Sunday, February 21, 2010

7 Truths To Set You Free.......

Watching the coverage of CPAC, I am struck by the idea that the conservative reactionaries are whip[ping themselves into a frenzy to come after what is left of America's institutional, spiritual and cultural memory. They no longer even attempt to loosely base their rhetoric on any political, economic, social or historical reality. 30 years after Reagan, it is apparent that he did not launch a revolution, he launched a counter revolution.

We are living in an age of media influencing policy and the media is in the hands of those who manipulate the message to influence the masses to work for corporate profits. The conservative corporate counter revolution is packaged as populism which harnesses the angst, fear and rage that the common man feels dealing with the massive monolith of an ever more oppressive reality. How can the supporters of the Tea Party Movement and CPAC be so blind, you ask yourself, that they do not see that the heroes they worship are some of the richest men in the country, who are cynically using them to rtemain that way?
Mitt Romney is worth over $200 Million. Cheney is worth at least $100 Million!

This is why conservative "ant-government" politics and religion can so efficiently feed off of each other. Religion helps the common man deal with the complexities of our universe and existence by replacing questions with blind faith. Radical Conservatism does much the same thing. It replaces truth with a target...and uses the blind faith of the masses as a means to gain power.
The truth, though is power in itself....here are 7 truths to set you free:

1. The US healthcare system is not the best in the world.

Despite spending more than twice as much as the rest of the industrialized nations ($8,160 per capita), the United States performs poorly in comparison on major health indicators such as life expectancy, infant mortality and immunization rates. Moreover, the other advanced nations provide comprehensive coverage to their entire populations, while the U.S. leaves 46.3 million completely uninsured and millions more inadequately covered. Single-Payer National Health Insurance, Physicians for a National Healthcare Program

The United States ranks 31st in life expectancy (tied with Kuwait and Chile), according to the latest World Health Organization figures. We rank 37th in infant mortality (partly because of many premature births) and 34th in maternal mortality. A child in the United States is two-and-a-half times as likely to die by age 5 as in Singapore or Sweden, and an American woman is 11 times as likely to die in childbirth as a woman in Ireland.
Canadians live longer than Americans do after kidney transplants and after dialysis, and that may be typical of cross-border differences ...
The figures are even worse for members of minority groups. An African-American in New Orleans has a shorter life expectancy than the average person in Vietnam or Honduras ... Americans take 10 percent fewer drugs than citizens in other countries — but pay 118 percent more per pill that they do take …
Nicholas Kristoff, New York Times, 11-4-09

We need single payer universal healthcare: Medicare for all. You can phase it in with a robust public option and lowering the Medicare enrollment age down to 55, but single-payer, universal coverage has to be the end result.

2. Predatory capitalism is not freedom.

It is not sustainable. It is not compatible with democratic institutions. A market without regulations or controls is not a free market; it deteriorates into suffocating monopolization, and results in the enriching of a few at the expense of the many. It does not treasure or invest in the commons, it does not value the rights of individuals or minorities.

It is said that a near-death experience forces one to reevaluate priorities and values. The global economy has just escaped a near-death experience. The crisis exposed the flaws in the prevailing economic model, but it also exposed flaws in our society. Much has been written about the foolishness of the risks that the financial sector undertook, the devastation that its institutions have brought to the economy, and the fiscal deficits that have resulted. Too little has been written about the underlying moral deficit that has been exposed-a deficit that is larger, and harder to correct ...
We have created a society in which materialism overwhelms moral commitment, in which the rapid growth that we have achieved is not sustainable environmentally or socially, in which we do not act together to address our common needs. Market fundamentalism has eroded any sense of community and has led to rampant exploitation of unwary and unprotected individuals. There has been an erosion of trust-and not just in our financial institutions. It is not too late to close these fissures.
Joseph Stiglitz, Moral Bankruptcy: Why Are We Letting Wall Street Off So Easy?, Mother Jones, 1-13-10

We need to re-instate Glass-Steagal, and supplement it with additional regulations.

3. The Climate Crisis is not a hoax. (Nor, BTW, is Peak Oil a hoax).

This isn't a good old-fashioned winter for the District of Columbia, not unless you're remembering the last ice age. And it doesn't disprove global warming, despite Sen. Jim De Mint's cheerful tweet: "It's going to keep snowing until Al Gore cries 'uncle.' "
Instead, the weird and disruptive weather patterns around the world are pretty much exactly what you'd expect as the planet warms … Looked at dispassionately, those political attacks essentially buttress the consensus around global warming. If that much money and attention can be aimed at the data and all anyone can find is a few mistakes and a collection of nasty e-mails, it's a pretty good sign that the science is sound (though not as good a sign as the melting Arctic). The British newspaper the Guardian just concluded a huge series on the "Climategate" e-mails with the words: "The world is still warming. Humanity is still to blame. And we still, urgently, need to do something about it."
Bill McKibben, Washington's snowstorms, brought to you by global warming, Washington Post, 2-14-10

The USA needs to go green hard and fast. The other great and would-be great nations are racing ahead of us in the development and implementation of wind and solar energy. We need a new smart and green power grid, we need a new green transportation system, we need a national campaign to green existing buildings, and a green mandate for all new buildings, we need to cut back on our consumption of meat, etc. We need to spend a lot of money, fast and wisely; and we need to educate our populace.

4. Corporations are not people.

It is absurd to gift them the rights of the individual.

Human beings are people; corporations are legal fictions. The Supreme Court is misguided in principle, and wrong on the law. In a democracy, the people rule.
We Move to Amend.
We, the People of the United States of America, reject the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Citizens United, and move to amend our Constitution to:
* Firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights.
* Guarantee the right to vote and to participate, and to have our votes and participation count.
* Protect local communities, their economies, and democracies against illegitimate "preemption" actions by global, national, and state governments.
Sign the Motion
Move to Amend, Campaign to Legalize Democracy

Disgust with corporate influence is raging. The appearance of Wall Street influence in the Obama administration contributed to an unthinkable result in the Massachusetts Senate race. And the White House dealings with the insurance and drug lobbies during the health care debate have been pilloried on the left and the right.
Now the conservative Supreme Court showed its hand, and shredded our campaign finance laws, leaving our democracy even more vulnerable to special interests.
What better time to raise the stakes.
Put a constitutional amendment on the floor of the House and Senate creating a public campaign finance system banning all private money.
Dare conservatives to side with more corporate influence in our campaigns and our policymaking.
Either conservatives buckle and the amendment is passed.
Or they block it, show their sympathies, and expose their attempts at co-opting the populist fervor to be phony.
There is no better time than now.
Bill Scher, A Constitutional Amendment for Public Campaign Financing: Now Is the Time, Huffington Post, 1-21-10

5. The USA is not a Christian nation.



Consider How Christian were the Founders, NY Times, 2-14-10. Its author, Russell Shorto offers the gullible reader only partial truth, and that is swaddled in a heavily embroidered cloth of pleasantry. Mr. Shorto studiously avoids exploring the oft-stated, well-documented, and clearly NON-CHRISTIAN personal views of the principle founders.

Back in 2003, when a Neo-Confederate Judge in Alabama wanted to place a monument to the Ten Commandments on public property, Thom Hartmann wrote a powerful piece (no, not published in the NY Times, published in the Blogosphere) that intrepidly goes everywhere Mr. Shorto was too timid to go.

Here are two brief excerpts with a link to Thom's full text:

[Ben Franklin] - like most of the more well-known Founders - was a Deist, a philosophy made popular by early Unitarians who held that the Creator made the universe long ago and has since chosen not to interfere in any way, that neither Jesus nor anybody else was divine (or, alternatively, that we are all divine and shall all do as Jesus did and said we would), and that there is only one God and not three.
Another founding Deist who resisted giving political power to those with religious power was George Washington.
On the topic of Washington's religious sentiments, Thomas Jefferson wrote in his personal diary entry for February 1, 1799, "when the clergy addressed General Washington on his departure from the Government, it was observed in their consultation, that he had never, on any occasion, said a word to the public which showed a belief in the Christian religion, and they thought they should so pen their address, as to force him at length to declare publicly whether he was a Christian or not. They did so.
"However," Jefferson noted to his diary, "the old fox was too cunning for them. He answered every article of their address particularly except that, which he passed over without notice ... In later years, Jefferson would put together what is now called "The Jefferson Bible," in which he deleted all the miracles from the New Testament and presented Jesus to readers as an inspired philosopher. His Jefferson Bible is still in print, and well received, if amazon.com sales and readers' comments are any indication.

Thom Hartmann, The Founders Confront Judge Moore, OpEd News, 2003

6. Religion is not science. Religious myth is not scientific theory.


The problem is not Science vs. Religion. The problem is not Science vs. a particular religion. The problem is Science vs. one specific interpretation of one particular religion and, in general, the problem is an American one ..."What is up with you Americans and evolution?"  This intellectual hamstringing is not happening in China or India or Europe. The nations we are be competing with are not playing these games. The nations we are competing with to shape our own, and the planets, future are not wasting their time in this intellectual vortex. They are moving forward while we stare at our navels and argue over the shape of lint bunnies we find there. Adam Frank, Creationism Vs. Evolution: An American Problem, An American Opportunity, NPR, 2-12-10

7. The torture of prisoners is not a policy option, it is a war crime

"24" is a TV show, the Geneva Accords is established law on this planet (and there is nothing quaint about it).

The brutalization of our culture took a great leap forward from 2001 to 2008, with the Bush-Cheney regime's institution of torture (a.k.a. "enhanced interrogation techniques") as official policy. Unfortunately, despite its repudiation of this abomination, the Obama administration shows no desire (moral or political) to prosecute its chief architects. Nor does the US mainstream news media show any appetite for confronting those who now openly boast of perpetrating what are clearly codified as war crime. (Of course, by not pursuing criminal charges, the Obama administration is giving cover not only to the perpetrators, but to the news media.)

On [ABC’s “This Week”], Cheney pronounced himself “a big supporter of waterboarding,” a near-drowning technique that has been regarded as torture back to the Spanish Inquisition and that has long been treated by U.S. authorities as a serious war crime, such as when Japanese commanders were prosecuted for using it on American prisoners during World War II … That Cheney feels he can operate with such impunity is a damning commentary on the rule of law in the United States, at least when it comes to the nation’s elites. Robert Parry, Cheney Exposes Torture Conspiracy, Consortium News, 2-14-10

Indeed, the two major national newspapers--The New York Times and The Washington Post--characterized Cheney's interview as a mere spat between the vice president and the Obama administration over the direction of the latter's counterterrorism and national security policies. Jason Leopold, Cheney Admits to War Crimes, Media Yawns, Obama Turns the Other Cheek, Truthout, 2-15-10

A special prosecutor needs to be appointed, one with sweeping investigative powers to probe the Bush-Cheney regime, and not just concerning the use of torture.

[And no, I do not give a damn that a Bush-Cheney appointee "cleared" Yoo and Bybee, thereby over-ruling the DoJ investigators who recommended action against them. The only question worth asking about that sad story is why all of the Bush DoJ appointees involved in sensitive or politically tainted investigations were not fired or "resigned" on Day 1 of the Obama administration.]

I am aware that most people who read this blog understand these 7 truths, but as we wage this struggle against the reactionaries' Assault on Reason, and this Republic, it's a great thing to have facts to back up the truth!


10 comments:

Engineer of Knowledge said...

Hello Microdot,
Man this is so good that I copied and saved this to my laptop for future references.

I can't complement enough you on how good this posting is.

Laci the Chinese Crested said...

The problem is that the US is an insular society. While it may seem a fatuous example, it plays the world series against only itself. Likewise, it is able to see the world in a manner similar to this New Yorker Cartoon where the rest of the world (and nation) are insignificant.
http://www.ctrl-n.net/images/journal/NewYorker1976-03-29cover.png

It has deluded itself about oil and the environment, yet that will kick it in the arse. Perhaps it will be an instance where the military budget delivers the first blow, and these are further blows that kill the beast. Or at least subdue it from its hubris.

The masses are easily distracted from their own best interests by wedge issues
http://wi.aflcio.org/statefed/index.cfm?action=article&articleID=d39b8466-cae3-48ab-9bf4-eb86f9d3aa11

As someone said in a newsgroup: "Think of fascism as an infection of the body politic that can occur when there isn't a strong leftist working class identified party."

The US doesn't have such a party (and neither does Britain for that matter).

mud_rake said...

Great, albeit sad post, microdot! We here, stuck in this wilderness of idiocy, have to put up with crap every day, up to our knees in this shit.

The dumbed-down citizens merely bobble their heads in agreement with the propaganda or don't even know that there is a group of anarchists hard at work trying a fascist take-over of our democracy.

Enjoy your sensible, mature neck-of-the-woods!

microdot said...

sensible, mature? I spent the morning getting stocked up for what could be a big petrol shortage as all of the refineries in France could get shut down this week in a big strike.

what is going on here is so complex in it's game playing that I can't really write about it with out making myself a target.

Lacie, I have said it before, but Britain is a total basket case, but I suppose that's what makes Britain so great...it is wrapped in its Island mentality...on one had a bastion of freedom and individual rights, on the other, one of the most repressive nanny states in the western world.

I suppose that is what makes great pop music!! Why doesn't that formula apply to France?

I was thinking of creating a graph that charted the rise and fall of great pop music in relationship to government and economic factors..
I think I have a point here...

Jeanette said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
microdot said...

Some people have what they call the shit finger...what ever they touch turns to shit. It's the opposite of a magic power and you seem to have one extremely stinky digit lady! I have no idea what you are talking about and I don't want to know. What ever it is that you are complaining about, I am sure it was well earned...now, I am asking you nicely,get lost!

microdot said...

If there is a next time, I'll just call the Whaaa-ambulance!

Jeanette said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
microdot said...

Stop hiding behind your family background and be honest with yourself. It's all about you and you know it.
I didn't say you couldn't post here, but I would really appreciate it if you took it that way because I don't want to have anything to do with you and I greatly resent having to read your whiny dissemblig ramblings.
Go whine to your buddy, you can say anything you want on PQP because you can be assured that I will never read it and I do not care!

In other words, Bite Me!

microdot said...

Mr. Engineer, I wanted to thank you for the reply regarding the original thread here. I spent a lot of time putting it together.
Being pissed off is a real waste of my time on this extremely beautiful day.