Monday, July 7, 2008

The roots of discontent

The direction America is headed

Well, my bro said that he thought that (what was supposedly) Jay Leno's diatribe was good food for thought, and he was right. I’ve been thinking about it ever since in the context of various other issues. More specifically, I guess I’ve been thinking about the nature and roots of discontentment of Americans. What seemed to be Leno’s presumption was that Americans are discontented with the direction in which America is heading because of the effects poor economic conditions are having on them, i.e. for purely selfish reasons. While he may be right with regard to some people, I think that his interpretation of “the direction the country is headed” is infinitely narrow and shallow. Also, while he is correct that we should feel no small amount of joy about the degree of comfort and privilege that is afforded us as citizens (and residents) of the United States, this is not a reason to overlook the negative aspects of American foreign and domestic policies. Rather, it is all the more reason we should be concerned that our national policies are fair to all affected by them, and it is all the more reason for Americans to be upset when they feel America’s strength is misused. As Ben Parker said, “With great power comes great responsibility.” Actually, it was Churchill, or Roosevelt, or Kipling or…but the point is the same. As THE superpower, we have a responsibility to use our power, which in strict economic terms is derived from American taxpayers, with the utmost moral conscience.

Non-advocative representation

When an elected leader acts on behalf of the represented in a manner contrary to the moral values of the represented he or she violates the most basic principle of our republic. The framers of our constitution knew that power corrupts and their distrust of power and authority derived from power was so firm it led them to lead a revolt against Britain. Certainly, the founding of a nation that would oppress other peoples with its power with the goal of maintaining or expanding its power was not what they had in mind when they committed their treason against the oppressive British crown.

While there could and should be some justification or some validation for the actions the U.S. government has taken in Iraq, it has not been presented to The People. The primary justifications, WMD and collusion with al Queda, have proved unverifiable or false, and the Executive branch has consistently refused to address the questions of doubters, citing national security and executive privilege—basically leaving us in the dark for our own good. While there may be some precedents for such behavior (the Nixon Administration’s spying on the Democratic Party to help ensure that America stays what they perceived as the proper course for us and our covert wars in South and Central America and Asia being examples) that behavior is inherently contrary to the foremost American precept that The People are the sovereign and the role of the elected is to do their bidding, for, if the people are not privy to the information, they cannot make informed decisions. The gravity of this contradiction is particularly illuminated by the withholding of classified information from Congress whose role is supposed to be making informed decisions on The Peoples’ behalf. It is unconceivable to me how the constitution can be twisted to permit this degree of subversion of The People. The propagandization of the news, long perceived as the Fourth Estate, is plainly a component in this puzzle, further disinforming The People and creating an atmosphere where the subversion of The People is permissible. The secrecy of the Executive, the propagandization of the news media and the negligence of the Congress to act on behalf of The People to check executive power have conspired to warrant great suspicions that the government is acting with ulterior motives, not on behalf of or in the interest of The People.

The mere appearance that this is happening should be very alarming to most Americans for a variety of reasons. The appearance of the essential theft of our democracy and betrayal of the pubic trust is perhaps paramount among them. The taking of our tax dollars and the accumulation of debt on our behalf for a war, the justification for which remains mysterious to us, particularly as many Americans are experiencing personal financial difficulties and economic stratification is becoming more intense by a personally selfish oligarchic administration is a betrayal of the trust The People have placed in the government. An elongated list of reasons for alarm would be tangential. These two reasons alone—that the government is not operating in accordance with constitutional mandates and that we are being forced to pay for its unlawful actions—are reason enough for The People to be alarmed and angry. These grievances (unfair taxation and an effective lack of representation) were at the heart of the argument for American independence. To endorse the actions of the current government, specifically with regard to Iraq, is to discard the fundamental principles of republican democracy. The point with regard to Iraq policy is absolutely not to disregard American security; it is to ensure the proper functioning of American democratic government. The point is not to direct blame for Iraq policies or the inexpediency of those policies; it is to ensure that the government serves The People and not visa versa by holding those suspected of having betrayed The People accountable or at least answerable for their actions. The founders would expect nothing less of us than that we hold government accountable to us. The signers of the Declaration of Independence had a healthy distrust of authority (healthy enough to commit treason) and would hope that we use a healthy degree of the same. I use the word “hope,” because it is also true that pessimism ran deep among those men. They expected this experiment in democracy to fail and this nation to fall in to monarchy, authoritarianism, or even theocracy. The appearance of betrayal of our representatives in government and their unaccountability is a symptom of an impending failure of our democracy. This sign of failure is definitely at the root of the problems leading to the discontentment of Americans, but is by no means the sole problem.

Most of what I have said here regarding the responsibility of the government to act in the interest of The People and our responsibility to hold our representatives accountable (lest we discard our democracy) I would have thought would go without saying. However, the great division of Americans over their support for or dissent from America’s policies regarding Iraq indicate that a clarification of the reasons for dissent is needed. The above should at least serve as a starting point for some discussion of Iraq policy in the context of rights and duties of the government and the governed. In this essay, the preceding case against the government is simply a prerequisite to the following.

The nobility of the American working-class?

The failure of the American government to present itself as a faithful servant of The People in the case of Iraq is perceived by many as merely one of several such instances. Perhaps alluded to in Leno’s essay is the discontent of many over economic matters. I say “perhaps,” because, he attributes discontent to America’s being “the largest group of ungrateful, spoiled brats the world has ever seen.” While he might be in the ballpark, I think he’s missing the game entirely. The noble worker holds no small place in the American iconography—he is the quintessential American underdog, the cowboy, the factory worker, the construction worker, the farmer, the soldier, teacher, policeman and fireman. While, in the case of public servants and perhaps farmers the nobility lies in part on the self sacrifice he or she makes for the benefit of the rest of us. For the cowboy and the soldier, nobility comes in part from the romanticized lifestyles and idealized sense of honor we impose on them. For the underdog, who perhaps embodies the American Dream moreso than any of the others, nobility comes from his successful moral or physical struggle against a superior but morally corrupt opposition such as a corporation; a corrupt official; or a richer, more privileged, and spoiled man. He is the Everyman, the common man. For the workers by whose labor this nation was built, nobility comes from being the underdog, fighting the good fight on behalf of the rest of us, making the sacrifices that benefit the rest of us, and, instead of being rewarded for their sacrifices by rising in stature, continuing on through a thankless life of drudgery. It is all most Americans ever know. It is on their shoulders the rest of us are carried. It is true that even the poor in the U.S. live in relative luxury compared to the rest of the world’s poor, but they live in the U.S., not the rest of the world. One can make the argument that each of us chooses his or her place in society and is responsible for his or her place, negating any social responsibility the rest of us might carry for anyone else. So, what status does the American worker hold in society? Is he a noble American icon? Or, is he a blight on society, dependant, willingly exploited, a pathetic contrast to the American Dream? For much of our young nation’s history the American Dream was one of opportunity for everyone, not just one in which anyone can rise to be super successful but one in which anyone can achieve a decent standard of living. None of us may be the idealized, noble American worker but many Americans do nevertheless identify with him and perceive our society from his perspective. Although aristocracy has always had a place in our country, our constitution gives the same privileges to us all, and the usurpation of rights by an oligarchy is an attack on the Constitution.

Much like we embrace Robin Hood who “stole from the rich and gave to the poor,” we embrace the America that is economically destratified, where we are all truly born equals. So, it is from this perspective that Americans feel betrayed by their government. They feel overlooked, neglected, even forsaken in favor of the rich. Wealth is relative, and in the last few decades the rich have been getting richer while the poor have been getting poorer. This is not just the natural order; this has been fostered by our government’s tax policies and business regulations. Contemporary historian and author Kevin Phillips, having recently left the republican party wrote a series books on just this topic during the post-Reagan era: The Politics of Rich and Poor: Wealth and the American Electorate in the Reagan Aftermath (1991), Boiling Point: Democrats, Republicans, and the Decline of Middle-Class Prosperity (1994), and Arrogant Capital: Washington, Wall Street, and the Frustration of American Politics (1995). He was sounding the alarm that America was becoming economically stratified and that this was having negative consequences on our democracy. The pot hasn’t boiled as quickly as he thought, but he was right about the pot boiling, about why and about the consequences. Leno misses with his assertion that we are just a bunch of spoiled brats. Since he is totally out of touch with how the rest of us non-millionaires live and how we feel about our democratic disempowerment and about the degradation of our relative standard of living, he totally misses the point. The exclusion of working-class Americans from our own democracy ought to be reason enough for discontentment, yet there is an even greater problem at the root of it.

The American work ethic and the betrayal of American industry

Implicit in the nobility of the American worker is the idea that Americans derive their pride and patriotism from the belief that we, as a nation are working towards a greater goal. Americans are not the spoiled brats that Leno thinks we are; we want to work hard and work to bring honor upon our selves and our country. It is the inability to do so that breeds discontentment—idle hands, stagnation, the inability to fulfill one’s potential—the classic causes of frustration. This increasingly oligarchic society and economy are betrayals of that trust that we as a nation are unified for a greater purpose. The supply-side economic paradigm exacerbates things, because we are no longer work for American corporations that pay taxes, in turn benefiting the nation or that invest in new technologies that will benefit the nation. American corporations seem to be selfish and exploitative institutions that usurp our national wealth and power by gradually taking and taking and never giving back, slowly tilting the balance of wealth to the point that they own the government and the rest of us are powerless. The failure of corporations to invest back in the society that paid and labored for its empowerment is no less of a slight. Tax cuts for the wealthy initiated under Reagan and persisting today were supposed to provide those who were wealthy enough to make substantial investments with money to do so. And, these investments were supposed to pay-off in jobs that would allow the lost tax income to “trickle down” to the rest of us, thereby fostering economic development and sustaining working-class standards of living—supposedly a win win situation. Many like to attribute the technological advancements of the 1990s on these tax cuts for the wealthy; however, there is no shortage of detractors. The virtues of tax cuts for the wealthy, if there are any, will not be known for decades if ever, yet this is the form of tax policy. While most Americans are left to wait for wealth to trickle-down to them, American Oil companies enjoy prosperity unimaginable to most of us, American automobile companies refuse to embrace alternative fuel technologies (we’ve been waiting for decades), legislator-lawyers escalate criminal penalties to obtain votes and create business for their industry, American corporations send their jobs to cheap overseas markets—all with the blessings of our representatives. And, all the while, our ability to do anything about any of it is eroded.

Most Americans remain pawns in a game of the rich and powerful from which they will never benefit. Deeper than the political and economic disfranchisement is the forestalling of both American progress and Americans’ ability to do their part in it. Perhaps those working class Americans who do not feel discontent are those who have fulfillment in their working lives or in their creativity, and it is those who do not who are most discontented. As wages stagnate, the cost of living rises and businesses cut jobs, the search for personal fulfillment cannot center on one’s work life. One must create his own form of fulfillment. This is contrary to the fact that in America we have centered our lives on jobs where we enlist the values of honor, dedication, sacrifice, and pursuit of excellence. American progress is built upon American workers who embrace these values and do so with noble intentions of playing their part in American progress. It has been their privilege, the source of their nobility and honor and their willingness to sacrifice. The sense that American workers have been abandoned has created an atmosphere not unlike that of Stalinist Russia where workers have no desire to work because it brings no fulfillment, are hopeless to affect any change in their own conditions and are entirely subject to the government-backed industry. Whatever the American Dream is, this it is not. Perhaps Leno is right, and it is in this sense that Americans are spoiled—Americans have come to expect rewarding work, and the lack of it has soured their attitudes. Regardless, this is from where American rebirth must come. Americans are wanting for work, for good work that will bring them honor and the nation prosperity. They want corporate America to play their part and stop acting purely in self-interest. They want to recreate America as the model it was after WWII, one where sacrifice was honored and rewarded, where there was nobility in our national pursuits and where the government was "of the people, by the people, for the people." And, their frustration results from government’s and industry’s failure to provide them with the opportunity to do so.

The promise of American progress

Now that we’ve put the national wealth in the hands of the rich and the national faith in their willingness and ability to invest wisely to the benefit of the nation, what do we do? We’ve given the wealthy all the cards. We’re waiting … impatiently. But, our representatives aren’t listening to us. The so-called Fourth Estate is trying to manipulate us rather than inform us. And, the industry that we put our faith in appears to be taking over our government and our media and using them against us. Many Americans feel that instead of being able to work together as a nation to better our situation, our prospects are limited. Fulfillment is to be found in the patriotic fight against Islamic radicals who “hate us for our freedom” (a ridiculous slogan that should make the administration’s motives suspect) or in the successful pursuit of endless capital gain (perhaps the new American Dream—proclaiming the virtue of greed), but where else? We’ve been disempowered to do much to change the status quo. Anyone who condescends to say we’re just ungrateful brats has been watching too much network news, trusting too much in the government, blindly assuming the good intentions of American corporations and is totally out of touch with the working-class.

Americans need noble national goals, investment in those goals, and domestic industry that will work towards those goals. It is a lot to ask—true. But, men and nations decide their values and find fulfillment in lives that embrace those values. Progress might be the preeminent American value. Progress is what we as a people demand. Perhaps more that anything else, it is what we believe in. Political, industrial, social, economic, scientific, technological—progress is at the center of the American identity. The abandonment of tangible progress in favor of ideological progress (the supposed propagation of democracy or Christianity) or capitalistic or free-market progress (which is no progress at all for the great majority of Americans) has left most Americans parched for want of something to believe in, something to work towards, and distraught with doubts about validity of these new values. This, the inability to work toward goals we believe are noble and which we believe represent progress, is at the heart of American discontent. Perhaps we are spoiled if we are so audacious to expect such lofty goals and achievements from our nation, but, then, maybe that’s a good thing. I don’t think the men who revolted against Britain on our behalf would object.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Have I mentioned my short attention span?

I came across this Lynnhaven River restoration group's website and had to find out just how much they knew or were acknowledging about the system's history of environmental problems. I think what they're trying to do is just awesome (even if it may be futile). Here's the string of emails. Apologies for the corrupted formatting. I suppose I just wanted to share my opinion about what's really (or deeper) at the heart of the Lynnhaven's problems but didn't want to tell anyone what they already knew. Seems to me the devastation of the estuary occurred rapidly and didn't correspond to any particular stage of landscape development, indicating that the origin of the problems was neither the cummulative effects of development nor the effect of some particular landscape event (unless the massive oil slick that occurred one year originated on land) but rather, the cause for (what I saw as) the river's rapid decline was a series of water pollution events combined with dredging. And, while the inability of the ecosystem to recover is associated with the stresses of coastal development, it is founded moreso upon the extent of alteration of the physical habitat and biological communities of the Lynnhaven River pre~1982. Anyway, here's the string.
-----Original Message-----> From: > Sent: Friday, June 06, 2008 8:34 AM> To: > Subject: Howdy?
>> Hello, Ms. X. I'm a VB Native who grew up on the upper> reaches of Thalia Creek, and I know a little bit about marine science.> I know there is no such simple answer, but could you as briefly as> possible (three or for points) tell me why the Lynnhaven River has> become an unhealthy estuary? This may seem a bit like a trick> question; I'm trying to get an idea about the understanding those at> LRNow have of the River and its history. I'll really appreciate it if> you'll humor me with a response.>> I applaud y'all for everything you're doing there and think you're> doing the right things (perhaps 20 years too late). I've been gone> from VB for some time and don't know the status of the watershed these> days, but I would have thought it was ready to be stocked with carp> just to have something living in it. I'd much rather it be stocked> with oysters.
>> Regards,
>> Me, Virginian in exile


- Hide quoted text -
On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 12:02 PM, Ms. X wrote:> Hello Me,>> Thank you for your interest in the Lynnhaven River and for your> compliments to our organization. I am attaching our 2007 State of the> River Report, which gives a really nice 4 page summary of the condition> of the river. We have tracked these indicators for the last 3 years so> we can see how they are changing.>> In 2 points though, I'd say that the Lynnhaven has become an unhealthy> river because:>> 1. The Lynnhaven's watershed is approximately 95% developed, we have> more than 35% impervious surface, and a huge population (220,000 people)> living in the Lynnhaven's watershed. When it rains, pollutants (such as> fertilizers, nutrients, pet waste, sediment, pesticides, oil, and> toxins, to name a few) wash off the watershed and are carried by the> rainwater to stormdrains that expel directly (and untreated) into the> Lynnhaven River. Once the pollutants are in the water, they cause a> variety of complications, including algal blooms, anoxia, turbidity,> toxic pollution, etc.>> 2. We have lost or destroyed thousands of acres of forest, riparian> buffers, and wetlands in the watershed. They are critical to the> river's health because they provide natural filtration systems that> intercept nutrients and sediment before they reach the water. We have> also lost approximately 99% of our historic oyster population. Oysters> are also critical to the river's health because they filter sediment and> algae from the water and they provide tremendous food and habitat in the> river.
I hope that is helpful,
Ms.X, Assistant Director & Marine Scientist> LYNNHAVEN River NOW> 1608 Pleasure House Road, Suite 108> Virginia Beach, VA 23455>> telephone: (757)-962-5398> visit our web site: www.LynnhavenRiverNow.org>>>


Hi, Ms.X. Good to hear back from you.

Coastal development is a huge problem and is certainly responsible fora great deal of estuarine health issues. But, I hope you'll consider an alternative explanation of what is wrong with the Lynnhaven.Fertilizer and sediment runoff among other things may be keeping the Lynnhaven from recovering, but what sent it down the path to its current state was dredging. Back in the 80s, the river was supposedly having eutrophication problems because of the volume of treated wastewater entering the watershed. This was before the consolidated wastewater system there is today, when several local (neighborhood scale) wastewater facilities operated within the watershed. I'll admit the effluent was bright green and there was a nice mat of periphyton lining the channel from the effluent pipe, but I never saw a red tide or any plankton bloom for that matter back in those days.But someone decided the Lynnhaven had gone eutrophic (there are some documents at the library written by the COE and Stokes Environmental Consultants that make this point) and argued that the solution was to increase the flushing rate by dredging. Anyone with a most basic understanding of estuarine ecology could see this was ridiculous: If you increase the flushing rate, you increase the salinity (because the fresh water inputs are too low to compensate) and totally alter the ecosystem. The whole scheme was in fact a transparent justification for dredging, which was a priority issue for waterfront property owners on the shallow Lynnhaven River.

Before the dredging the river transformed with the passing of every tide from a salt water bay full of blue crabs and white perch to afresh water stream with crayfish and catfish. Despite the claims of eutrophication I never ceased to be amazed at the diversity of critters I could catch or the textbook perfection of the whole ecosystem. Around the same time as the dredging (early '80s) there was an oil slick that was responsible for a huge fish kill, then major red tides in successive years, the second one of which was clearly related to the closure of the wastewater plant on Harton Rd. You see,they waited two years for the waste ponds to dry-up and when the sewage just wouldn't dry enough to be covered over, they cut a big notch in the East-facing side of the pond to let the sludge ooze out into Thalia Creek. That was the third punch and roughly coincided with the completion of dredging the upper reaches of the river. It came back a little each time at first, but after the last red tide,the water remained black and devoid of life. All of the fresh water fish we used to see were gone and we never saw any more salt waterfish either -- just that black water. Rather than expediting the release of effluent from the Lynnhaven into the mouth of the Chesapeake, the increased saltwater intrusion helped to wash polluted water deeper into the estuary, contaminating the headwaters and eliminating headwater populations that would be needed to repopulate the river after die-offs.

That's just what I saw from my point on the shoreline. What I am trying to illustrate is that it isn't as simple as restoration of riparian buffers and SAV. The Lynnhaven has been drastically altered-- not simply by expanded impervious surfaces or increased runoff.The very nature of the watershed -- it's morphology, salinity regime, freshwater inputs -- the set of physical characteristics that determine what kind of ecosystem it CAN be has been totally and perhaps irreversibly changed. The native species have probably been totally wiped out, leaving it with an entirely clean slate with respect to its wildlife community. So, restoration is simply out of the question. What's living there now I do not know. It is fantastic that new populations of oysters have been discovered, and I'm sure (at least I would guess) that some populations of something have established themselves since the days I recall. But, whatever ecosystem that has evolved or that will evolve in the Lynnhaven is not and will never be the one that once was. A revitalized Lynnhaven will be an entirely new ecosystem. Greater success might be found by actively trying to engineer that new ecosystem than by trying to passively facilitate any form of recovery.

Anyway, I apologize if I am perhaps too eager to share my opinion, but I wanted to use my personal, historical account to bring attention to some of the Lynnhaven's more elusive issues that usually get ignored or overlooked.
Regards,
Me

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Another diversion for my short attention span

I never really liked Jay Leno (I just don't find him funny). Someone sent me this essay attributed to Leno. My comments are interjected. Long story short: I guess he thinks responses to the "How do yo feel about the direction America is headed?" poll question simply reflect people's comfort level or the depth of their wallets. He seems to be oblivious to any matters of morality, to the stability of our constitutional government or to the problems that face the masses who are not rich as hell. Anyway...

> Jay Leno wrote this; it's the Jay Leno we don't often see....
>
> As most of you know I am not a President Bush fan, nor have I ever been, but
> this is not about Bush, it is about us, as Americans, and it seems to hit
> the mark.
>
> The other day I was reading Newsweek magazine and came across some Poll data
> I found rather hard to believe. It must be true given the source, right?
>
> The Newsweek poll alleges that 67 percent of Americans are unhappy with the
> direction the country is headed and 69 percent of the country is unhappy
> with the performance of the President. In essence 2/3 of the citizenry just
> ain't happy and want a change. So being the knuckle dragger I am, I started
> thinking, 'What are we so unhappy about?''
>
> A. Is it that we have electricity and running water 24 hours a day, 7 Days a
> week?
>
> B. Is our unhappiness the result of having air conditioning in the summer
> and heating in the winter?
>
> C. Could it be that 95.4 percent of these unhappy folks have a job?
>
> D. Maybe it is the ability to walk into a grocery store at any time and see
> more food in moments than Darfur has seen in the last year?
>
> E. Maybe it is the ability to drive our cars and trucks from the Pacific

> Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean without having to present identification papers
> as we move through each state?
>
> F. Or possibly the hundreds of clean and safe motels we would find along the
> way that can provide temporary shelter?
>
> G. I guess having thousands of restaurants with varying cuisine from around
> the world is just not good enough either.
>
> H. Or could it be that when we wreck our car, emergency workers show up and
> provide services to help all and even send a helicopter to take you to the
> hospital.
>
> I. Perhaps you are one of the 70 percent of Americans who own a home.
>
> J. You may be upset with knowing that in the unfortunate case of a fire, a
> group of trained firefighters will appear in moments and use top notch
> equipment to extinguish the flames, thus saving you, your family, and your
> belongings.
>
> K. Or if, while at home watching one of your many flat screen TVs, a burglar
> or prowler intrudes, an officer equipped with a gun and a bullet-proof vest
> will come to defend you and your family against attack or loss.
>
> L. This all in the backdrop of a neighborhood free of bombs or militias
> raping and pillaging the residents. Neighborhoods where 90% of teenagers own
> cell phones and computers.
>
> M. How about the complete religious, social and political freedoms we enjoy
> that are the envy of everyone in the world?

The three percent of Americans who have been to or are in prison (and particularly the 1/4 of those who were jailed for non-violent drug offenses) would disagree about the status of social freedoms. I personally feel like my religious freedom is under threat as do many of my fellow American atheists (Bans on abortion and suicide are explicitly Bible-based. The use of public finds for religious proselytization in the form of prison ministries and abstinence education are thefts of my tax money by religious politicians. Having "In God we Trust" on my money and "Under God" in my Pledge of Allegiance are personal religious affronts endorsed by my government.) "Complete social and religious freedom" only exist for Christians who don't drink or smoke or or use drugs or have only heterosexual sex in the missionary position. In other words it doesn't exist, and there are those who would like to eliminate any illusion that it does exist.

>
>
> Maybe that is what has 67% of you folks unhappy.
>
> Fact is, we are the largest group of ungrateful, spoiled brats the world has
> ever seen. No wonder the world loves the U.S., yet has a great disdain for
> its citizens. They see us for what we are. The most blessed people in the
> world who do nothing but complain about what we don't have, and what we hate
> about the country instead of thanking the good Lord we live here.

Maybe he's privy to some information I'm not, but I've always heard the opposite--that foreigners have a problem with the US and not the people (even al Queda states that their beef with us is that we pay taxes that support the US government's actions against their people.) I don't think he has any fucking idea how most Americans live. I'll agree that there are a lot of stupid ungrateful people out there who don't appreciate what they have. For example, all of the idiots commuting in oversized trucks and SUVs have no right to complain about the price of oil, nor do any of the politicians who have allowed the propagation of this stupid huge truck trend in the US. But, to have our government create an unnecessary war that sucked-up not just our tax dollars but probably those of our children and to "justify" it with a series of lies and twisted "facts", unjustly persecute the people of the nation we went to war with and to say he did it because God told him to degrades our nation by undermining our basic expectations of fairness, truth, government transparency, and not having an insane man piss away trillions of our tax dollars on lunacy. This is something to be angry about not despite the fact that you have food on the table and a roof over your head but because you have those luxuries. To live in relative luxury is reason to want to elevate others and all the more reason to be ashamed of what we have done to the Iraqis. To live in a society where ultimately we are responsible for the conduct of our government officials is all the more reason to be upset when those officials mismanage our nation and conduct its business in a manner contradictory to fundamental human values.

>
> I know, I know. What about the president who took us into war and has no
> plan to get us out? The president who has a measly 31 percent approval
> rating? Is this the same president who guided the nation in the dark days
> after 9/11?

By standing atop a pile of rubble that he failed to prevent despite repeated warnings that an attack was imminent (just what percentage of his time had he spent on vacation at that point? 27% as of 2003--100 days more in three years that Clinton had in seven.) and waving a flag? I didn't feel led. I felt insulted. I still do. He gave the military permission to draw-up plans and go to Afganistan as he should have, but he commanded them to stop short of capturing Bin Ladin and then sent them into Iraq because of some manufactured reasoning. The president and hence the US's response the attack has been a huge disaster militarily and morally. We've created more terrorists than there were to begin with and given them really good reasons for wanting to hate us and attack us. I should thank him?

The president that cut taxes to bring an economy out of
> recession?

Are we out of a recession? When the rich folks benefiting from the tax cuts start investing in new energy and transportation technologies and infrastructure, I'll consider considering the virtues of supply side economics. It only works if the rich are altruists, and people don't get rich by being altruists.

Could this be the same guy who has been called every name in the
> book for succeeding in keeping all the spoiled ungrateful brats safe from
> terrorist attacks?

Is there some reason to think that he is somehow personally responsible for us not being attacked? Is he that tight with the terrorists? Did he have the Saudis tell Bin Ladin to step off in exchange for not making a martyr out of him? I never felt threatened to begin with. Do I have him to thank for me still having a job? Would my car have broken down he he had not willed it to keep running? Maybe he's also responsible for the increases in teenage pregnancy and smoking that have occurred under his watch? The idea that he is responsible for us not being attacked is just stupid.

The commander in chief of an all-volunteer army that is
> out there defending you and me?

The commander in chief that sent our all-volunteer army into harm's way to avenge his daddy or protect Israel or control the Iraqi oil supply or whatever stupid reason it is that we went there? The Commander in chief who basically deserted or avoided real military service using his familial political ties in a time of war (I'd respect him more if he fled the country or deserted outright than I can for joining the National Guard and then not even showing-up? Regarding the Army, they aren't defending me. I'm sure they'd rather be but instead they're on a futile and wasteful mission at the cost of their lives and health and American tax dollars (but not the rich people's tax dollars because it's more important that they have money to invest).

>
> Did you hear how bad the President is on the news or talk show? Did this
> news affect you so much, make you so unhappy you couldn't take a look around
> for yourself and see all the good things and be glad? Think about
> it......are you upset at the President because he actually caused
> you personal pain OR is it because the 'Media' told you he was failing to
> kiss your sorry ungrateful behind every day.

I don't watch cable or network news. They don't provide real news anymore. The anti-reality movement has ruined ruined the media. This kind of nonsense is a case in point.

>
> Make no mistake about it. The troops in Iraq and Afghanistan have
> volunteered to serve, and in many cases may have
> died for your freedom.

No; the ones in Iraq died for the president's misguided war. The ones in Afganistan continue to die because we took the emphasis off of Afganistan and put it on Iraq.

There is currently no draft in this country. They
> didn't have to go. They are able to refuse to go and end up with either a
> ''general'' discharge, an 'other than honorable'' discharge or, worst case
> scenario, a ''dishonorable'' discharge after a few days in the brig.

Yeah, but an "other than honorable discharge" is like having a felony on your record.

>
> So why then the flat-out discontentment in the minds of 69 percent of
> Americans?
>
> Say what you want but I blame it on the media. If it bleeds it leads and
> they specialize in bad news. Everybody will watch a car crash with blood and
> guts. How many will watch kids selling lemonade at the corner? The media
> knows this and media outlets are for-profit corporations. They offer what
> sells, and when criticized, try to defend their actions by 'justifying' them
> in one way or another. Just ask why they tried to allow a murderer like OJ
> Simpson to write a book about how he didn't kill his wife, but if he did he
> would have done it this way......Insane!
>
> Turn off the TV, burn Newsweek, and use the New York Times for the bottom
> of your bird cage. Then start being grateful for all we have as country.
> There is exponentially more good than bad. We are among the most blessed
> people on Earth and should thank God several times a day, or at least be
> thankful and appreciative. With hurricanes, tornados, fires out of
> control, mud slides, flooding, severe thunderstorms tearing up the country
> from one end to another, and with the threat of bird flu and terrorist
> attacks, are we sure this is a good time to take God out of the Pledge of
> Allegiance ?

I don't blame the media for making people discontented; I blame them for not informing the public with facts, but instead waving the flag and sounding the march to war, when they should have been asking "what's the reason for war and where is the evidence and why is ours the only government on earth who interprets the intelligence this way?" I blame them for unquestioningly endorsing administration claims because to do otherwise might be interpreted as unpatriotic and be bad for ratings. "With hurricanes, tornadoes, fires out of control, mud slides, flooding, severe thunderstorms tearing up the country from one end to another, and with the threat of bird flu and terrorist attacks," and with serious environmental, energy, and economic problems facing the US and the world we shouldn't be pissing away our wealth on an ill-conceived war; we should be prosecuting the criminals responsible for it, and we should all feel a sense of guilt for our waste and our disastrous actions against the people of Iraq.

>
> Jay Leno
>

Diversions for my short attention span

So, I've been slack here lately, but I've been blathering on nonetheless. So, here are a couple links to my remarks on someone else's nonsense.

http://www.charlestoncitypaper.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=47385
I think I wrote about another page re. this, but decided to be "brief."

http://southernavenger.ccpblogs.com/2008/06/27/the-left-conservative-ralph-nader-white-guilt-and-black-nationalism/

I was blown away by this guy's rants on "white guilt," which I assumed to be some fiction he created, but then discovered the guy he was criticizing actually endorsed a sense of guilt among whites as a step towards interracial harmony (whoa). But after reading enough of this guys rants about liberals and his bad (i think) arguments, I realized he's a ahhhh not to be taken seriously.