Sunday, October 16, 2011

wRONg PAULitics! ...why Ron Paul is not the 99%

One of the great things about the 99% is that it's so inclusive, all individuals are truly welcome and can have their voices heard. But aside from the 1% there are a few other considerations for those who are thinking, and acting in radically democratic ways. For example, it's not cool to come to rallies and marches drunk, high, or in possession of recreational drugs or alcohol. It would be TOTALLY inappropriate to speak at a rally or use the peoples microphone for racist hate speech, MEL GIBSON! And of course it would be downright douche-y to endorse your company or product while addressing an occupy crowd. What has been a source of confusion and contention is the political activity of campaigners, or those who endorse a specific candidate and/or agenda and effectively represent that group and it's strategy. They do not come to the events and cyber hubs of the occupy movement as individuals, but as representatives of that group and/or agenda, often with the only goal of recruiting people to their more limited causes and remedies.

Of these groups one stands above them all in their concerted effort to corral the 99% into their ranks to adopt their agenda and strategy, and that group is made up of Ron Paul supporters who effectively campaign on his behalf. This may have had something to do with the deadline for GOP registration being October 14, of course the Paul campaign wants as many people registered GOP as possible so his odds of winning the Republican nomination increase. There's nothing new about this, and if there's anything "wrong" with it, it's that it's business as usual politics. In fact, Ron Paul has for years been recruiting those on the left whom he can convince that his agenda is also their agenda, based on a few overlapping issues. Those issues are primarily the ongoing wars and military bases around the globe, abolishing corporate person-hood, and the goal to end the Federal Reserve banking Money-opoly. And those ideas are already a BIG part of the 99% agenda, so of course anyone can come discuss those issues and bring any idea to the table. But why should those ideas be called Ron Pauls' ideas?

I have attempted to engage in dialog with many of the people who leave Ron Paul links on Occupy Facebook pages, or bring Ron Paul campaign signs to 99% events, and it always goes the same. They tell me that Ron Paul wants what I want, that he has been "fighting the good fight" for decades, and that he is all about "Freedom" and "Liberty." And when I try to tell them that I don't want everything Paul wants, and that I have different ideas about "Freedom" and "Liberty" they go into straw man mode, accusing me of advocating things I never even eluded to. As if I can only TOTALLY agree with Ron Paul, or TOTALLY disagree with him on each and every issue, you're with him or against him. But I believe the majority on the left simply see right through Ron Pauls' gratuitous rhetoric about war, the issue that made him popular on the left during the Bush years when we needed allies on the right to oppose war. And he makes a lot of sense when he talks about the crimes of our nation, not because he's so smart or such a great guy but simply because he's talking about it at all.

So he has some good ideas, so do I, and so do the 99%. So he can tell us that our wars and military policy are wrong, we knew that already no matter how refreshing it is to hear in a republican primary debate. So he has been a life long champion of the cause to end the Federal Reserve, no offense, but so have a lot of us and altogether none of us have achieved this goal thus far through the normal channels of "democracy." So you might think that Ron Paul and his supporters would be overwhelmed with joy knowing they have common goals with the 99%? But their greater goal is to elect Ron Paul for president, and they only see these common goals as opportunities to bring more voters into their fold. So when we talk to them the conversation always short circuits back to Ron Paul, and the strategy is limited to voting for him, a political dead end. Let's face it, Ron Paul will never be the president of the United States, just as Ralph Nader will never be the president, and I knew that when I voted for him. But Ron Paul supporters don't seem to know this, they actually think Paul could win the popular vote, if only the corrupt system would let him.

So their goal is for us to register as GOP voters, and vote for Ron Paul in the primaries. Then IF he wins the primary, vote for him for president, then IF he wins the presidency he will end the wars and end the Fed. Hooray! But wait, what else will he do? He won't bring us universal health care, he claims that's socialism and socialism doesn't work. He may or may not deal with Wall St. beyond breaking up the Fed, but he is 100% for "Free Market Capitalism" which is conservative code for "Unfettered capitalism" which could also be called "Ungoverned Capitalism". Why would you want to remove the rule of law from the market place, isn't that called anarchy? If we apply the "Unfettered" concept to criminal law it would be the law of the jungle, when we apply the same concept to the military we get martial law, why would we want such a savage economic system? I don't hear the wealthy saying we need to remove murder barriers, why remove trade barriers? Ron Paul supporters would dismiss us as mistaking capitalism for "corporatism", I think we know the difference. But they don't seem to understand the difference between "Free Trade" (an oxymoron) and "Fair Trade" a level playing field in which they might actually fail.

I don't need to tackle his whole agenda before I decide whether Ron Paul qualifies to "represent" me, and I know the difference between people joining the discussion as campaigners as oppose to individuals. We are all the 99% as individuals, not as representatives of groups, politicians, corporations, etc. This is not a "rule" and there is no "forcing" people one way or the other. But I know that if I brought my pop up tent and folding table and started selling my wares at an occupy event that I would not be the 99%, I would be selfishly exploiting the opportunity for my short term economic gain. I don't want to see political canvassing, tabling, or campaigning in the occupy movement anymore than I want to see Fedex style product placement from corporations. I don't want to see political parties recruiting voters any more than I want to see the branches of the military recruiting soldiers among the discontent, despondent youth in the movement. I sincerely have no problem with Ron Paul or his supporters, but as a group, as a campaign, as a unified front with a singular goal, I'd rather they not try to co-opt this movement to their own ends. It's hard to discuss alternatives to our current system when people are trying to convince you to give it another shot.

We are all the 99% as individuals, so please check your Ron Paulitics at the door.

Here is an example of guidelines established for Occupy Wall St. forums, in this case the Global Revolution live stream chat, which has hosted one of the most vibrant and rapid interactions of any online forum:


"We are here for one purpose ...to support the OWS and new occupations..
we do not discuss politics...political candidates...religion...or any other isms..
this is because those topics...bring division and conflict ...and we will not be distracted
if you want to talk about money...or the fed..or the wars...or taxes.. there are other places to do that ..
we have been using these rules for 30 days now... and the make this a safe productive space..
we do not bash anyone...
no racsim...sexism...or any other bigetry is allowed..
HATE, VIOLENCE and ILLEGAL ACTS or DRUGS  talk...will get you a perma ban ..
we ask for mutual respect and focus :)
we love and thank every one of you!
when we ban...it is not personal...it is just keeping things on track..
please only share related links...
no personal promotion is allowed...
there are fake donation sites...so be careful :)
please dont spam... it makes it too fast.."

~Global Revolution live stream chat admins.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

A Radical Proposal for a Rational World

The cry has gone out across the country, as it reverberates around the world, there is a revolution on the rise and the buzz is undeniable. As many have been witnessing the destruction of our democracy, our infrastructure, and our planet, it has finally come to the breaking point. While many in the US media have been wondering "What's everyone so upset about?", the rest of the world is wondering "What took you so long?" Those of us in the US are just a fraction of the true 99%, but we have a special responsibility to change our system enough that it ceases to manipulate the rest of the world. The 99% are global, whether they realize it yet or not, if we don't seize the moment to make a world of true global equality, we have failed the greater achievement. Now is the time for a dialogue about what steps can be made towards a better world, as well as making radical revisions of a global society without compromise. Those with ideas must come forward now because the whole world is watching, and listening, and we have got plenty to say. Occupy Earth!

So here is my wish list of demands, each one a link to a previous post elaborating or including the idea.


We need to do democracy right!

We need to do money right!
  • Tear down this Wall St! We're tired of playing Moneyopoly, can we play something else now? The Free Market has spoken, now it's our turn. See Also: Money-opoly
  • Boycott Money! It's time we listened to our wisest fore-fathers who repeatedly warned us about big, centralized, banking institutions. Money IS a monopoly! Alternative and local currencies are the solution! See Also: Providing Jobs in a Matter of Hours
  • No More Super Rich! That's right, I didn't say "No more tax cuts for the rich" We need to recapitulate (and cap) wealth in the world to limit income disparities as FDR suggested in his proposed "Economic Bill of Rights." See Also:  World Wide Strike, Moneyopoly, and The True Sleeping Giant; and from my other blog 'Pagan Jesus Freak' Two Golden Rules, and Grief and Joy
  • Everyone gets a Home! Millions of people are being thrown from there homes by the banks who took our tax money! Everyone deserves a home, JUST ONE!!! For those of you who shrill at the notion of being limited to just one house, please juxtapose that scenario with the millions of people who are losing their ONLY home, some even now as you read this.

We need to do "Rights" right!

We need to wake up from the American dream!

These are just some ideas I've been working on much of my life and I've been publishing them in recent years in anticipation of the right movement. This is that movement, I don't claim to have the message for the entire 99%, but if we do not all contribute our pieces of the puzzle we will never get to see the bigger picture. The media is asking for a message, we know there is a message and they just don't want to hear it. But that's why we need to spell it out for them, literally. We need to discuss our deepest visions for a better world and we better get it on right away. The mainstream media may not listen but a lot of people are listening, and talking, and it's time we have that discussion. So, have ya heard about these Occupy Wall St. people?

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Agree to Dis-Argue

I have always disliked debates, not because I lose but because I can win if I want to. Or, more precisely, because of what it takes to win. As a natural debater I grew up taking on every challenge that came my way, despite my mothers wise council to choose my battles carefully. I quickly realized that there was a big difference between "winning" a debate, and being "right", and the winner rarely determined the more accurate view point. A debate, is really a fight by other means and by another name, and though we are more civilized for fighting in this way, it's still essentially a metaphoric battle to the death not unlike the games of ancient Rome. But instead of mortally wounding our bodies, we fight with our minds, or maybe ego is more to the point.

And it's all about points, the sharper the better. When one engages in a debate, they tend to see their opponent as living in a "bubble" of delusion, and it is up to us, for their own sake, to burst their bubble. In this bubble world there are some base assumptions, almost like a world view or creation myth, there is one great bubble called reality. When we see others forming a bubble around themselves that allows them to believe an unauthorized belief, idea, or theory, it is our duty to the great bubble called reality, that we sharpen our swords, words, minds, and get ready to burst some bubbles. We can even tell ourselves that anyone who disagrees with us and whatever authority we identify with, is a threat to us and maybe the world at large. This is sometimes the case when people and groups have counter agendas, and they may find themselves constantly blocked by one another seeking only to free the obstacles in their own path.

Open debates in the general public, rather than between two individuals, are more democratic and lateral, and less bent on winning or losing but instead on informing both sides. It's when we pit ego against ego that we bring out the worst in people, and in ourselves if we are the ones in the arena. You may not be the aggressor, you may not be a mud slinger, but you will be dragged down into the mud and may find yourself justifying some mud slinging as retaliatory. Great, except most people were turning away in disgust and lost track of who started hitting below the belt, and does it really matter? Listen to any two respected figures in any field engage in a highly informed debate, and count the seconds before one of them says "Excuse me, can I finish?" It never ceases to amaze me how childish men and women in their later years can become when they are engaged in a heated debate.

In the mechanics of debate the sword fight analogy is uncanny in it's accuracy. The mind is often represented in metaphor as the sword of the intellect, slicing the world into its' component parts: higher/lower, left/right, inner/outer. Ideally one has the sharper sword, the sharper point, and when a point is sharp it makes clean cuts. But sometimes we know that our point is not sharp, but we are invested in the outcome of the debate and we feel we must win. And what does it take to win a sword fight with a dull point? One must use great force if they wish to pierce the armor, flesh, and bone of their opponent, and when this occurs the cut is not clean. Unlike when a sharp sword pierces flesh and bone, the dull point breaks and tears the flesh and brutally crushes and chips the bone creating more of a hole than a cut. A person is less likely to recover from such a wound and the pain is tenfold that of the sharper, cleaner cut.

Another great metaphor is the landscape analogy: the field of ideas, facts, theories, beliefs, etc. is like a giant landscape stretching as far as the eye can see in every direction. In this mental landscape it becomes necessary to distinguish between a "point" and a "claim." When one makes a point they are metaphorically pointing at some other place however near or far from where they stand. They are in no way invested in this idea they refer to, but merely pose the question "But what of this?" When one makes a "claim" it is not unlike the minors of the California gold rush, staking their claims on a position they are willing to fight and die for. And perhaps when we seek to simply be "understood" we are asking one to simply stand where we stand and see the view from here. When one can simply see the others point, or see the world from their unique position, there is potential for understanding and tolerance, even if we choose to dwell on different points.

So among individuals, friends, acquaintances, Facebook friends and groups, it's better to pass up most, if not all debates. It's too easy to get sucked into debates, especially online. Whether you're just answering a simple question or if you decided just to put your two cents in, you may find like a gambling addict that you've managed to waste a lot more than two cents. And just like a casino, your chances of "winning" were somewhat random no matter your skill, knowledge, or experience. Perhaps this point is debatable, but it may be best just to agree to disagree before you agree to argue. Sometimes you find that you can't stop a debate once it starts, it becomes a monster constantly taunting your ego to fight like a man. Maybe the level of discourse has even sunk so low on your opponents part that you wonder if the mask of civility is off and if perhaps the proverbial gloves should come off as well. When you come to this point where you can no longer simply agree to disagree, try this instead:
Agree to dis-argue.

And remember, social skills are survival skills after all.

btw, if you feel like a winner, click on the sword fight image above to collect your prize.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

The Assassin President

Does it strike anyone else as ironic that the President who was most under the threat of assassination from the time of his campaign through the first year of his presidency has become the assassination president? There was a time when you would hesitate to put the words "Assassination" and "President" in the same sentence, but now we have a sitting president who is synonymous with "Assassination." His targeting of "Al Queda" suspects using pilotless drones has been an on-going policy from his first day on the job and now he's eliminated his primary target. To amplify the irony Obamas' name was purposefully confused with "Osama" during his campaign and it's very common for people to mix up the two. No doubt at least one small town paper ran the headlines "Osama kills Obama", it's only one letter off after all. So if you were the first African American president who has received more death threats than any other president, would you promote assassination as an acceptable way to resolve conflicts?

Many people can justify the assassination of Osama under the eye for an eye system of justice, reasoning that Bin Laden assassinated others so he has received his due. Following this logic, is Obama himself not deserving of assassination? If I'm writing this as intended it should be ringing some alarm bells with the internet surveillance firms contracted by the government to find potential threats. So perhaps I should implicitly state that I do not wish assassination of any president, or anyone else, on the contrary I believe all presidents should be brought to justice in the International Criminal Court. Including, if not especially president Barack Obama for the crime of multiple extra judicial assassinations, someone must stop this serial killer before he strikes again. Noam Chomsky has asked us to imagine Iraqi commandos landing in George W. Bushs' compound, assassinating him, and dumping his body into the Atlantic. This would also be unacceptable, George Bush should be put on trial and convicted of his many crimes against humanity. That Obama quickly ruled out justice for Bush administration criminals makes him an accomplice at best.

I was not a "fan" of Bin Laden, though I believed little of what I have been told about him. I believe he was killed not for his crimes, but for the crimes of the US that he might reveal if captured alive. Osama Bin Laden and Saddam Hussein were both extremely valuable witnesses for the trials against Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld that should (but may never) take place. If Hussein was to be executed it should only have taken place after these other trials. And if Obama had dedicated himself to justice for the Bush era crimes, he would be facing a very weakened Republican opposition after many of the crimes and accomplices had been revealed and punished. A true examination of the crimes of Republicans in general would essentially eliminate them from having any further political role in the future. The party that claimed, funded, and supported Bush and his policies should have been treated the same way the Bathists were treated following the fall of Saddam. Or they should at least be treated the same way they treated the Clintons during Whitewater/Lewinsky affairs. Once again, if Osama got what he deserved, why then don't US government officials get what they deserve?

Barack Obama is not completely ignorant of his karmic footprint, he must know that he is still and always will be a target for assassination, it comes with the job after all. And if you believe in a kind of karmic, "comes around goes around" philosophy how can one not simply predict and expect the ultimate outcome to result in the assassination of Barack Obama? And if/when this occurs will anyone say "Hey, he assassinated a lot of people, so he got what was coming to him"? OK, I, and possibly Noam Chomsky will say that, but most people will hold him to an entirely different standard. If Obama were assassinated today people would still have a hard time putting it together, or recognizing the irony. The same news outlets and pundits who have been openly celebrating the assassination of Osama, would declare Obama's assassination to be a tragedy. Those who now look with scorn at anyone who would oppose the assassination of Osama, would look with the same scorn on anyone who would agree with the assassination of Obama. If we the people truly believe in justice, we would all join together to oppose assassination in general.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

US UK BP Coalition of the Drilling

It has recently come to light that the British government met with the heads of BP and Royal Dutch Shell in late 2002 to secretly discuss Britain's policy toward Iraqi oil reserves. At the same time Tony Blair was brushing off any notion of Britain's interest in Iraq's oil as "One of the most absurd conspiracy theories you can imagine" a secret document in the Foreign office stated "Britain has an absolutely vital interest in Iraq's oil." Is anyone shocked to learn that we invaded Iraq for oil and not to spread democracy as we were told? Is anyone surprised to learn that BP has that much power in both the UK and the US? I mean it was basically BP that got us in the business of staging coups when Britain asked for our help to overthrow the democratically elected leader of Iran in 1953. Since that first fabulously successful coup our CIA has helped out hundreds of companies by subverting democracy around the globe.

Is it possible that our governments at the highest levels are actually serving the will of the rich and powerful corporations, and especially the energy goliaths in the coal, gas, oil, and nuclear industries? It is possible, and probable, and with all of the evidence it's beyond improbable that our governments were ever intended to serve anyone but the most powerful people and companies. So why should a company as tightly connected in the nexus of government and industry take all necessary precautions when pursuing greater and greater profits? If you feel I'm being cynical, ask yourself this: What price has BP paid for it's deep water disaster one year ago? Now ask yourself what price the people of that region have paid and continue to pay? We as tax payers will pay and pay for the endless ripple effects of such a disaster. And sadly, ultimately, What price does the environment pay? Our governments, supposedly designed to keep powers in check, are so completely corrupted that the will of the people is the only thing in check.

If it seems like corporations are acting as though they own the world, well they kind of do own the world, or at least they lease it for pennies on the dollar. And as long as we live in a world of property rights over human rights we might as well just hand them everything and beg for their mercy on our pathetic souls. The two main tactics the Republicans (and too often Democrats) employ are deregulation and privatization, essentially handing over everything to the ones who are supposed to be regulated. How long can we watch this go on before we realize that this is the opposite of what we are told our government does. "Regulate" and "Govern" are synonyms, deregulation is ungovernment. Privatization of the commons gives away the apparatus of the state so that there is nothing left to govern, to regulate. If there ever was a true regulatory body in government it has been completely replaced by conspirators in a corporate coup d'etat.

Democrats in office are at best co-conspirators in this epic crime and they're only criticism of privatization is that it should be instead called "Public/private partnerships" so that we the people will have a harder time catching on to the fire sale they have made of government. The two party system has co-opted democracy and the energy industry has co-opted the government, even Mr. Hope and Change was quickly brought into the fold of this criminal syndicate. There may be some "Heroes" in the Democratic party but they are bound and gagged as are we the people, good guys simply aren't allowed to do good things. It's only when one aligns oneself to the agendas of "Big oil" that they are truly allowed to function in government. We have a secret opaque center to our supposedly transparent government that makes the real decisions about exactly how to steer the ship of state. Generally speaking, when a republican is president he is "The most powerful man in the world" and when it's a Democrat, especially a do-gooder Democrat, the president is the biggest prisoner in the world, and every effort ends in fruitless failure.

So take a look at what's happening now in a small town called Benton Harbor, Michigan where the governor recently pushed through a bill allowing corporations to completely take over local townships if they are determined to be in "Fiscal crisis." Maybe you haven't noticed but the majority of local governments are in fiscal crisis and by no fault of their own. Local governments are not unlike we the people, they can't do anything to stop Wall street from robbing them blind or to get BP to adequately compensate the people of the Gulf coast region. So it's the criminal behavior of Wall street that put us all in this mess, and now the corporations are rewarded with the wholesale acquisition of entire towns. Benton Harbor is the first victim, the governor Rick Snyder appointed an "emergency financial manager" to usurp all political power and dismiss all elected officials. This has always been the plan, the corporate coup d'etat, to destroy the economy and then declare a fiscal crisis so great that we all just sit and watch our democracy be dismantled piece by piece. It's time we realize that our democracy is a false democracy, "representatives" will sell us down the river every time.

Direct Democracy Now!

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Open Source Government

From Wikipedia:
"Open source governance is a political philosophy which advocates the application of the philosophies of the open source and open content movements to democratic principles in order to enable any interested citizen to add to the creation of policy, as with a wiki document. Legislation is democratically opened to the general citizenry in this way, allowing policy development to benefit from the collected wisdom of the people as a whole."

For those of you who have not heard the term "Open Source" or never really understood what it meant, it is well described by Wikipedia.org. Wikipedia is also a good example of an open source system, anyone can access and/or add to the content, disagree with or correct errors. At first it seemed too vulnerable to manipulation, if someone can simply change the facts they don't agree with the whole reference system may break down into chaos. But that didn't happen. Will you find inaccuracies and biased content? Sure, but you and millions of other people will be there to correct it, so the long term consistency is much more true to reality. When I look through an old dictionary, or encyclopedia I get frustrated when I see old, outdated information that has obvious biased, sometimes even lending to or undermining the validity of certain ideas and agendas. There's nothing we the people can do to change that, those old books are almost fascist in their final judgement, the dictionary is the dictator of language. Open source returns power back to the people.

Open source governance is also well described on Wikipedia, but you could think of it as Wikigovernment. Nothing could be more democratic than to give everyone administrative powers with zero compensation. The way our governments are now structured a great deal of power is in the hands of the covert players in the secret core of influence and espionage, we'll never know just how much power as long as they operate behind this veil. Americas' idealistic beginnings gave promise of a right to privacy and an open form of government, opaque people and transparent state. In our modern world of electronic communications our governments (with the help of the communications corporations) can, and often do access our private information. Before the turn of the century the idea of the government listening in on our phone conversations seemed unlikely and yet very draconian if it were true. We never knew for sure, but now we know that we're being spied on for a fact, and by act of congress. Somehow that american promise went from "opaque people/transparent state" to "opaque state/transparent people.

Why should we have such unrestrained access to government policy? Corporations do. What is referred to as "lobbying" in Washington DC, is a process of accessing and manipulating policy. Anyone (in theory) is allowed to walk up to a congress member and express his or her ideas and opinions, so when's the last time you flew to DC to make sure your voice was being heard? You can call your representatives, just a few, and they may even make a sticky note just for you, but they have a lot of sticky notes and they don't work a lot of over time. Either way, it effectively acts as a filtration system, creating unnecessary barriers for the average person to present a new idea, or challenge an outdated one. There are many non-profit organizations who use their influence to lobby for some of these changes, but they also act as a layer of this filtration system because the average person has no influence over their agendas either. Why must we join together in groups to express ourselves in mutual consensus? Are we somehow less valid as unique individuals? Shouldn't the merit of a single idea, be able to attract those who can appreciate it, without a context associating it with a group or agenda?

A little over a year ago the supreme court decided in the citizens united case that corporations are "people" with all of the rights of people, they can't vote but if you had the money would you rather vote for a candidate, or fund their campaign? Corporations now have the "right" to do just that, they already have their corporate puppets sitting in the peoples' seats of power all over the country. And no surprise they're attacking the unions, the only thorn left in their side. Of course corporations aren't "people", they can't be arrested and put in jail, and they've tinkered with the legal system making it harder to sue them for compensation when they cause negligent harm. They can cheat on their taxes and still walk away with multi-million dollar bonuses. If they were "people" they would walk as giants among us, with super human strength and no natural predators. We are mere ants under their feet, we merely bother them with our cries for justice, peace, and true equality. We as individuals and even in large groups have little hope of countering the agendas' of this league of super people. Many of us real people have awakened from the american dream and it's getting harder and harder to deny the corporate coup d'etat that has claimed the power we the people are not using.

Imagine the majority of people who disagree with the citizens united ruling actually being able to access that decision and cite it's many flaws and over time with majority consensus overturn this obvious giveaway of our democracy. Perhaps you prefer the odds you have now to change this legislation, if you believe it can be done through the same system that implemented and enforced it, by all means prove it. But I'd prefer we the people all have a hand on the wheel, even if it's a struggle to guide the ship of state, at least we know that no one giant has it's finger on the scale. There is no need for politicians, there's really no need for nations or corporations. We the people can be the government we wish to create, and a true pursuit of democracy will lead us to this more perfect form of government. But we must put down the american dream, the attachment to patriarchal idolatry, the need to have a big father figure directing us from above. Democracy is not hierarchal but lateral, this is expressly implied by the concept of "one person, one vote". But in a world where our votes are undermined and channeled through a few non-choices, the time has come to upgrade democracy to be more modern, more responsive, more true.

We the people are ready to govern, do it yourself politics!

Sunday, March 13, 2011

The True Sleeping Giant

The alarm is ringing and ringing, will it wake the sleeping giant? It's true that we in the bubble of america have been living in a dream, the american dream. And like most dreams, it quickly becomes a nightmare when we refuse to wake up. Our american dream has always been the nightmare of the rest of the planet, including most of the united states. But the sleeping giant that is now awakening is not the american middle class, or even the american worker, it's the workers of the world. If we keep isolating humans with the false walls of nationalism we will fail to realize the true potential for this moment in time. What is happening in Wisconsin has spilled over into almost every neighboring state and no person can deny the spirit that binds our mid west uprisings with the north african uprisings.

Some are saying the sleeping giant of the american middle class is awakening. It's absolutely crucial at this time that we drop this reference to the american middle class, this is not about any middle class. This is about the workers of the world rising up to throw off their corporate masters, to flush out the parasites of capitalism across the planet. I know that the phrase "middle class" has a powerful effect in our political rhetoric, but it's used as a distraction from a far more realistic model. We hear the phrase "middle class" so much, especially during election seasons, but when do we hear the phrase "lower class" or "upper class"? These phrases have a powerful effect in our rhetoric also, a very different kind of effect. If you just dropped down to earth in the middle of the last election season you might think there were no upper or lower classes, just one big middle class. And it sounds like a world without much conflict doesn't it? We're all just one big happy class.

Do I want to create division where none exists? No. Do I want to create unity where none exists?Hell Yes! Many people who lived their whole lives thinking they were a part of this big middle class have found that in fact, they are poor and they can no longer deny it. Usually when you hear the phrase "middle class" it is a call for them to be treated fairly in our state and local budgets, and not get stuck with the bill when the super rich cause a deficit. You might think it's a given that the poor are a part of this calculation, that of course they too should be treated fairly, but they are not. In fact, politicians aren't really that concerned about the poor, it's the middle class that they're sometimes looking out for. And if you want to be specific, and/or partisan, it's the Democrats who try to look out for the middle class and sometimes the poor and the republicans who look out for the super rich. But democrats are afraid to mention poverty because the republicans (on behalf of the rich and mostly via fox news) start screaming "Socialism!", "Entitlement!", "Distribution of wealth!!!"

But where is it written that a class system has three tiers? You could just as easily cut it in half and call it upper and lower, but it would be far better if we made a less arbitrary line. There are only two classes in reality: Workers and Owners. Unlike the caste system one can change classes but this is the exception, called "new money" among the upper class. Most workers admit that if they suddenly struck it filthy rich they would never work another day in their life, would you? I love my work, but... I might focus on my labors of love, like writing and playing music, but I wouldn't be as motivated to do what I now do to pay the bills. On the flip side, if I grew up in the top 10%, the creme of the american crop, I might take some symbolic positions to look like a functional part of society, but executive jobs are not "work" the way the average american defines it. You won't find an executive office in a corporate headquarters anywhere in the country without office chairs that cost over $1000, have you ever sat in a $1000 office chair? It's tough work, if you can get it.

I dream of a future where former corporate executives and board members have to lie and say they worked in the mail room at Goldman Sachs just to get a little respect. And another future is possible if the workers of the world unite, we can throw off those who drain us and keep us weak and divided. We must unite across all borders and not fall into the trap of nationalism. We must form universal bonds of solidarity and be prepared to stand with workers everywhere against the unjust men and laws that bind them. If we are to wake up to anything, it should be a world united as one, with equal rights and equal democracy for all people. Americans are not better, or special, in fact america is the dream, and it's over. There never was a thing called america, it was all just maps and banners, paper and ink. Nobody ever dug out the earth with a giant american shaped cookie cutter and said, "here's america." It's all in our minds, there are no lines on the planet, just rivers and mountains and oceans and deserts, and people, plants, animals, etc...

Think about it, the upper class has horded so much wealth, that a true redistribution of wealth could potentially wipe out poverty all over the planet.