Friday, October 31, 2008

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion...."

A friend of mine, after six years of school and obtaining degrees in music and engineering, is now pursuing a graduate degree in theology at Berkeley. He raised a discussion on Proposition 8 citing all sorts of things regarding the family as a sociological construct and raising questions about the various arguments for and against gay marriage. I wanted to share my response to his ideas, because it seems I've had this conversation all too often in the past month or so:

The issue here on proposition 8 is not a sociological or theological one. It's not about unions and procreation or family integrity with only one type of parent. Proposition 8 brings to light a serious issue of civil liberties guaranteed in the U.S. constitution.

What's happened to spawn this issue is our government has failed us at both the state an federal level. The establishment clause in the first amendment guarantees freedom of religion by all citizens by enforcing freedom from a state religion. Because our culture is one of monogamy, the state has appropriated the term "marriage" from religion for the civil and legally binding contracts into which people enter, and this is a big problem.

When Christians thump their bibles and decry "gay rights" citing the "sanctity of marriage" they are confusing the sacrament and the secular contract. These are two very different things.

The state supreme court found that a ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional, based on our state constitution. The very idea of denying a significant minority basic civil rights based on a single quality that separates them from other was found to be what is is: legislating bigotry.

Propositions allow initiatives to bypass the legislature and go straight to voters, and basically what's going on is a special interest doesn't like the rules and is trying to change the game.

The proposition that should be on the ballot is one that would remove the term "marriage" from our state laws and tax system, replacing it with "civil union," as that is what it is, a contract. We should be leaving the sacrament of marriage to the churches, and if they would rather discriminate based on sexual orientation, (a very Christlike behavior, I might add) that's their prerogative.

The state does not enjoy such a luxury.

Besides, on the issue of procreation: homosexual unions are pro life. Think about it. The pope should reach deep into that hat of his and pull out some good old fashioned pragmatism.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Red Scare 2.0


Just hit play on the video and scroll down to read.

It seems that Senator McCain is continuing with his line of attacks that Senator Obama is a socialist. The Joe the Plumber fad is fading and the McCain camp is coiling back up, slithering through the neoconservative base and searching for anything that sits in line with their message to throw at his opponent. I could deal with Obama being an Elitist, a Muslim, a Sex Peddler, a Terrorist... but throwing around the term Socialist is bothersome.

It just brings out the feeling that the Neoconservatives that rule the right really do wish for the 1940's and '50s to return and remain in perpetuity. Think about it.

With Palin stumping about The Real America being the average the idealized Small Town America, something straight out of Maybury. Not to mention the fact that we have people lobbying to suppress the civil rights of a significant minority of the country, and trying to legislate christian values into our constitution.


Take a look into the Project for a New American Century (wikipedia)- the Neoconservative think tank that dreamt of World Dominance of the U.S. as an unchecked superpower. We've had our second Pearl Harbor in 9/11 -  in "Global Terror" we have a new menace on the equal of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. With the Patriot Act, we have the beginnings of a new McCarthyism, and now in the race to succeed the administration that put all of this into effect, we have one candidate calling the other a Socialist, hoping the word holds enough of its former power to stir enough fear in the voting masses.

This is not progress, but regression to an era where the citizens of the U.S. lived in fear daily. The Cold War is over, it's time to move on.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Propositions and Controversy

I haven't posted in a while, and it's really a tragedy because after the election, I'm going to have to look much harder to find stuff to write about. But, here's something to tide you over for a while. It turns out one of the channels I subscribe to on youtube is to a fellow who at least works in the sacramento area. The video is titled "Is gay marriage a two sided issue?"




What bothers me most is that this much attention is given to religious affiliation regarding a ballot measure, the focus of the news segment was on the PASTORS and their opinions.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Red Scare.

I've been lazy. I'm behind in my posting, and I'm a bit behind the times with this topic.

Over the past couple months, I've heard people toss around the accusations that Obama is guilty of trying to incite class warfare. This, combined with anything that requires social responsibility labeled as "Communist" or "Socialist" is meant to scare people out of left leaning ideas. 

I'm sorry, but what? Take a second and look at what's going on in the political scene right now. You have two parties, one made up of mainly middle class, with the majority of the party base being liberal, college educated adults. The second party consists of two very disparate groups, the "working class" who pride themselves as "values voters" and the rich who want to remain rich and not waste their money on social programs. I had originally intended to contrast the first group with fiscal conservatives, but it seems we're fresh out, seeing as our government has run our debt clock up to $10 trillion.

Wow, I'm not biased at all. 

Then again, we've always had some disjunct in America - the terms blue collar and white collar go back quite a ways. The accusations of Obama trying to incite class warfare by pitting the lower and middle classes against the rich are made out of the fear that the richest maybe 5% of Americans won't benefit form outrageous tax cuts any longer.


My question is who orchestrated the giant schism between the middle and working classes?

Since when in this modern age has a college education made you an elitist? How did we arrive at the term "Elite Media?" and how does that exclude Rupert Murdoch's Newscorp and FOX news? How does the Republican Party survive an economic crisis when it is composed of two fundamentally different economic groups, and spouts economic policies that benefit the smaller at great cost to the larger?

Maybe I read too much Marx or Gramsci in college, but it seems like evidence of manipulation by a ruling class. Whenever something comes up that benefits the majority of Americans, like socialized healthcare, or higher taxes (less tax breaks for the wealthy) to fund social programs, it's labeled as wealth redistribution and slapped with a title we're conditioned to fear: Socialism. (about 1:20 in the video)


It seems Americans have a high tolerance for income disparity, preferring equality in opportunity versus equality in outcome like they have in Europe.

I've been doing some reading on economics to try and understand more of what's been going on. Generally, I've gotten by by listening to Roy go on and on while we climb and try and pick things up from NPR, but I recently found Robert Reich's blog and I'm going to lift something straight for that. The post is titled Are we headed for another Great Depression?
Probably not. But go back 75 years and you'll find eerie similarities. Marriner S. Eccles who served as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Chairman of the Federal Reserve from November, 1934 to February, 1948 gave his view of what caused the Depression in his memoirs, "Beckoning Frontiers" (New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1951):
As mass production has to be accompanied by mass consumption, mass consumption, in turn, implies a distribution of wealth -- not of existing wealth, but of wealth as it is currently produced -- to provide men with buying power equal to the amount of goods and services offered by the nation s economic machinery. Instead of achieving that kind of distribution, a giant suction pump had by 1929-30 drawn into a few hands an increasing portion of currently produced wealth. This served them as capital accumulations. But by taking purchasing power out of the hands of mass consumers, the savers denied to themselves the kind of effective demand for their products that would justify a reinvestment of their capital accumulations in new plants. In consequence, as in a poker game where the chips were concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, the other fellows could stay in the game only by borrowing. When their credit ran out, the game stopped.

That is what happened to us in the twenties. We sustained high levels of employment in that period with the aid of an exceptional expansion of debt outside of the banking system. This debt was provided by the large growth of business savings as well as savings by individuals, particularly in the upper-income groups where taxes were relatively low. Private debt outside of the banking system increased about fifty per cent. This debt, which was at high interest rates, largely took the form of mortgage debt on housing, office, and hotel structures, consumer installment debt, brokers' loans, and foreign debt. The stimulation to spending by debt-creation of this sort was short-lived and could not be counted on to sustain high levels of employment for long periods of time. Had there been a better distribution of the current income from the national product -- in other words, had there been less savings by business and the higher-income groups and more income in the lower groups -- we should have had far greater stability in our economy. Had the six billion dollars, for instance, that were loaned by corporations and wealthy individuals for stock-market speculation been distributed to the public as lower prices or higher wages and with less profits to the corporations and the well-to-do, it would have prevented or greatly moderated the economic collapse that began at the end of 1929.

The time came when there were no more poker chips to be loaned on credit. Debtors thereupon were forced to curtail their consumption in an effort to create a margin that could be applied to the reduction of outstanding debts. This naturally reduced the demand for goods of all kinds and brought on what seemed to be overproduction, but was in reality underconsumption when judged in terms of the real world instead of the money world. This, in turn, brought about a fall in prices and employment.

Unemployment further decreased the consumption of goods, which further increased unemployment, thus closing the circle in a continuing decline of prices. Earnings began to disappear, requiring economies of all kinds in the wages, salaries, and time of those employed. And thus again the vicious circle of deflation was closed until one third of the entire working population was unemployed, with our national income reduced by fifty per cent, and with the aggregate debt burden greater than ever before, not in dollars, but measured by current values and income that represented the ability to pay. Fixed charges, such as taxes, railroad and other utility rates, insurance and interest charges, clung close to the 1929 level and required such a portion of the national income to meet them that the amount left for consumption of goods was not sufficient to support the population.

This then, was my reading of what brought on the depression.
Those in power should look at history much more closely, or at least pay some people to do it for them, it'd be good for the economy.

Monday, October 6, 2008

The Alpine Wordsmith

Two weekends past, I made my sixth ascent up Pyramid Peak. It was an overnight backpacking trip with Mike and Mark, Roy and the Canns. John Allen Cann is Cody's "Poet Laureate" and I don't think I have to explain why. He wrote several poems on the way up, stopping to catch his breath and pulling out his notebook to sketch things down.

He sent me a poem titled "In the Aftermath of the Mountain." I couldn't resist sharing it with everyone.

 

What climbing

the tallest mountain around

 means

only comes clear

after the soreness fades

 

and you’ve resumed

your participation

       in the workaday world---

You forget somewhat

the grueling feat

 

of staring at your boots

& trudging

       grudgingly

one step

after another---

 

the pack on your back

growing 

inconsolably heavy

       since no peak

in this part of the universe

is yours unless you sleep on it

 

gazing at the stars

sequestered from the wind

       in a rockrimmed foxhole

so the slow dawnfire

can alchemize your memory forever.

 

All the grimaces

borne of the severe steepness

       going up

followed by the harsh descent

of the last measure

 

on wobbly legs 

relax

       into an interior smile

doubtless shared

by those who fellowed you on the climb.


A mountain matters

most in the mind

       only after the body

has been sacrificed

to its beautiful demands.

Playing ball.

As a lobotomized member of the cult of Obama, I am doing my duty to post and spread this propaganda in a smear campaign against Senator McCain. Unfortunately the guilt by association isn't as strong as the wrong doing of his own actions in this one, but you know, we've got a long ways to go before we can catch up with the McCain Campaign and conjuring lies and smears out of thin air .

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Veep.

The VP debates are tomorrow. I've discovered something that I wanted to share, something from the VP debates of 1992, before Al Gore said "Let there be internet!"




"Harry Truman, it’s worth remembering, assumed the presidency when Franklin Roosevelt died here in Georgia--only one of many occasions when fate thrust a vice-president into the Oval Office in a time of crisis. It’s something to think about during the debate this evening. But our real discussion is going to be about change. Bill Clinton and I stand for change because we don’t believe our nation can stand four more years of what we’ve had under George Bush and Dan Quayle. When the recession came, they were like a deer caught in the headlights, paralysed into inaction, blinded to the suffering and pain of bankruptcies and people who are unemployed. We have an environmental crisis, a health-insurance crisis, substandard education. It is time for a change."

Senator Gore's remarks are rather familiar, aren't they? It seems that the only way to get a Bush out of office is to campaign on a platform of change. It's funny because Quayles remarks and warnings about a Clinton presidency are the same things the McCain camp is saying.

The Truman/Kennedy business struck me as odd, so I found out what they were referencing.



He may not be Jack Kennedy, but try that comparison on Palin. Quayle is looking like a champ these days.

I was 5 years old in 1988. That was 5 election cycles ago. Those debates in '92? I was in third grade. It's important to realize how much of history will repeat itself if we're not careful.

Free Market Blues

This was too brilliant to pass up.