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A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others)

A Dog Named Buff (This is not a musing about a general topic like the others) The article about the dog who waited by the highway mont...

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Suh Reversal No NFL Surprise

Suh Reversal No NFL Surprise

Anyone remotely familiar with the unregulated monopoly called the NFL knew the Suh incident would be given the usual disingenuous treatment by the NFL. The goal of the NFL owners is simply to make the most money possible. That is the bottom line. Remember, there are 1696 players in the NFL and 32 owners. Each group gets roughly the same percentage of the profits. If we think players, at least the top players are making way too much money, then just imagine the amount of money being made by the 32 owners. From the same profit the owners, per owner, get 53 times as much money. It is not quite so lopsided in that I believe the owners do have some hefty expenses like coaches salaries, stadium upkeep, and so on. BUT, how much this impacts depends on what profits are being delved up in the labor negotiations. If TV revenues are part of the profit, then the case is as unfair as I am portraying it. Nothing is ever self evident in professional sports. And no one is watching over them to any extent. Even if you are wealthy enough to buy a team you can’t unless the cabal of existing owners think you are going to play the game as they already do. You have to be voted in by existing owners. 

But let us return to Suh. The owners are not particularly concerned with Suh or any other players. Suh is a good player for Detroit. Having Suh play in a playoff game translates into big money for the Detroit owner and the league. The game will be much more competitive with Suh playing and more money will roll in and the interest in football maintained. But the league knows it need give the public perception of not approving opposing players stomping on, stepping on, banging an opponents head on the turf while down, etc. The owners don’t want that either, up to a point. And of course the point always boils down to money. 

So here we are in the playoffs and Suh comes up with this new try-to-injure a downed player twist. He has already done all the rest of the more obvious techniques.  It fools hardly anyone. Standing on someone’s leg and then switching legs to push off on the same opponents injured leg with the other foot?  How could he be expected to know he was doing that? Walking on the turf always feels like a leg underneath. Anyway the league then suspends Suh. That demonstrates  the league is not going to tolerate such incidents. But it really doesn’t because act 2 follows. They, the owners, through their appointed Commissioner, assign the one arbitrator they always assign to a case they want overturned. Most of the time this is done to placate the players union, now and then, but this time it was not the player’s union they needed to placate (since players don’t like to be injured while lying on the ground) but the money to be generated by heightened interest in the next playoff game. The Lions have little chance to win if Suh doesn’t play. With Suh they have a chance to stifle Murray the running back and force the game into Romo’s hand. And Romo is always unpredictable, the Cutler of the Cowboys. 

There were other creative alternatives. They could have suspended Suh from the next game Detroit plays Green Bay, either in the playoffs or next year, whichever comes first. Or I suppose, if one team in this playoff contest is to lose one of their best players because of their thug like behavior, then maybe make the game be played minus the biggest thug on each team—Suh and Bryant. Smile. 

Or, to be more realistic, arbitrators should never be chosen by either the management or the players. There exists a pool of arbitrators who have been approved by both management and the players union. BUT this is disingenuous too, since the management picks the arbitrator from that pool. Had the players picked the arbitrator they would never have picked this guy because players themselves don’t want to be injured by the likes of Suh while lying on the ground. I don’t know why not, Suh is just trying to give his final stomp of approval on a mission accomplished. Others may just beat their chest. 


In the last analysis, when the country allows a cabal of extremely wealthy citizens to own our professional sport teams, a monopoly if there ever was one, then have Congress give them immunity from anti-trust laws, and exempt this ‘corporation’ from most all taxation, set no limits on profitability, provide any oversight on behavior, and allow them to set up their own court system with the Commissioner being the policeman, the prosecutor, the Judge, and the Jury, well—it is only a matter of time before it will have to collapse under it’s own weight. Only then will the predatory nature of such a beast on the public be curtailed. 

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Vietnam Today

Vietnam Today

It has been 35 years since the Vietnam War ended and America withdrew from Vietnam after killing 2 million Vietnamese and losing 35,000 Americans in the killing fields. It was the strangest American War ever, and certainly one of the most shameful. The West had promised Vietnam free elections but when the time drew near for the election, realizing that they were going to elect a Communist leader, American decided it was not in our ‘national interests’ to allow this, that a domino effect would follow with all of southeast Asia next, right on down the line, until America itself was gobbled up by a Communist dictator. After all, Joe McCarthy himself, one of the purest of patriots, had warned us about this communist stuff and how many of us were already jailable communists. 

It came as a real shock to the American people that we could actually kill 2 million people of such a small country, only lose 35,000 ourselves, and still lose the war.  We had spent so much on military hardware and bases all over the world that we had enough fire power to blow up all of Vietnam many times over. But as a Christian nation we were not going to blow up everyone, 2 million seemed an appropriate place to declare victory and go home. So Vietnam became Communist, and if there was any measurable impact on the security of our country, we must have missed it somehow. Vietnam hadn’t invaded, or bothered any other countries in hundreds of years, if ever, and they haven’t bothered any other country since. As Dick Cheney would probably say, “Well, you can never be too cautious, better to kill 2 million before they can become enemies than to wait until they become enemies and then kill them. Many Americans wish we had killed Dick Cheney before he had a chance to become Dick Chaney. 

It is perhaps interesting to take a look at what Vietnam is 35 years later. It is hardly ever in the news, and even the most right wing hawks (of which I was one at the time) don’t bother to pursue their notions of how dangerous a communist Vietnam would be or is. I have been on the wrong side enough times in my life, but the Vietnam War debacle ranks up there as my most shameful political stance. Even Barry Goldwater came around on this issue. 

Vietnam is still under single party communist rule, but there is a decent amount of market oriented businesses and tens of millions have been lifted out of poverty. Over the last decade economic growth has grown annually at 7 percent (the United States, under 2%). Since 1993 the percent living in poverty has dropped from 58 percent to 11 percent last year (In 2012, 46.5 million people were living in poverty in the United States—the largest number in the 54 years the Census has measured poverty. The poverty rate (the percentage of all people in the United States who were poor) also remained at high levels: 15% for all Americans).  What????  The percentage of people poor in the United States is higher now than the percentage of people poor in Vietnam? I suspect this is not a fair correlation, but nevertheless poverty is growing in the United States rapidly and falling rapidly in Vietnam. I guess they rightfully won the war and are reaping the benefits. It has been a while since we won any war with benefits, and I really don’t think Reagan’s Granada War should count here. 

In a recent poll 81% of the people in Vietnam said their country was moving in the right direction. In the United States only 27% of Americans said their country was moving in the right direction. What????? Maybe we are being overtaken by Communist Vietnam. Maybe all Joe McCarthy’s domestic communists are operative after all. Actually, if we had bombed our own poor instead of the Vietnamese, we would only have 44.6 million poor people instead of 46.6 million. 

In Vietnam, large state-owned firms dominate the economy. In the United States billionaire-owned firms control the economy and most of our government politicians. In Vietnam, the communist party operates the country directly; in the U. S. the billionaire owned firms operate the country via lobbyists and record levels of campaign cash for their puppets. And this puppet control has no weak linked strings either. None of the puppets has a prayer in hell getting elected without corporate and billionaire campaign financing. But that is ok apparently, since our supreme court has declared Corporations are people. 

In the United States around 30% were interested enough in politics to vote in our last election leaving around 17% of eligible voters determining our government policies. That’s a tad short of a majority. We are no longer a democracy but a corpocracy. That’s just fine for those of us on the affluent end of the economy. The rest will be fine as soon as the trickle down pipeline gets unplugged. It’s been plugged now for 40 years but we are told it takes time for trickle down to work. In Vietnam more than 60% said they are not interested in politics and 39% said they were. What?????A higher percentage of people in Vietnam are interested in politics than in America?  

Here’s something not surprising.  Only 3% of Vietnamese think the U.S. should have gone into Iraq or Afghanistan. Finally something not surprising. But guess who received the highest approval rating of all world figures?  Yep, Barack Obama.  What??????? Obama is more popular across the world than in the U.S.?  So who gets the lowest approval rating?  George W. Bush. Why the huge difference? Most Vietnamese agreed with this statement. “Bush is kind of hawkish but Obama wants to be friends with countries around the world. I don’t know who benefits from these wars, but it’s the people of Iraq and Afghanistan who pay the price.” 

While all of the above has meaning, Vietnam has all the problems that comes with communism. Corruption is wide-spread. There is a lot of jailing over recreational drug use and violation of social state decreed norms. There is not a lot of individual freedom. Discrimination against women is huge. Here is one interesting bit of intrigue. While there is a lot of jailing over drug usage there is also a lot of jailing for white collar crimes. When it comes to theft in the United States, our jails are full of petty thieves and drug users/sellers but it is relatively rare to find white-collar big time thieves in jail. They, when rarely caught, get fines, not jail—which leaves the profit margin for being a white collar criminal both jail safe and with adequate profit margin safety nets (They have to give back some of the money stolen and are never tried for a crime). 

It seems both communism, in most forms, and democracy, in certain forms, are becoming failures. Vietnam seems to be blunting the failures of communism by allowing more market economic principles. Both systems are plagued with an inability to control the mass movement of their country’s wealth into the hands of a small upperclass. Right now, the major communist and democratic countries are stymied by a rapidly growing very unequal distribution of wealth among their citizens. In both cases, those at the top cannot restrain themselves, the governments won’t do it, and the only way the already wealthy can amass even more wealth is taking it from the middle class, which pushes more of the middle class into poverty and, the whole of their country into chaos. 


As the world turns and ultimately driven right now by human overpopulation, the evolutionary process, and all the laws which govern it, have never dealt with a situation where the planet itself, and all other species are being threatened by overpopulation of one species. Given that evolution has many times regressed from disaster and recovered in due time (evolutionary time, not human time) there is no reason to feel the world is ending.  As always the case, TIME stays, WE GO. 

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

The Mindset Behind Conservatism and Liberalism

The Mindset Behind Conservatism and Liberalism

Politics, like sex and religion, can be confusing and enigmatic. Certainly when we have major elections in which only one third of citizens eligible to vote actually do, the term democracy loses any meaning. That means, in a close election, that around 17% of the citizens dictate the national agenda. For whatever the reasons, little today is as it seems. We start with a democracy that is not a democracy, as noted above. We have a ‘Christian’ country which behaves diametrically opposite to the teachings of Christ, we have freedoms which apply only to some, we have taxation which favors the wealthy, we have educational opportunities which are grossly unequal based on community affluence, we have adequate health care for some and not others, we have living wages for some, non living wages for others, and absurdly elevated wages for others; we exploit other nations on behalf of our own corporations, we pretend we care about the future of our kids via ‘family values’ and yet fight wars on borrowed money, fail to adequately protect the environment in which our kids will have to live, fail to address human overpopulation and all the consequences therein; and pretend our society can prosper with almost all our wealth concentrated in the hands of a few. The potential harm coming down on us from so many directions all at once has left us hopelessly blinded, like a deer frozen in the headlights. Do nothing or next to nothing has been our mantra for years now. The only thing in common is that everyone is mad—about different things for differing reasons, but they are angry, matched only by a common feeling of hopelessness. 

It is with the above in mind that I ponder the two political terms we use to characterize voters. Okay, change that to citizens since most don’t vote. To a degree, we inherit our politics much like we inherit our religion. God only knows from whence our sexual proclivities arise. People rarely change their religious beliefs—if they change, change is mostly by ignoring aspects of scripture or Church directives. After all, every religion is sure to include forgiveness as part of the pathway to Heaven. Our politics has a little more leeway, there is no after-death Heaven involved. Everything which follows utilizes a lot of generalizations, but generalizations which are purported to be generally true with exceptions. 

Liberals tend to be Rationalists and Conservatives tend to be Romanticists. Liberals tend to base their political positions on evidence, reason, logic, ethics, and facts. Conservatives tend to base their political positions on feelings, culture, religious scripture, and faith. Conservatives like to express their political opinions via “I believe….” and liberals tend to start conversations with observations, assorted related facts, and studies.  Personal experience means more to conservatives than liberals. Conservatives tend to understand things through their own eyes, their own feelings, their own social status, through admired authority figures, their own personal experiences.  Conservatives tend to be a lot more self-serving whereas Liberals, to varying degrees tend to be more expansive in their view of others. Whereas conservatives like to draw lines in the sand about issues, liberals tend to be less sure about where any lines should be drawn. 

Conservatives tend to be more into organized religion and be far more rigid with their religious beliefs. Whatever their religious inherited dogma is, conservatives tend to accept it with strong faith—after all, if God through select humans, decrees something to be right or wrong, then the conservative feels it is their duty to ensure this right is practiced not only by themselves, but all others, if not by persuasion, then by law. Liberals tend to think the same issues are a personal choice and should never be enforced by laws. Because conservatives tend to believe things on faith, and liberals arrive at positions more by their own logical thought, conservatives are much more likely to end abruptly a conversation about an issue in question with “I don’t want to talk about it”. To the conservative, if God states something is wrong or right, then there is little discussion to be had. In their mind they are listening to God, not anybody else. 

While I started out as a Barry Goldwater conservative, I, like Barry, moved to the left. In general more people move to the left than ever move to the right, at least among those people who think a lot about political matters. Supreme Court justices, for example, are much more likely to move to the left with time than move to the right. Moving to the right on the Supreme Court is highly unusual. 

One thing is generally true. Conservatives spend little time thinking about the arguments of liberals, and liberals spend little time listening to conservatives. We all know people who were born Republicans and will be Republican no matter, period. It would be unthinkable for them to ever vote for a democrat, even if they hurt their own financial status by doing so. And we all know people who were born democrats and will vote democratic no matter what. 

An occasional cursory look at comments which often follow internet news articles is really startling. The amount of genuine hatred existing between conservatives and liberals is unnerving. If, and when the ’shit hits the fan’, it is going to be a blood bath in our country. This country is becoming more and more well armed, and when conflict breaks out the seeds are there for blood shed that will never cease—just like in the Middle East.  We are positioning ourselves to think and act toward each other just like they do in the Middle East, where they have done so for centuries. Barack Obama is one of the most tolerant and appreciative of diversity as any modern President, but strangely, it is just these two traits which have made so many so irate. Conservatives want things the way they have historically been, and liberals are always trying to bring more people under the tent of inclusiveness in just about every phase of our society. And what really grates many conservatives is the observation that many of those now being included are themselves anything but inclusive in their relations with others. Conservatives are much more likely to say, “If they don’t like it here let them leave” than liberals. Conservatives are probably right in that when those groups suffering injustice get inclusion, many of them are going to be seeking payback. What goes around, comes around. 

Conservatives are much more likely to see life as some sort of contest between good and evil. There are consequences for this mentality. It explains why conservatives are far more likely to support any war. There has not probably been any war which American conservatives have not been for. The other side is evil and we are always fighting for the good. After all, we are a Christian country, and Christians, by their own definition, fight for good and the opposition fight for evil. Liberals are more likely to loathe war and believe that violence begets violence. And yet when it comes to actually fighting the war, conservatives are much more likely to support war through voluntary armies than through any national draft, and support borrowing the money to fight the war. Liberals are more likely to support a draft and to feel everyone, if war is necessary, should have to sacrifice in some way for the war effort. This is one of the biggest ironies of religion. Religions, in theory, are there to promote the well being of others and to bring peace on earth. But that theory never holds up, and in truth, the most vicious wars have been religious in nature, including the present.

Liberals are more often likely to be content to let all people be free to practice their own beliefs which don’t hurt anyone else. Conservatives are more likely not to be content unless they are allowed to be publicly out front with their beliefs, if they are in the majority. Prayers in schools or at other public gatherings is a good example. Prayer does not require a public setting. A person can pray anywhere, including in school. But conservatives see nothing wrong if they pray in public and force everyone to either pray with them or at the very least sit and listen to their prayer. Praying itself has little logic to it, and a whole lot of self-serving faith—faith that indeed, God will do the right thing at certain times only if the person praying asks Him to do it. What kind of God are they praying to? “I’ll save your little Jimmy or spouse because you prayed to me, but any other little Jimmy or spouse in the same situation with no one to pray for them must die.” Who is running the show here? God or those who simply claim thru inherited religion to have special contact with God? It is all a bit much. And not very rational either. If God listens to those with the right religious inheritance, then surely, on all matters pertaining to life and death, those in the right religion will percentage wise die less often on whatever the matter is that pertains to life and death. If Jews are the chosen people how the hell did the Holocaust ever happen? If Christians are the chosen people how the hell can Christians be mass murdered in Africa by Muslims?  If Muslims are the chosen people how the hell can Muslims in Africa be mass murdered by Christians in Africa?  If there were any chosen people these people would certainly stand out as such throughout history. 

Founding fathers like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson stated clearly that ours is not a Christian government because there is separation between church and state. Religion, in the last analysis, boils down to the international ethical concept of the Golden Rule. There is no major religion that I can think of in which, IF you followed the Golden Rule, you would not be a candidate for whatever Heaven exists in that religion.   What major prophet in any major religion ever encouraged everyone to carry a weapon around so that if any confrontation occurs someone can get murdered? Would Jesus really endorse the kind of torture used on prisoners by the CIA in our country? Of course not, but only 18% in a recent poll of Americans thought it was wrong. Would Jesus have encouraged this country to go into Vietnam and murder 2 million Vietnamese, a country which had not bothered any other country for hundreds of years or more? Would Jesus have ever encouraged this country to invade other countries and teach them that power through violence can bring peace and prosperity? We can conquer through power, but when we finally tire of it all, the country we leave is more violent than it ever was before we invaded. Conservatives are much more likely to eagerly make someone or some group do something to please their own conservative feelings, while liberals are more likely to use discussion and reason to convince others to behave differently.

It might be wise to pause here a bit to clear up what might be a misconception of the above. None of the above paints either political position as any good vs evil contest. The evolutionary process is amoral. That is, ethics plays no role in survival of the fittest in evolutionary history. Surprisingly, ethics doesn’t even exist until we get to the more complex species, and it is only a considerable force in the human species.  After all, until the evolutionary process generated species which have highly developed reasoning—which means the ability to comprehend their own fate—ethics was of little import. Much of nature seems so cruel in terms of one species preying on another, but then we must always remember that much of the pain we feel is precisely because we understand the consequences of physical injury, disease, etc. Because we understand the consequences of pain we actually have two pathways of pain to the brain. One pathway is purely non emotional and informs us of the location and type of pain being experienced. The other pathway connects with our emotional centers in the brain and determines our emotional response to pain. The threshold for different kinds of pain in humans is pretty much the same for us all——the emotional response to the pain is what varies. Thus, the same strength of pain stimulus may cause one person to scream bloody murder and another person to be far more stoic about the sensation. Thus ethics is really all about trying to level the playing fields of life so that more and more people have a chance to achieve some contentment in their life. Contentment, of course is an emotional state, and has little to do with survival of the fittest. Ethics simply enables humans to minimize the trauma associated with the evolutionary process. Ethics is meaningless without rewards for ethical behavior. Everyone everywhere comprehends that the Golden Rule is an ethical principle. We arrive at this concept through our ability to reason, not via any inherited religion. The reward for ethical behavior is contentment. Contentment for the recipient of ethical behavior and contentment for the giver of ethical behavior. It is a win-win situation. Money is not involved, titles are not involved, power is not involved, popularity is not involved, ethnicity is not involved, physical skill or appearance is not involved, and so on. Ethics simply maximizes contentment amongst a population sharing the same environment. 

Conservatives tend to ignore the plight of the less fortunate and to project the circumstances of the less fortunate as self inflicted. The less fortunate too often are not seen as victims but those who inflicted their situation on themselves. And having done that, the solution is to punish them for their misbehavior. Conservatives tend to create logical absurdities when they selectively hold on tenaciously to certain inherited religious dogmas. For example, there are few things which generate stronger reactions from conservatives than abortion. To conservatives abortion is simply put, murder. It is a clear cut attack on the sanctity of life. But there are several illogical consequences of their stance here. First of all, their is no sanctity of life since all of us are going to die. This is, without exception, a current consequence of God’s evolutionary process. The only variable is that death comes at different stages amongst us. Another misconception of conservatives on this issue is that life begins at conception. ALL human cells came from pre-existing living cells. All life does is change from one form of life to another. The old were once young, the young were once babies, the babies were once embryos. The embryos were once egg and sperm, the egg and sperm each came from pre-existing cells, and so it goes further and further back in the evolutionary process. When and how life began is way beyond our current comprehension. At the time of conception there were millions of sperm with the potential of fertilizing the egg, and each such combination had the potential for a new unique human being. But, of the millions such possible combinations, all but one such combination were murdered by the process. The potential human beings were just as dead as the aborted combination. Furthermore, the one combination that happened, only happened because two people decided to have unprotected sex. In essence, every time two human beings decline to engage in sex between each other during the fertility period that must then be committing murder. Human decisions are always involved, and with modern medical techniques, are more than ever involved in just when fertilization is going to occur and with whom. If God had the same understanding about the sanctity of life as conservatives have, human life on this earth would never end. Finally, if there is life after death in the absence of sin, then the aborted fetus goes directly to Heaven since a fetus has no sins. To push this to the extreme, an abortion then simply guaranteed the entrance of that genetic combination to Heaven. To the extent that is true, then we all should be so lucky as to have been aborted and escape the stresses and judgement of life. 

Perhaps a more puzzling aspect of this stance against abortion is this: If bringing a fetus to term is so vitally important to the sanctity of life, shouldn’t this entire formative period of a child’s life be awarded the same protection?  Why would we ever permit any child to be given an inferior educational environment, or given inadequate health care, or be given an unsafe neighborhood to grow up in, or not have proper parental care, or food, or shelter, and so on? And if we collectively fail to do this in our society, then why, when the child becomes an adult, should we punish the child for the circumstances of his formative years?  Let’s take education for example. The percentage of children who attend poor schools and then end up in jail is much higher than children who attend good schools.  Perhaps, instead of spending $30,000 a year to incarcerate vast numbers of these products of bad environments, the ethical approach should be to spend the money to ensure these kids have good schools and a good home. But conservatives are really adamant about this. No one is going to take their hard earned money and spend it to educate other children less fortunate. Using local tax monies to finance education effectively ensures that children in poor neighborhoods get the worst schools. 

Does this mean conservatives hate the poor?  They do not. They don’t go around saying if someone is poor “I hope they rot in hell”. What they do is wrap themselves in some sort of “family values” which pretty much limits their responsibility to their own offspring. They don’t hate other people’s kids, affluent or poor, but their commitment is entirely toward their own kids and, in their mind, that is exactly where it should be. Each worry about their own. They call it personal freedom. Conservatives often express their nonspecific empathy for the poor by serving meals in a homeless shelter on Thanksgiving or giving a nice gratuity to someone at Christmas making a non livable minimum wage. But suggest the minimum wage be tied to inflation like social security and conservatives, almost unanimously, will be against raising the minimum wage. Suggest these disadvantaged kids be given good health care and the conservatives, almost unanimously, will be defiant: “not with my money you will not”. 

I recently watched a movie called “The Waiting Room” about a day in the emergency room at a Oakland California Hospital. Conservatives will say that the poor get free medical care and just have to go to an emergency room to get it. Anyone who watches this film will understand that for many poor, an emergency room is where you go to die when your condition is no longer curable. Otherwise, when it is curable, there is not sufficient staff to handle ongoing medical problems. Of course if you have medical insurance, once admitted to the emergency room your case moves quickly to the fast track since you have insurance. If you don’t and major medical intervention is needed, finding a doctor to take the case is difficult and you end up on a waiting list, and often die before the intervention is available. Only liberals would ever watch this film. Conservatives, often good people on a daily basis with those in their own life environment, never allow themselves to be face to face with the injustices heaped on the less fortunate. They are gated off on purpose for their own psychological well being. So are a lot of liberals, including myself, except liberals have little illusions about how many of the less fortunate are living. When conservatives see the less fortunate rioting in the streets they get angry—“what is the matter with these animals?  We don’t behave this way in our neighborhood? Every one of them should be put in jail and the key thrown away.” Of course it is easy to understand why they feel that way, but their personal feelings are not only misdirected, but ill founded. Treat them the same way for years and they would be right up at the forefront of any riot with an incendiary device, all ready to go shopping. 

What conservatives fail to understand is that if the least fortunate in our own country ever riot all at once, the affluent are going to lose everything. The same conservatives, who insist everyone should arm themselves in public for protection, are foolish enough to believe, when push comes to shove, the police will protect them. Well, both the police and individual property owners will be out mobbed. While the allfuent are home protecting their ‘things’, mobs will move around looting everything in sight. And the police, when it gets to that point, will be home trying to protect their own families, or trying to flee with them. That is how it always goes down in history. The Have-Nots will always win over the Haves. The Haves have much to protect, the Have-Nots have nothing to lose. With today’s wireless gadgets, those rioting are no longer isolated in their rioting, just like terrorists can organize and control confrontations via all their own communication gadgets. The disaffected today have guns, communication devices, and organizers who are just as prepared for battles as law enforcement. Of course, if our house is the one being attacked the government has the fire power to blow up the entire neighborhood, and be done with the invaders, and us too. No, we want them to just eliminate the invaders, which is another story altogether.

Neither conservatism or liberalism is a moral stance. However, considering the nature of human ethics, if either one fails to achieve the Golden Rule, then contentment cannot be reached. Look at the modern day conservatives compared to modern day liberals.  A liberal like Obama radiates contentment with his outlook on life while conservatives like Sarah Palin, Donald Trump, Ted Cruz, Pat Roberson, Dick Cheney, Rush Limbaugh, and so on, radiate an anger towards so many diverse groups of people that it approaches rabidity. I reckon once we accept the notion that God talks to us and depends on us to make other people practice religion as we do, well then it must really be annoying that so many others continue to do their own thing—to the point where we feel a real urge to make them follow our inherited religious dogmas. And if we fail to conquer the heathens, maybe God will retaliate and we won’t go to Heaven.  

What determines whether any of us are conservative or liberal? That would be past my pay grade. I started out conservative enough, but my world was rather small back then and my ethics applied more to simply those with whom I came in daily contact. Did I participate in any way with the civil right movements in the 50’s?  I did not. Was I a racist? This word is used so many ways by so many people that I’d rather avoid the term altogether. There were no blacks in my square mile neighborhood except one black somewhat younger than I. We didn’t spend time hating blacks and no one that I can remember ever did anything outwardly hostile to the one black kid. On the other hand I don’t remember him ever being involved in any of our pick up ball games of various sorts. I don’t recall any conversations in which any of my friends and I in our neighborhood ever plotted anything disrespectful or harmful to any blacks or any others period. Our attitude back then was more like when we saw protests on TV that “If they don’t like it here they can leave”. My town was probably 20% black and yet in terms of contact it may as well have been two separate towns. It wasn’t until I left home and lived in dorms and was on teams with various ethnic groups and then began teaching did I ever have to come to grips with ethnic diversity. If my career had gone in a different direction perhaps today I would still be conservative. 

People don’t usually become more liberal in respect to others overnight. The first time Reagan ran for President I actually voted for him. The second time I did not, and have become more liberal since then. When I look back at my earlier years, including my childhood friends and early career associates etc. I don’t see good people vs bad people. And, as pointed out earlier here, God’s evolutionary process is not about good vs evil. It is simply amoral. To me, over time—evolutionary time, not human time, liberalism will win out over conservatism simply because humans, earth’s natural resources, and other species cannot survive with human conservative policies. Violence begets violence, overpopulation of any species is dealt with harshly by the evolutionary process, destruction of habitat is fatal to any species, and it is simply preposterous to ever claim humans have dominion over other species or the planet itself. The world is now too much with us, our human ‘noise’ has become deafening—to each other and to all other species—and our failure to adhere to the Golden Rule as the basis for ethics will be fatal——not to the distant future, but the immediate future in human years. We are not so much evil as we are trapped in our own inflated self-serving operational mode. “Family values”, patriotism, religious furor, overpopulation, climate change, species extinction, pollution, vast inequalities in the distribution of wealth—all of these among others will force a brutal correction by God’s laws which govern evolution. We are going to pay a terrible price for letting such emotional and illogical confrontations exist over abortion, prayers in school, who can marry who, everybody arming themselves, immigration rights,  proper health care only for those who can afford it, wages not protected from inflation, and no taxation policies which prevent a few from amassing almost all the community wealth in their hands. In terms of human evolution we are still childlike and ignorant. Fortunately, human evolution will mature or be replaced and all will advance admirably as it always has for billions of years. 


As we painfully weather all these storms coming straight at us, conservatives will get angrier and angrier, targeting for blame those outside their own cabal of twin-like reflections, while liberals, via their communication devices and the internet, will shed many tears——some tears of happiness when some of the least amongst us get a break, and other tears when so many of the less fortunate suffer so painfully and hopelessly as this evolutionary process wends it’s way forward per its usual amoral progressive nature.  

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Addendum to 'No More Super Bowls for Green Bay'

Addendum to No More Super Bowls for Green Bay

Since the above musing was written things may have changed a bit for Green Bay: they might have found a reasonable defensive game. In the last 4 or 5 games Green Bay defense has been reasonable, not great, but not as bad as they have been for several years now. True, some of the teams were not offensively too good but they did keep the score down against Philly and New England. This provides Aaron Rodgers  enough support for him to win the game. Time will tell whether this defensive side of the game can hold up for Green Bay.  If it does then Green Bay is dangerous against anyone.

Interactive discussions of this topic with others has, not surprisingly, added some dimensions to this topic which I had not done. Sport debates are rarely about facts but which player is better than another, which coaches are better, which teams are better, what kind of behavior is acceptable, and so it goes, on and on——often to the point where anger surfaces and personal insults get thrown into the mix and to any observers it seems rather pointless and silly-ass. On topics like this, any facts are layered on top with endless uncontrollable variables, and the uncontrollable variables are often more important  to the outcome than any ‘facts’. How accurate anyone’s opinion is on these debates depends on the evidence they can generate to support their opinion. Even then nothing becomes fact.

In this case I started with the observation that for some time Aaron Rodgers has had to score 40 pts or more to beat any team with a potent offense. That sort of situation doesn’t bode well for Green Bay. Like with any team, the buck stops with the Coach, and since McCarthy has made few, if any changes, in the defensive coaching staff, I figure he must be part of the problem.

But it does admittedly get a little complex. Green Bay spends a small fortune of their salary cap on offense, not the least of which is Rodger’s salary. That makes a case for maybe Green Bay hasn’t the money available to attract as many quality defensive players as other teams can. Also, while Green Bay did not make any major changes in the defensive coaching staff, they were sent (I forget where) to study up on offensive schemes with which they were having trouble defending against. There is something to be said for stability on the coaching staff.  And loyalty has it’s good points too.

There is no objective way, with any degree of accuracy, to judge just how much of the Green Bay offensive plans come from Rodgers and how much from McCarthy. Rodgers seems awfully smart on offensive football, and at least he orally expresses himself in better fashion than McCarthy. It really doesn’t matter. The offensive football by the Packers had been great and a lot of that came from Favre and Rodgers in successive fashion. If Rodger’s is as smart as he seems to be, then when he is done with playing football I would guess he might become a Head Coach somewhere. Time will tell. 

Even though Green Bay is not controlled at all by any aspect of the public or stock holders, the top administrators hardly ever change. I assume they make good salaries and there is no reason to think they do not give the job their all. Another aspect of the Green Bay operation which is worthy of note is their tendency to groom their own players via the draft more so than free agents. There is something to be admired in this also. 

Finally, injury plays a part, more so today than ever, injuries determine just how ready any offense or defense is for any particular game. 

Thus, the only part of my original musing about the Green Bay Packers and Super Bowls which is operative in my mind is that Green Bay, some way or other, must come up with a defense which is good enough to keep the score well below 40 pts with the better teams. Aaron Rodgers can only be expected to carry the team so far. What is not so clear, and more debatable, is just how the best way is to fix the weak defense. 

And the final kicker is this. Given the nature of a football game and all the uncontrollable variables that affect the outcome, any of the better teams can beat any of the other better teams on a given day.  If anyone bets on football it is like horse racing, no money can be made betting on the favorites, the only hope, and that can be evasive, is to bet against the odds. Then again, Rodgers, especially of late, seems to have mastered the art of reading defenses better than anyone, makes more accurate throws than any other quarterback, throws with bullet like speed when necessary, can dodge pass rushers better than any other quarterback, is the most accurate on deep passes, and knows when to take off and run as well as anyone. This quite a package, enough of a package to make one wonder if Rodgers might win no matter now mediocre their defense might be. 


The bottom line at this point seems to be this. The Packers have improved their defense to a certain extent BUT a team like Atlanta can still score 37 pts against the Packers. Worse, the weakness seems to reside in long passes. A team whose quarterback is accurate with the long ball, on given day, can have a field day against the Packers. Can this be corrected overnight?  That’s past my pay grade, but my guess is probably not. What I still don’t understand is how the Packer pass defenders can so often be no where near the thrown ball. That must be coaching. Perhaps it is raw talent in that these pass defenders are simply not capable of adjusting quick enough or have the speed to keep up. Being a football coach is really, really tough. With 17 assistant coaches and 4 dozen players, a mountain of rules, and endless play possibilities, plus computerized input, and diverse player personalities, this would for sure be more than I could ever handle. And I need to ponder things.  No time to ponder in football. I think I would need a half hour between plays, and coach from a skybox surrounded by computer geeks to decide on the next plays. 

Friday, November 28, 2014

The Ferguson ‘Mess’

The Ferguson ‘Mess’

If ever personal bias and fabrication have run amuck, this incident where a police officer kills a person, is a stark example. 

Who was at fault became an almost instantaneous decision by most all of us.  And hardly anyone was basing their opinion on any facts. Almost universally, our feelings about the situation were fueled by prior racially formed attitudes. This musing will try to separate out what is pure feelings and fact. 

First of all many ‘facts’ will not likely ever be known. Parents grieving over the death of a son carries no connection to fact. How many parents ever want to do anything but defend their offspring in such a situation? 

Most people who have been protesting across the nation, and especially in Ferguson, did not know either the policeman or the person shot. Even those who might have cursorily known either, did not know them enough to project exactly what either might be capable of. 

But there are things we can know that relate to the situation:

1. People who live in, and are raised in environments in which unemployment is like 40% or more, are not going to be happy campers. Imagine living in a community where a few have a lot, and the rest are split between those having barely enough and those having nothing. 

2.  Many kids who are raised in crime infested areas, with poor schools to attend, and often unsatisfactory home environments and peer pressures, are not going to arrive at adulthood without a lot of unfocused generalized anger.  They are going to feel trapped, unloved, and hopeless about achieving a better life. To them, ‘nobody cares for, or likes them, so they don’t like others either, and especially any of those perceived as ‘responsible’ for their environment.  

3. Most blacks who live in Ferguson are good people living under stressful situations. They do the best they can. They resent the endless suspicion cops and others have toward them in so many situations. And they resent the police have not made their neighborhoods safe. And they resent that all but one of the policemen on the force are white. 

4. It is always wrong for any citizen to refuse to obey a reasonable order by a policeman. Certainly if a policeman tells us not to walk down the middle of the street, we are obligated to comply. It is a mistake for any society to actually support the notion that one can defy a policeman, scuffle with a policeman, and run away and feel, until subdued, the policeman is not in charge. When we run from the police we kind of have asked for trouble. This is not to say police should shoot anyone who runs, but it is to say we will have created a situation where it will be difficult to say when a policeman is going to feel it necessary to shoot. No one has to run. And we better be careful about saying there are no real risks to running away from the police.  

5. It is difficult to portray any citizen as as some sort of innocent and harmless soul when shortly before this incident this same citizen was on tape committing a strong arm robbery. It was no robbery out of desperation for food or money, the whole demeanor on tape was one of an arrogant, angry bully-thug type. So we are to believe that a few moments later his demeanor had changed?

6. For all of us to believe what we want to believe makes us all dangerous fools, some more guilty than others. 

7. There certainly should be anger by every American citizen that so many neglected places like Ferguson exist. We should be angry that any segment of our population suffers from so much unemployment, poor schools, lack of good health care, and lack of personal security. Every society is responsible for the welfare of all it’s constituent groups. These people in Ferugson weren’t born to be angry, weren’t born to have poor schools, weren’t born to have poor home environments, weren’t born to have no access to jobs, etc. There is no reason why any child in American, one of the richest countries in the world, can’t ensure that every child has an excellent school to attend, that every child has access to good health care, that every parent has access to a job which pays a living wage, that the makeup of public service employees represent roughly the make-up of the community, or that 2-5% of the citizens do not own 90% of the wealth in our country.  We cannot short-change children at every step of their development and expect them to always turn out to be model citizens. To the extent we tolerate any of this as a nation, we are all guilty and part of the Ferguson tragedy. At no time in history has any nation survived with such disparity between the few wealthy and the many poor. Riots begin to happen and when chaos ensues, the ‘have nots’ always win against the ‘haves’.  The ‘haves’ have a lot to protect and the ‘have nots’ have nothing to lose.  Ask the owners of all the buildings that get looted during riots. The Governor called out the National Guard but no military force can protect life and property once chaos sets in. Ask Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine, etc. 

8. We seem to think none of the above can happen to us. We think that if we jail enough people, and supply police and soldiers with enough weapons, and wall ourselves off in affluent neighborhoods  (our own green zones) that we are all safe, that we ourselves ‘earned’ all these perks as kids growing up, and that we, with much, owe nothing to those with ‘less’. As a ‘Christian nation’ did Jesus ever preach any of this? 

Right now these riots over the Ferguson incident are being conducted by a really small percentage of people across the country and even in Ferguson itself. Who are all these people who say ‘I don’t need the facts, I can feel the truth?”  I guess most all of us. But then most of us aren’t out protesting either, only a small few who sometimes create huge damage to the property of others, the others all innocent of any overt crime. So who are these small few?  First there are those uneducated crass thug-like characters who just are looking for an opportunity to ‘go shopping’. They are never choosey about any opportunity to do their shopping. They don’t shop often, but every so often they need some new stuff of varied sorts. Then there are those blacks who are so rightfully upset about how so many blacks are living in such situations that no misbehavior by any black should ever really be prosecuted. And there are the whites who are also sympathetic to the conditions under which so many blacks live that they also believe any individual black who commits a crime should be excused based on their circumstance in life.  What do all these groups have in common?  Tunnel vision. They cannot see the forest for the sake of the trees. What exactly is the forest here?

1. Our society, as a whole, has a political and ethical responsibility to do everything we can to make the playing field more level for all citizens and especially all children. Instead we spend huge amounts of money on military matters engaging wars which haven’t won anything from Vietnam on with maybe the exception of Granada and the Balkans. These kind of winless wars have only succeeded in killing, directly or indirectly, millions of dispensable people and making people like Dick Cheney very wealthy war machine capitalists. 

2. We protect the buying power of the elderly by having social security rise with the cost of living. Fair enough. But we let the buying power of the minimum wage sink lower and lower with no protection. The federal minimum wage is now 25% lower counting inflation than in 1968. Why do we ethically protect the elderly and stick it to those earning the least amount of money via wages?  What kind of irrationality is it when we express, as parents, that we worry about the future for our own children, and yet finance our wars on borrowed money, ignore environmental protection, do nothing about responsible reproduction (does anyone really believe the world can handle another doubling of the human population as it has in my lifetime?), and provide good schools only for those children living in affluent communities? This list could go on for some length but that is not necessary to prove the point. What kind of Christian nation is saturated with people who only care about their own personal immediate needs. When someone says they oppose increasing the minimum wage what else can they really mean other than they don’t want to pay another 25 cents for a hamburger or hire somebody to mow their lawn at higher cost. What kind of ethics have we come to when those losing good pensions, good health care, good pay raises, respond positively to those politicians who propose giving them a paltry tax cut by taking away such ‘perks’ from those who still have them?  Whatever happened to the notion that the object was to ensure more and more people have good pensions, good health care, good salaries, etc. 

3. Somehow, the majority of people living in communities like Ferguson need to gather the strength and courage to take back the community from the hopeless thugs, regardless of whether these hopeless thugs are a product of our own national policies. The following URL admirably addresses this issue. 


To put it bluntly: All this turmoil and emotional response to the killing of one person in Ferguson by the police is useless. No one can verify what kind of verbal exchange went down between the policeman and the guy walking in the street. The victim is dead, and the policeman, the victims companion, and the parents are all obviously bias. The facts uncovered in the grand jury make it clear the victim would not stop walking in the middle of the street, attempted to harm the policeman inside his car, at one point ran away, and then stopped and came back at the policeman. There were no shots in the back.So there was not enough evidence available to charge the policemen with a crime. 

Unless the issues 1, 2, and 3 above are addressed, it doesn’t much matter where the law comes down regarding the engagement of a cop with the citizen in the middle of the street. We could hang the cop and nothing would change except maybe establish that we are not obligated to obey reasonable police demands. We could make a hero out of the cop and not a thing would change for the citizens of Ferguson. 


We all need to accept that all of us, black or white, are not doing the kind of things we should be doing to make this country a better place for all to live. An ethical country never stops making he playing fields as level as we can so that all children have an opportunity to become responsible productive citizens. 

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Doctor’s Without Borders, Ebola, and the Angels of Mercy

Doctor’s Without Borders, Ebola, and the Angels of Mercy

I recently attended a presentation by the President and some Field workers of Doctors Without Borders (MSF). Most people are probably aware that these medical personnel volunteer to practice their trade in the most unstable and dangerous areas of the globe. These kind of hot spots have become increasingly widespread in recent years. South Sudan has been the scene of senseless destruction for years, as has been Somalia, and today it is the Congo and Syria, and it just seems one could go on and on. Like most others, it is hard for me to even relate to these kind of environments. How do people live in situations like that?  I guess they often don’t very long before their life gets snuffed out. 

And yet there are doctors and other health personnel who travel to these places and try their best to save as many lives as possible under conditions which are appalling in terms of equipment, physical danger, health dangers, and extreme mental stress. “What”, I ask myself, “motivates them to undertake such a task in that kind of dangerous environment?” Many of these people get kidnapped, held hostage for years, get killed, go for long periods of time with hardly any sleep, and get burned out from stress so quickly that they often are rotated in and out every 6-8 weeks. Why would any sane person volunteer to do this?  What motivates them to do this? And if they need to be relieved every 6-8 weeks from all the stress, how do the native people survive all this stress year after year? They get no relief.

Doctor’s without Borders is a main recipient of grants from my own little charitable fund called FANAFI (Find A Need And Fill It). The grants are not huge but substantial, and enough that the organization wants to keep me interested. Every year they call and indicate the President of the Organization or some other high up administrator would like to meet me when they are in Chicago on such and such a date. I never say yes and simply indicate it is not necessary for me to meet anyone from the organization, that it is a waste of their time, I have nothing to offer them in terms of any expertise etc. They simply have more important things to do than entertain me. But twice now they have invited me to sit in on a presentation by some of their field workers. Now that interests me for the reasons already mentioned. As a people watcher, getting to observe them up close is appealing to me. What kind of persons are they?

The former one was held in a downtown Chicago skyscraper in some sort of Legal Corporation Boardroom. There were less then ten of us there, very limited, which caught me off guard.  This last one was in someone’s home and had maybe 60 people present. I no sooner got there, which is another story in itself, than it was cocktail hour and no one dislikes inane chit-shat more than myself. And it was crowded, and no one dislikes crowded babbling more than me.  A double whammy. I stepped out into an empty room deciding whether to force myself to mix or just hide until the presentation started. But some young gal snuck up on me from behind and said “Hi”. It turns out she was not a guest but one of the speakers, a field worker who had just gotten back from Sierra Leon. 
Lucky me, I now get a chance to probe her mind one on one. She grew up in Wisconsin, went to undergraduate school at Tulane down in Louisiana, and I forget where she did graduate work. I think her graduate degree is in Public Health, some sort of diagnostic degree. I am pretty sure she is not an MD. But that makes no difference in that she faced the same threats any health worker on the team would face. She had returned from Sierra Leon in late July after dealing with an Ebola outbreak, and was heading back in a few days. Most of the members of a medical team are nationals, not foreigners, and are trained by the foreigners. She had her own team and I think she was the only foreigner. At least in the slide show picture she was the only white person on the team. And the team was mostly young people. 

The other two field workers giving presentations were older, middle aged. So what stood out in common about these health saviors?  They certainly weren’t depressed or withdrawn or stupid. All were scheduled to go back and put themselves on the line again. While I have only seen a handful of the actual workers myself, they seem plain enough looking people, not at either extreme of the good-looking scale. They are clearly deeply moved by people in distress. Well, so am I, but I am not going to the Congo to get in the middle of it all. But they do.  Why?  They certainly don’t make a lot of money doing this. These ventures clearly give strong meaning to their lives, a sense of pride, a sense of accomplishment, a sense of importance—real importance, not the shallow Donald Trump kind of importance. What could make anyone feel more important than saving the lives of those with so little hope? These trapped and helpless people will die without the effort of these volunteers. I myself like to make a difference in other people’s lives but it has never been a question of life or death for myself. 

Many people would question, “Why bother?, These wretched souls have nothing to look forward to, they are destined to perish one way or another.” Not a bad point but a scary one. The world is becoming filled with more and more people who are destined to perish from neglect of various sorts.  Then again it is a perfect match— some of the least fortunate people get to live, and the workers get to feel contented and motivated by the help they give. I am reminded of what someone once said, “It is hard to dislike someone who likes you.  There’s your peace plan.”  And this is the core of an important truth. Until there is more widespread appreciation of diversity there can be no peace across the globe. I have taught in a high calibre University and in a State University located right smack in the middle of an urban ghetto. Both were challenging and interesting experiences. Yet teaching in the urban state university was more challenging and rewarding. At a quality university a Professor can speak gobbly gook and the students will learn, if not from the Professor, then from the book. Some of the brightest Professors are the worst lecturers, and usually least involved with students on an individual basis.  And this is ok, these are the Professors who will make significant advances in their field. At a low level urban State University the students are not affected by advances in any field of study, but seek the help and motivation to improve their own lives. In truth, the system has been rigged against them from the start, and without the help of the more fortunate in life, most of them will never go very far.

Doctors Without Borders never takes political sides. They treat whoever is wounded or sick regardless of what side they might be on in any civil war. One volunteer told us that in the Congo the medical camp had people from one side of the conflict on one side of the camp, and persons from the other side of the conflict on the opposite side of the camp. Since many of these conflicts are religious in nature we have two religious groups, trapped into coexistence via being sick or wounded, and chomping at the bit to get back to the killing. Perhaps they have little choice, there is some personal safety if one can be on the side doing the killing and some safety being in the armed group that is losing for the moment. It is the hapless villagers who have no security. In Afghanistan the people were so beaten down that they simply cooperated with whomever were the guys with the guns in control of the area at any given time. American soldiers often complained that the villagers were helping the enemy too much. Really?  Maybe these villagers didn’t live their lives inside some fortified “green zone.”  Sometimes neutrality doesn’t save the volunteers and they are forced to flee after some of the volunteers get killed or kidnapped. 

The volunteer I chatted with before the presentations told me that kids as young as 6 can be assigned a task of walking a day’s journey to catch up with a herd of cattle so an older child can be relieved to search for new grazing areas.  Since water is scarce the child may simply have a little tin of water to sip on until they find the cattle. I found this incredulous and asked now can a 6 year old child not get lost? Or be harmed?  She told me that the child knows enough to follow the footprints of the cattle. Hell, it is not uncommon in some American households for a child not to be very far out of sight of a parent until they graduate from high school and some offspring never do get out of sight of their parents until the parents die. What does all this mean for how a child’s mind develops? It seems either extreme is a disaster. Kids given poor environments as a child seem very likely to be hostile and non social as adults, and prone to violence against other people. Kids spoiled as children seem more likely to end up more withdrawn from others, have little appreciation for diversity, and adapt a family values mentality in which their only social circle are family members. When I taught it was always easy enough to spot the ‘spoiled brats’, the ones whose parents never let them have any independence or responsibility. They went through the motions of living but were rarely satisfied ‘campers’ and simply remained aloof from others most of  their life. 

Prior to these Civil Wars the youngsters led pretty happy lives even though they were working in the fields at such young ages. Poor but happy is an apt description. When we read books written by young refugees who trekked thousands of miles to reach refugee camps and later get sent abroad to live in more modern societies, they always seemed to have fond memories of life before the bombs came, their villages burned, and most family members raped and/or killed. Americans are aghast at how these people in these hot spot areas of the world treat each other, but seem rather immune to the life situation of the millions who live in our own ‘hot spot’ crime ridden urban, rural, and now suburban ghettoes. These kids are not out working in the fields at a young age but are trapped inside with bars on the windows and doors. When I was young the ghetto area streets and neighborhoods were always filled with people sitting on porches, kids riding bikes all over the place, ball games of some sort in the streets, and everybody knew everybody. Ride through these same streets today and not a soul will be seen except a few hustling to get back in their houses behind the bars on the windows and doors.

What does all this portend for the future with so many at home and abroad living lives of seemingly hopeless desperation? Thugs rule the roost in these situations, thugs with no kindness towards others as sort of pay back for no kindness received on their part from hardly anyone during their formative years. They emerge with a simple goal—to project an image in which no one better mess with them, and an attitude of ‘nobody has ever much liked me, and I now don’t much like anyone else.  Doctors Without Borders cannot heal this kind of affliction.  It is often in the eyes we can see the depth of someone’s pain. It is also in the eyes we can see the depth of someone’s happiness. Certain images tend to haunt me, and I wish she hadn’t told me about the 6 year old child all alone following footsteps of a couple of cows all day with a little tin of water for subsistence. Nothing can match the sorry image of a group of orphaned children trekking a thousand miles to reach a refugee camp. Nothing unnerves me more than looking into the eyes of an emaciated refugee on camera and see the vacant stare of approaching death. Some of these neglected children will survive and grow up, just as some of these neglected children in our own ghettoes will, and we are not often going to like the end product.

Humans are an advanced species, the only species with such advanced powers of comprehension. We suffer more than other species precisely because we understand the consequences of so many situations we find ourselves in. There are two pain pathways to our brains.  One pathway simply tells us what kind of pain, where, and to what extent. The other pathway triggers our emotional response to the pain. The pain threshold for various pain activators (usually destruction of body tissues) is quite similar for most all of us. What differs a lot is our emotional response to the pain, that second pathway of pain to the brain. Some of us get hysterical with a certain level of pain and others are rather stoic. Morphine and heroin are unique drugs in that they block the emotional aspects of pain. That is why patients in pain like morphine, and it is also why many people whose lives are unbearable to them sometimes gravitate to heroin use. It is often hopeless to convince someone whose life is such that living is emotionally painful to them, that they should stop using heroin. Under heroin they just don’t care so much about their life situation. That is exactly why many soldiers on a battle front will use heroin to handle the stress of the situation and when they come back home they no longer need, and therefore, no longer use heroin. That is exactly why patients in pain are allowed to administer whatever the dose of morphine needed to relieve their pain, and when they heal, they no longer need or want to stay on morphine. It only took 50 years for politicians and the public to understand that morphine/heroin are not addictive drugs in the absence of physical or emotional pain. Because these two drugs are natural to the body and we all produce our own endogenous opiates under certain conditions, they are not toxic to the body at all unless someone takes heroing/morphine along with a lot of a depressant like alcohol, in which cases respiration can be suppressed enough to kill the person. 

Humans are the only species with an advanced trait of ethics. Ethics is the only means, in a population with such diversity, where we can, via our ethical sense, level the playing fields in life so that more people can achieve some contentment in their lives. Because diversity is such an important component of God’s evolutionary process, there can never be level playing fields. The goal all of us have is to maximize contentment in our lives. Ethics only works if there is a reward for being ethical. Some people view the reward as a trip to Heaven. There is no real evidence to support this, but there is no way to disprove the existence of Heaven either. Ethics is two sided. It helps the less fortunate find some contentment in their lives and it enables the more fortunate in life to achieve some contentment in their lives. The truth is that most of the giving in our lives, at least for most of us, is to people that are not the least fortunate, and therefore not the most deserving of, or in need of, any gifts from us.  At some point in my life I saw the inaneness of all this and, with few exceptions put a halt to this frivolous and useless habit. Ethics means finding time in our lives to directly help the less fortunate, or use our excess wealth to support charities which do help the less fortunate. Our ethical potential, like any other inherited trait, varies. It is harder for some people to be ethical than others. But if real contentment in life is to be achieved, we all need to try hard to be ethical, because if we don’t achieve our potential in this trait, we are not going to ever be really contented. We will end up being a mini version of Donald Trump, or Sarah Palin, or Rush Lambaugh, etc. We cannot be ethical and not have tolerance for diversity in so far as the diversity in question has no impact adversely on others. 


My conclusion from observing these field workers is that they are really contented and vibrant individuals who have managed to maximize their ethical potential and are reaping contentment from their efforts. Naturally there are a lot of other ways to express ethical behavior without diving into the center of an Ebola epidemic.  But it is hard not to admire those who do just that.  I chatted with that young gal just a few days ago and now she is already back in the middle of chaos and risk, to her own well being and that of everyone around her. There are way too many dark clouds on the horizon for us to feel all is going to be well in the near future. So I resort to thinking in evolutionary time, not human time, and yes there is no reason to feel the process itself is in any trouble. Mother Nature bats last, and I sense she in now in the on-deck circle. Hold on to your hats, the near future could be a bumpy ride. 

Monday, November 10, 2014

Obama’s Place in History: Why Obama Became Unpopular

Obama’s Place in History: Why Obama Became Unpopular

It might seem surprising that a President with Obama’s personality and good will to just about every segment of society, should end up with so many who absolutely detest him. Amongst modern politicians it is rare to find someone who has so much empathy with the rich and poor, the religions of every ilk, every age group, every ethnic group, and rose so fast to almost cult status.  And yet more and more became angry with him. Why?

Basically Obama refuses to side with the self serving interests of any group, and that generates anger each time he does this. His focus always seems to be on doing the right thing ethically—not politically, and not via popularity. This is not to say his interpretation of ethics is always right. But he is someone who does not put down opponents with adjectives, but invariably sticks to a reasoned out defense of his own decisions. Endless insulting adjectives have yet to steer him off his own measured analysis of issues.  When it comes to insults he rarely, if ever, returns tit for tat (which invariably reminds me of the old wisecrack “If I give you a tat will you give me a tit?). 

Precisely because Obama relates so well to so many diverse groups he feels their pain, understands their plight, and tries hard to level the playing field so the maximum number of citizens can achieve some success and contentment with their lives. He clearly wants various groups to develop respect and tolerance for each other rather than focus so hard on protecting their own self-serving agendas.  Perhaps this is not surprising: he is a genuine mongrel himself.  

It takes a good person to do the right thing, and a strong person to do the right thing even at a personal cost. Obama may not be as widely popular as when he first became President because he actually has stood steadfast in his efforts to give those without rights the same rights others have, and  those without a level playing field a more level playing field.  When Obama stated it was an ethical obligation for a country, as rich as ours, to give all people  access to good health care, he carried through with Obama Care. While any overhaul as vast as this needs a lot of tweaking, he is the first President to establish that good health care is a legitimate function of government for all citizens. His place in history will be elevated on this basis. Obama has made it highly unlikely that universal good health for all citizens is going to go away

When Obama, through his personal support for the right of everyone to choose who they wish to marry, he helped give the correctness of this position a strong push, and made this act of justice become fact almost overnight. His place in history will be elevated on this basis. Groups, once gaining justice with their own rights, rarely lose them. It simply sticks. 

When Obama, out of nowhere, became the first black President, he accomplished something no one 10 years ago would have thought remotely possible for many years to come. His place in history will be elevated on this basis. He has probably buried forever the notion that blacks operate on some sort of different genetic parameters compared to other ethnic groups. Obama clearly appreciates human diversity. Some hate him precisely for that

Since Obama somehow managed to stop the economic depression created by Republican and Democratic policies for decades, his place in history will become elevated still further. 

When Obama gave support for measures which would help stem climate change and set America on the course for new forms of energy, he became virtually the first President to take these issues seriously. This will again elevate his place in history, unless climate change proves to be the fraud non climate scientist ‘experts’ of the Sarah Palin mentality so claim.  

When Obama firmly set out, as one of his goals, to fix a broken immigration system, he again became the first President in a long time to seriously address the issue. Through his goal of tightening border security, and letting those immigrants who have lived in this country for some time be put on the path to citizenship, he not only is doing the right thing, but putting a stop to a form of slave labor in this country—and this will again elevate his place in history. Slave labor is never justified under any circumstances, so whatever the resolution, those who work in this country, as individuals, deserve living wages. To what extent immigrants are allowed to stay in this country is another matter

When Obama stood strong that the the lowest paid jobs should receive living wages and pushed for the minimum wage to be raised to $10.10/hr he again raised his place in history. There is no humanitarian reason why some individuals in our society have to work two jobs to make a living, or why senior citizens have their purchasing power protected via cost of living increases, and those at low paying jobs do not have their purchasing power protected via cost of living increases. It hurts the economy to have millions of people with diminished purchasing power. If he succeeds in establishing this point, that also will elevate his place in history. 

Obama is the first President in a long time to put an end to endless wars that cannot be won. Limiting American involvement, in aiding other countries fighting internal terrorism, to non combat roles, is a huge change in American Foreign policy. Using paid American mercenaries to fight freedom battles via voluntary armies is an embarrassing abuse of our own citizens, especially when these kind of wars helped the Cheneyites of our country become quite wealthy. The average American family is not helped by defense budgets which dwarf our domestic needs. This reversal of policy by Obama will also help elevate his place in history.

Obama has correctly focused on our primary economic  shortcoming as the rapidly growing disparity between the very rich and everyone else. He has understood this situation, has addressed it as wrong, but for whatever reasons, he has been unable, or slow, to move forcefully on the problem. There is a lot of money behind the power to keep the system rigged in favor of the wealthy. In this area, what Obama genuinely seeks, is stuck in neutral. 

Rather than try to identify every positive policy Obama has championed to give everyone rights that others already have, and level the playing field for the less fortunate of our citizens, the above examples serve to elevate the point being made. And that point is this: With every one of the policy changes listed above, there will be some who will become irate. There are some who are not interested in fairness for all, but want to retain privileges for themselves at the expense of others, and these privileges have been long standing. Breaking cultural and economic barriers is not easy, and are rarely cheered at the time being implemented. It takes time for any pat on the back.

Perhaps his last two years as a lame duck President with a hostile Congress will put an end to further changes by Obama. History is likely to be kind to Obama but that is a difficult accomplishment to define. All of the above achievements are based on the realities of today. The future is determined by evolutionary time, not our current sense of time. None of the issues which are going to determine the future are being addressed by either political party. Human overpopulation, the major force behind all the problems now facing human societies everywhere, is not even on the table. Responsible reproduction is not even a topic of discussion, let alone acted on. Climate change is vaguely on the table but the human activities which are behind climate change have taken many decades to begin to have an impact and cannot be reversed quickly. In a global economy, no economic prosperity can be achieved for the masses of people without global minimum wages.  And no society, no matter the form of government, can avoid chaos with such a huge disparity between the wealth of a few and the wealth of the many. Neither party has gotten any handle on this yet

At any rate, it just seems that human overpopulation is destined to trigger yet another major evolutionary correction. We already have caused a major species extinction rate which is starting to rank up there with the 5 or 6 times this kind of extinction rate occurred in past evolutionary corrections. Climate change is about to follow. And let’s not forget that the kind of vicious and senseless violence pitting different groups of humans against others is going to spread as everyone begins to fight for survival. The trough size cannot appreciably grow, but the number of those trying to feed from the same trough is growing in an exponential fashion.  Humans do not have the intellect to really predict the future, and that being so, it may be meaningless to talk about how history will judge Obama. If the human species survives an evolutionary correction, only then can there be any historical judgement.

This past election was more like a brawl in a ghetto playground. The winners are left standing, but absolutely nothing has been solved.  And each side prepares diligently for the next brawl, as if who wins the brawl changes much about life in the ghetto. This is kind of a sad state of affairs.

Thus, if we are to be painfully honest, the immediate future for humanity looks very scary. The long term future for the evolutionary process looks right on track as it always has been. All any of us every got was the opportunity, by chance, to be a participant in the this process. Humans have an inherent ethical sense (the Golden Rule) and this has improved over time just as physical traits improve. There is no reason to fear that evolution is going to leave a sense of ethics behind. Evolutionary advancements of the major kind, are rarely lost, but after corrections, come back stronger than ever. 


Obama is more like Lincoln that any other President. Lincoln too, was figuratively crucified during his time as President. Only with hindsight did he rise to the level of appreciation he now receives. Secretary Steward once remarked, after watching Lincoln stand firm for the right, as best he understood the right, that “he (Lincoln) is the best of us (in the cabinet)”. Whenever a leader fights for what is best for all, his support goes down as more and more of those fighting for what is best for themselves become furious that the needs of those less fortunate are are being met via sacrifice from everyone.