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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...

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Deathday Countdown

Deathday Countdown

I was never big on birthdays, not mine or anyone else’s. I think it is hard to get excited about something that has little meaning to me. What connection each day of my life has to do with my birthday is a mystery to me. Birthdays have always been as exciting to me as exchanging gifts with people who are in no need of gifts. No one has to do anything to be born, and yet we celebrate that yearly as if the fact of being born was an accomplishment on the part of the one being born. Naturally the parents did something and whether or not it was a good thing remains to be proven. I think poor people are more excited about gift exchanges because they are always in need of something, including the attention gift giving brings. If everyone took all the money they spend on exchanging gifts with people in no need of a gift and gave that money to the less fortunate, the world would be a far better and kinder place. 

Thus, I have essentially ignored my birthday most of my life. In fact, since a child I don’t think I have ever had a birthday party. Of all the things I might like to be celebrated for, just being born is not one of them.  People close to me know better than to irritate me in that way. And unless someone is poor, it is rare for me to shower them with any gifts. To be T.O. fair, I don’t accept gifts either, albeit sometimes a person who hardly knows me slips a gift  in, but understands quickly it better be the last one. I prefer friendship be cemented by words and deeds, not obligatory meaningless gifts.  Sometimes I fail. When Obama first ran for President I was a big fan. One day I was in the lobby to get my mail and the guard and Manager told me to wait  while they located the cleaning gal. I figured I must have done something wrong—my specialty. She arrived with a gift all wrapped up and addressed to me. I refused to open it and explained to her that I just don’t accept gifts and rarely give them (in her case, being underpaid, I do give her a generous gratuity at Christmas) but I certainly was not going to accept any present. She kept insisting that I accept her present. I jumped down her throat. “Do I look like I need any present? What could you possibly buy me that I need?  If I need something I go out and buy it. You struggle financially and I am supposed to let you buy me a present? Now let’s get real here.”  Others began to accumulate and all started getting on my case. “What’s the matter with you Reid, if she wants you to have her present, just take it.” The gal looked near tears. Everyone is looking like obnoxious Reid is making the cleaning gal cry. I felt forced to open the present. Inside was a large picture of Obama with an expensive frame around it. I liked it, but that is not something I would purchase myself with that expensive frame around it. “This is worth some money, why in the world would you give this to me?” “I know you like Obama.” The picture still hangs in my living room with many other of my ‘heroes’ in world history. Later, upon reflection, it was probably among a cache of stolen goods someone in her neighborhood had, and she asked for it so she could give it to me. She doesn’t work here any more but she sometimes stops by to “see how I am doing”. Nice gal. I wonder if she is one of those who Trump is hot on her tail? 

Anyway, I have no use for birthdays and gift giving among the affluent, but my deathday merits some attention. It is one of these events we simply cannot ignore or avoid. It is, after all, our final goodbye. It is ironic that such a day most likely will find us not in the best of shape to hardly know which end is up. I’d prefer to be in excellent physical and mental shape, have a huge party with all the good people I have known in life and just say goodbye in a grand memorable fashion. 

For whatever reason, I have chosen 85 as the age I would like to die, after having relatively good health right up to my deathday when I die in my sleep and just can’t remember any longer to get up and get a move on. I think we suffer less from the ordeal of death if we expect and accept the inevitability of our deathday. Even when we are on our deathbed, others don’t really send us any deathday cards. More to the point, no matter how famous or powerful or how many friends we have, everyone will die alone. It is well known medically that people on their deathbed become less and less interested in involving themselves with others or any aspect of life. If there are any who are overcome with grief and become apoplectic about our death it will be others, not ourselves on the days around our deathday. While others may wail and weep, the dying are busy with dying.

So one year into my ten year plan for continued existence, what is changing? Well, I no longer walk 5-7  miles everyday, but every other day and mostly 5 miles now. My feet and legs feel like lead if I walk long distances everyday. It seems we need be realistic and not pretend like we are still young again. Just today I had a tough time going out for my wandering. But once out I come back feeling in a better more pensive mood. Always. I feel like I have gone over the peak and headed downward into decline and the walks bring me back over to the other side of the peak. Even if true, this will work only so many times. 

I have a hard time remembering names now. Many actually, and to be safe, I refer to others as “My friend”. There is no middle name. Ok, maybe ‘good’ is thrown in sometimes. Part of this is aging, and part of it is that I don’t think I make much of an effort to remember names. My effort or energy level is getting less and less. “To hell with it” is becoming a well worn phrase stolen from my dad.  Excitement is seldom a goal sought. Now I prefer peace and quiet, no pressure, no fuss, no whining—oh just everybody be ‘cool’, friendly, and non demanding. These days my body requires endless patching. Patch, patch, patch. So far nothing has been unpatchable and I have escaped the major stuff like stroke, heart attack, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, cancer, and so on. Maybe God just likes me a lot, but a little birdie whispered that is absurd. This little birdie is a good thing to have around, it keeps my feet on the ground a bit more. Most people associate being old with sitting around with nothing to do. Well, maybe so depending on what ‘something to do’ amounts to. My den is piled high with books and articles to read, topics to muse about, my wanderings take 3-4 hours, I love to cook, music and Netflix movies to listen to (late at night), eating out—-although I do that less since if I like something I tend to learn how to cook it myself, there is my FANAFI Fund, the Redwood Forest (missed this year), Sheebiejiebee the cat, Riva the Horse (now ended), an occasional lunch or dinner with someone, never more than 3-4, a football pool, limited idle chat with assorted others in the building, and of course the housework.  All in all, there is one year down with no major calamities on my back. The fractured shoulder makes me a minor cripple, but I am scheduled to have my options examined at Mayo Clinic next week. Getting their attention took some manuevering. But what else is new? Some often referred to me as “that slippery one”.

My regular doctor has diagnosed me as being dead from the neck up. I use that joke a lot. At any rate my decline meter has not taken a nose dive YET. I will have to be a little more patient. I hope I don’t whine and fuss and whimper and get all angry and frustrated when the rug gets pulled out from under me, but time will tell. 

But back to deathday. I would rather see one big birthday, one allowed big marriage day, one allowed 50th wedding anniversary, and one scheduled deathday. The birthday would be at the end of the formative years when there is something to celebrate about having been born. I would attend that kind of birthday. The marriage day and 50th wedding anniversary are self explanatory. See, if there were limited ‘big’ days I would attend. But the way it is now, once one starts, there is no ending. It could take up a major part of one’s life. Now for the deathday celebration. It would not take place on the day of death, most of those about to die are not really up to it at the time. So a person would schedule this day while they are still mentally and physically at a reasonable level. It would be like a celebration of one’s life with all the friends still living attending to celebrate the good times. Of course, you are going to say how would we contact all these dear people from the past. Well, there should be a national register for all deathday celebrations. So we could then look up the names of people who meant so much to us in the past and see if their death day has been scheduled, AND one would be able to list the names of those who were so dear at one point and when any of them schedule a deathday celebration we would be notified on our computer. Now that would be a meaningful gathering. Nice pipedream huh? Not really practical and kind of scary. I would fear the one person who put me on their notification list might not be able to attend. Smile.

I know a lot of people who rarely miss a local funeral of people they knew. What is the point? The dead person won’t be there. Only the shell is left, the nut is gone.  The truth is, most of the people who attend a wake or funeral never bothered to visit the person in many years. This seems a tad irrational. It seems visiting others has been mostly replaced by social media devices. Not bad, I guess, but different.  I know a lot of people, if I knew their end was nearing, that I would make every effort to celebrate their life in a formal way. I am not particularly interested in staring at their dead body. Memorial services some time after death are not bad because people who really knew the person well speak instead of some clergy type who give their usual generic spiel. Useless. But a deathday celebration would include testimonials, and also hear from the person on track to die. And the dying would get to hear the kind words from those part of their past. If we can’t feel good about the future then at least we ought to feel good about the past. It would give me a chance to pull a practical joke on all those present. 


Someone once told me I could expect a large funeral: “Give the people what they want and they will come in droves”/“Most are here just to be sure he is really dead.” Of course none of us are important to the larger picture of evolution. That annoys me. So maybe all that is needed is to post a notice in the paper that on such and such a date, so and so really doesn’t matter any more. No details need be provided because it really doesn’t matter any more. Interesting how things get suddenly reversed: at death the future doesn’t matter, and the only things that ever mattered are in the past. When the race has ended, soon there will be no trace left of our existence, and no one around to even perpetuate any meaningful memory. How depressing. Without T.O. around to promote his achievements, what will happen to his accomplishment of ‘being someone’ instead of a ‘nobody’? Perhaps those are most contented who are happy enough to be a ‘nobody’. Expectations can be suicidal to success. Death is the great leveler. Leveling with you is a good way to end this. 

Saturday, November 12, 2016

The Strangest Election in U.S. History

The Strangest Election in U.S. History

I tend to use musings to address more philosophical issues than straight political issues. Of course the two can get intwined. This one will be pure political analysis; then I am anxious to move on. 
For some time past Donald Trump had been hinting he might run for President. Perhaps he just wanted to see his name in the paper. It is probably not unfair to assume that Trump is addicted to money, to power, to recognition, to making sure that he always comes out ahead in any contest or deal, and at any cost to others. That is where an analysis of Trump begins for this musing.

A couple of years ago I watched some dinner, I think it had to do with the press. A comedian, forget his name was busy roasting the politicians. One of his jokes was something like this: “I see Donald Trump is here with his (comment about his hair) and I understand he is thinking about running as an Independent for President. That surprises me, I thought he would run as a joke.”  When the camera panned on Trump it was obvious that he felt really, really angry and embarrassed. Whatever else Donald Trump considers himself, the last thing is a joke.

Now I make two other observations about Donald Trump: Revenge is a very strong part of his personality. Second, he doesn’t seem to have any strong opinions on a lot of political issues, especially the hot button issues. If getting nominated as a Presidential candidate would be easier in the Democratic party he probably would have run as a Democrat. It is never the issues with Trump, but in what way can he himself further himself financially and image-wise. 

From the first time Trump appeared on the stage with like more than ten other Republicans seeking the nomination, he made it immediately into an entertaining ‘reality show’. He even went so so far as to state the one female on the stage was so unattractive that nobody was going to vote for any woman with a face like hers. When another panelist objected to his comment, Trump responded that “I haven’t said anything about your face so quite whining—but I will say your face gives me a lot to work with.” He said the meanest things about any candidate who had polling numbers, or was a well know politician. From this point on it became more like the Dating Game or some trashy sit-com where endless insulting one liners keep the audience tuned in. Each threatening opponent became a Trump created caricature of ridicule. Any policy comments were general and incidental, like “I will be the biggest job creator President of all time.” 

Trump knew a lot of Americans were angry, very angry, but not all angry about the same things. Unlike Obama, who genuinely appreciates the diverse groups which make up our citizenry, Trump simply calculated which group he insults will bring additional people to his side. Trump seems to understand that prejudicial votes, once attained, will stick no matter what else he might say or do. Political issues these days are complex, and over the head of most voters because of the complexity. I mean, how many of us could go more than a minute or two with intelligent input about the issue climate change. We can’t. To keep this short, Trump who by nature is a very angry person, thrives on his anger—it fuels his energy. For this election, policy debates were far behind the anger issue. So many of those really angry—about their financial situation, abortion, gay marriage, immigrants, kicking the butts of certain foreign countries, particular minorities, and so on, felt the anger of Trump and decided he was the best candidate who expressed the same level of angriness as they did—so he was their candidate. He was the one candidate who was not concerned about political correctness. The more he trashed establish ‘norms’ of correct society, the more loyal his supporters became. Trump once remarked during the campaign that “I could kill someone and my people would stick with me”.  Trump went to an evangelical convention, made a pitch which simply said “Vote for me and I will support the very things you want.” They endorsed him. On the way out some reporter asked when was the last time Trump went to Church. He replied that he had too many important matters to deal with and didn’t have the time to go to Church. In truth, just about every behavior Trump engaged in throughout his life was definitely against evangelical beliefs. But that became tolerated because he said he would support whatever it was they were against. Just another angry group to toss in his vote bag. 

Trump broke every rule in the book about proper things to say or do in a campaign. When he bragged on a tape about how he was so important that he could simply grab a female by the ‘pussy’ and get away with it, it was passed off as just Trump being Trump—the boys will be boys mentality. Except those kind of boys don’t usually run for President. Yet there was no big drop off in support by his female fans. Actually, late in the campaign, when some mother and her son in a wheel chair with cerebral palsy were at one of his rallies, and they were chanting “Trump makes fun of the handicapped”. Trump from the stage asked his supporters to “get those two out of here”. Ok, not so unreasonable, the crowd did come to hear Trump. But amazingly the crowd began to chant: “Grab her pussy”. That’s a different kind of signature campaign rally call. 

I doubt Trump really expected to become President. He simply wanted the notoriety and personal attention he got with every victory at the polls. He was no longer a ‘joke’. Many prominent Republicans were mortified at his comments and felt for sure he was relegating the Party to extinction. I mean, who would vote for a person like this to be President? It might be a clue to watch the kind of reality shows and sit-coms which are so popular on TV.  Towards the end of the campaign most party notables would not appear on the stage with him. Almost all polls showed Hilliary winning. 

But, as a sign of the times, when the election was over, Trump was now the President. And the whole saner part of the planet was shocked. The huge number of people across the globe who detest their government leaders, were ecstatic, jubilant——the establishment is gone. And whoever got rid of it was their hero. None of his supporters knew what he would really do if President. It didn’t matter, what he did do is get rid of the establishment. This is global now in democratic elections—get rid of the incumbents.

The democrats are now totally shut out of all branches of the government, even though at the start of the campaign the democrats were a shoo in to control congress, the Presidency, and the Supreme Court. By the time election night was over, they would be controlling nothing. BUT, does anyone really know what Trump will do as President?  My guess is that he will continue to do whatever makes his ego grow larger. Because of the way he won he is not really beholden to anyone. Can the evangelicals really depend on him to back their religious demands?  If doing that is not beneficial to his own interests, they probably need to be concerned. Frankly, Trump won because the rural white voters who used to vote Democratic, switched and voted Republican. If Trump can keep these rural citizens on his side, how do the Democrats get back in power? However, be all this as it may, if the financial status of the poor, which often includes rural whites, continues to tank in all aspects, Trump will be booted out. What are the chances that Trump will be able to tax the wealthy enough to help return some of their wealth back into society?  Probably zilch. What are the chances that Trump can get global decent minimum wages?  Probably zilch. What are the chances that Trump can stop global human overpopulation? Probably zilch.

Notice that suddenly, after the election Trump is being especially kind-worded to those top Democrats who he had never missed a chance to assassinate their character. And the reverse is true to some extent. Now that Trump is President a lot of people are more than willing, or at leas publicly hoping that Trump will be a different kind of person. The same thing happened with Hitler. His opposition reasoned that once in power Hitler would behave differently. While I don’t think it is possible to accurately predict what Trump will do,  the odds are high, that whatever his position on any issue that comes up will not be decided on whether it is good for the country, but what a chosen position will do for his image and control over our citizens. It is good to keep in mind that right now Trump is the Republican Party, stripped of past leaders, and serves at Trump’s pleasure. On these hot button issues which I doubt Trump cares little about one way or the other, they will be decided on how best his actions here serve his own interests. Just to weaken and destroy the Democratic Party Trump might (I said might) do some good things for hispanic, blacks, gays, women and so on. How can he personally lose if he does? When he attacked them while campaigning his attacks on certain groups gained him votes. Now, anything he does nice for these groups will gain him support. Like who will his right wing supporters in the election turn to? His strong sense of revenge argues against any of this but it will boil down to whether he gets more satisfaction from revenge or taking support away from the democratic party. Even the millionaires and billionaires need get edgy. Trump already has used the ‘rigged’ system to make his millions and is assured millions in the future if he ends up another Rush Limbaugh radio or TV talk show host. If cutting the rug out from under his fellow rich beyond imagination can make him a hero to the less wealthy, he might very well just do it. After all, Trump’s age demands he become a hero to the greatest extent possible right now

What Trump says today is based on what that will do for Donald Trump today. What Donald Trump says at any point in the future will depend on what that will do for his personal image at that future time

So it will be great theatre. Most politicians have strong positions on a lot of issues. They sometimes fall on the sword pushing their support for these issues so dear to them. So, realistically, we really don’t have any sure basis to know what Trump will do on most anything. So far in his life, including his campaign, he doesn’t listen too much to any advisory staff and they often quit because he pays no attention to them. Thus the fact he  won the election on his own terms probably ensures he will call his own shots during the Presidency also. We also don’t know how long he can handle the stress of the Presidency. He is very high strung. Putin is probably depending on Trump to cause so much domestic turmoil that he won’t have time to bother Putin much with Putin’s global actions, what ever they might be. A lot of Americans believe Trump will blow everything up and cause social and economic turmoil, and probably so does Putin. 

At this point, I am tired of this musing and do not know what Trump will do about most anything.From past musings it is clear that I see major social, economic, and military/terroristic implosions in the near future; who is President will not be able to stop these implosions, only move the date forward or backward.  Personally, I am not going to nitpick over a few years one way or the other. It is what it is and will be when it will be. No, the Shadow doesn’t know either. Only the laws which control the evolutionary process dictate the future, and set the time table.  No species, and certainly no individual member of any species, controls the destiny of evolution. We are unwilling players in the game, but never in control of where evolution takes us. Individuals can impact only on how much personal contentment they achieve in their brief existence—and this depends on how closely they follow the Golden Rule combined with how many others around them follow the Golden Rule. Contentment is not self achievable. It requires some luck (chance) and lots of help from others as we wend our way to personal  extinction. 

Surprise!!! Again I end as I so often end a musing:

“There is a way of life, a way of thinking, of behaving towards other men and your fellow creatures, towards all living things, towards the whole earth and the sky and the sun that is based on love, on compassion, on respect, on cherishing everything there is around you because it is wonderful, unique, it’s natural and good and it evolved that way by itself, it’s got to be cherished and if we think like that, and live that kind of life, we can all have our freedom, we can all have our happiness, we can all feel the sun and smell the grass and smell the flowers and look upon each other with appreciation.” (Unknown) 

I will add one more nugget here: “It is commonplace of all religious thought, even the most primitive, that the man seeking visions and insight must go apart from his fellows and live for a time in the wilderness. If he is of the proper sort, he will return with a message. It may not be a message from the God he set out to seek, but even if he has failed in that particular, he will have had a vision or seen a marvel, and these are always worth listening to and thinking about...... One must seek, then, what only the solitary approach can give--a natural revelation.” Loren Eiseley (Anthropologist, philosopher, natural science writer, sometimes called ‘the modern Thoreau’)

I think the above  is why my favorite hobby is the long solo walks I take in various nature settings and city communities. Nothing mellows me out more than these solitary wanderings. It makes me feel more appreciative of my own existence and more in tune with the diversity of life on our planet. It is more rewarding to accept that everyone matters than to be too self serving and full of ourselves. It’s all good theatre and a tad sad for me to realize that soon the curtain will fall for someone my age. No tragedy. No whining. No feeling that God is about to forsake me. No axe to grind. No need for a coffin, a tombstone, a funeral, just vanish and be one of the ‘grateful dead’, which sounds good but means nothing. We start as a nothingburger and end up a nothingburger. As T.O. would say: “Fair is fair.” Smile. 


Thursday, November 10, 2016

America the Invader

America the Invader

This is a tricky musing to write. It is not written to impugn the motives, at least for most Americans, for having invaded like 60 countries since World War II and bombed many dozens of nations. No other country has come remotely close. Basically the concept appears to be that if we don’t police the world and nip antidemocratic challenges in the bud, the domino theory kicks in and we ourselves, as a nation, will be at risk of attack. Behind much of this is the belief that we, with our wealth and military might, know best what kind of government, culture, and religion is best for others less prosperous or weaker militarily. 

For me, it just seems most nations simply take what they can, when they can, and justify what they did just like we justify what we have done and continue to do. Humans tend to be greedy by nature—  as individuals, as families, and as nations. Some individuals, some families, some nations manage to discipline their greed more than others, and ironically, with exceptions, those who discipline their greed end up the most contented. The Swiss are probably most contented, and if they spoke English, I might be attracted by the contented simplistic state of mind. The most discontented are those for whom enough is never enough regarding money, power, fame, control, and so on. Addiction, the failure to be satisfied with enough of whatever, is a very frustrating medical mental condition.

Historically America has pretty much taken whatever it now owns. The Indians of various tribes were in the Americas first, but despite the vastness of these two continents, no native Americans control any national boundaries within the Americas. There are 35 nations which make up the Americas and the natives control not one of these nations. I would guess the ethical solution would have been to at least allowed the original inhabitants to have one nation all by themselves.  I mean, really. Unfortunately, most Americans are more like the Puritans—the Puritans may have escaped religious persecution abroad, but once they had their own colony, no one persecuted those of different religious beliefs more than the Puritans. They even managed witch burnings. We now settle for the less bar-barbaric method of death by gunfire, sometimes multiple deaths per round. Expansion from the original colonies was always by military conquest or monetary buyouts.  Manifest destiny became an American mindset with the corollary mindset that God Himself was on our side.  After World War two, when every other major power was in a state of rubble and exhaustion, only America was poised to recover on it’s own with all of it’s infrastructure in place, and seemingly endless natural resources. Overnight we became the world’s superpower— operating on a self serving notion of manifest destiny, I guess as a a gift from God——albeit am not sure which true God of which true religious sect blessed us in this way. 

Our very first President, Gentleman George Washington, warned us against getting involved in European conflicts. I reckon even Washington would have helped other countries from being taken over by Germany in both World Wars. Being a Superpower came with serious drawbacks. And these drawbacks have reached a very dangerous point. As a nation we need to re-examine just what our endless meddling in the affairs of other nations has gained us. 

For a start, since World War II and maybe the Korean War, what has all this invading and bombing and boycotting gained us the past 50 years?  I guess we won with Reagan’s Granada, the least significant nation we have invaded. We had some success with the Balkans, and then I draw a blank. If our goals were noble and we were trying to bring democracy, prosperity, and tranquility to the invaded nations, then we not only have failed, but have made life for them just as bad or worse. Rubble, refugees, gangsters, religious wars, poverty, no personal safety for the inhabitants, and deaths by the hundreds of thousands or millions—AND inside every ‘defeated’ country there are groups who blame America for all of the above miseries, so we become a prime target for almost all the terrorist groups in the world. 

It seems like old fashioned war with uniformed government soldiers fighting on battlefields has become obsolete. But that hasn’t stopped us from building more and more weapons—smarter and smarter, more destructive than ever—while supporting military bases in 63 countries——more foreign military bases than any other people, nation, or empire in History. 

History doesn’t really repeat itself for the simple reason things change and with these changes, the old ways which worked before fail to work anymore, and new ways are necessitated. But there are some generalities which seem to still be intact. For example, every empire in history with rare, if any exceptions, has imploded mostly from within by the accumulation of wealth domestically within the hands of a few, while other segments of the population get poorer, and the cost of maintaining a foreign empire becomes too costly and unmanageable. This fits the U.S. to a tee right now and there are no political platforms which seriously address this dilemma. To make matters much worse, we just need add human overpopulation of the planet and climate change. What is different here is that we are no longer talking about just America imploding for the usual reason empires implode, but also the global implications of this overpopulation and climate change—AND I guess we can add the global sport of terrorism which is available to any group or individual angry about most anything. 

We kind of have the gut feeling that even America, the most powerful military might on the planet, cannot stop the kind of terrorism taking place across the globe. If I want to create havoc and kill a whole bunch of people there are thousands of ways I could do such a thing. It is simply unpreventable, and such incidents are happening now at an exponential rate. Why? In part because our gadgets, which provide all kinds of information to our brain, overload our neural circuitry, getting us agitated about more and more things, and mostly things over which we have little control. So many personal things which we could do ourselves were simply not in our thoughts 50 years ago. No one envisioned going to school and getting shot. No one envisioned attending a movie, or a shopping center, etc and having someone with a military weapon of destruction kill dozens of people at random within minutes. Utilizing amazing irrationality we seem to have concluded that if we all walk around armed with weapons of mass destruction we will all be safe. It is no surprise that those states with the least restrictive gun laws have the most gun deaths. I mean duh? We all, I assume, understand that violence begets violence, but then emotionally we ignore this and actually perpetuate violence as a means to control violence. Not too bright. We need some more evolutionary progress and fast. 

Now let’s examine how the greatest military power in the world is actually working. Why do we keep invading all these countries when there has been no real success for over 50 years? Keep in mind that we don’t really pay for these invasions. We borrow the money because, while we want to invade, we don’t want any tax increases. Nor do most of us want to personally participate in these kind of wars. Thus we borrow the money and depend on mercenaries to fight these wars (those who sign up to serve, in most cases do so because it brings an income and some independence). Of course the next generation is even less interested to pay the debt off and so we just end up deeper in debt. And politicians find it easiest to get elected if instead of campaigning on the need to pay off the debt,  they campaign to give the middle class a tax break. The whole business here could not be more disingenuous and dead ended. 

The truth is that these wars, fought on borrowed money and with mercenaries, combined with tax cuts—all this means that most of us need sacrifice nothing for these wars. On top of this, these invasions stimulate the economy and richly reward all those involved in the industrial military complex that Eisenhower warned us about. Unemployment would rise substantially without all these invasions. It is not far from the truth to say these incessant invasions are our most lucrative industry, and the biggest source of employment, one way or another, for our citizens. 

It is probably fair to say that all the countries, with precious few exceptions, have never recovered from our invasion, and are worse off economically than before we invaded, no matter how bad their government at the time. We need to be a tad more honest. Many of the citizens left alive after our invasion, including all the refugees scattered across the globe, live in a most pitiful manner, numb from all the stress they have been through, and often are simply at the mercy of whatever gang of thugs controls their community for the time being. We ourselves are furious at the hundreds of  innocent Americans who have been killed by terroristic attacks, including the 3000 killed in the 9/11 attacks. But our anger probably pales next to that of some in these invaded nations who feel all the rubble, the displaced persons, the refugees, the millions killed or crippled or homeless, or forced to live in unsafe unhealthy conditions are due to our terrorism. If an American drone or missile kills several in their community what is so different from a terrorist taking out several Americans in a terror attack with their body bomb, land mine, or automatic rifle?  Who is the terrorist becomes relative. 

In essence we cover our financial benefits gained from these invasions with pompous claims that we are the freedom fighters, the liberators, the white knights rushing in to save innocent people from slaughter, the ethical force in the world. If this were really true, given the failures of all these invasions, we would stop invading these sordid countries. And for the most part, sordid they really are. Religious wars in the Middle East between factions of the same religion have been going on for centuries, much like Catholic and Protestants in Ireland spent hundreds of years killing and hating each other. We should never enter any religious wars. They are absolutely the worst kind of wars, which invariably know no end to the cruelty involved. When humans think God is on their side, God help those who are the heathens in question. No method of killing is ever cruel enough to satisfy religious fanatics. We may have fought all these wars over in the Middle East to save them from themselves, but the sad and ironic result is that we have become far more like them now in our politics and violence than they have ever become like we envisioned them to be.

We even got silly, and for example, claimed we got so involved in the religious factions in the Middle East  because we needed the oil. Really? What is so wrong to simply state if we cannot buy oil from any country in the Middle East at market prices, we will simply go in and take it. Everyone wants American money, foremost and always. We don’t have to threaten war, just wave our money in front of them. 

And for Heaven’s sake: What logic gave the UN a right to create a religious state for a particular religious group? The UN didn’t create a state for the American Indians, strewn across the Americas, or the Baptists strewn across the globe, or the Hindus, or the gays, or the atheists, or the handicapped, etc. I guess by the same flawed logic the hispanics in Texas should be given a portion of Texas for their own state. The healthiest thing for organized religious groups,  and for citizens as a whole, would be to ensure there is no such thing as a religious state. There is no worse tyranny than the tyranny of a religious majority given state control. Religious fanatics always feel that their true God has dictated to them how things should be and that is the way they will be. End of debate. Like who has any right to oppose God? 

Recent elections across the globe have done nothing to remotely address the issues which are the most important for the survival or advancement of the human species. When we have an election here in which a major issue is considered to be whether using the wrong internet server disqualifies someone from being President and other such trivial garbage, there is little hope for advancement of our society. If all these invasions are dumb and non productive, then maybe we should desist. 

Most everything today is global, whether we like it or not. Ignoring this hardly generates any useful solutions to the real problems we face on this planet. Let us start by remembering that 99% of all species which ever existed on our planet are now extinct. We understand, and to some degree accept, that all of us will die, that no one gets out of this world alive. But in reality, almost all species will not be around forever either. Will our species be the exception?  I have no idea. 

Right now it is estimated that there are 10-14 million different species existing, and we have documented about 1.2 million of these and 86% have not even been described. Species come and go in the evolutionary process mainly because climate changes occur. There have been 5 major extinction periods in evolutionary history. 

1st One: 444 million years ago—86% of species became extinct
2nd One: 375 million years ago—75% of species disappeared
3rd one:  251 million years ago—96% of species disappeared
4th One: 200 million years ago—870% of species disappeared
5th One: 66 million years ago: ——76 % of all species lost

According to most (75%) evolutionary scientists, we are now living in the midst or start of the 6th massive extinction period, which they are calling the Holocene Extinction Period. We are now said to be losing up to 140,000 species per year. These species are in our way. 

What is different about this 6th massive extinction period is that the cause is due to the activity of a particular species—yep, you guessed it, they are talking about the human species. Our species is putting tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Perhaps we will find ways to remove it, but that won’t solve the companion problem which we simply refuse to address: human overpopulation. The human population on this globe has doubled in just my lifetime. If anyone thinks human population can be allowed to double again, this is clearly delusional. We understand from Biology 101 that overpopulation is a disaster for any species, but we manage to pretend that the human species is exempt. Responsible reproduction is something which needs to be enforced globally, but it is a topic not even mentioned in Presidential debates. We actually pretend the future depends on such crucial issues as abortions, gay marriage, prayers in school, marijuana use, and a myriad other hot button issues that really amount to lack of tolerance to diversity.

The real issues facing this country and most every other country on the planet are not addressed at all.  The current election, which will probably be over by the time I finish this, does not determine whether the shit hits the fan, but how soon the shit hits the fan. Trump will likely blow up everything in short order and delight in doing so. He is a very unhappy emotionally disturbed extremely self serving blowhard who has lived his entire life making sure anyone with whom he deals gets the short end of the stick.  That he could actually be in the running for President doesn’t say much for the mind set of millions of Americans. For different reasons, they too are angry, Trump is angry, and so Trump is their guy. That’s about the end of their logic. Hilliary would probably succeed in stalling the inevitable for maybe a few years. Unfortunately, the inevitable is not something we can run from.

The human species is about to implode on itself, if not to extinction (unlikely I would guess right now) to total and violent disorder. All this will happen, sooner rather than later, for the following reasons. 

1. Human overpopulation
2. Climate change
3. Inability for there to be global living wage minimum wages. In a global economy, without reasonable minimum wages which rise with inflation, workers are simply screwed. There is no way to effectively compete with those working for slave wages. 
4. The inability to globally prevent those at the top from grabbing an obscene amount of their nation’s wealth. In the U.S. 2-5% of the citizens now own 90% of our wealth. Outrageous. 
5. As long as recreational drug abuse is a police and political issue instead of a purely medical matter, our ever growing in size ghettoes will become poorer and evermore violent.
6. The inability of the ‘Golden Rule” to become the ethical standard for all people everywhere. Religious sects have become outdated and antithetical to enabling diversity to prosper and there be peace for all “Gods” children
7. Illogical information overload via gadgets which are filled with information that has no logical or scientific validation. People don’t have to live much with the reality of others around them. Social life these days is often pretty much with others via media gadgets who look just like us, think just like us, behave just like us, and so on. This encourages hostility to human diversity, and removes any pressure for us to understand those who are different from ourselves. 
8. No country, with as diverse a population as in the U.S. can be prosperous, peaceful, and have justice for all until differing groups can find ways to truly respect each other and ensure that all the diverse groups get justice, opportunities, a level playing field, and emotional support for everyone just trying to make a better life for themselves. Modern day ‘family values’ has become a toxic social poison in which we learn to worry only about our ‘own’ and to ignore the needs of the rest of ‘God’s children’  When everyone matters, then—and only then—will everyone achieve some contentment, those who give and those who receive. That’s real ethics and the only ethics which matters. 

Does anything written above matter? In the purest sense no. The script for evolution is determined by the laws created by “God” (however one visions this) and not by any particular species. It is us who have created a God in our own image, And in our best self-serving desire have declared that we are special to God, and even that each of us can have a personal relationship with God, that if we pray to God, He might even alter the laws which govern the evolutionary process as a favor to us personally. There is zero evidence for this. Much as we might wish otherwise, many of us will reach the point where we, frustrated to the hilt, ask “Why God hath thou forsaken me”?, then are forced to recover our anger, lest we anger God in our frustration, and conclude that “God operates in mysterious ways” and we move on to die or accept our fate until we eventually do die. 

On what basis would God allow one person to be born in the right place, by the right parents, at the right place in time, and allow another person to be born in the wrong place, by the wrong parents, at the wrong place in time? We like to think we ourselves have earned our successes and blessings, but this is clearly hogwash. The best we can hope for is to be lucky at birth and then hope, via the Golden Rule, that others will help us achieve some contentment with our limited potential.  As a child I Iearned to help my pets achieve some happiness and helped them be safe. This brought me contentment.  That same principle applies on an even greater scale with other people. The more time we take time to help others with their needs, the greater contentment we will achieve ourselves. We would do better to never give gifts or inheritance, or excessive amounts of our time to those in no need of this, and to always give whatever we are in a position to give, to those most in need. Absent any case for special handicaps, children once past their formative years are best left to be financially independent from their parents, and all adults, including those with handicaps, become the collective obligation for all members of society to assist these least fortunate with their differing needs. That is hard to do, but is also the fairest for all concerned. Only then does any society achieve the maximum amount of contentment for the greatest number of citizens. 

I have taught at one of the most prestigious universities and one of the least prestigious universities. At one just about every student passes the course with an A, B, or C. They would never have gotten in were they not good students already. At the other university it was a good semester if 25% managed to pass the course. The difference was that, for many in that 25%, their Professor played a major role in helping them to become a better student so they could pass. They end up, often after some intense clashes, with eternal gratitude and the Professor ends up with elevated contentment for his/her role in enabling the student to succeed. In a prestigious university the students are already good at the game, and they will succeed no matter how good or poor the Professor is as a teacher. If our job is such that there is no opportunity to help the less fortunate, then there are all kinds of ways to do just that away from our job. Money, time, and skills are all helpful tools to go through life assisting the less fortunate. The dividends are great. 

As I repetitively do, I will end with my favorite quote:

“There is a way of life, a way of thinking, of behaving towards other men and your fellow creatures, towards all living things, towards the whole earth and the sky and the sun that is based on love, on compassion, on respect, on cherishing everything there is around you because it is wonderful, unique, it’s natural and good and it evolved that way by itself, it’s got to be cherished and if we think like that, and live that kind of life, we can all have our freedom, we can all have our happiness, we can all feel the sun and smell the grass and smell the flowers and look upon each other with appreciation.” (Unknown)

I reckon since I wrote all the above before the Presidential election I should comment how someone who envisions our major problems as those numbered 1-8 in the musing above, feels about the election. First of all, neither I or any other human determines how the evolutionary process ends up. This is all decided by the laws created to drive the evolutionary process. Certainly my ending quote is hardly applicable to Donald Trump. We need remember that the only two constants which have characterized Trump’s life are revenge—and the principle that whenever there is an interaction between one person and another, someone will get the short end of the stick—and just be sure it is always the other person. He became very wealthy by this principle. He is not likely to change either of these two traits.

The favorite quotation above describes a frame of mind that is best suited to ensure that we ourselves, in our behavior, talk, and actions, live our own lives in whatever environmental situation we find ourselves at any time in our lives. All we can personally do is help the less fortunate as much as we can for as long as we can. If we cease doing this then our level of personal contentment will fall no matter our current environment. Only society as a whole can make the playing fields more level for all it’s citizens. As individuals we are more limited. We do what we can, be grateful for the help and good luck we get, and try to make all with whom we come in contact a better person for having had contact with us, and never let go of “There is a way of life, a way of thinking, of behaving towards other men and your fellow creatures…….” .  This is probably the most important mental state to retain no matter what societal circumstances prevail at the moment, especially after this election. 

It does seem unfortunate that people would elect a  President, apparently on the belief that this person would not really be the kind of person who he was all of his life, and during his campaign. We can then only hope he changes, which of course I will, along with others. Because of my age, life circumstance, financial situation, and belief that this election only determines how soon the ‘shit will hit the fan’, not if—I do not have the same at stake as the young or those struggling to make a living with mortgages, low pay, few benefits, bad neighborhood, severe health problems, and so on. The saddest change in my life is having to suspend my FANAFI Fund until I see what the impact of this election is on the financial markets.  So far so good, which surprises me, but then it is really too soon to tell.  


My musings tend to be more philosophical about various areas of life than political in any narrow sense. However, this particular election was the strangest election in American History, or so it seems to me, so I will write a musing titled: The Strangest Election and then revert to more philosophical topics.