25 April 2009

Everything is changing, it's happening now

Sunday April 24, 2009
. . . . .I'm going to update yesterday's post, and leave the news that was up yesterday there along with new updates. There's a reason for that, everything is happening now, not yesterday, not in 2012, not next week, but now, right frakkin' now. What I'm hoping for is to get the words out and on paper as fast as they're flooding in.

. . . .By the way, I've been asked if there was a way to capture or keep the music and little vocal messages that I put out when I post. Yes, there is, quite simple really. Subscribe to this as a feed, and you'll have the podcast of this, the soundtracks and music files captured. Apparently, according to feedback from some of you, I, on a rare occasion, put music up that you've forgotten about, or haven't heard before, and you'd like to keep. So, anyhow, if you have ITunes, go up top to the menus, click advanced and then click "subscribe to a podcast". In the URL box that comes up type in "http://anidiotsravingsattheedge.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default". The intro and the music will then be imported into your ITunes library as a file. Use the same http address that I just gave above for any other RSS feed catcher that you use, like GoogleFeeds or YahooFeeds, if you use FireFox as a browser, you can subscribe right from your toolbar. Anyhow, thought I'd pass that on. If you don't know what I'm talking about, e-mail me and I'll walk you through it, or ask your local 21 year old.

. . . . I was asked a couple of weeks ago by a reader "Who are you? What makes you believe the way you do?"

. . . .I gave the answer but not all of it. Here's the rest. I live in two worlds, and always have. There is the side of me that is very well educated in the laws of mathematics, physics, electricity and engineering. The side that knows that these laws are universal constants that cannot be broken, defeated, cheated or gotten around, and are the same everywhere, regardless, here, on Jupiter, in a distant galaxy or at the center of a black hole. I'm an information sponge that read the Encyclopedia in the summer between kindergarten and first grade, with an eidetic memory and a flair for mathematical formulas, probabilities and equated outcomes. who's always learned to tone that down for the sake of the people around me, and is damn near autistic in his social relationships.

. . . .There's another side of me, just as vital, and just as prescient who has always, repeat always, known that there was something else, some other thing or a world beyond our own. A kid who heard, as a child, what other people were thinking, who could talk to dead people, and still does, regularly. A child who learned to shut it off and out, for the sanity's sake, and was finally able to turn it back on as an adult, when he was given the opportunity and chance to learn how to monitor it, use it, channel it and believe in it. Someone who now has the privilege and opportunity to understand that there really is a world beyond our world, that this world has a Creator, and spirits that live in both worlds, with us. Ceremonies that can touch things inside us and reach beyond this veil, and allow me, us all, the brief moment on occasion to see the Great Mystery, to touch the Face of God.

. . . .Two distinctly different crowds of people, but very good friends in each one, people whom I love, people who I proudly call friend. Two crowds with supposedly diametrically opposed viewpoints, people who cannot understand one another, and here I stand, at that crossroads between them. The place where the rational, scientific world intesects with the world of the mystic and the spiritual, the Crossroads.

. . . . .What's happened is the ability to "see" the connections between apparently unrelated events, to understand the chain of events, to see the nexus points where the information all flows in, creating nodal points (points where the course of human history can be changed). It's allowed me to become someone who lives in both worlds, and sees how the Wakiyan, Anansi, the Orishas, Ochosi, Eleggua & Xango; Fallen Angels, all of them, travel the circuits, the connections and live in the cyberworld, more real than ever. It's allowed me to see how Jesus, Krishna, Mohammed and Buddha are all hanging out a great greasy rib shack somewhere with an incredible band that they've assembled all playing some of the best rock and roll in all of eternity.
. . . .It's the ability to process loads of information rapidly, multiple streams of data and start seeing how it all fits together, what the equations say will occur, since absolutely everything can really be boiled down to an equation. It's unfortunate that we educate our children by having them learn arithmetic first, since once you get through all of it, you begin to understand just how abstract and difficult something like arithmetic and number sets are. The real world operates on the calculus and differential equations, which is what gives us "randomness" and probability, what gives us how large systems with multiple inputs interact, and is much easier to "see".
I'm not unique, there's always someone around like that, just as there are others who have other, different, gifts, all just as real, just as unique.

. . . . . Don't get all of that? OK, here's the first reading assignment from the Angel, there are 6 books altogether by William Gibson, who was, and is, one of the best futurists to ever put together a novel. I said futurist, I use language very intentionally and specifically. Gibson had, and has, the uncanny knack to see exactly what was coming. So . . .click the link, get yourself over to Amazon, and order yourself up: Neuromancer, Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive, Virtual Light & All Tomorrow's Parties. You'll get "it" eventually.

. . . .Chaos theory is definitely misunderstood by both the crowds that I run with, and as a result, I'm not always understood. The distinct possibility for that, I suppose, is it's name. It's not really about chaos at all, but only what appears to be chaos upon casual observation. It's a mathematical system for probabilities in complex systems, such as our society, our Nation, or our own Earth. To understand it completely, the fractals, the differentials, the potential probabilities; the equations behind it does take quite a bit. To understand it's essence is actually incredibly simple. It's understanding that nothing that happens is random, that everything, absolutely everything is predictable. It's also understanding that within those nodal points I referred to earlier, those points where the entire course of human history can be changed, where everything shifts lie infinite possibilities. It's understanding that there is absolutely nothing that is an inevitable outcome, that there is no such thing as an unavoidable doom, that there is no such thing as guaranteed salvation. The guarantee of chaos theory is that the one constant in a system is change, change that may seem to be beyond our ability to shape or influence, but if the nodal points can be understood and seen, if there is at least one person who has a glimpse of the mathematical possibilities and probabilities, then the direction of that change can be influenced and shaped, and all it takes is subtle nudges, of any kind, thus always there is hope, always hope that the direction taken, the outcome, is one that will (a) always be predictable, even though the mathematics of that prediction may be hard to comprehend or figure and (2) even in the midst of seeming disaster, there is a chance that those disastrous conditions actually may lead to a desirable outcome.

. . . .So. . . . .I hope that you all are beginning to see why, at least for me, I do this. The more that facts are known, the more that the shape of things begins to come clearer, the more defined the connections are, the sharper the image becomes. If we truly believe that we are all related, that we are all connected, not just us, but everything in the world, then it becomes obvious that we are part of picture. We, the collective we, created a mantra last summer, last fall, a prayer, a koan all centered around the word "change" and we sent that forth. The election was only a part of that, we sent that mantra, that thought, that prayer out into the world, and it had a lot of energy behind it. Well, folks, be careful what you ask for, change we have, and in abundant fashion. So, yes, there really is a relationship between increased and more severe storms, climate change, a financial crisis of unprecedented proportions, societal upheaval centered around gay marriage and race relations, with the right wing pushing back hard; a fear about food supplies; a reshaping of the political system; a religious war that rages unabated in the Mideast that we have the barest comprehension of, and a pandemic, deadly flu virus that appeared out of nowhere not during flu season, that is a heretofore unknown genetic mix of swine flu, avian flu and human flu, an unknown strain, that there are no vaccines for, and that is now killing people and in 24 hours has vectored uncontrollably and wildly. The basic thought pattern behind chaos theory is that no change is entirely unexpected, although sometimes wildly improbable, but there is still the chance inside a nodal point that it could happen, so it does. That's the nature of mutation, or intuitive leaps, or improbable happenings. They are real, and they do happen.

. . . . .Remember that language is symbolic, it's not only the letters coming together to make words and sentences. It's the soundtrack, it's the colors, it's the font, it's the way the breeze is blowing while you read, the colors around you, the thought that goes behind everything. It's not just the words and letters.

. . . .Why does this become important and count, and have a need to be understood and comprehended? Because we're in desperate trouble here on this beautiful little blue marble, that's why. As the evidence mounts, it would take the most stone-headed of "those who would deny" to try and ignore or refute the dramatic evidence mounting everyday of dramatic and catastrophic climate change going on around us every day.
- The Chicago Tribune turns this one in on a report called The Environment America study, based on government and university data. The report comes to the conclusion that American corn (the most important crop in the cycle of life on this planet) yields alone will be reduced by 3 percent due to rising temperatures, with Illinois and Iowa hit the hardest, and as a nation, we will lose $1.4 billion in corn revenues. The report does not even attempt to calculate the losses from storms, floods, ozone pollution or increased insect damage due to those same rising temperatures, but only quantifies based on sub-par growing conditions due to the temperature increase.
- Researchers with NASA and The National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado report that Arctic Sea Ice is at it's thinnest levels in over 30 years. More than 90 percent of sea ice in the Arctic is only 1 or 2 years old.
- From the BBC, this video of an ice bridge breaking up in the Antarctic, which linked an ice shelf the size of Jamaica to two islands in the Antarctic. The scientists who released it say it's proof that the climate is changing much more rapidly than thought or predicted.
- From CNN, this report on a village of Upik's having to abandon their village and their homes due to climate change:
The community of the tiny coastal village of Newtok voted to relocate its 340 residents to new homes 9 miles away, up the Ninglick River. The village, home to indigenous Yup'ik Eskimos, is the first of possibly scores of threatened Alaskan communities that could be abandoned.
Warming temperatures are melting coastal ice shelves and frozen sub-soils, which act as natural barriers to protect the village against summer deluges from ocean storm surges.
"We are seeing the erosion, flooding and sinking of our village right now," said Stanley Tom, a Yup'ik Eskimo and tribal administrator for the Newtok Traditional Council.
The crisis is unique because its devastating effects creep up on communities, eating away at their infrastructure, unlike with sudden natural disasters such as wildfires, earthquakes or hurricanes.
Newtok is just one example of what the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns is part of a growing climate change crisis that will displace 150 million people by 2050.
- This one developed rapidly over the day on Saturday and I've included Sunday's update below it. When I first tuned in CNN Saturday morning, there were 60 reported deaths in Mexico City from an outbreak of swine flu. By the end of the day, going into the late afternoon, there are now 68 confirmed deaths from this flu, with over 1,000 confirmed infected in Mexico City alone. This morning, there were no confirmed cases in the States. Again, by late afternoon, there are 2 confirmed cases in Kansas, 8 confirmed in Texas and California, and an outbreak in a private school in New York City. This can't be taken lightly, and yes it ties in. We cannot continue to destroy the ecosphere and not expect some reaction to those actions. This is very serious, deadly strain of flu, that CDC officials say genetically has strains of swine flu, avian flu and a third flu. It genetically altered to adapt, there aren't any vaccines right now, and no, it's not flu season in North America right now. WHO officials and CDC officials are very concerned that this is the "pandemic" flu that has been predicted for some time now. As I wrote above about the length of time (less than 8 hours) and the particular locations, the disease vectors on this are taking off in some wild directions.
Sunday Update
- The White House held a press briefing today on the flu: It's not time to panic
"We do think this will continue to spread but we are taking aggressive actions to minimize the impact on people's health," said Dr. Richard Besser, acting chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."We're preparing in an environment where we really don't know ultimately what the size or seriousness of this outbreak is going to be," Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told reporters.Earlier, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said the outbreak was serious, but that the public should know "it's not a time to panic." He told NBC's "Meet the Press" that Obama was getting updates "every few hours."There is no vaccine against swine flu, but the CDC has taken the initial step necessary for producing one _ creating a seed stock of the virus _ should authorities decide that's necessary. Last winter's flu shot offers no cross-protection to the new virus, although it's possible that older people exposed to various Type A flu strains in the past may have some immunity, CDC officials said Sunday.


- The United States has declared a public health emergency, and is likening it to preparing for a hurricane:
The U.S. declared a public health emergency Sunday to deal with the emerging new swine flu, much like the government does to prepare for approaching hurricanes.

Officials reported 20 U.S. cases of swine flu in five states so far, with the latest in Ohio and New York.

"As we continue to look for cases, we are going to see a broader spectrum of disease," predicted Dr. Richard Besser, acting chief of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "We're going to see more severe disease in this country."

At a White House news conference, Besser and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano sought to assure Americans that health officials are taking all appropriate steps to minimize the impact of the outbreak.
- From CNN:
- Canada has found it's first case
- Now, along with Texas, California and New York, Kansas and Ohio have reported cases.
- And in the sincerest case of buffoonery and hypocrisy yet, Governor Rick Perry of Texas, who last week was making very sincere and real statements about secession, has now asked for Federal help in dealing with his borders and the flu outbreak.
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- To go along with the massive disappearance of frogs (more on that below, and it's significance), now scientists are concerned about the large numbers of honeybees, bumblebees and butterflies that are simply missing, and the large dieoffs in those populations. This ties in with the corn problem that I talked about above, without bees, we lose our most important pollinators, which leads to no crops. With crops already threatened with flooding, the loss of fresh water reservoirs and the increasing loss of arable land to desert, the loss of bees as pollinators could severely threaten our ability to keep a food supply going.
- The problem of the disappearing frogs continues to plague scientists. Since frogs bridge the gap between water and land, they are the "first responders" of ecosystem changes. With disappearing wetlands, and increasingly polluted fresh water, the frogs are acting as our canaries in a coal mine, letting us know that the ecosphere is increasingly becoming unbalanced.

. . . .How serious is it? Serious enough that Al Gore addressed Congress on Friday on the issue of climate change and the need for sweeping action. Serious enough that Congress is now beginning to move on legislation, starting this last week with the hearings that Gore addressed, that will rival the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts passed in the 70's. Serious enough that back on Wednesday, Earth Day, Energy Secretary Chu laid out a climate change doomsday scenario in a press briefing at The Summit of the Americas:

And so let me remind you that the Earth has already warmed up by about 0.8 degrees Centigrade; that the experts acknowledge that there is another 1 degree Centigrade already built into the system, even if humans stopped carbon emissions today flat. That's because we put enough greenhouse gases up into the atmosphere, the sun continues to warm up the Earth, and until you reach a new equilibrium or the heat from the Earth then reaches the equilibrium -- what's coming in and what's getting reflected back -- there's 1 degree change already; that there's a reasonable probability we can go above 4 degrees Centigrade to 5 and 6 more. That means we have a -- there's a reasonable probability, and certainly in business-as-usual scenario, we can go to 5 or 6 degrees Centigrade.
Now, what does that mean? The last ice age, we were 6 degrees Centigrade colder than we are today -- a very different world. Okay, only 6 degrees Centigrade means, in North America, ice sheet from Canada down to Pennsylvania, Ohio -- year round in ice. So imagine a world 6 degrees warmer. It's not going to recognize geographical boundaries. It's not going to recognize anything. So agriculture regions today will be wiped out. Yes, there are parts of Canada will be -- can grow more food, but, you know, the other thing is, the Earth is spherical and the sun hits at an angle up north. So there are going to be huge consequences if we go up to that 4, 5, 6 degrees.
I think the Caribbean countries face rising oceans and they face increase in the severity of hurricanes. This is something that is very, very scary to all of us; that if you consider what has been happening, especially in the polar regions in the north, and you look at the predictions of the IPCC beginning in 1990, this is something they didn't do so well. It's melting considerably faster than anyone predicted ten years ago.
So we are terribly afraid there will be an increase in temperature if the ice in the Antarctica and Greenland melt. This is bad news. If Greenland melts -- it's two or three kilometers thick -- we're looking at a seven-meter sea level rise around the world. Some island states will disappear.
. . . .None of this is meant to be doomsday, or to scare anyone, but I hope you're scared. As scared as I am. It's scientific research, and it's fact. It's meant to give you some factual basis to have a discussion with someone, anyone, who isn't a believer yet, or is still a skeptic. It's happening, and it may seem overwhelming, but there are things we can do, a lot of things. So. . . . In that vein, how about a list of resolutions that you and I can do each and every day to help make things a wee bit better. I know it's overwhelming, and it may seem like you or I can't make a big difference, but each little thing adds up to a big thing and it all helps. From Planet Green, Cara Smusiak over at NaturallySavvy.com put together this list of resolutions that you or I can do:

  • Ditch plastic wrap (some of it contains PVC—yikes!)
  • Stop using paper plates. This is one of my biggest pet peeves. It's wasteful and completely unnecessary. If you're worried about family time, make washing dishes or loading the dishwasher a rotating chore that you do with one of your kids each evening.
  • Use public transit
  • Walk or take your bike whenever possible
  • Stop using chemical cleaners. Switch to natural products or homemade solutions.
  • Choose organic foods—particularly when it comes to pesticide-heavy produce and genetically modified foods.
  • Grow your own fruits and vegetables to eliminate pesticides and a huge part of your carbon footprint.
  • Start composting!
  • Stop using chemical fertilizers and pesticides. There are tons of natural alternatives on the market and all sorts of home remedies. (Trust me, people with chemical sensitivities will thank you.)
  • Use cloth diapers.
  • Volunteer with a local recycling program or environmental group.
  • Paper or plastic? Neither. Always take along a reusable bag when you leave the house.
  • Learn one new thing about the environment every week, then pass it on. Knowledge is power.
  • Reduce your garbage to a maximum of one bag per week. (It's the limit in my town, and with four people in my house, we rarely fill the bag.)
  • Send one letter or postcard to a politician—local, state, federal or international—each month concerning an environmental issue. A politician once told me that one letter or postcard represents about 50 people who feel the same way. Politicians won't take the environment seriously unless you show them you do.
  • Cut your paper footprint and switch to recycled paper products—paper towels, toilet paper, printing paper.
  • Ditch wrapping paper and paper gift bags in favor of eco-friendly and reusable alternatives.
  • Refuse to use polystyrene (Styrofoam). If a restaurant or take-out joint uses it, point out that it's unhealthy and bad for the environment.
  • Don't buy products made with PVC (polyvinyl chlorate). PVC is difficult to recycle and a recent study links the phthalates in vinyl flooring to autism. Other places PVC is lurking include: shower curtains, rain gear...
. . . .The popular myth is that being green, that going green is expensive. Wrong, as this video (click the link) shows, back during WWII, the entire nation went green in a business model that demanded that resources needed to be put into tank, gun and plane manufacturing. It wasn't expensive to do it then, it's not expensive to do it now.

. . . .One of the best ways to go green at home, to start getting ready for solar, is to get more efficient, less costly in our use of energy at home. From Intent.com, this article that says the first step in going solar is to cut your energy use now, first, while hooked 100% into the existing grid.

. . . . .I was reflecting today on the changes in weather patterns that seem to have accelerated the last couple of years. The heavy flooding in North Dakota last month, Iowa last year. The tornados last week in Columbus, Georgia. The harsh winter up throughout the Great Lakes, and the extreme cold that hung in from the Great Lakes to the East Coast until today. Due to the places that I live and work, and where my friends are, I get it all. If I look at the cycle starting it right now, it's flood season up in the Great Lakes, with tornadoes through the South. Soon, it'll be tornados up North in the Great Lakes, and from there I'll go to work into hurricane season, and after that, well, it'll be ice storm, then blizzard season back up in the Great Lakes.
. . . .It does make me think of something, and give some advice. As the storms get more severe, it's important to keep yourself and your family prepared. Keep a battery operated radio on hand at home, one that can get weather alerts and AM news. Keep good flashlights with fresh batteries around, at least 3 days worth of fresh drinking water, and of course some food that will stay fresh. (I have no problem with Spam, but at least keep something around that has a long shelf life). This one is important, learn to text on your cell phone, if you don't know how, ask your teenager. A text message, straight data, will go through when voice calls won't. I'm going to repeat that, learn to text, a text message will go through when voice calls won't.
. . . .I'm not suggesting that cell towers and power lines from the fragile electrical grid will still be up, but if they are, voice won't always go through if there's damage.

Sunday Update
. . . . .On the economic front, most of the experts, real ones, people who are respected, still don't have a real rosy outlook.
. . . Over at the Economist, Robert Reich gave an interview to Democracy in America and gives his reason for still being pessimistic;

DIA: You say on your blog that "we're not at the beginning of the end" of this downturn, and perhaps not even "at the end of the beginning". Why so pessimistic?

Mr Reich: I do believe we're approaching the end of the beginning, but I see little reason for optimism over the next 12 to 18 months. Aggregate demand is so far short of total capacity that we're still caught in a vicious cycle in which employers have to continue to cut payrolls, which shrinks consumers' wallets and forces them to buy even less and postpone payments on their loans, which causes more layoffs and generates more bad loans. The stimulus is a step forward but it's less than what's needed, and it doesn't really take full effect until the middle of 2010.


. . . . . .Dr. Nouriel Roubini, the "Dr. Doom" who was discredited by other economists back in 2006 when he saw this crisis coming, in Newsweek this week has some kudos for the current administration, Geithner, Summers and Obama in how they've handled it so far:
The rate of economic contraction you have seen in the last two quarters—6 percent annualized—is going to slow down. The optimists are already talking about the "green shoots" of spring, about economic activity becoming positive. [They say] we will have positive growth in the third quarter, and in the fourth quarter we will grow 2 percent over the previous quarter. They expect that next year, growth will go back to above 2 percent.

Compared with this optimistic consensus, I believe that the rate of economic contraction is going to slow from minus 6 percent in the last two quarters to minus 2 percent by the fourth quarter. Next year, I believe that the growth rate is going to be 0.5 percent for the U.S. average. Even if we are technically out of a recession, we are going to feel like we are in a recession. The bottom of the economy is not going to be in three months, but rather toward the beginning or middle of next year.

So you are still Dr. Doom?
No, I am not Dr. Doom. I am Dr. Realist. I don't believe we are going to end up in a near depression. Six months ago I was more worried about an L-shaped near depression. Today, after the very aggressive policy actions taken by the U.S. and other countries, the risk of that near-depression L has been reduced from 30 percent to 15 or 20 percent. We are instead in the middle of a U.

You think the Obama administration is on the right track?
I have to give credit to the administration. Within 30 days of coming to power, they did an $800 billion stimulus package, a new program to deal with mortgages and foreclosures, and also a bank plan that when Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner came with details, made the markets rally sharply. Each one of these three programs has some flaws. The fiscal stimulus could have been more front-loaded. For the mortgages, eventually you are going to need a reduction of the face-value principal of the mortgages. And on the banks, I believe after the stress tests it is going to be obvious that even some of the largest banks are so fundamentally in trouble that you cannot buy their toxic assets. You need to take over these banks on a temporary basis, clean them up and then sell them back to the private sector.


. . . .As you can read, he is a little more optimistic than Reich, but his timing matches that of Reich's almost exactly.

. . . .The World Bank met on Sunday, in an unprecedented unscheduled meeting, urging banks to move more money to the poorest countries, as the poor and those living in poverty are increasingly threatened by what is occuring.
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. . . .I have to thank my son Cody for this awesome video and the even better news that came with it. Henry Rollins wrote a Love Letter to Ann Coulter that has to be seen and heard, it's great. I love Henry Rollins, and the even better news, picked up on Kurt Sutter's blog, is that Henry Rollins has been signed for the 2nd season of Sons of Anarchy, one of the best shows ever put on TV, as the new antagonist for SAMCRO.

. . . . .I have to thank the lovely and talented LuLu, down at Red Queen Tattoo in Chattanooga, TN (on Lee Highway) for the video found at this link here. It's Michael Franti with a Barack Obama song. I love Michael as is, and the video and song make it even better.

. . . .John Lee, who has great insight into men's issues as we face them here in the 21st Century, has written a novel, When The Buddha Met Bubba, under his pen name, Richard Dixie Hartwell, available on Amazon, I recommend it, you can pre-order it at Amazon by clicking the link and ordering it up.

. . . .I have always been a fanatical and loyal Michael Stanley Band follower. He still makes music, and is distributing it as an independent label. Click the link here, buy his new CD and support songwriters who still believe in the power of words, and in the magic of music. If you grew up in the Midwest and were a teenager in the 70's, you knew who the Michael Stanley Band was, and he did have as large a following in the Midwest as Bob Seger or Grand Funk. Still makes great music, give it a try.

Sunday Update
. . . .Another component of this whole connect-the-dots picture remains in the Mideast, where we still face a war in Afghanistan, and the violence in Iraq increases every day we get closer to withdrawing. One of the problems that we face, as a people, and as a society, is that we don't know understand those we are fighting and what motivates them. One of the best I've read in a while is a recent book written by Reza Aslan titled How To Win A Cosmic War: God, Globalization and the End of the War on Terror. Courtesy of the Daily Beast, where Aslan is also a writer, is this excerpt:
Muslim cosmic warriors legitimize their attacks against both military and civilian targets, against both Muslims and non-Muslims, by dividing the world into what bin Laden calls “two separate camps, one of faith…and one of fidelity”: alwala’ wa-bara’. They rely on the doctrine of takfir to justify the slaughter of women and children, the elderly, and the ill. Although they are mostly holed up with the remnants of the Taliban in the tribal regions of the North-West Frontier Province on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, unlike the Taliban, they have no nationalist ambitions. Their jihad is not a defensive struggle against the occupying power but an eternal cosmic war that transcends all earthly ambitions. As [Ayman] al Zawahiri declared, “Jihad in the path of God is greater than any individual or organization. It is a struggle between Truth and Falsehood, until God Almighty inherits the earth and those who live in it. [Taliban commander] Mullah Muhammad Omar and Sheikh Osama bin Laden—may Allah protect them from evil—are merely two soldiers of Islam in the journey of Jihad, while the struggle between Truth and Falsehood transcends time.”
For the jihadist militants of al Qaeda, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have become central fronts in what bin Laden calls a “Third World War, which the Crusader-Zionist coalition began against the Islamic nation.” But while these wars, and the human-rights abuses at Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, have provided jihadist ideologues with an invaluable example, one perhaps on a par with the occupation of Palestine, for those Muslim youths who identify with global jihadism as a social movement there is no central front to the war on terror because their identity cannot be confined to any territorial boundaries. Rather, theirs is a transnational identity linked together not by language, ethnicity, or culture but by a set of grievances—both local and global, real and imagined—that has created a shared narrative of oppression and injustice at the hands of the West. The threat of terrorism from jihadist groups like al Qaeda may never fully dissipate. As is the case with any international criminal conspiracy, it may take years, perhaps decades, of cooperation among the military, intelligence, and diplomatic apparatuses of nation-states around the globe to put an end to jihadist militancy. But to adequately confront the social movement that Osama bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri inspired a decade ago will require more than military might. It will require deeper understanding of the social, political, and economic forces that have made global jihadism such an appealing phenomenon, particularly to Muslim youth. This battle will take place not in the streets of Baghdad or in the mountains of Afghanistan but in the suburbs of Paris, the slums of East London, and the cosmopolitan cities of Berlin and New York. It is a battle that will be waged not against men with guns but against boys with computers, a battle that can be won not with bullets but with words and ideas.
. . . .I hope that you all are beginning to see the connections, the nodal point that is happening now, yes it appears chaotic and scary, but within it lies all possibilities, and if we can influence the things working within that nodal point, nudge things the right direction, who knows? All things are possible.


. . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, and none of us gets to dictate the terms and conditions of how the ticket gets punched. It's not about tomorrow or yesterday, and it's senseless to live with regret and guilt over things in the past you can't do anything about. This ain't no dress rehearsal, it's about right here, right now. Change yourself, change your life, make a difference and change the world.
- Outta here, love you all, got your back

The Desolation Angel

20 April 2009

Monday (New week, same old trolls)

Monday April 20,2009

. . . . .Bob Dylan's new album is released at midnight tonight, I've already heard it, as have others, rave reviews by the way. April is National Poetry Month, and Bob is one of our greatest living poets. The two make a nice mix, and I swear I'm Cylon anyhow, (inside joke) . . . .

"There must be some kind of way out of here, said the Joker to the Thief,"
 
. . . .OK, the playlist, I admit, is not diverse, but I love it. All Bruce, all rave-up rockers, enjoy!

"There's too much confusion, I can't get no relief."

. . . .Going to spend this one answering e-mails and reader responses while still keeping track of, and keeping you all informed on, the issues of the day.

"Businessmen, they drink my wine, plowmen dig my earth,"

. . . .As per normal, last week's issues and feedback brought up a central issue that I try to combat each day, that of misinformation and viral nonsense creating hysteria and overwhelming fact, critical thinking and analytical reasoning. I swear people, not stopping to think, investigate and find out truth is going to kill us faster than global climate change, some days, I swear it, based on what I read, see and hear.

"None of them along the line know what any of it is worth."


. . . .First off and up to bat, my e-mail inbox is getting flooded with the same e-mail being forwarded to me over and over by well-meaning friends, it's the one concerning H.R. 875. My good friends Tom Summerlin, Alan Boyce and myself were talking about this one on Saturday night. The e-mail, which I'll quote below, is a rather hysterical one concerning "the end of organic farming", and as per normal for one of these pieces that's gone viral, does have shred, a tiny shred of truth in it, but like the best of these, has been taken out of context and used to create a piece of disinformation. I'll quote the e-mail in full, and then go after all 6 myths in it. With each myth, I'll provide the myth, and then the fact, with links to The Daily Green, one of the leading subject matter expert websites on organic farming, and links to Open Congress, the website devoted to transparency in legislation, which provides all the necessaries behind a bill, any bill that is presently in Congress; who originated it, it's current progress, whether or not it's still in committee, whether or not it's been voted, who the money and lobbies behind it are, and what the blog and website buzz about it is, along with any hard AP, Reuters, or UPI News that may have been reported on it. It's an excellent resource for any bill that you're interested in, and I highly recommend it.

. . . First, the e-mail itself:
"PLEASE SPREAD THIS NEWS AND VOICE YOURSELVES NOW! PUT THE JOBS OF THE SENATE ON THE LINE.
"WHO EVER CONTROLS THE WORLD FOOD SUPPLY, CONTROLS US ALL. JUST THINK, MAJOR FARMERS AND YOU ARE NOW FORBIDDEN TO GROW ORGANIC HEALTHY FOOD IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD WITHOUT THE GOVERNMENTS APPROVED PESTICIDES. IT IS CRIMINAL. THEY ARE GETTING READY TO PASS THIS BILL RIGHT NOW. IT IS NOW AGAINST THE LAW TO HAVE A CLEAN BILL OF HEALTH.
"NO MORE ORGANIC GARDENING. SERIOUS!!!!! YOUR HEALTH IS IN JEOPARDY
READ BELOW!!!!!!!!!!
"Bills are:
House H.R. 875
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h111-875
"Senate S 425
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-425
"There is an enormous rush to get this into law within the next 2 weeks before people realize what is happening.
"Main backer and lobbyist is (guess who) Monsanto
"Bill will require organic farms to use specific fertilizers and poisonous insect sprays dictated by the newly formed agency to "make sure there is no danger to the public food supply".
"This will include backyard gardens that grow food only for a family and not for sales.
"THIS IS DICTATORSHIP in any way you look at it.
"If this passes then NO more heirloom clean seeds but only Monsanto genetically altered seeds that are now showing up with unexpected diseases in humans.
"There is a video on the subject.
http://www.voteronpaul.com/newsDetail.php?Food-Safety-Modernization-Act-HR-875-Criminalization-of-Organic-Farms-222
"The name on this outrageous food plan is Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009
"(Really makes it sound like the feds are trying protect us. LIES )
"Let me be crystal clear here......
"This has NOTHING to do with food safety.
"This is only about TOTAL CONTROL by the feds in our lives.
"Get on that phone Monday and burn up the wires.
"Get anyone else you can to do the same thing.
"The House and Senate WILL pass this if they are not massively threatened with loss of their position. They only fear your voice and your vote.
"BOY! WILL PHARMACEUTICAL PROFITS GO THROUGH THE ROOF OR WHAT!!! I THINK I'LL GET UP IN THE MORNING, IF I CAN, AND GO TO THE HOSPITAL TO GET AN ANTI-MUTANT SHOT. THE NUMBER OF HEATH DEFECT AND DISEASE CASES WILL BE WORSE THAN THE NATIONAL DEFICIT.
"AND ONCE AGAIN, FDA COULD CARE LESS..........THEY ARE IN BED TOGETHER.........THANKS TO YOU SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE AND HOUSE. AMERICA JUST GOT CAUGHT SLEEPING AGAIN. CAN YOU SAY DUMB-DOWN?"
. . . .I'm sure that you all are quite familiar with it, and just as sure that many of you are pretty certain that it must contain some shreds of truth. WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!!! Here we go, I'll go after each myth in it one by one:
MYTH: H.R. 875 "makes it illegal to grow your own garden" and would result in the "criminalization of the backyard gardener."
FACT: There is no language in the bill that would regulate, penalize, or shut down backyard gardens. This bill is focused on ensuring the safety of foods sold in supermarkets.
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875

MYTH: H.R. 875 would mean a "goodbye to farmers markets" because the bill would "require such a burdensome complexity of rules, inspections, licensing, fees, and penalties for each farmer who wishes to sell locally - a fruit stand, at a farmers market."
FACT: There is no language in the bill that would result in farmers markets being regulated, penalized any fines, or shut down. Farmers markets would be able to continue to flourish under the bill. In fact, the bill would insist that imported foods meet strict safety standards to ensure that unsafe imported foods are not competing with locally-grown foods.
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875 

MYTH: H.R. 875 would result in the "death of organic farming."
FACT: There is no language in the bill that would stop organic farming. The National Organic Program (NOP) is under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). The Food Safety Modernization Act only addresses food safety issues under the jurisdiction of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875 

MYTH: The bill would implement a national animal ID system.

FACT: There is no language in the bill that would implement a national animal ID system. Animal identification issues are under the jurisdiction of the USDA. The Food Safety Modernization Act addresses issues under the jurisdiction of the FDA.
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875 

MYTH: The bill is supported by the large agribusiness industry.
FACT: No large agribusiness companies have expressed support for this bill. This bill is being supported by several Members of Congress who have strong progressive records on issues involving farmers markets, organic farming, and locally-grown foods (Barbara Lee, etc.). Also, H.R. 875 is the only food safety legislation that has been supported by all the major consumer and food safety groups, including:
  • Center for Foodborne Illness Research & Prevention
  • Center for Science in the Public Interest
  • Consumer Federation of America
  • Consumers Union
  • Food & Water Watch
  • The Pew Charitable Trusts
  • Safe Tables Our Priority
  • Trust for America’s Health
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875 
MYTH: The bill will pass the Congress next week without amendments or debate.
FACT: Food safety legislation has yet to be considered by any Congressional committee.
Resource: The Daily Green and Open Congress H.R. 875 

"No reason to get excited, the thief, he kindly spoke."

. . . .Speaking of Tom Summerlin, he told me of his brother-in-law, Bob who has built a wood-fired boiler to heat his daughter's house with. Now bear in mind that the house is 4,000 square feet, and is over a 3,000 square foot garage, all located where we all are, up in Michigan, a Zone 2 state. The boiler has a burn chamber that is 3 feet by 4 feet, encased in a metal jacket that holds the water, and acts as the radiating boiler. The wood-burning boiler is housed in it's own building outside the house, the heated water piping runs underground (most efficient, same temperature all year) and is tied to the thermostat, and has a solenoid operated damper and fan, so that when the thermostat in the house calls for it, the damper opens up, the fan kicks in and brings oxygen into the burn chamber to accelerate the burn on the wood and bring the temperature of the water back up. As well, the gas furnace still exists to act as a back-up. Tom is not sure of the hours involved, but the materials were around $3500. The night back in March when I talked to him that he was out in the boiler's building looking at it, the outside temperature had to be right around 32 degrees, but the interior of the house was at 70 degrees, and it was evening. The furnace had not kicked on all day. As well, two of the issues with wood heat are basically eliminated; (1) the wood burning smell doesn't exist in the house, as the burn chamber is in an exterior structure, and the normal "dryness" associated with wood heat doesn't exist, since it's a boiler system. Given the overall investment, the efficiency of the system, and the price of heating a home, a fantastic "green" project, that also reduces dependence on the grid, and consumes less of the mass forms of energy that are available. Go Bob!

"There are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke"

. . . .I want to thank Dave P. for his contribution, this link to a video series on the Federal Reserve Banking system that may open your eyes up. Thanks Dave. Go ahead and give it viewing folks, a lot of the things that you think you may have known, you may have been misled or misinformed about.

"But you and I we've been through that, and this is not our fate."

Steven W. out in Idaho wrote in response to the piece that I linked to in Time magazine concerning the Obama White House's use of behavioral psychologists and behavioral economists to try and tweak our behavior as an entity, a body politic into saving more, getting greener, valuing education more and being healthier:
"...aren't these economic and psychological scientists the same ones who turned us inot the mindless consumers we've become through advertisements.
...i had a thought one day about political elections, every four years the media profits, i won't throw out a percentage but it has to be an extremely high one considering the billions and billions of dollars spent on advertising. My question is with all the power the media has who really elects our politicians? They tell me to vote and make a difference, well i voted so why do I feel so helpless? Why do I feel like a sheep? "
. . . .Excellent thought Steven, but I don't think it's exactly the same set of people. These folks that have a connection to the White House are a little too esoteric and deep for the folks in advertising, and the buffoons in the media, but it is exactly the same principles in use here. In this case, the only hope is that what the President, his staff and The White House are nudging us to to do is ultimately, in the long run, good for all of us, and as opposed to television advertising, isn't trying to urge us to buy something unhealthy for us. Personally, I could use a little urging to eat healthier, take better care of myself, think greener and do some serious long-term saving, not investing. 

"So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late"

. . . . .So guess who is the first one to ask people to make budget cuts? Yes, President Obama has ordered his Cabinet to be the first ones to start making cuts.

"All along the watchtower, princes kept the view."

. . . .After last week's sheer idiocy of "Teabagging" (I don't know anyone who makes over $250K a year, the only people affected by the tax increase, nor, I would bet my rent, did anyone in those crowds, and I bet that everyone in the crowd had already gotten their first paycheck with the increased take home pay from the payroll tax cuts that the President enacted. Idiots!) that failed so miserably around the Nation, (other than Fox News reporters proving once again that they're not journalists, and it's not news, not when you join the crowd and become the news and prove on camera that you're there to entertain, not report), I find it refreshing to see the President proving once again, through action, that the misinformation and lies being spread by the Right and the Republicans are just that, a load of bullshit.

. . . .Let's go over it once again. George W. Bush the Republican President, with Tom DeLay, the disgraced Republican House leader along with Dick Cheney and Karl Rove presided over:
- The largest expansion of Federal government in history, in a classic example of Orwellian 1984-speak, taking the twisting of the word "conservative" to new lows.
- Taking a budget surplus of $5.6 trillion dollars left him by Clinton, and immediately giving a tax cut to his supporters, the top 1% of wage earners in the U.S., managed over 8 years to run up a record-shattering $4.8 billion dollar deficit when he left office.
- Waged a war in the wrong country for the wrong reasons that cost 4,000 young American lives, cost over $6 billion dollars a month, and let the perpetrators and planners of 9/11 run unmolested through Afghanistan and Pakistan and allowed Al-Quaeda, Hamas, and the Taliban to grow even stronger.
- Let an entire American city be destroyed by a hurricane, while he watched and didn't care and allowed a few thousand American citizens to be killed for the simple crime of living in the wrong city and not being White.
- Completely deregulated the banking and investment industry, allowing his buddies and cronies to steal from, rape, pillage, loot and reap billions from good, hard-working, trusting folks, leading to the current global economic collapse that will eventually affect everyone.
- On 9/12/01, completely subverted the American Constitution, and secretly suspended 9 of the first 10 Amendments, the Bill of Rights.  (Clicking the link takes you to the Department of Justice documents released in March that carry Bush's signature.)

"While all the women came and went, barefoot servants too"

. . . .Matt Taibbi, over in Rolling Stone, one of the consistently best political reporters around, in this week's issue, sums up the GOP's Obama hysteria nicely in article titled The Class Clowns, excerpted in part, below:
Following the Republican Party of late has been a movingly depressing experience, sort of like watching Old Yeller die — if Old Yeller were a worm-infested feral bitch who spent the past eight years biting children at bus stops and shitting in neighborhood swimming pools. As a useful force in American politics, the Republicans have been dead for a while now. But in the seven months since Sarah Palin's nomination, they have taken on an intriguing new role: providing much-needed comic relief during dark times, serving as the unofficial rodeo clowns of the Financial Crisis Era.
If there were any doubts about the once-mighty party's hilarious new role in American society, they vanished in recent weeks, as the Republican leadership's attempt to stop the passage of Barack Obama's budget turned into one of the most half-assed public-relations campaigns in congressional history. Watching this amazingly amateurish performance by a party that not long ago was led by highly skilled and ruthless political assassins like Tom DeLay and Karl Rove was just the latest bummer in the spiraling American-decline story. Not only don't we make good cars or airplanes anymore — now our Republicans have apparently lost their touch for evil politics.
The comedy began in late March when, after weeks of sniping about the high spending in the president's budget, the Republicans — steered by House Minority Leader John Boehner, one of the few influential Republicans in Congress to survive the Bush era — called a press conference to release an 18-page "alternative budget." The document quickly entered Washington lore as one of the most preposterous things a politician has ever handed, with a straight face, to a reporter on the Hill. Intending to counter accusations by Democrats that Republicans had become a "Party of No," blindly opposing every Obama initiative without a real plan, Boehner sternly waved the thinnish "Republican Road to Recovery" pamphlet at reporters gathered at his presser.
"The president said, 'We haven't seen a budget yet out of Republicans,'" Boehner croaked. "Well, it's not true, because here it is, Mr. President."
Except that "it" contained almost nothing inside. The actual text, which included no specifics or numbers at all, was full of wildly general phrases like "Republicans would fully fund our ongoing commitments overseas while devoting the entirety of any savings from reduced fighting to deficit reduction." As one observer put it, it was like an invasion plan that read, "Send ships, land troops, kill Germans."
Not only that, the pamphlet looked like it had been laid out by a college student trying desperately to meet his professor's requirement for "20 pages, double-spaced" — unnecessarily huge graphs on almost every page, fonts jacked up to readable-for-the-legally-blind size, absurdly placed clip-art images (to wit: photo of cute child with broken arm, gratefully gazing at the caption "Provide Universal Access to Affordable Health Care"). While reporters flipped through the idiotic text, searching in vain for content, Minority Whip Eric Cantor, who had already made brief introductory remarks, stealthily slipped out of the room, leaving Boehner to the wolves.
The onslaught started quickly. "There's no detail in here," grumbled one reporter.
"This is the blueprint for where we're going," Boehner barked. "Are you asking about some other document?"
Reporters stared at each other. "What about some numbers?" another asked.
Republicans, Boehner dithered, would provide details on the budget "next week."
Opposition politicians rushed on the air to rip the Republican nonbudget budget to shreds. The Democratic National Committee released an online ad that opened with a graphic: "This DNC ad is brought to you by the number zero. That's how many numbers are in the GOP's 'budget.'" Even White House press secretary Robert Gibbs got in on the act, lauding the document's depth. "It took me several minutes to read it," he quipped.
. . .For the entire article, which I highly recommend, check out the latest print edition of Rolling Stone on newsstands now.

"Outside in the distance, a wildcat did growl"
 
. . . . . .Meghan McCain, John's daughter and one of a handful of Republicans with a brain, (George Will, Steve Schmidt, Christopher Buckley among them) spoke to the Log Cabin Republicans this weekend, saying that "Old school Republicans" are "scared shitless", among other things:

Speaking to an affectionate crowd of Log Cabin Republicans on Saturday evening, Meghan McCain ridiculed the party her father headed this past election, declaring that "old school Republicans" were "scared shitless" of the changing landscape.
The Senator's daughter, who has quickly become something of an iconic figure in the gay conservative community since the end of the election, took repeated shots at the GOP for its antiquated mores.

"I feel too many Republicans want to cling to past successes," said McCain. "There are those who think we can win the White House and Congress back by being 'more' conservative. Worse, there are those who think we can win by changing nothing at all about what our party has become. They just want to wait for the other side to be perceived as worse than us. I think we're seeing a war brewing in the Republican Party. But it is not between us and Democrats. It is not between us and liberals. It is between the future and the past."
Later, she called out those officials in the Republican tent who insist that tactical improvements, technology and brass-knuckle politicking are the path back to relevance.
"Simply embracing technology isn't going to fix our problem," she said. "Republicans using Twitter and Facebook isn't going to miraculously make people think we're cool again. Breaking free from obsolete positions and providing real solutions that don't divide our nation further will. That's why some in our party are scared. They sense the world around them is changing and they are unable to take the risk to jump free of what's keeping our party down."
. . . .Go Meghan, after all it was only last Friday that Rush Limbaugh, referring to her father, Senator John McCain said that he (McCain) was "proof that torture works" because the "North Vietnamese broke him", as reported by Think Progress.

"Two riders were approaching, and the wind began to howl."

. . . .And while we're on the topic of drooling, mouth-breathing, barely functional morons, Rush was paired up with his twin brother in idiocy, Sean Hannity by Charles Barkley in an interview, where he tore into an "unpatriotic" Rush Limbaugh and and "idiot" Sean Hannity:

NBA great Charles Barkley dipped into some political punditry during a Tonight Show appearance on Friday, tearing into conservative talking heads who have rooted for President Obama to fail.
"I mean, you look at this country now, we've got all these foreclosures, we've got all these people laid off. We should be behind him 110 percent, hoping he's successful," Barkley said. "And I just thought it was unpatriotic and basically B.S. for Rush Limbaugh and that idiot Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck and all those idiots to not root for this guy."
Barkley is no stranger to the national political debate, and he said last year that he's planning a run for Alabama governor in 2014. But it's pretty clear at this point that he won't be on the GOP ticket.
"Neither party is anything to write home about," Barkley told Jay Leno. "But the Republican Party just went right-wing whack nut job on America and screwed up the country."

. . . .Now that the truth has come out about torture and America's use of it, it's time to have an open dialogue, and to consider criminal charges against those responsible. I agree with Harry Shearer, over in the Huffington Post:

Several years too late, we've been dragged kicking and screaming into what a democratic republic should be engaged in: a public debate on whether such a nation is ever well-advised to engage in the torture of captives. Of course, the motives adduced are always the best--we've been attacked, the government has to protect the country--but it's not the proclaimed motives that separate the most admirable countries in the world from the most despised, but the behavior in pursuit of those motives.
Buried in the rhetoric pro and con are a couple of facts which deserve wider exposure. First, as the New York Times reported, waterboarding was performed on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed 183 times in one month, and 83 times on Abu Zubaydah. Put aside the question about whether the CIA is hung up on the number 83. This technique, which the United States has prosecuted (as a war crime) both Japanese and American soldiers for using, is reputed to be so wickedly effective that only 35 seconds of it had Abu Zubaydah willing to tell interrogators everything he knew. We'll get to what he knew in a moment. But, if it's so instantly effective, why in the world would it need to be administered almost two-hundred times within a one-month period? It's either not as effective as advertised, or the practitioners had another reason for persisting.
. . . .This is a great one by Daniel Esty, here on the eve of Earth Day, which nicely ties together, and connects the dots on the Big 3 issues facing us right now; the financial crisis, regulation, and green sustainability:

Talk has begun to turn to the new economy that will emerge from the present collapse. General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt has suggested that the current crisis is not just a recession but a fundamental "reset" of how business gets done. And Time magazine has taken up this theme with a reset cover story. But there has been little discussion of exactly what changes - in principles and practices -- should be made so that we rebuild our economy on firmer foundations. As we celebrate Earth Day this week, it is a good time to commit to "sustainability" as a centerpiece of a revitalized regulatory system.
For the past three decades, debate has raged over whether and how to deregulate. But while markets offer the prospect of promoting innovation, growth, and prosperity, few now believe that capitalism is self-correcting or that the private sector needs only minimal supervision. From the demise of Lehman Brothers and AIG to the skullduggery of Bernie Madoff and Allan Stanford, the signs of inadequate regulation and market failure surround us.
We need regulations which ensure that companies cannot structure their operations so that any upside gains accrue to their owners (or worse yet their managers), while risks or costs get shifted onto society as a whole. In the banking sector, rules against over-leveraging are urgently required. The recently released Turner Report in the UK outlines the first steps in this direction that should be taken. More generally, financial reporting rules must be designed to expose hidden risks and externalized costs.
We should likewise insist that companies which send emissions up a smokestack or out an effluent pipe cease their pollution or pay for the harm inflicted on the community. In our "reset" world, economic success cannot come at the price of harms imposed on the public in the form of contaminated air and water or risk of climate change. Thus while we lay the foundation for a more sustainable economy, let's similarly adopt rules that provide for a sustainable environmental future. This will require overhauling the traditional approach to environmental regulation which countenances way too much in the way of externalities by offering "permits" up to a certain level of harm.

. . . The Wall Street Journal reports that President Obama is meeting with credit card lenders on Thursday to discuss their destructive practices with the public:

Congress and the White House are taking aim at controversial credit-card practices, from higher interest rates on past balances to fees for paying by phone or online.
In a bid to aid consumers hit hard by the recession, lawmakers are pushing legislation this week that would ban a long list of credit-card practices that essentially amount to higher costs for consumers. Meanwhile, the Obama administration has scheduled a meeting with executives from credit-card issuers at the White House on Thursday, adding to pressure on the industry. President Barack Obama plans to attend.
The efforts come months after the Federal Reserve issued new consumer-protection rules that cover most of the provisions lawmakers are considering, but don't take effect until July 2010. Congressional action would only speed up the changes modestly -- a House version gives card companies a year from the bill's signing -- but would codify the new provisions in law and allow lawmakers to take credit for aiding consumers during the downturn.
The Senate Banking Committee late last month narrowly passed a measure that goes beyond the House version. It would, among other things, ban a company from considering a consumer's bad credit from other loans -- an overdue home or car payment, for instance -- to change interest rates for that company's credit card.
The House Financial Services Committee plans to vote Wednesday on legislation that includes the provisions cleared by the Fed earlier this year, along with other rules such as a ban on marketing credit cards to minors and the ban on fees for phone or Internet payments. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D., N.Y.), said she hopes her credit-card legislation will pass the House again -- it cleared easily last September -- and be reconciled with the Senate version to reach the president's desk before summer.
The latest battle over credit cards comes as regulators and lawmakers respond to years of easy credit that put Americans in deeper debt and fueled some of today's troubles in financial markets.
The Fed's regulations, approved in December, came after years of work drawing up policies, soliciting public comments and field-testing sample disclosures to make sure cardholders could understand the fine print.
Among the key regulations set to take effect in July 2010:
Banks can't treat payments as late unless consumers have a "reasonable amount of time" to make the payment; at least three weeks before the due date.
Banks must allocate minimum payments to balances with the highest rate first, or pro-rata among all balances.
Banks cannot raise interest rates from the opening amount unless it's a variable rate or an introductory rate with an increase disclosed in advance; or a year after the account opens, a 45-day advance notice has been made; or if a minimum payment is received more than 30 days after the due date.
A ban on double-cycle billing, which allows banks to calculate interest based on a prior month's balance in addition to the current month, even if the prior month had been paid off.
Consumer groups have been pushing lawmakers to act, saying cardholders need relief now. The current rules "give very little help to families that are struggling with their debt," said Lauren Saunders, managing attorney at the National Consumer Law Center. "Once you miss a payment you lose most protection."
But the industry is warning that some of the efforts -- including speeding up implementation -- would paralyze issuers and force them to raise interest rates, cut credit lines and cancel accounts, hurting consumers who need credit.
The Fed's new rules "upend" the card business and fast-forwarding them would "create huge implementation challenges," said Kenneth Clayton, senior vice president of card policy at the American Bankers Association.
Many banks are already trying to raise rates on the riskiest consumers as their credit-card businesses posted hefty losses while cardholders lose their jobs and fall behind on payments. Industry officials warn that adding restrictions when banks are under pressure from existing strains could choke some consumers' access to credit.

. . . .And the cluelessness goes on, just before publication tonight, the CEO of J.P. Morgan Chase in a letter to shareholders says that "the war in Iraq is to blame for the financial crisis". "Nuff said!

. . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, let 'em know. Seize the precious moments, you don't know when they'll be gone. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive. We don"t get to dictate the circumstances and terms of how that ticket gets punched. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, this ain't no dress rehearsal, it's about right here, right now.

The Desolation Angel

18 April 2009

Do they realize just how insanely pointless those Tea parties were?

Friday April 17, 2009
. . . .April is National Poetry Month, and I've been putting a poem up top here every post this month, however, in my mind, rock and roll boy that I am, I put people like Bob Dylan up there with the greatest poets. His ability with the English language is unparalleled in songwriting. In a recent interview, in anticipation of his upcoming album, the first cut of which I've had in the podcast every day, Bob talked about co-writing most of this album with Robert Hunter, an old Dead buddy and good friend of Jerry Garcia's and he talked about his own favorite songwriters, the list actually was pretty surprising, there were only two names on it that I expected, the rest came from left field: Jimmy Buffet, Gordon Lightfoot, John Prine, Warren Zevon, Randy Newman and Guy Clark. Anyhow, within 24 hours or so, or as long as it takes to upload the files, we'll have a little festival of sorts, celebrating the release of Bob's new album with a cut from it, and cuts from the other musicians as well. Bob mentions particular songs in the list, and I'll stick to those he mentioned. Enjoy!

. . . . .I've spent the better part of two months trying to build links, write pieces and put together everything I can to make some sense out of the current financial crisis, where it came from, and why it counts so very much.
. . . .One of my biggest aims, always, is to be able to connect the dots, to draw the connections, to be able to at least see for myself where everything is connected, and how it is all, and I mean all, related.
. . . .Not in a conspiratorial, "MIB", Black Helicopters, Area 51 type of way; but in the sense that we live in an organic, wholistic system, where whether or not anyone likes it or believes it, everything is connected and related, and what happens in one part of a dynamic system does have effect on other, seemingly unrelated parts of the system.

. . . . That said, yes, the connection points, the nexus (nexi?) are all there for seeing and understanding how the current global financial crisis, climate change and the effective tools to try and deal with it, the extreme hatred and misinformation being put out by the Right Wing these days and yesterday's absolutely ridiculous Fox News sponsored "teabagging" parties are all pieces of one big whole.

. . . . .The current economic crisis, beginning with the banks and credit markets, can actually be traced back to one point singularity. That being Joseph Cassano, of AIG's London branch, which handled investments for the insurance giant, creating a form of pooled risk for credit derivatives, which had not been used before, and then the largest banks in the world all dumping their subprime toxic mortgage assets into it. The bet that Cassano made was that with pooled risk, there was almost mathematically no chance that every asset in a pool would be called all at once on the same day. It happened, at which point in time, a $500 billion dollar hole was punched into the world economy. Not credit dollars, not 1's and 0's, but $500 billion that all came due on the same day, at once. That triggered the collapse, back in September of '08, when McCain and Obama both flew to Washington and McCain submarined the entire deal that had been worked out with his grandstand play with the House Republicans.
. . . . .That was the moment in time when Paulson and Bush both said that action needed to be taken in the "next 24 hours". That was a true statement.
. . . . .It's all been too well documented from there, but you know the rest, and how it played out. The first half of bailout money went out, it wasn't used for toxic assets, it was used to cover the books to a bare minimum, and the rest went to bonuses, spa retreats and office remodels.
. . . .The election occurred, the White House gladly stepped out of this one, and the House and Senate were remade, truth be told, I think, much to the Republican Party's relief, since the American citizens are such fans of short attention span theater.
. . . .In less the 100 days, Timothy Geithner went from blooming idiot to genius, as it looks like in the last 96 hours that most of the larger banks are passing the stress tests and starting to make plans to pay back TARP funds.
. . . .The President meanwhile, is either a hero or Satan incarnate, there is no middle ground with this one. It depends on who you talk to and their particular prejudices and beliefs. The short attention span crowd is completely insane over taxes being raised to pay for "stimulus packages" and forgets completely that it was their guy and their congress that spent $6 billion a month on a war started under completely false assumptions, and their president and their congress that presided over the completely unfettered and deregulated buffoons on Wall Street and in bank CEO corner offices that brought the financial Armageddon about that we are all now suffering under.
. . . .This same President, who has so masterfully handled the messes left for him by the Bush administration, is sticking to his guns, with bringing a "green" economy and a "green" nation about to help combat climate change; with health care and then education still being his top priorities.
. . . . Handling the financial crisis and stabilizing the banks and credit markets had to be, absolutely had to be the top priority. As we'll explore below, there can't be any effort behind those three items, and for reasons that we'll lay out, climate change has to be the top priority, but there can't be any effort behind it without stable banks, credit markets and a stable economy. Now, going further with that, the resistance from the Right is incredible and far deeper than anyone anticipated.
. . . .However, I don't think it's unexpected. Earlier this week, I put a piece in here on how America has basically reshaped itself into a permanent, progressive Democratic majority. What remains is a fringe movement, who had their 8 years in the sun, and of course, don't want to leave the seat of power, especially if they know that they are now in the statistical minority.
. . . . More importantly to that extreme right wing fringe, now apparently being led by Glenn Beck and his nightly fear-mongering, if the current Administration, led by someone who isn't White, can pull the economy out of a tailspin, put some teeth behind some financial regulations, rein in the top 2% in this country who have taken all their money offshore while putting us in the poorhouse, gain some international respect again, and put some thought and reasoning behind a "green" economy, a revamped educational system and make health care affordable; to that extreme fringe, they know that permanently, they'll be removed from seats of power, lose their seat at the table and will wither away, as the Baby Boom-echo generation sees what the power of a progressive government can do. To the majority of Americans anymore, most people have seen who the "man behind the curtain" was, and they now understand that Rove/Cheney/Bush were just poseurs, dilletantes, who in fact were elitists, rich beyond belief themselves, and were most definitely not "outsiders" who understood the "common folk". They understood them enough to use them, abuse them, curry their votes and laugh at them behind their backs.
. . . .The anger then, by those same people, is being successfully rechanneled by hate-spewing fear mongers like Rush Limbaugh,Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity, Glen Beck, Michelle Malkin and Ann Coulter into hating government, even thought it was their guy's government who brought this calamity about; into hating the "mainstream media" even though Fox News is the highest rated news channel and those names mentioned are millionaire household names and, in fact, epitomize, "mainstream media".
. . . .So, I hope you're beginning to see how all the dots are connected. A failure for the current sitting President, first economically, and then combatting climate change, then revamping the education and health care system, would guarantee not that things would return to what they were in the Bush years, but would in fact, be far worse, and guarantee a lowered chance for the survival of future generations; but what it would mean is that failure now, would guarantee a return to the seat of power, and it's attendant wealth and ability to be lord and master over other people's lives, for those on the extreme Right wing who feel that they are entitled to this position, and somehow better than us, and actually feel as if, right now, they are a dispossessed ruling class, who have been cast out by someone from a different race and lower class. Their survival, in their own minds, outweighs the survival of the many, or the rights of all people to enjoy life.

. . . . .Given all that, it becomes even more interesting, in light of Wednesday's cartoonish "teabagging" parties, that Steve Schmidt, John McCain's former campaign manager would make a very public keynote address to the Log Cabin Republicans in which he said that religion could kill the Republican party.

Speaking publicly for one of the first times since the end of the presidential campaign, John McCain's campaign manager Steve Schmidt painted a dire portrait of the state of the Republican Party, arguing that the GOP has largely been co-opted by its religious elements.
"If you put public policy issues to a religious test, you risk becoming a religious party," Schmidt declared. "And in a free country, a political party cannot be viable in the long term if it is seen as a sectarian party."
. . . Schmidt went on to state that the Republican party should embrace and back the issue of gay marriage
"If you reject [gay marriage] on religious grounds, I respect that," he said. "I respect anyone's religious views. However, religious views should not inform the public policy positions of a political party because... when it is a religious party, many people who would otherwise be members of that party are excluded from it because of a religious belief system that may be different. And the Republican Party ought not to be that. It ought to be a coalition of people under a big tent."
. . . .Given that, the fallout from Wednesday's extreme Right "teabagging" parties now has the Republican party worried, as immediate reaction shows that independent and moderate/centrist voters were completely turned off by the displays from the normal whackos, kooks and crazies that show up to these extreme rightist events.

. . . .John Ridley, a writer for Esquire turned in a great piece on the Republican game of Hate and it's Consequences over on his blog That Minority Thing.com, which was also picked up in the Huffington Post:

Empty of better ideas -- of any ideas -- of how to remain relevant, the reactionary wing of the conservative movement has chosen to quit faking respectability and get back to doing what they do best: cranking up the hate to eleven.
This is the week we have lived:
A week when Texas Governor Rick Perry -- a man with presidential aspirations -- gets comfortable being flippant about the idea secession, raising the specter of both the anti-civil rights movement and the Civil War.
A week when Texas Republican State Rep. Betty Brown (what is it with Texas?) told a hearing on voter registration that if Asians wanted to avoid problems at the polls they needed to change their names to something that's "easier for us to deal with."
A week when Illinois Republican Congressman Mark Kirk said he thought the people of Illinois "are ready to shoot" anyone who's going to raise taxes.
A week when the Caucasian Stepin Fetchit Glenn Beck -- which is more of a slam against Lincoln Perry than it is Glenn -- thought it was humorous to take on the guise of our president and pantomime him pouring gas on the average citizen before setting a match to him.
This is the week when even his cover as GOP Chairman couldn't outweigh his blackness and Michael Steele was unwelcome at the not-even-slightly-white-fright based tea parties where signs stoking the fears of WHITE SLAVERY were as prevalent as any saying: I LOVE AMERICA.
And this was the week where Minority Leader John Boehner's only take away from the Bush-authorized DHS report on the threat of extremist violence was that it was offensive to American soldiers.
Really? Offensive to soldiers? From the same John Boehner who, when presenting the Congressional Medal of Honor to the famed WW II era Tuskegee airmen repeatedly -- repeatedly -- referred to these great Americans as the "Tush-Chee-geee airmen." All those aides of his, and he couldn't have one of them run and get him a pronouncer?
Boehner could not disrespect or minimize more. Unless he were disrespecting and minimizing a warning on hate attacks directed primarily at people of color in this country.
And that's what really cuts: the conservatives, aided and abetted by their own Axis Sally Michelle Malkin who does the "that's not racist" dance of the seven white hoods at the slightest yank of her chain -- hate and deny and get indignant and deny some more when the reasoned try to connect the dots between their reactionary rhetoric and the violent consequences to which they lead. We're all just blowing some liberal kookiness and lefty conspiracies.
Tell that to the three Pittsburgh police officers killed by the young man who frequented neo-Nazi and anti-Semitic websites.
Tell that to the families of Marcelo Lucero, Jose Sucuzhanay. Both killed in the wake of President Obama's election in attacks prompted by their perceived place of origin and sexual orientation.
Tell that to the Southern Poverty Law Center which has been tracking an increase in hate crimes and hate group activities long before the "offensive" "conservative-baiting" DHS report.
Have something to say besides peppering every sentence with buzz words like "revolution," "fascism," and "secession."
And in that week what do reasonable people do? Wait to find out if CNN or Ashton Kutcher can arrive more quickly to a million Tweeters. Instead of meeting outrage head on, we let the haters slide.
These may be the last, desperate days of reactionary, anti-American Conservatism. But in the manner of a rabid animal backed against a wall, these are its most dangerous as well.
. . . .On the subject of that Department of Homeland Security report that is being parsed and having the classic "sentence fragmentation" routine done to it. It was the Bush administration, long before Janet Napolitano and President Obama, who asked for that report, it took the analysts quite a while to put it together. If you read the entire situation report, it warns against both left-wing and right-wing extremism. Remember that that next time someone starts spouting off about it, it was the Bush/Cheney White House who asked that the report be prepared.

. . .Lincoln Mitchell, a professor of International Politics at Columbia University, sees this just as seriously:
Why then are Republicans willing to talk about revolution, secession and other ideas that would destabilize our country and our democracy. One hopes that most of this can be simply chalked up to a party that is weak, defeated, directionless and out of ideas, but it may not be that simple. Perhaps the demonstrators and, more significantly their leaders, feel that for some existential, and undoubtedly irrational, reason the Obama presidency is a profound threat to their worldview, values and vision of the US. If that is the case we can only hope that these people remain on the margins. This is likely to occur as Obama's worldview, values and vision not only reflect those of a huge plurality of Americans, but will likely to continue to become more, not less, accepted over time.
. . .Congressman Todd Tiahrt, a Republican from Kansas has probably stepped right into it, and better get ready for some public groveling, in meeting with the editorial board of the Kansas City Star, he referred to Rush Limbaugh, when asked if Limbaugh was indeed the defacto leader of the Republican party as "just an entertainer". Uh-oh!

. . . .And of course, underneath all this, is the release this week of Bush's torture memos by Attorney General Michael Holder and President Obama, which lay bare the sick, twisted mentality behind the Bush/Cheney White House and it's overt and abject approval of torture, this from the team that this week's collection of nutjobs and whackos idolizes. The President remarked, in part:
These legal memoranda demonstrate in alarming detail exactly what the Bush administration authorized for "high value detainees" in U.S. custody. The techniques are chilling... We cannot continue to look the other way; we need to understand how these policies were formed if we are to ensure that this can never happen again. This is why my proposal for a Commission of Inquiry is necessary.
. . .The entire text of the "torture memos" can be found here.

. . . .One ray of sunshine coming through this mess, Louisiana Bobby Jindal has finally had enough and come out and told Dick Cheney, on Thursday morning on ABC's Good Morning America to back off. Jindal said "Don't question Obama's patriotism":

"Democrat or Republican," Jindal responded, "we should all agree that our current President and our former President would obviously want to do everything they could to keep us safe. I don't think we should question President Obama's patriotism or his intentions."
"Let's give the new administration a chance. Let's not question their intentions, but let's have a real debate on their policies," Jindal added. "We should give the new administration a chance ... I don't think we should question Obama's patriotism. ... At the end of the day, I don't think we should be questioning the administration's intention, but I think it's good to have an honest debate."
. . .See the entire video here.

One extremely interesting piece that I read in the April 6 issue of Time gave me some insight into what is going on in Washington and the White House. Investigative reporter Micheal Grunwald turned this one in that details the team of behaviorists (Phd's all, behavioral psychologists and behavioral economists) that have never been publicly acknowledged to exist, yet they do, that have guided both the election campaign and now advise the White House on how to implement change in the populace. First during the election, and now on two particular fronts, our spending and consumer debt habits, and changing our own behavior into something more "green".
Obama's efforts to change us carry a clear political risk. Republicans already portray him as a nanny-state scold, an élitist Big Brother lecturing us about inflating our tires and reading to our kids. We elected a President, not a life coach, and we might not like elected officials' challenging our right to be couch potatoes. Obama's aides seem to favor nudges that preserve free choice over heavy-handed regulation, an approach Thaler and Sunstein, the co-authors of Nudge, call "libertarian paternalism." But it's still paternalism, and Sunstein will have the power to put it into action. The idea of public officials, even well-meaning ones, trying to engineer our private behavior to produce change can seem a bit creepy.
But face it: Obama is right. Our emissions are boiling the planet, and most of our energy use is unnecessary. Our health expenditures are bankrupting the Treasury, and most of our visits to the doctor can be traced to unhealthy behavior. We do need to change, and we know it.
So why don't we? And how can we? The behaviorists have ideas, and the Administration is listening.
In fact, Obama is betting his presidency on our ability to change our behavior. His top priorities — the economy, health care and energy — all depend on it. We need to spend more money now to avert a short-term depression, then save more money later to secure our long-term economic future. We need to consume less energy in order to reduce our oil imports and carbon emissions as well as our household expenses. We need to quit smoking, lay off the Twinkies and avoid other risky behaviors that both damage our personal health and boost the costs of care that are ravaging the nation's fiscal health. Basically, we need to make better choices — about mortgages and credit cards, insurance and retirement plans — so we won't need bailouts down the road.
The problem, as anyone with a sweet tooth, an alcoholic relative or a maxed-out Visa card knows, is that old habits die hard. Temptation is strong. We are weak. We've got plenty of gurus, talk-show hosts and celebrity spokespeople badgering us to save energy, lose weight and live within our means, but we're still addicted to oil, junk food and debt. It's fair to ask whether we're even capable of changing.
. . . .In the April 20th issue of Time, check out the profile of Mark Zandi, one economist whom both parties are listening to right now, along with a host of Wall Street investors, the foreign managers of funds, and most of Commerce and Treasury. What we're experiencing right now is exactly what he predicted, and he sees the same thing that Roubinni and Krugman see, a very, very tough remainder of this year, with the bottom being seen this summer, and things finally starting to pick up around the first quarter of 2010.

. . . .Going into Earth Day week, it is a landmark that the EPA announced today it's finding that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide present a danger to public health and welfare, paving the way for regulation of the same under the Clean Air Act and finally beginning to do something at a policy level about gases directly involved in global warming.

. . . .Kent Gerber in the April U.S. News and World Report put together one hell of a lead article for it's coverage of a green economy:

The outcome of the tremendous push that's now underway to change how the United States and other countries obtain and consume energy is anything but predetermined. There are no definite answers to questions about the role one source of energy or another will play 15 or 20 years from now, no clear sense about the type of fuel (if any) people will put in their cars, no consensus on how quickly any of this can happen or at what cost.
Nor is the change likely to be smooth and quiet. Instead, it will probably be disruptive, breaking down existing ways of thinking and acting. Not that disruption is bad: Joseph Schumpeter, the famous Austro-Hungarian economist, once spoke of "creative destruction," whereby new technologies and ideas replace old ones, which themselves are overthrown by newer, more progressive ones.
Already, 2009 has been a year of visions, of prophecies. President Barack Obama's inaugural address offered one such vision: doubling alternative energy production in the next three years, updating and expanding the nation's energy infrastructure, saving billions of dollars in energy costs through improved energy efficiency. Think tanks, businesses, industry groups, and environmentalists have laid out their own plans, some more aggressive and some less so.
The idea that a nation should have a clear-cut national energy policy sounds obvious enough. In the United States, however, the truth is that energy has not always been considered a national issue, and in some ways it still isn't.
Nowhere is this more obvious than with the transmission grid, a sprawling jumble of wires and mechanical connections dating back 50, 80, even 100 years in some places. Today, the grid is divided into more than 140 "balancing areas" to help manage the distribution of power. But some are so localized that they can't communicate with their next-door neighbors. As a result, extra power in one region is often wasted rather than being sent to a place that needs it.
So if wind power, solar power, and plug-in electric vehicles are to be big players in the country's energy future, as many hope, this antiquated system for delivering electricity will have to change. The grid must be retooled, and new high-capacity power lines are needed to carry wind-generated electricity from the Midwest to the East and West coasts. To get those high-power lines approved, Bode and other advocates say, the federal government needs more authority to override nasty squabbles between states, environmentalists, and other interest groups that have typi-cally stalled such efforts. The federal government, the thinking goes, already has the authority to build natural gas pipelines across state lines, and electricity should be no different. That sentiment seems to be gaining ground even among regulators who once opposed it, although there are many issues still to be worked out. As Chu says, "If we just take the view that we are going to cram something down someone's throat, this is not a constructive way of doing business."
Infrastructure is only one part of the battle to make national energy problems a national issue. Another is technology. Even though wind power technology is relatively mature—it was the country's largest provider of clean electricity last year—most other renewable sources still need work. Improvements to photovoltaic cells could reduce solar power costs significantly. New drilling technologies could help geothermal spread across a larger geographic range. Advancements in biofuels, in particular to the enzymes needed to break down grasses and woods to produce ethanol, would have a major impact. Meanwhile, fossil fuels face their own technological challenges. If coal is to stay around for a while, it'll most likely be because of still-developing methods to capture carbon dioxide emissions before they enter the atmosphere.
Groundwork. Scientific breakthroughs don't come cheap. The economic stimulus package set aside $21.5 billion for scientific research, signaling that Washington is taking a much more active role in basic energy issues after years of declining budgets at national labs. But this is just the groundwork. The most powerful force to remake the energy America uses could be government policies: climate change legislation, which would set a price on carbon dioxide emissions, and a national renewable-electricity standard, which would require the United States to get a certain portion of its electricity from renewable energy. Both rules could have far-reaching impacts, forcing industries to massively reconsider their operations, giving financial investors confidence to pump money into wind farms, solar fields, and other industries, and convincing the coal industry that it's worth investing billions in technology to reduce emissions.
The consequences of climate change legislation, in fact, are expected to be so great that companies typically opposed to government regulation are asking Congress to go ahead and act just so that they can have some certainty about where to put their money.
. . . .Outta here for now, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the day and it's precious moments, go change your own world, and in so doing, change the world at large. This rodeo is a one-way ride, and no one gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate the terms and conditions of how the ticket gets punched, so it's not about yesterday, or tomorrow. It's about right here, right now. This isn't a dress rehearsal, each day the curtain goes up on the real thing.

The Desolation Angel

14 April 2009

Tuesday - Major developments and reader responses

Tuesday April 14, 2009

. . . . .Yes, it's the day before Tax Day. The government is particularly unforgiving about this one.

. . . . .Podcast/playlist today: I'm having fun with it, 'nuff said.

. . . . .Today's movie moment: "In order to find his equal, an Irishman is forced to talk to God . . . .Yes, Father. . . . .The Almighty says 'Don't change the subject, just answer the fuckin' question' - Stephen to William Wallace in Braveheart. (Mel could use some props and cred today, trust me, I get it, better than most.)

. . . . .Most of today is devoted to reader responses and comments that have been pouring in since last Friday, answering them while still staying on topic and devoting some space and time to this morning's major speech by President Obama.

. . . . .April is still National Poetry Month, and I like starting the day off with one, in this case The Coming of Light by Mark Strand:

Even this late it happens:
the coming of love, the coming of light.
You wake and the candles are lit, as if by themselves,
stars gather, dreams pour into your pillows,
sending up warm bouquets of air.
Even this late the bones of the body shine
and tomorrow's dust flares into breath.

. . . .On Saturday Ignorant in the Basement wrote in, commented and asked a question:

First off nice selection of music. Good music makes me forget I'm trapped in my castle with no way to pay for it at the moment. I want to ask you a question and have you give me your opinion. I heard recently that Wells Fargo showed a projected profit of 3 billion. Does that mean they payed back the 25 billion they received in bailout money? I cant find anything that says they did. How does that work?


. . . . . Back on March 26th, Chris Carey over at Bailout Sleuth posted this one by Avi Klein that noted that Wells Fargo & Co., along with other banks like JP Morgan Chase and TCF Financial have made their intentions clear to the government that they intend to return TARP funds just as soon as they pass the governmental "stress" tests that are being conducted this month. Bank of America had already announced their plans to return TARP funds this month, along with Goldman, Sachs (as noted in the press and in this column yesterday, they announced their financial plans to return all TARP funds). Is this a sign that the financial and credit markets are strengthening and beginning the climb out of the depression? Most economists and econometrics gurus think so, with the notable exceptions of Paul Krugman and Roubinni, the two who have been the most accurate all along, unfortunately.
. . . .Two salient points here: (1) the best place to accurately track TARP funds, who they went to, and the payback schedule is at Financial Stability.gov, Treasury Secretary's Geithner's governmental site that does do this tracking, (2) the other salient point would be the "stress" tests that the Treasury department is making banks go through. Bloomberg reports that back on April 9th, the President met with the Treasury Department and his Economic Recovery team to take a look at the results of the bank stress tests, but so far, the results of those test have been kept quiet. It's hard to say what this means, it could be that banks and government don't want people to know the results if they don't look quite so healthy, for fear of bank runs, or a further weakening of the credit markets. However, two things happening would seem to contradict that viewpoint, (a) the largest banks are returning the TARP funds, or making plans to do so and (b) there is money flowing this week and last week from the stimulus packages to companies for construction loans, and actual work has begun on those projects, meaning there is money to meet payroll and buy raw material and supplies. (More on that particular point later).
. . . .This takes me off on another riff. Please be sure to bookmark two other governmental sites besides the ones mentioned above. Making Home Affordable.gov, (Ignorant In The Basement, please take note of this site), it's the site where you can find out if you're one of the 7 to 9 million Americans eligible for help with your mortgage, and it's a good one to have handy for family members and friends as well. The other site, Recovery.gov, is the site where you can track stimulus package funds, which as I mentioned above are already starting to have impact on the credit markets for small businesses, making it possible for them to get back into action.

. . . .An Anonymous reader wrote in and asked:

Who are you? Project Healing Waters brings hope i love it. Sent off an e-mail and offered my services. Always had a thought in the back of my head about something like that with all disabled. What makes you think the way you do? How do you believe?

. . . .First and foremost, thanks for e-mailing Healing Waters and offering your help. That's what it's all about, each one deciding to help another. In this case, Healing Waters, as I talked about last Friday is a non-profit volunteer organization started by a wheelchair bound Vietnam Vet to help severely wounded, disabled vets and those vets with profoundly traumatic wounds to help along in the healing process by helping them rediscover fly fishing with their trips, their equipment, everything paid for. They've already paid enough. Anyone who knows me, or who is a regular reader knows the respect I have for veterans, and the compassion I feel for them. I don't give one damn how you feel about a war or conflict, in this country everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but I do care that our veterans are treated with respect, dignity and honor. These young men and women take an oath when they put the uniform on that has nothing to do with political leanings or opinion. They put themselves in harm's way while wearing that uniform and serving under that flag, they deserve nothing less than the best we have to offer as a nation and as people when they return.
. . . .I tell this to everyone, try something small. When you're traveling, if you see a young man or woman in uniform, walk up to them, look them in the eye, shake their hand and tell them "Thank you". Buy them a cup of coffee or a lunch. The reward you get is the look in their eyes. It's worth it, try it.
. . . .Healing Waters, and the Wounded Warrior Project are two of my favorite organizations, both work with severely wounded and profoundly traumatized vets to help them transition back into civilian life, while respecting the sacrifices they've made.
. . . .Now, Anonymous, as to the "who are you, what makes you think the way you do and how do you believe" questions that you put forth, here's the answer to all 3:

. . . . I think that false humility is as bad as unsupported arrogance. The true answer would take up an untold number of columns. I stick with some things to describe it; my sons know that I love them more than I can say, so much it hurts; my friends know that I'd take a bullet for them, or put one in someone who was threatening them (not a boast, or a promise, just a statement); someone I worked with once told me that if he had to go down a dark alley, knowing that something bad was waiting down there for him, I'd be one of two people he knew that he'd take down that alley with him, because he knew he'd come back out alive, no matter what the cost to me, not because I'm "bad" or anything like that, it's just how I'm wired and what I'd do. I'm the guy who will run out in the road and get someone else's dog that's been hit and cry while I'm cradling it. I'm an alcoholic/junkie who is over 28 years clean and sober, but couldn't hold together a marriage that had over 25 years into it. I've got an IQ that's off the charts, but wear black, have tattoos and a pierced ear , and flunked out of my first semester of college because I couldn't get it together. I'm a son who is incredibly proud that my father taught me my trade, and my own son wants to carry it on, but is a terrible son to my Mother, and a worse brother to my sister. I'm a terrible husband, but a great date. I read voraciously, and process information, multiple streams of it, at a very high rate. I'm one of the subject matter experts in my field, but completely lack common sense most days. I work on deepwater oil platforms, but am a committed environmentalist. I'm so damn stubborn it's painful. I'll piss you off, let you down, irritate you, but when you need me the most, unfailingly, I'll be there for you, no questions asked, no thanks, payment or favors returned asked for, wanted or needed. I can tell you the track listing, the studio, the engineer, the producer of just about every album cut since 1967, along with the unnamed side and studio musicians who sat in, and the inspiration for most of those songs, why the artist wrote them. I love every style of music, and I mean every style and genre, with the notable exceptions of pop (no substance, no musicianship, no effort to be an artist), gangster rap that degrades women or celebrates randomly shooting citizens (but I do love urban poetry, hip-hop, funk and rap from artists like Kanye, DMX, Lil' Wayne, people who are willing to examine societal ills and bring them to light) and death metal (sorry, never got into GWAR). As for the rest, I can put a playlist together that goes from Samuel Barber's "Adagio for Strings" to Derek & The Dominos to Dr. John to the Kings of Leon to My Morning Jacket back to Jackson Browne, Little Feat, Bruce and U2 with side stops at Tommy Dorsey, Sonny Rollins, R.L. Burnside, Miles Davis and a topping of Reckless Kelly and Cross Canadian Ragweed, with Robert Earl Keen thrown in for the apertif. I don't know how to do anything but work, and won't relax. You'll notice me when I walk into a room, but truth be told, I'm uncomfortable with crowds, and shy. I always have something in my hands, and want to take it apart and see how it works, because if I know how things work, how they're put together, what the connections are, then when something goes wrong, I'll have a plan to fix it. I'm a white guy who is welcome out on the rez, not because I'm special, but because there are times when I know how to shut up, observe and work. I love to fish, to be outside, to be in open spaces, but I find cities like New York and New Orleans fascinating, and can feel at home there. I hate places like the Wisconsin Dells, anything overdeveloped and catering to the chain restaurant, theme park and water park crowd. I find great mystery in the night sky and the stars, in watching the sun rise and set on the ocean where I work, in feeling the wind and watching the weather. I'm the guy you think you know everything about, when in reality, you know nothing, and the next thing I do will throw you off completely, but to me, makes perfect sense.
I'm 51 years old, so I come from that generation. The generation that saw Vietnam, Woodstock, the Chicago riots, remember John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy being assasinated. Remember Watergate and Nixon getting on the helicopter. The generation that started to change this country, gave up, lived through the culmination of the last 30 years, with the last 8 years of the Bush imperium, and finally found our voice again, and came roaring back to bring change about finally, not for ourselves, but for something finally that was worth it to us, our kids and grandkids, because we finally woke up to the legacy that we were leaving behind, and it wasn't pretty.
How can I believe? I take that to mean, with the world and conditions as they are, how can I believe. I posit this question back; how can I not believe? Check out the pen name I use Anonymous, it's the pen name of a fallen angel. Those who thought they were somehow powerful, but were reminded of how frail they really were, and now must earn their redemption by making different choices in their existence. With the miracles that I have been given the grace to be witness to, with this brain that the Creator gave me that absorbs the mathematics and physics of the world and the Universe, seeing the unexplainable symmetry and causality in things, how can I not believe? I've been in that place of no belief, of no faith. It's dark, painful and there's no way out. It sucks, and it's self-destructive and self-feeding. My Creator gives me, gives all of us, free will, not just of our own actions, but of the will to believe and have faith. All of what I see in the world that we've destroyed, that we've done such terrible things, those are things that a person made a choice about. My Creator doesn't take sides, doesn't make choices, my Creator only gives me the power to choose, and offers second chance after second chance after second chance. So I ask again, how can I not believe?

. . . .Another Anonymous (God, I love the anonymous ones) one writes in:
Best feel good soundtrack i've heard in a while 40 Year Old Virgin. Aquarius kicks ass.
Turn off the boob tube and read your way back to sanity Sex, Death, and Fly-Fishing by John Gierach. Thanks Desolation Angel after reading some of you lunacy I'm beginning to hate myself enough to want to change. Don't worry i hated a lot about myself already its not all your fault. Still on the fence and don't trust either side. Working on the demons.

. . . .Sorry Anonymous, I'm only averaging a book every 4 days right now, I'll try to up it to 3, but since I also read about 13 magazines a week, own a small contracting company, consult and travel, and there is the whole eating once a day, and sleeping an average of 5 to 6 hours a night thing, I might have to let it ride at averaging a couple of books a week. As for turning off the TV, nope, I've got my 3 hours a week I watch (Lost, Rescue Me, & 24) and I ain't giving them up. Battlestar Galactica was in there, but it's now done as a series, and Rescue Me didn't come on until that was off the air. Sons of Anarchy will slip into the rotation this fall when it comes back, but Rescue Me will be off by then. I actually did have it up to 4 hours a week when HBO actually did things worth watching, but they haven't done anything like The Wire, Deadwood, Rome or The Sopranos in a long time. I don't count CNN and MSNBC, which are on as long as I'm awake and near a television, they're a background information stream that I consider pretty important in keeping up with the rapid changes going on right now. And on a prideful, egotistical and arrogant note, yes, I do put together good playlists, they kick ass, thank you very much. As for the rest of what Anonymous wrote, sounds like you've got some work to do, no more or no less than any of the rest of us. We're all in the same boat, every day, each and every one of us.

. . . .Last night, Slightly Stoopid wrote in and contributed the following:
When you say we've acted in our own "selfish best interests for far too long" i agree with you wholeheartedly but this is not just a conservative problem. This way of thinking has invaded the whole society (if not the civilized world). One of the worst purveyors of this thinking is the media. Its like the infomercial that tells you how easy they can make your workout or how easy it is to make money or whatever they're hawking at the moment. Now everyone wants it easy and are looking for the shortcut. One of the reasons we can't make a profit in this country is there are too many middle men taking a slice of the pie for doing nothing, part of the reason for this, in my opinion, is because there is no industry in this country anymore and these people need jobs and they're getting creative.
Something else that bothers me is the work ethic is disappearing in this country. I'm 43 and I owned a concrete construction company for 15 years starting in 93 (when the technological revolution was fueling the construction industry not Clinton). When i entered the work force in 88 it was by walking the construction sites and asking for a job and i wasn't alone. In 93 nothing, people had the audacity to tell me they weren't going to do concrete for ten dollars and hour when they had absolutely no experience. Like its my job to train you because you were like me and smoked your way through high school. I'd find an american here and there that still believed in working for it but not enough make a good business. But there was always south americans (trying to be pc here) showing up everyday and asking for a job and happy to work and learn. The plain simple fact is they work harder than we do. Next thing i know i've got three crews 75 percent south american and my competition is saying I'm not paying them enough and doing the work for cheaper.
That was some funny shit. I bought breakfast, lunch, payed out cash because they kicked ass for me and nobody that ever worked for me and stuck around got payed less than they were worth. Those same people would underbid me and still didn't get the work because i had a better product. The stupidity made me not want to be a businessman.
I remember when they were trying to unionize our valley and they came and tried to tell me how wrong i was. My base rate for someone with no experience was less but i payed experience a lot better than union wages.
Anyway sorry i ranted a little. I'd like to hear your point of view.
I have some questions on the Biomass power plants also. Just so happens my dad was an engineer on the 50 some megawatt wood chip burning plant in Kettle Falls, Idaho and they had every ounce of burnable material in the NW tied up. My question is where are they going to get the wood. I know they genetically engineered those trees but still thats a whole lot of burnable.
I know my thoughts are a little unfocused but i'm working on it LOL.
would love your feedback

. . . .Absolutely Slightly, for one thing, I don't think it's unfocused at all, and very conscise and coherent. From my own little worldview, the first portion of what you talked about is it, exactly, and to a tee. With no manufacturing in this country, there aren't any jobs that people can get where they make a real product, at some cost paid for raw materials and supplies and then sell that product for a profit, some of which they can get back in wages, that they can then use to pay bills with and buy, themselves, something someone else made. Ross Perot warned all of us about this years ago when he ran his "renegade" Presidential campaign. Other than the unfortunate choice of Admiral Stockdale as his Veep candidate, Perot was absolutely right on and hit the nail dead center with his predictions of where this country was headed and what was going to happen. No one wanted to listen to him, and lookie there, turned out that a businessman, a successful one, like Perot was right.
I make that point that he was a businessman, because I don't believe that anyone can or could argue with Ross Perot's business ethics. Which leads into my point about "selfish best interests" and couldn't agree with you more about that fact that this attitude, as it pervaded every aspect of our lives, was the root cause of the last 30 years. When Joseph Cassano of AIG perpetrated what he did in their London offices with his then heretofore unknown form of credit derivative, designed to skirt regulatory agencies, it was only for his own profit and AIG's profit, and if he was smart enough to come up with the derivative that caused the global crisis and punched a $50 billion real dollar hole in the fabric of the universe, then he was also smart enough to know just how much damage he would cause to individual citizens when it happened. When the former CEO of Countrywide launched the subprime mortgage assault on American citizens, he had to know full well that the people he was underwriting mortgages for on overpriced homes could in no way, long term and long run, afford the home and payment, but again, it was for Countrywide's and his own benefit that he did it, and those who followed suit with him, did not do so blindly. When Karl Rove harnessed the incredible anger and energy of the lunatic evangelical movement to elect GW Bush, he had to know that he had no intention of honoring any of their wishes, nor their hopes for a Christian Taliban-like government and White House, and so, after having to rig and steal the election twice, knew that they would turn against the Republican party, and against politics, but again, it was only his interest and electing GW that he cared about, not the American people, or those that he was purporting to represent. When Fox News allows Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, Michelle Malkin or Ann Coulter rattle on and spew their vile hatred, they aren't stupid. Even though none of it may be true, even if their only aim is to incite treason and sedition, the aim of the network is ratings, and not purveying truth. In other words, over the last 30 years, and especially in the last 8, the "selfish best interest" mentality has beaten out the "enlightened self-interest" mentality hands down, and look what's it's gotten us: the largest Federal deficit in history, a global economic depression, a war fought over a lie that cost us 4,000+ young soldiers that lined Cheney, Rumsfeld and Rove's pockets, a legacy across the world that our current President has to work feverishly to now repair and a Constitution and the legacy of a Republic built on representation and voice that is now in tatters. And yes, if you've read any of my previous columns, you know that I've been a member of two unions, am a craftsman, and will tell anyone how necessary those labor unions were in the beginning, how they built a middle class in this country, but then fell victims to themselves of that very same mentality and got greedy.
As for biomass fuel plants, no, I don't believe them to be an answer. The trick in the equation lies in understanding how many erg's and btu's or energy has to go into growing and harvesting the biomass. It's the same thing as ethanol, it's a negative sum equation that will actually hasten, rather than delay, resource depletion and speed up climate change as more resources and trees are stripped.

. . . .And all of this dovetails nicely into the address President Obama gave this morning at Georgetown University. The speech, titled "A New Foundation", is from my standpoint, the most important speech of his first 100 days, outweighing his Inaugural address. As a sidenote, I'm happy that the anti-intellectualism, the attitude that had it's roots in Washington that somehow it was un-American to be smart and to question things, to actually do some analysis and figure out the why's, the what's and the how's of things is gone. At any rate, as reported in Politico, here is a reaction to that address:
President Barack Obama acknowledged in a major economic speech Tuesday that "times are still tough" and warned that a culture of "instant gratification" had produced neglect of major national problems that wound up undermining the economy.

"By no means are we out of the woods just yet," the president said in remarks at Georgetown University. "But from where we stand, for the very first time, we are beginning to see glimmers of hope. And beyond that, way off in the distance, we can see a vision of an America’s future that is far different than our troubled economic past.

Obama contended that the nation's "day of reckoning" on the economy was caused partly by "a fundamental weakness in our political system."

"For too long, too many in Washington put off hard decisions for some other time on some other day," he said. "There’s been a tendency to score political points instead of rolling up sleeves to solve real problems. There is also an impatience that characterizes this town — an attention span that has only grown shorter with the 24 news cycle and insists on instant gratification in the form of instant results or higher poll numbers. When a crisis hits, there’s all too often a lurch from shock to trance, with everyone responding to the tempest of the moment until the furor has died away and the media coverage has moved on, instead of confronting the major challenges that will shape our future in a sustained and focused way."

Obama's speech, titled "A New Foundation," invoked a biblical parable by saying the nation "cannot rebuild this economy on the same pile of sand."

"We must build our house upon a rock," he said. "We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity — a foundation that will move us from an era of borrow and spend to one where we save and invest; where we consume less at home and send more exports abroad."


. . . .The White House excerpted his remarks and published them thusly:
The past three months have seem a storm of activity from the White House, with initiatives on housing, the markets, the auto industry, small businesses, international financial cooperation, and job creation through the Recovery Act. Today the President made it his central purpose of to explain the vision that has served as the foundation for every major initiative on the economy thus far:
So today, I want to step back for a moment and explain our strategy as clearly as I can. This is going to be prose, and not poetry. I want to talk about what we've done, why we've done it, and what we have left to do. I want to update you on the progress we've made, but I also want to be honest about the pitfalls that may still lie ahead.
Most of all, I want every American to know that each action we take and each policy we pursue is driven by a larger vision of America's future -- a future where sustained economic growth creates good jobs and rising incomes; a future where prosperity is fueled not by excessive debt, or reckless speculation, or fleeting profits, but is instead built by skilled, productive workers, by sound investments that will spread opportunity at home and allow this nation to lead the world in the technologies and the innovation and discoveries that will shape the 21st century. That's the America I see. That's the America that Georgetown is preparing so many of you for. That is the future that I know that we can have.
He explained that in order to understand where we have to go from here, we also have to understand how we got here:
Now, this is when the crisis spread from Wall Street to Main Street. After all, the ability to get a loan is how you finance the purchase of everything from a home to a car to, as you all know very well, a college education. It's how stores stock their shelves, and farms buy equipment, and businesses make payroll. So when banks stopped lending money, businesses started laying off workers. When laid-off workers had less money to spend, businesses were forced to lay off even more workers. When people couldn't get a car loan, a bad situation at the auto companies became even worse. When people couldn't get home loans, the crisis in the housing market only deepened. Because the infected securities were being traded worldwide and other nations also had weak regulations, this recession soon became global. And when other nations can't afford to buy our goods, it slows our economy even further.
So this is the situation, the downward spiral that we confronted on the day that we took office. So our most urgent task has been to clear away the wreckage, repair the immediate damage to the economy, and do everything we can to prevent a larger collapse. And since the problems we face are all working off each other to feed a vicious economic downturn, we've had no choice but to attack all fronts of our economic crisis simultaneously.
The President spoke at length addressing a sentiment he said he hears most often in letters from people across the country, namely outrage about the government support for banks teetering on failure. As he did throughout the speech, he took time to address opposing arguments and perspectives. To those who take the intuitively and emotionally understandable position that we should simply let the banks fail – "where’s my bailout?" in short – he argued that in truth a dollar in credit can have an immense multiplier effect that will produce a much greater gain in terms of jobs and the broader economy. And in turn, the failure of those banks would have a vastly disproportionate impact on every American. To those who urge the preemptive takeover of banks, "the nationalization argument" as he called it, he gave assurance that his reticence to engage in that strategy was not born of ideological rigidity or moral obligation to shareholders, but rather a belief that this strategy would cause even bigger losses for taxpayers.
Perhaps the heart of the speech was focused on the core weaknesses of the economy that led to the crisis we see now, and the pillars of the new economy the President envisions to ensure such a crisis will be kept at bay in the future:
It is simply not sustainable to have a 21st-century financial system that is governed by 20th-century rules and regulations that allowed the recklessness of a few to threaten the entire economy. It is not sustainable to have an economy where in one year, 40 percent of our corporate profits came from a financial sector that was based on inflated home prices, maxed-out credit cards, over-leveraged banks and overvalued assets. It's not sustainable to have an economy where the incomes of the top 1 percent has skyrocketed while the typical working household has seen their incomes decline by nearly $2,000. That's just not a sustainable model for long-term prosperity.

For even as too many were out there chasing ever-bigger bonuses and short-term profits over the last decade, we continued to neglect the long-term threats to our prosperity: the crushing burden that the rising cost of health care is placing on families and businesses; the failure of our education system to prepare our workers for a new age; the progress that other nations are making on clean energy industries and technologies while we -- we remain addicted to foreign oil; the growing debt that we're passing on to our children. Even after we emerge from the current recession, these challenges will still represent major obstacles that stand in the way of our success in the 21st century. So we've got a lot of work to do.

Now, there's a parable at the end of the Sermon on the Mount that tells the story of two men. The first built his house on a pile of sand, and it was soon destroyed when a storm hit. But the second is known as the wise man, for when "the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house, it fell not: for it was founded upon a rock."
It was founded upon a rock. We cannot rebuild this economy on the same pile of sand. We must build our house upon a rock. We must lay a new foundation for growth and prosperity -- a foundation that will move us from an era of borrow and spend to one where we save and invest; where we consume less at home and send more exports abroad.

It's a foundation built upon five pillars that will grow our economy and make this new century another American century: Number one, new rules for Wall Street that will reward drive and innovation, not reckless risk-taking -- (applause); number two, new investments in education that will make our workforce more skilled and competitive -- (applause); number three, new investments in renewable energy and technology that will create new jobs and new industries -- (applause); number four, new investments in health care that will cut costs for families and businesses; and number five, new savings in our federal budget that will bring down the debt for future generations. (Applause.)
That's the new foundation we must build. That's our house built upon a rock. That must be our future -- and my administration's policies are designed to achieve that future.
Towards the end of his speech, he noted that in addition to the fundamental weaknesses of the economy, there is also a fundamental weakness in the political system that must be confronted. He talked about how the prospects for long-term, bold, necessary solutions often give way to 24-hour news cycles and fluctuating poll numbers.
This can’t be one of those times. The challenges are too great. The stakes are too high. I know how difficult it is for Members of Congress in both parties to grapple with some of the big decisions we face right now. It’s more than most congresses and most presidents have to deal with in a lifetime.
But we have been called to govern in extraordinary times. And that requires an extraordinary sense of responsibility – to ourselves, to the men and women who sent us here, and to the many generations whose lives will be affected for good or for ill because of what we do here.
Having been forthright about the challenges ahead, he expressed confidence: America will have that house upon the rock.
.. . . . .Outta here for today. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, let 'em know it. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, no one gets out alive, so seize the precious moments before they pass through your hands. This ain't no dress rehearsal, it's the real thing, and the curtain goes up every morning and we all get another chance. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now and not about anything else. This is the sight, words and soundtrack of me changing my own life, how's your day going?

The Desolation Angel







13 April 2009

Post-Resurrection Wake-up

Monday April 13, 2009

. . . . .Happy post-Easter Monday! I've always thought of Easter as kind of a party, really. I understand why it's celebrated, and it's pretty pious and solemn, death and resurrection. But I figure it this way, if I was dead for 3 days, and someone rolled away the stone from my tomb, I'd party! So. . . .Easter to me has always been kind of like "Hey - barbecue at Jesus' house!". You know - Buddha, Krishna, Mohammed everybody just kind of shows up and it's a good time.

. . . . . In light of that, I added the best rock and roll preacher I know to the podcast. No surprise, it's Bruce leading off today. He really is a preacher ya know, a revivalist. It's not an act, he truly does believe in the power of rock and roll to save a soul, the ability of a backbeat, a Stratocaster playing rhythm and a Les Paul cranking out a lead line to lead someone to redemption. He believes in the ability of the average guy to rise up, to rise above and become someone better.

. . . . . . .Gonna spend some time on green issues today. Earth day is coming up, and but every day should be Earth Day right now. In the April 13 special Environmental Issue of Time -

. . . . . .The current extinction wave going around the planet is happening at a rate about 1,000 times greater than before the appearance of humans as a species. We're the cause, but we can also be the cure.
Through our growing numbers, our thirst for natural resources and, most of all, climate change — which, by one reckoning, could help carry off 20% to 30% of all species before the end of the century — we're shaping an Earth that will be biologically impoverished. A 2008 assessment by the International Union for Conservation of Nature found that nearly 1 in 4 mammals worldwide was at risk for extinction, including endangered species like the famous Tasmanian devil. Overfishing and acidification of the oceans are threatening marine species as diverse as the bluefin tuna and reef-forming corals. "Just about everything is going down," says Simon Stuart, head of the IUCN's species-survival commission. "And when I think about the impact of climate change, it really scares me."

Scary for conservationists, yes, but the question arises, Why should it matter to the rest of us? After all, nearly all the species that were ever alive in the past are gone today. Evolution demands extinction. When we're using the term extinction to talk about the fate of the U.S. auto industry, does it really matter if we lose species like the Holdridge's toad, the Yangtze River dolphin and the golden toad, all of which have effectively disappeared in recent years? What does the loss of a few species among millions matter?

For one thing, we're animals too, dependent on this planet like every other form of life. The more species living in an ecosystem, the healthier and more productive it is, which matters for us — a recent study by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) estimates the economic value of the Amazon rain forest's ecosystem services to be up to $100 per hectare (about 2½ acres). When we pollute and deforest and make a mess of the ecological web, we're taking out mortgages on the Earth that we can't pay back — and those loans will come due. Then there are the undiscovered organisms and animals that could serve as the basis of needed medicines — as the original ingredients of aspirin were derived from the herb meadowsweet — unless we unwittingly destroy them first. "We have plenty of stories about how the loss of biodiversity creates problems for people," says Carter Roberts, WWF's president.

Forests razed can grow back, polluted air and water can be cleaned — but extinction is forever. And we're not talking about losing just a few species. In fact, conservationists quietly acknowledge that we've entered an age of triage, when we might have to decide which species can truly be saved. The worst-case scenarios of habitat loss and climate change — and that's the pathway we seem to be on — show the planet losing hundreds of thousands to millions of species, many of which we haven't even discovered yet. The result could be a virtual genocide of much of the animal world and an irreversible impoverishment of our planet. Humans would survive, but we would have doomed ourselves to what naturalist E.O. Wilson calls the Eremozoic Era — the Age of Loneliness.


. . . . . .The bottom line is this; we've acted arrogantly and egotistically for far too long, believing that somehow whatever we felt was in our own selfish best interest must be what's best for the planet long term, because we were the top of the heap. Wrong, it does matter, and as a species we lost the understanding of the priniciple that it all has to remain in balance, that we're only one of many species, 5 of whom previous to us were at the top of the heap before an extinction wave took them out. We need to act on climate change, we need to understand it and believe it, and we need to do something about it.

. . . .From the U.S. News and World Report April 2009 edition devoted to a Green Economy, and the shaping and vision behind it and where it has to go is an exceptional read, I suggest you go out and get it.

. . . . .Staying with good reads, make sure to pick up this week's Rolling Stone, interviews with Lil' Wayne, Kris Kristofferson and a National Affairs article on the incredible crimes and havoc wreaked in the Department of the Interior by the previous Administration. The crimes committed in Interior during the Bush years go further than anyone thought they possibly could. I'm sticking it up in this section, because that criminal behavior is what led to many of the environmental disasters and regulations wiped out that have put so many species on the brink, and led to the relaxation of air and water regulations:
Under Bush, the Interior Department became a lawless bureaucracy that actively worked to enrich the nation's most powerful energy interests. Top-level officials secretly allowed oil companies to keep billions in royalties owed to taxpayers, opened up 26 million acres of federal land to oil and gas drilling, denied wilderness protection to another 220 million acres, rewrote scientific reports to eliminate safeguards for endangered species, and even snorted coke and had sex with the very oil interests they were supposed to be regulating. "It was Dodge City," says Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon who chairs the Senate Energy Subcommittee on Public Lands and Forests.
. . . . . .From Time again, another article on finding the tipping point for climate change. What is it? What's the mathematical equation, the critical mass? I've been guilty myself of focusing on the recession and letting climate change slip into the background, when in reality, it's the true #1 issue:
When asked to quantify the impact of climate change, scientists come up with a lot of interesting answers, no two of them quite the same. For the lay person, then, perhaps the simplest way to understand it is to imagine a distant asteroid, somewhere out in space, on a collision course with Earth. It's not clear when or where the asteroid will hit, or exactly how severe the consequences will be. But it is clear that when it happens, the consequences will be far worse — and last far longer — than any natural disaster humanity has ever known.
That is the threat to the planet that many scientists can agree is posed by climate change. Yet the global response to global warming — one of fits and starts, with more hot air than real focus — doesn't exactly resemble the mobilizing opening scenes of disaster flicks like Armageddon or Deep Impact. Quite the opposite, as fears over the recession grow, climate change may be receding from the public consciousness. A Gallup poll released last week found that a record-high 41% of Americans believe that the threat of global warming is exaggerated in the news media, up from 30% in 2006. Though a majority of Americans are still a "fair amount" or a "great deal" concerned about climate change, that proportion has hardly changed in recent years, even as the preponderance of scientific evidence has increasingly supported the danger of global warming and the speed with which it is occurring. The asteroid is out there, and yet we remain reluctant to heed the warnings. Why?
For one thing, most people imagine global warming to be a gradual process, like water slowly coming to boil — so, it follows that averting the worst effects of climate change should be as straightforward as turning down the heat. But the climate, immensely complex as it is, doesn't work that way. The real danger could come from "tipping points" — sharp, sudden changes that could result in the complete collapse of the ice sheets on Greenland or West Antarctica, or the desiccation of the Amazon rainforest. If we cross those thresholds, the effects could be too swift and terrible for us to cope — the ice on Greenland alone contains enough water to raise global sea levels by more than 20 feet, which would swallow the coasts. Passing a tipping point would be irreversible and that is why the possibility keeps climatologists up at night.
. . . .One of the scariest things I've read in a while. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas addressed a group of high school seniors yesterday. "There's too much emphasis on rights these days."

. . . .As long as things are getting weird, and just when we all thought things couldn't get any weirder than a Supreme Court Justice dissing "rights", a guest passed out today on Glenn Beck on Fox, while discussing governmental debt. Link to the video here.

. . . . .From Meghan McCain, John's daughter in The Daily Beast:
Republican resistance to gay marriage goes against conservative values—and our own self-interest.
. . . .Paul Krugman, in the New York Times on Monday:
Republicans have become embarrassing to watch. And it doesn't feel right to make fun of crazy people. Better, perhaps, to focus on the real policy debates, which are all among Democrats.

But here's the thing: the G.O.P. looked as crazy 10 or 15 years ago as it does now. That didn't stop Republicans from taking control of both Congress and the White House. And they could return to power if the Democrats stumble. So it behooves us to look closely at the state of what is, after all, one of our nation's two great political parties.

. . . .Eric Alterman, over in the Daily Beast:

When you consider the respective achievements of the folks who peopled the upper echelons of the Bush administration, I think you’ll agree that after their incompetence, ideological obsession, and general malevolence, their most impressive characteristic was, and remains, their audacity.

Think about it: George W. Bush is widely considered to be, if not America’s worst president ever, then certainly in the bottom four or five. His legacy to his successor includes: the worst economic crisis in 80years, two unsuccessful wars, a thoroughly corrupt Justice Department, the destruction of time-honored civil liberties and hard-won rights, and the widespread contempt of almost everyone on the planet who was not a committed member of the conservative Republican base. And yet not only did Bush and Co. never own up to the catastrophic consequences of their actions, they gave one another medals for it. (It’s only a rumor, however, that Bush tried to rename the Presidential Medal of Freedom the “Heckuva Job” medal.)

In a society with any kind of memory whatsoever—much less one whose public servants enjoyed a modicum of self-respect—these folks would slink off into the sunset and lay low for a decade or two before taking up new careers doing something useful—if not ministering to the poor like Jimmy Carter, then at least sticking to charity golf tournaments like Gerald Ford.

Instead they’ve become pundits. And unlike ex-Democratic pundits, who tend to want to prove their mettle as independent analysts by attacking their ex-friends using Republican talking points—demanding to know why presidential candidates do not wear flag pins and are BFFs with Louis Farrakhan and the like—they keep up exactly the same shenanigans that landed this country in the screwed-up place they left it. Admit it: It’s impressive.

. . . . .No less than 3 authors/political scientists have put together studies that show, however, despite the blurbs above, that there is a permanent new, Progessive Democratic majority in America, and that November's elections were about a realignment and shift that started back in the 90's, and is culminating not in the election, which was a symptom and an outcome, but in the insanity seen today over on the Right and in the G.O.P.

. . . .The guy that the extreme lunatic fruitbag Right wing of the Republican party is all lining up to hate, the President, passed his first military/foreign policy/national security showdown with flying colors however. It was his signature and his orders that had the SEAL snipers take out the pirates, it was his call, he stood up to it, he made it, and it was the right call.

. . . .But, we still have to contend with mouth-breathing meatsack morons like Michael Steele. In a fundraising letter sent out Monday to 12 million Republican supporters, RNC chair Steele makes direct attacks on the President. Hmmm, wasn't so long ago that the Republicans were calling anyone who criticized the President a "traitor", was it?

. . . .The Financial Times of London reports that AIG, the company whose speculation branch in London basically caused the global economic collapse when the incredibly intricate and basically fraudulent derivatives they cooked up blew up in their face is refusing to participate in the overhaul of the derivatives regulations.

The unit that all but destroyed AIG has failed to sign up for the overhaul of the global derivatives market which was given added impetus by the troubles at the US insurance group.

AIG confirmed that its financial products unit, whose soured bets on credit default swaps forced the company into government hands last year, did not adopt the “Big Bang” protocol that has been signed by more than 2,000 market participants.

. . . . . .And in the first sign that the banks may be turning around, and this recession/depression is on the way up, Goldman Sachs posted a profit today and is raising the funds to pay TARP monies back. There's always hope.

. . . .That's what Easter has always been about for me. Hope, the promise of Spring, the promise of renewal, rebirth and resurrection. We all have it in front of us all the time, it's just that sometimes, we're too deep into it to see it. Trust me, I know. Been there, done that. There's always hope, and sometimes, it's just hanging on long enough to see another sunrise, to wait to see the stone rolled away, that's all it takes to turn that corner just a little bit.
Love you all, outta here for today.

. . . .Kiss your kids, hug 'em and squeeze 'em. Tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the day for all it's precious moments. Live life out loud with a good soundtrack. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and there's no way out, no one gets out alive, and there's no exemptions. That's a glorious thing, because it means that this ain't no dress rehearsal, and the curtain goes up every day on another show, and we get to do it all over again. If you don't like where your life is, and what you're doing, change it. No one has the power to do that except you.

The Desolation Angel

10 April 2009

Friday's ramblings

Friday April 10, 2009
. . . .Right off the bat, I can tell you that I'm hating the changes that Google has introduced into their
post editor. It's a piece of crap, and I've wrote to tell them that continually. I'm terrifically unhappy with their post editing engine.

. . . .By the way, if you're one of those people sitting there wondering just what the hell I'm writing about when I talk about a new playlist, and you're hearing silence, or an old one, and you're a Firefox user, it's simple. Go up to the top to the "Tools" menu, and select "Clear Private Data", you'll get another menu, leave only "Cache" checked, and then clear it. Reload the site and you'll be hearing the new podcast.

. . . .Enjoy today's podcast, it's a changeup from the nostaligia trip I've been on. Leave it up and open, and enjoy the music. It's a compare in contrast listing, between our existing rock and roll songwriting masters and the new kids, and they're doing some great stuff.

. . . .I've been away from home for quite a while now, and am getting ready for more traveling to get where I have to go, so I'll cut it short and tell you that by the end of the day, I'll have it updated and ready with both yesterday's and today's news and views. Outta here for a hot minute, be back later.

O Brother,Where Art Thou? (Friday)

Friday April 10, 2009
Once I spoke the language of the flowers,Once I understood each word the caterpillar said,Once I smiled in secret at the gossip of the starlings,And shared a conversation with the houseflyin my bed.Once I heard and answered all the questionsof the crickets,And joined the crying of each falling dyingflake of snow,Once I spoke the language of the flowers...How did it go?How did it go?
 
. . . . .Shel Silverstein - Forgotten Language
 
. . . .April is National Poetry Month
 
. . . . .Today's Podcast has only a short intro, and enough nostalgia already! First thing, leave the webpage open, and enjoy the music.
 Had some fun putting this one together. It's a "compare and contrast" exercise. Some of our best songwriters/musicians contrasted with some 
new kids. It leads off with the just released track from Bob Dylan's soon to be released new album. The track "Beyond Here Lies Nothing" 
is a perfect end-times Bob Dylan track,sounding empty and bleak, but with this whole Tex-Mex thing popping in on occasion throughout the song. 
The perfect song to be sitting in that dark, greasy blues bar that I always talk about as where I'm headed to when this particular walk is over, listening
to. The list is filled up with The Kings Of Leon, The Raconteurs, My Morning Jacket and The Black Keys. Bruce, Steve Earle and
U2 fill in as the other "masters" of the craft, and it provides a good comparison. It's important, for me at least, to not get hung up on
just the past, or to constantly believe that the "old guys" do it best. Music is music and is constantly morphing and finding new
ways to express itself and these 4 bands are doing a particularly good job right now of hanging out in that songwriter/rock and roll
band tradition that the others are masters of. 
. . . I'm looking forward next month to the release of Conor Oberst and the Mystic Valley Band's new album. I've heard some tracks and
it's like two parts John Mellencamp and one part Uncle Tupelo, sounds excellent. 
 
. . . .Sat there this morning sobbing into my coffee when CNN ran it's normal morning clip on heroes, those people who make a difference
every day, but go unsung. A man named Ed Nicholson, a wheelchair bound, disabled veteran himself, is the founder of a project called "Project Healing Waters",
an organization devoted to helping disabled combat veterans find physical and emotional recovery through rediscovering the art
of fly fishing and going on fishing and camping trips. It's hard to describe the feeling that I got from watching this man work with
with vets who have lost limbs, been severely scarred, had incredible trauma done to their bodies in combat. Watching them smile and
be at peace while striving for the perfect cast in a serene setting, the camera was able to convey the sense of peace they found while 
going on fishing trips, that in many cases are completely funded by Ed himself. Please click the link above and consider helping them out, 
it's one of the most worthwhile projects I've seen in some time.
 
. . . I've been gone for some time, and have a lot of catching up on the personal front today. I'll update throughout the day, with 
 what's in Time, Newsweek, Rolling Stone, The Daily Beast, The Huffington Post and on CNN. Outta here for a hot minute. . .
Leave it up, I think you'll enjoy the music.

07 April 2009

Wednesday - Have you ever seen sunrise at sea?

NATIONS ten thousand years before These States, and many times ten thousand years before
These
States;
Garner’d clusters of ages, that men and women like us grew up and travel’d their
course, and pass’d on;
What vast-built cities—what orderly republics—what pastoral tribes and nomads;
What histories, rulers, heroes, perhaps transcending all others;
What laws, customs, wealth, arts, traditions;
What sort of marriage—what costumes—what physiology and phrenology;
What of liberty and slavery among them—what they thought of death and the soul;
Who were witty and wise—who beautiful and poetic—who brutish and
undevelop’d;
Not a mark, not a record remains—And yet all remains.

O I know that those men and women were not for nothing, any more than we are for nothing;
I know that they belong to the scheme of the world every bit as much as we now belong to
it,
and as all will henceforth belong to it.

Afar they stand—yet near to me they stand,
Some with oval countenances, learn’d and calm,
Some naked and savage—Some like huge collections of insects,
Some in tents—herdsmen, patriarchs, tribes, horsemen,
Some prowling through woods—Some living peaceably on farms, laboring, reaping,
filling
barns,
Some traversing paved avenues, amid temples, palaces, factories, libraries, shows, courts,
theatres, wonderful monuments.

Are those billions of men really gone?
Are those women of the old experience of the earth gone?
Do their lives, cities, arts, rest only with us?
Did they achieve nothing for good, for themselves?

I believe of all those billions of men and women that fill’d the unnamed lands, every
one
exists this hour, here or elsewhere, invisible to us, in exact proportion to what he or
she
grew from in life, and out of what he or she did, felt, became, loved, sinn’d, in
life.

I believe that was not the end of those nations, or any person of them, any more than this
shall be the end of my nation, or of me;
Of their languages, governments, marriage, literature, products, games, wars, manners,
crimes,
prisons, slaves, heroes, poets, I suspect their results curiously await in the yet unseen
world—counterparts of what accrued to them in the seen world.
I suspect I shall meet them there,
I suspect I shall there find each old particular of those unnamed lands.

- Unnamed Lands Walt Whitman from Leaves of Grass

. . . .
April is National Poetry Month

. . . .So, President Obama returns tomorrow from his first overseas trip. It started with
the G-20 meetings with some fairly cranked up European countries in a one-day meeting that
ended with President Obama and Geithner convincing the European finance ministers that the
United States had a plan. From there into France, from there to the Mideast, where he started changing
the perception of America and undoing some of the damage of the Bush era, and ended with a
surprise visit to the troops in Iraq. Not bad, can you see W pulling this one off, and managing
to change the perception of America abroad for the positive? I can't.

Over on OpenCongress.org (a project of the Sunlight Foundation), you can track every bill in the House and
Senate. H.R. 1409 , the Employee Free Choice Act is basically dead in the water, with Sen. Lincoln,
A Dem from Arkansas announcing she will vote against it. In it's present form, it won't fly. It'll have to
go back to committee and be reworked.
H.R. 472, the Family Foreclosure Rescue Corporation Act of 2009 was introduced back in January,
but is still in committee, and has not come out for a floor vote yet.
H.R. 1106, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009 has been passed by the House but is
still sitting in the Senate waiting for a vote.
H.R. 1586, to impose and additional tax on bonuses received from certain TARP recipients, has passed
the House, but is waiting for a Senate vote.
. . . .Check out the website, Open Congress, it's worth it, and is a good place to check out the bills
moving through Congress and the House.

. . . .Open Congress is a project of the Sunlight Foundation
The Sunlight Foundation's stated goal is "to use the power of the Internet to shine a light on the interplay
of money, influence, lobbying and government in Washington in ways never before possible." They
use deceased Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis' motto "Sunshine is the best of disinfectants"
Their mission statement: "The Sunlight Foundation is committed to helping citizens, bloggers and
journalists be their own best congressional watchdogs, by improving access to existing information and
digitizing new information, and by creating new tools and Web sites to enable all of us to collaborate in
fostering greater transparency."

. . . . .Congratulations to North Carolina on last night's win of the NCAA basketball tournament. It's not
how easily they won, nor the fact that they played Michigan State, who I was pulling for. It's the
fact that 4 of their 5 starters came back for a 5th year of college, got a degree, and played as a team
for a championship they wanted and passed up millions of dollars, each of them, in an NBA contract
to do it. That is what sport is supposed to be all about, the willingness to sacrifice, the effort to
become a cohesive team, and to not quit until the goal is reached. That folks, is what true sports
are about, and not the distorted vision of it that we've allowed ourselves to become part of.
It's absolutely ludicrous and asinine that we pay athletes the salaries we do, and we pay it, by
buying tickets and pulling in record numbers on TV broadcasts. My ex-mother-in-law was a
teacher before her retirement, a teacher who taught the English language and reading skills to
small children in an inner-city setting, immigrant children. One of the most important jobs going
and she was paid a pathetic amount, and did her job because she loved it and she knew it was
important. There are countless others like her. I use the language and words I use, and spell the
way I do all because of Gwen Kulesa, retired from Comstock schools, and her dedication as a teacher.
My interest in politics, history, economics and geography was due to getting started by Mike
Stripp and fostered further by my college professor Glen Moots. My abilities in math, to do my
job with came from Don Penix, and my undying faith in science and the laws of the universe came
from Tim Fox, Doug Harper and Jay Stickle. My unwillingness to quit anything, to never back down and
to keep fighting no matter what came courtesy of my coach, Jack Runchey. These people are
teachers, like countless others, who dedicate themselves, underpaid, and often unappreciated
until much later in life. Our society instead, rewards those who have the gifts that these people develop, but not
the mentors, the teachers.

. . . .Yes, I believe that President Obama can take on all 3: the economy, education and health-care
reform, we need all three. I understand, and write constantly, on the economic crisis, and I'm someone
who due to personal experience, knows how badly health-care reform and insurance reform is
needed. It is education, however, that is the bedrock, and will shape future generations and the
future of this nation. Please remember to thank your teachers, and make the reform of the educational
system one of your top priorities too, it's about our future, and our kid's future.

. . . .The one CD I haven't commented on, nor played any of the playlists so far this year is Metallica's
Death Magnetic, I've listened to it seriously, given it the good 3 day play over and over listen/test.
I love it. It's a return to the original days of
Master of Puppets and One. I was listening to an interview
with James Hetfield the other day, realizing that these guys aren't that much younger than me,
and also that they've earned the right to play what they want, the way they want. In this case,
the band wanted to go back to their roots and a garage sound, underproduced, to see if past all the
arenas, all the million dollar production albums, they could still be a viable band that could fill
a bar on any given night and play a set that was built for a smaller, more intimate setting and crowd,
they achieved that.

. . . .This from the AP, Vermont just became the first state to legalize gay marriage when it's legislature
overrode the governor's veto:
Vermont, which invented civil unions, on Tuesday
became a pioneer again as the first state to legalize gay marriage
through a legislature's vote, suggesting growing popular acceptance of
the idea. The House barely achieved the votes necessary to override
Gov. Jim Douglas' veto of a bill that will allow gays and lesbians to
marry beginning September 1. Four states now have same-sex marriage
laws and other states soon could follow suit.

Bills to allow same-sex marriage are currently before lawmakers in New
Hampshire, Maine, New York and New Jersey. The three other states that
currently allow same-sex marriage - Connecticut, Massachusetts and Iowa
- each moved to do so through the courts, not legislatures.


. . .As slow as it may seem, human and civil rights are really returning to this country. It may seem like
ages, but remember it's only been since January 20th that the Bush/Rove/Cheney imperium
ended.

. . . . . On CNN Tuesday night, Vice-President Joe Biden sat down with Wolf Blitzer in the Situation
Room and did an interview. Biden's strongest remarks were reserved for his predecessor, Dick
Cheney, who has within the past week been highly critical (surprise!) of the Obama administration
saying that the President has put the nation "at risk". Joe didn't hold back, and took Dick on
full-bore:
"I don't think [Cheney] is out of line, but he is dead wrong," he told
CNN's Wolf Blitzer. "This administration -- the last administration
left us in a weaker posture than we've been any time since World War
II: less regarded in the world, stretched more thinly than we ever have
been in the past, two wars under way, virtually no respect in entire
parts of the world."
. . . .From Reuters, GM is in "intense" preparations for bankruptcy.

. . . .I realize that the news has been full of indicators and prognosticators saying that they see signs
that the Depression has bottomed out and is on the way back up, but not so fast. The global picture
is far worse, and most business media folks in this country are far too focused on just the U.S.
Thus, the anger and frustration last week when Obama and Geithner walked into the G-20.
It really is an interconnected web, and one world. The economic shock of the current depression,
on a global scale is far worse than the one from the Great Depression of 80 years ago. Two
economists released a report on Tuesday
the ran the econometric numbers, and the global
implications are far worse than expected. Top CEO's said on Tuesday to expect even more job cuts,
that they didn't expect an upturn anytime soon.

. . . . .Fitting right in with that, economist Noriel Roubini, affectionately known as "Dr. Doom" for his gloomy, bearish and
and extemely accurate economic forecasts (he predicted the worst global depression in 4 decades was coming back
in 2006) is proving to yet another Jim Cramer, of CNBC's Mad Money, fan. You will recall that Jon Stewart took
Cramer on 2 weeks ago, and called him out for his startlingly inaccurate stock market predictions, and called him
out for being one of the media figures who helped the debacle along. Roubini yesterday called Cramer "a buffoon".

"Cramer is a buffoon," said Roubini, a New York University economics
professor often called Dr. Doom. "He was one of those who called six
times in a row for this bear market rally to be a bull market rally and
he got it wrong. And after all this mess and Jon Stewart he should just
shut up because he has no shame."

Cramer, the host of CNBC's "Mad Money" show, recently wrote in a
blog that Roubini is "intoxicated" with his own "prescience and vision"
and said Roubini should realize that things are better since the stock market's recent bottom in early March.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index has rallied 17 percent since then.
Roubini said in 2006 that the worst recession in four decades was on
its way. He has attracted attention for his gloomy _ and accurate _predictions
of the U.S. financial market meltdown.
Roubini said the latest surge is just another bear market rally
following the pattern of other rallies after the government intervened.
He expects the market will test the previous low because of
worse-than-expected macroeconomic news, disappointing earnings and
because banks will fail after the stress tests come out.
"Once people get the reality check, than it's going to get ugly again," Roubini said.
. . . .And this link here will take you to Paul Krugman, another one of my favorite economic realists on Rachel
Maddow last night pouring cold water all over recent polls showing people being more upbeat about the economy.

. . . .I'm still trying to get my head wrapped around the small plane from Canada that violated U.S. airspace, buzzed
the capitol of Wisconsin and then made it's way through Illinois to land on a dirt road in Missouri, and have the pilot
walk into the local 7-11 so he could be arrested, being tailed the whole time by F-16's. We've spent billions of dollars
since 9/11 to hire god knows how many military wanna-be's to search and delay us at airports, throw out water bottles,
have at us with crotch-sniffing dogs, search our toothpaste tubes, harass 70 year olds in wheelchairs, delight in pulling
vibrators out of luggage, strip search anyone they choose, most of the time women, all to keep us "safe". We've
put up with this, since there "isn't anything we can do about it" and it's all to "keep us safe". I travel in the air for a
living, and I wouldn't trust most TSA agents to keep a candy bar from being eaten by my co-workers, much less
keep me safe from some shoe-lighting nutcase. We hear over and over about the Mexican border. Got news,
since I live in Michigan, which is next door to Canada, and know the upper Midwest pretty well, the Canadian border
is deserted and unguarded. Now, not only did some wingnut wander into that airspace and make it all the way to Missouri,
we couldn't even do that right. It appears that he was suicidal and wanted to be shot down, so that was his plan.
Feel safer?

. . . . . .Interesting that the Congressional Black Caucus visited Cuba yesterday, and also wound spending time with
Fidel Castro. Interesting in light of the fact that as of today, Iran wants to enter into dialogue about it's nuclear future,
interesting in light of the fact that the President's first overseas trip looks to start garnering some of our respect back
around the world. Maybe, just maybe, we're starting to realize that we need to be engaged in the larger world community
and not just telling it what we're going to do, because we feel like doing it.

. . . . . .This space has written over and over about how rickety, old, inefficient and vulnerable the existing electrical
power grid is, and how much we could gain just by putting some efforts into making it more efficient, and stronger.
Over 50% of the power initially generated at any plant is lost in getting to whatever it powers, even the light bulbs in your
home. That's waste, a tremendous waste of energy and money and resources. The Administration and new Energy
Secretary Chu have made it a priority. Now, today the Wall Street Journal reports that our entire grid has been
compromised and is a victim of cyber-war.
Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind
software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, according
to current and former national-security officials.
The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, these
officials said, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the
U.S. electrical system and its controls. The intruders haven't sought
to damage the power grid or other key infrastructure, but officials
warned they could try during a crisis or war.

"The Chinese have attempted to map our infrastructure, such as the
electrical grid," said a senior intelligence official. "So have the
Russians."

The espionage appeared pervasive across the U.S. and doesn't target
a particular company or region, said a former Department of Homeland
Security official. "There are intrusions, and they are growing," the
former official said, referring to electrical systems. "There were a
lot last year."
.. . . ..Over at the American Prospect, Kevin Mattson turns in this one, detailing and exploring our National shift
in attitude back towards sacrifice, humility and hard work.

. . . .The geek in me absolutely loved hearing this morning on the news channels the breaking news about research into
viral technology for electrical power. Scientists at MIT have genetically engineered a virus to build the basic positive
and negative components of a battery. Conceivably, in the near future, we could have an organic source of power
for laptops, phones, MP3 players and other small electronic devices.

. . . . .Outta here for the day. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the day and change
your own world, and in so doing, change the larger world around you. The rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets
out alive, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now. Live now, without regret, guilt
or compromise.
. . . .This is me changing my life, the words, sight and sound of it, doing what makes me happy and stirs my soul.
. . . .So, how's your day?

The Desolation Angel
[where:Gulf of Mexico]

06 April 2009

Tuesday (Last blast of winter across the U.S.)

April is National Poetry Month, therefore the lead-in each day, because I like the fact that despite all our troubles, we can still take the time to recognize how beautifully language can used.

A voice said, Look me in the stars
And tell me truly, men of earth,
If all the soul-and-body scars
Were not too much to pay for birth.

A Question - Robert Frost

. . . .
The playlist basically remains the same, with some rearrangement of song order, since where I am right now is basically too far out to reasonably upload and download MP3 files with any speed at all. So I move some from the bottom up to the top, and so forth.

. . . .One result of Sunday's test launch by North Korea? Sarah Palin is demanding budget money for a missile defense shield for Alaska? Sarah sweetie, a couple of points you may be missing. #1, there's nothing in Alaska worth launching a missile at, and #2, North Korea is resource poor and would want the only thing up there, oil production facilities, intact. Once again, clueless.

. . . . .Some of you may ask, why does he like solitude so much when he's on land, why the night so much? why living where he is right now, so far out and so quiet? It's simple, I fly in a helicopter to my job (in my particular profession and industry, 3 have gone down in the last 4 months, taking 41 brothers away from their families too soon) and I go work, live, sleep and eat on a floating bomb with anywhere from 40 to 120 other men, all living in very, cramped quarters, berthed up like the navy, eating in shifts in the galley, and if anything ever did happen on one of these things, the only place to go is into a survival capsule, if you're lucky, or into the ocean itself in about 2,000 foot of water with all the sharks and barracudas. I have come to think of all this as normal. My normal life is what other people view as a television show. And you could say that my personal life has been a wee bit stressful the last year or so too. So, anyone blame me for sometimes wanting just a little bit of restful quiet, since I live a Discovery Channel life?

. . . . .This one is important. There is one, and only one, website that is the official Federal Government website if you are having trouble with meeting your mortgage payments are in danger of losing your home, it's MakingHomeAffordable.gov , click the underlined link to get to it. Please, if you or someone you know is in imminent danger of losing their home due to current economic conditions, forward this link to them, or direct them to this website. The site is full of information for the estimated 7 to 9 million homeowners that this particular government program is aimed at.
. . . . .By the same token, please don't fall for the mortgage scams out there, and right now there's plenty, many of them doing so with television, radio and web advertising that looks very governmental, offical and newsy. These scumbags need to be shut down, rounded up and shipped off to the swamp somewhere. If you have been in contact with someone who wants you (1) sign the deed over to them or (2) pay them a ton of money you already don't have upfront for help, then you're dealing with a mortgage scam artist or company. Immediately break off business contact with them and report them, if nowhere else, then report them here, not only will I publicize who they are, I'll contact the appropriate agency for you to get you (1) some help and (2) get them reported and shut down.

. . . .Let's see, a killer earthquake in Italy that has left scores injured and dead, and thousands without livable buildings, power or water. A volcano in Chile that now has a 60 mile wide ash cloud. Last week, the largest ice bridge in Antarctica melted and collapsed, and Arctic sea ice is at it's thinnest ever depth. Hmmm? No comment or pounding things over people's heads here, but isn't it time that even the biggest of deniers and refuse-to-believers took one tiny look up from where their heads have been buried in the sand?

. . . . .The latest massacres over the weekend and the last couple of days, the 13 in Binghamton, NY; the one outside of Pittsburgh and the totally abhorrent one in Tacoma, Washington where a man killed all 5 of his kids and then himself, allegedly because he was getting divorced and saw his wife with another man? I agree with the sheriff in Tacoma, that was murder. Yes, it is a tragedy, don't get me wrong. I cannot however, confuse my sadness and anger over the deaths of those children with their father. It was murder, plain and simple, and of all the ones over the weekend, the one that makes me the angriest. As a father who loves my sons, and would take a bullet for them, would die for them, and is divorced himself, this one touched a chord for me. I refuse to debate gun control laws with people, I own guns. Gun control laws are an external control for what is an internal system or process issue. The internal issue being whatever was wrong in that man's mind and soul to allow him for even the tiniest fraction of a second to act and kill his own children. I sincerely hope that man wakes up every morning where he is now, and has to walk out into some dusty street and face Doc Holliday and Wyatt Earp over and over throughout eternity, seeing his children's faces constantly.

. . . .Holy TV revolution Batman! Tommy Gavin comes back tonight on FX, in Rescue Me. If you've not seen it, at least give it a try. This program doesn't play it neutral, you'll either love it or hate it, but at least check it out for yourself. I love Tommy Gavin, and I want to be just like him as I (don't) grow up! He's my hero!

. . . .
Prior to that, at 6 PM on CNN, Joe Biden can be found with Wolf Blitzer in the Situation Room live and answering questions. I enjoy Joe's interviews, he is somewhat of a loose cannon and can be a lot of fun.

. . . .
Honest to God, I want to keep this woman in the House of Representatives forever for the amusement value. Now Republican Representative Michelle Bachmann, of Anoka, Minnesota is saying that President Obama wants young people in "Re-education camps". Seriously, she said it! Read it at the jump here.

. . . .Actually, Monday was a very solemn day. For the first time in 18 years, the media was allowed to cover the return home of slain soldiers, being allowed to film the coffin as it came off the airplane. I have always disagreed with this policy, and I've always wanted their return home covered, not to show "the cost of war", everyone knows what the cost of war is, some of our sons and daughters will never come home again from war once they go. What we need to do is honor our fallen soldiers, honor their memory and their sacrifice. The young man or woman who puts on a uniform, and puts themselves in harms way must be honored and respected, and I don't care what anyone's political stance on the particular war they're fighting in is. And one of the best ways to honor and respect them is to hold their memories dear, and remember that a family is welcoming that coffin home and needs our prayers and best wishes.

. . . .Speaking of which, please remember to click the link for The Wounded Warrior Project, just clicking that link brings them attention and contributions. They are a volunteer organization that support profoundly and severely wounded and traumatized combat veterans back into civilian life, which in this current job climate and economy is tougher than ever. All it takes is one click, and it helps.

. . . . . David Frum, over on New Majority - "Bank CEO's still in denial over bailouts":
If the Politico report is to be believed, some of the bank CEOs who met with President Obama last week actually used some of their scarce time to defend -- yes, defend rather than apologize for -- the compensation practices of the banks since they all received TARP funds. After all this time, are these people still in denial to this degree?

So permit NewMajority to attempt to pierce through this fog. The banks have put trillions of taxpayer dollars at risk as a consequence of their own mistakes. Many of the institutions at that meeting would currently not exist but for the kind graces of Messrs. Bush and Obama. Moreover -- and more to the point -- the entire equity value built up over the years by bank CEOs and thousands of rank-and-file senior employees would have evaporated. Gone. Zeroed out. Lehmaned. To the tune of billions of dollars of personal savings now being preserved by the kindness of taxpayer strangers. If (as we have said before) these people had happened to work for airlines or telecommunications companies or railroads or real casinos (as opposed to the de facto casinos the banks became) their billions would have long since disappeared.

To enable this wealth of the perpetrators of the greatest financial incompetence of the previous 70 years, we have had to resort to multiple bailouts, for each bank has benefited not just from the injection of public funds onto its own balance sheet, not just favorable terms for that money, not just unprecedented short selling bans and government bad-asset backstops and short-term debt guarantees and long-term debt guarantees and the rest. Each bank in that meeting has also benefited tangibly from bailouts that aided counterparties and avoided panic (Bear Stearns, AIG and the forced Bank of America closing of the questionable Merrill transaction) in order to stabilize whatever was left of the "system" these overly leveraged institutions and overpaid executives helped put in place. Since banks are in the business of being creditors their employees and shareholders understand this even if they don't want to admit it.

. . .Read the rest of it after the jump here.

. . . . .Dan Rather, over on the Daily Beast on "Where's the Outrage?":

Where is the outrage from We The People? And where is the outrage—or sense of outrage—from the Treasury Department, from Congress, and, yes, from the White House and the new president himself?

We are in a downward economic spiral and the worst is probably yet to come. The situation threatens our own and future generations. Yet there is no transparency, no accountability, and no clearly-stated plan to pull us out.

Outrage is seldom justified and rarely wise, but in this fix it is both.
. . . .OK, so the summer list for tours is:
Bruce (Thank you Lulu for letting me know he's headlining at Bonnaroo)
U2
Jackson Browne/Steve Earle
Reckless Kelly
Micky & the Motorcars
Cross Canadian Ragweed
. . . .If any of the above are coming to your town, let me know please, I intend to catch some music this summer.

. . . .We can turn this thing around people, you know that. We are the children and grandchildren of the generations that survived the Depression and built a better nation. We are the descendants of the "Greatest Generation", those people who sacrificed and saved the world once, and those who came back, quietly went to work and built the world's greatest industrial and economic engine. You can do this, we are nation of people who can do it, no matter the price or cost and at the end of things are willing to put aside our differences to once again achieve greatness, to take care of our own and everybody else, we know how to lead, we know how to work, we know how to survive, we know how to take care of one another. You can do this. Lace the boots up, pull the gloves on, settle the cap down on your head and go get it done. Get up, start moving, and do something today, something for yourself and someone else, you'll feel better, and it's another rock in the wall we need to build, together. Do it.
. . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the day, change your own world, and in so doing, change the world at large around you. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, no one gets out alive, so it's not about yesterday, nor tomorrow, it's about right damn here and now, and what we do with it. This ain't no dress rehearsal.
. . . . This is the sight and sound of me being willing to embarrass myself and pursue what makes me happy, what makes my soul sing, and this is me changing my life.
How's your day going?

The Desolation Angel
[where: Gulf of Mexico]

It's a brand new day (Monday, with apologies to and acknowledgment of Gordon Sumner)

Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds...and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of...wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there,
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air.
Up, up, the long, delirious burn
ing blue
I've topped the windswept heights with easy grace
Where never lark, nor even eagle flew.
And while with silent, lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space...
...put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

. . . . . .High Flight by John Gillespie Magee, Jr.

. . . . . OK, I'm leaving the podcast intro greeting the same for a while. I was told by more than one person to leave it on there for a while, and that they'd felt I'd hit my Elmer Gantry stride as the Desolation Angel and that it's a good preach. I'm leaving the playlist for a couple of days too, I had way too much fun doing a nostalgia trip with that one. I may swap the order of the songs around from day to day, for some of you that don't stay all the way through it, just so you can hear all of them. For those of you that don't stay all the way through the podcast, or don't have your speakers turned up, there's always about 45 mins to an hour's worth of music with every posting. Turn your speakers up! Your office will love you, I promise! Today's leadoff is the ultimate cover version, the best of the best. And it's a good enough, and haunting enough song that a television series built an entire mythos around it, the words, the notes, the sequence and in that virtual reality, the song was over 160,000 years old. You go Mr. Zimmerman!

. . . . .OK, so which is it? Did North Korea have a successful launch or not? Is the world joining in a campaign of disinformation? Or did we actually take it down with an advanced system we aren't talking about yet? Was it truly a satellite launch, or was it a weapons test? What was the payload?
Here's the facts, as reported in the AP and elsewhere:
- Around 10:30 on Sunday North Korea launched a test missile.
- It flew over Japan and crashed in the Pacific Ocean
- North Korea is dead broke and starving as a Nation
- Kim Jong Il has been known to use the art of taking things to the brink to bring about negotiations with his country, as in developing nuclear weapons and threatening to deploy them.

. . . . .To me, the whole thing appears to be based on two movies widely separated by decades: The Mouse that Roared starring Peter Sellers, where a tiny fictional country declared war on the United States in hoping to receive foreign aid in return after it "lost", and of course, one of my all-time favorites Team America, starring a bunch of puppets. And possibly an episode of South Park or two, I dunno.

. . . .The reaction(s):
The statement from President Obama, released from Prague, where he was on Sunday during the European visit:
North Korea's development and proliferation of ballistic missile technology pose a threat to the northeast Asian region and to international peace and security. The launch today of a Taepo-dong 2 missile was a clear violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1718, which expressly prohibits North Korea from conducting ballistic missile-related activities of any kind. With this provocative act, North Korea has ignored its international obligations, rejected unequivocal calls for restraint, and further isolated itself from the community of nations.
We will immediately consult with our allies in the region, including Japan and the Republic of Korea, and members of the U.N. Security Council to bring this matter before the Council. I urge North Korea to abide fully by the resolutions of the U.N. Security Council and to refrain from further provocative actions.
Preventing the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their means of delivery is a high priority for my administration. The United States is fully committed to maintaining security and stability in northeast Asia and we will continue working for the verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula through the Six-Party Talks. The Six-Party Talks provide the forum for achieving denuclearization, reducing tensions, and for resolving other issues of concern between North Korea, its four neighbors, and the United States. North Korea has a pathway to acceptance in the international community, but it will not find that acceptance unless it abandons its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and abides by its international obligations and commitments.
. . . .The U.S. and the European Union issued a joint statement along the same lines.
. . . . Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is working the phones furiously to garner support with the U.N. Security Council.
. . . . .An emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council has been called for immediately and was in process on Sunday late afternoon.
. . . . .Secretary Clinton's work lies mainly with Russia and China, who could easily derail the process or dilute the Security Council resolution vote.
- We'll see how it develops.

. . . . .The reason this is important, hugely important? The world is increasingly uneasy, especially during this time of global economic crisis. Geopolitical and macro-social impacts mean that what would ordinarily be handled diplomatically, must now be handled on a crisis basis. North Korea able to launch a nuclear weapon at either Japan or the United States, combined with Kim Jong Il's notorious emotional and mental instability means that it all could flash over quickly. For anyone who's ever dealt with a fire that's reached a flashover point and experienced it do so, you'll know what that means.

. . . . .OK, I was seriously off-base with my theories on Lost last week. It did, in the end, follow the Faraday principle "Whatever happened, happened". I especially loved the interchange throughout the episode between Hurley (who consistently demonstrates that he is the smartest character on the show at times) and Miles, which took leaps forward in explaining to the casual viewer just exactly what is going on in terms of the "time travel" that the characters are experiencing, and it's effects on the world and localized on the Island. It answered tons of questions about how Kate wound up getting on the plane, and where Aaron was. It answered some long standing questions about Sawyer's daughter, set up the dynamic tension between Jack/Juliet/Sawyer/Kate even further, and left open-ended one of the most important ones. What the hell has happened to Sayid and where is he? With the (at that point in time) reclusive Rousseau? or Desmond? And it did finally answer what happened to Ben. He wasn't twisted around by his upbringing. In the end, the young Ben who became the warped, twisted Benjamin Linus became the way he is due to two choices; The first being Jack refusing to help Juliet save the young Ben, and the second being Sawyer and Kate's decision to save his life, which will in the end, become one of those twisted, "they did it to themselves" when it comes down to the original plane crash and what happened to the survivor's every step of the way afterwards. The final moments were classic, Michael Emerson as Ben did a masterful job of acting with no words in his reaction to waking to now very alive John Locke, the man he killed. Can't wait until next week. And given the sequence of events so far, one of the central questions becomes around Jack. If he profoundly believes that his purpose is to "save" everyone, and he could have prevented the poisoning of Ben's soul by helping Juliet and saving Ben on an operating table, instead of Ben's being sent into the temple to be healed, could he have "saved" everyone by making that choice?
. . . .Just like my other favorite, Battlestar Galactica, Lost is becoming one of those profound treatises on the difference between the choices we make, and what God, or Creator, or the Spirits have in mind and the fact that they don't make choices or take sides.

. . . .Of all people, Newt Gingrich. I wrote earlier last week of the shot that Newt took across the existing GOP leadership's bow by telling them, essentially what fruitcakes and nutbags they were, and how much responsibility the former Republican administration and Congress has in the current national economic clusterfuck. Now, in this week's Newsweek, coming to newstands on Monday, Newt has written a jaw-dropping, sober, serious article that addresses the Nation's energy independence. He sounds almost centrist and moderate:
What America needs is a rational energy policy that utilizes all our homegrown energy resources while protecting the environment. For instance, in addition to opening up the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve and the shale-oil deposits in Colorado and Utah for drilling, we should change our federal law to give all states with offshore oil and gas the same share of federal royalties that other states get for land-based resources. Revenue generated from these royalties could help many cash-strapped states address their budget problems, in addition to funding alternative- and renewable-energy research. In addition, we should allow companies to write off 100 percent of their expenses in the first year if their refineries considerably expand America's oil-refining capacity.
The federal government should also develop a package of incentives to encourage clean-energy innovation. This should include a series of tax-free prizes to accelerate innovation in developing clean-coal technologies, as well as a $1 billion tax-free prize for the first hydrogen car that can be mass-produced at a reasonable price. We should make the wind- and solar-power tax credits permanent to provide long-term stability to these growing industries and develop long-distance transmission lines to move the massive amounts of wind power in the Great Plains to urban areas. We should also pass an open-fuel standard for 95 percent of the new cars sold in the United States, allowing the construction of flex-fuel vehicles (FFVs) that can run on a variety of fuels, including ethanol. Finally, America should implement a loser-pays rule for lawsuits against any energy company. This would guarantee that any lawsuit brought against an energy developer was not done solely to slow down the process through the courts.
. . . . .And, don't look now, but the neoconservatives, led by Bill Kristol and John McCain, openly agree with President Obama and back him on Afghanistan, as reported in the Daily Beast. Not only that, but a good number of neocon's including David Frum and Charles Krauthammer and warning the nutbags and extremists that are right now in control of the Republican Party and have been for the last 12 to 15 years that their Obama-hatred isn't doing the country or their party any good.

. . . .Beautiful little one written by Christopher Orr in the New Republic, a partial quote below:
Are GOP House leaders cynical or naive? It strikes me that they--and a disturbingly large section of the party--are both. The GOP budget alternative isn't just goofy (though it certainly is that), it is breathtakingly dishonest: inventing insane, impossible Democratic spending numbers for 60 years' worth of future budgets and pretending they come from the CBO? Cutting the top marginal tax rate from 35 percent to 25 percent, but calculating deficit numbers based on the idea that taxpayers would voluntarily choose to pay the higher rate anyway? Such wild, deliberate deceptions are no part of a "pure" or "rigorous" small-government vision. GOP leaders in the House are trying to sell something, and they're trying to sell it by lying through their teeth.
. . . .Click the link here, and read the whole thing after the jump.
. . . .The Washington Monthly is reporting that the Religious Right is becoming increasingly disenfranchised from, and disillusioned with politics, and conservative Christians are leaving political activism in droves. What would anyone expect after it became so apparent that these people were used by Karl Rove for their votes, and their voice was never heard by the previous administration? This leaves the Repubs increasingly in the hands of the nutbags and hatemongers.
. . . . .Combine that with Sarah Palin being disinvited and taken off the guest list for a GOP fundraiser (and becoming a regular item on the daily sleaze TV talk shows) and Newt being put on the guest list and it may appear that they're regaining their senses, and coming back to being the party of Truman, Eisenhower and Goldwater.


. . . .As I pointed out above, Gingrich has an article in this week's Newsweek on energy independence, and it appears that Obama and Geithner have enough of a handle right now on the economic crisis, that it's allowing the news cycle to swing back to at least be inclusive of the issue that I believe is Number 1, that of energy independence, new energy sources, energy usage and "smart" energy grids, all of which have the most direct effect on Problem #1 confronting humanity: Global Climate Change. Fareed Zakaria, a CNN correspondent and Newsweek contributor, in this week's Newsweek as well, takes on energy independence and policy:
The key is to free ourselves at every level of the energy chain. That means, first of all, finding sources of energy that are abundant, cheap and don't have hidden costs—environmental, social or military. (What do I mean by military? Well, if the Middle East produced only carrots, would we have fought the last two wars there? I don't think so. A large part of the American defense budget goes toward protecting our oil supplies.) How do we do that? By generating an enormous diversity in supply and having as many sources as possible be clean and green.
This part most of us understand, and the process of searching for new fuels and energy sources—solar, wind, geothermal—is already underway. But there's another aspect to energy independence that we also need to embrace. As we live and work, we consume resources—food, minerals—and energy, and produce massive amounts of waste. Then we have to spend more energy to deal with it. We are heaping computers in massive new landfills; many countries just burn all their waste, spewing fumes into the atmosphere. This is a cycle that has worked, so far, for 6.7 billion people, many of whom are still poor. But, as Tom Friedman argues eloquently in his call to arms, "Hot, Flat, and Crowded," it's unlikely to work with 9 billion people, many of whom will be consuming and producing more and more.
The solution is to be smarter about how we grow. We can and should build smart grids, highways and better-insulated buildings; cultivate vastly higher-yielding crops; and produce less-costly steel. We can achieve much more economic growth—almost 30 to 40 percent more, by some estimates—while using the same amount of energy. This doesn't depend on some miracle technology we're praying for, simply the disciplined application of technologies that already exist. Greater efficiency will lead to a more sustainable model of growth.
The ultimate goal is well articulated by William McDonough in his book "Cradle to Cradle." As he explains it, recycling today just takes large products—computers—and turns them into pieces of steel and plastic, and eventually those pieces get thrown into landfills. But we now know how to make things so that nothing is wasted—every component is either biodegradable or totally recyclable. Things go back to the earth or they go back into the manufacturing cycle.
. . . .It's actually a very, very good article that talks about smart growth of energy sources, making the grid more efficient and sustainable. I suggest reading the entire article at the jump here.

. . . .Sustainability, not just as a word or a concept, but as a practice, is something that I think we all need to put more energy behind. Sustainability is the ability of a process, a policy, a practice to continue on with minimal inputs and create benefits for people, while producing minimal waste, and what by-products there are can be recycled or reused. As well, sustainability dovetails in with longevity, something else we've come to have lowered expectations around. We need to build a sustainable society, with sustainable resources and processes. It's the only way to guarantee our long-term survival as a race.

. . . . .Leon wrote to me after last Friday's playlist thanking me for the Cinderella song leading off the playlist, going into Led Zeppelin. I always loved Gypsy Road, thought it was one of the best metal songs of the 80's. I'm building up the themes for the next few weeks of playlists, and if you're a regular listener/reader, you know that I do themes, not just individual songs. If you're a friend of mine, you know the library of music and encyclopedia that's in my head of the history of American music of all stripes. If you have a particular theme, or song that you'd like me to build a theme or setlist around, just e-mail me at one of the many e-mail addresses for me available to you, or just write it in the comments below the body of the posting here, and I'll pick it up and see what I can do for you.
Hint: There was a Beatles reunion yesterday, well, at least 50% of them, Paul and Ringo. Yes, there is a theme set coming for them, but per usual, it won't be the Top 40 hits. I'll probably lead it off with While My Guitar Gently Weeps, remembering of course, that Eric Clapton, George Harrison's good friend, plays the guitar on that one, not George.

. . . .Jim Cramer, he who stated that "President Obama is creating the largest destruction of wealth in history", was taken to task by Jon Stewart, and then saw the light and became a true believer on the Monday that Geithner revealed the details of the TARP plan and the market jumped 500 points, has declared that "the Depression is over". Click the link to hear it. Would someone please check this guy's med levels? Next he'll grow a beard, quit TV to start a band, appear on Letterman and mumble incoherently and then start a fight with a patron. Helllllooooo! Joaquin redux is getting ready to happen.

. . . . Secretary Geithner, on CBS's Face the Nation on Sunday morning said "We will not hesitate to change leadership" at the banks and financial institutions that receive TARP funds. After the fuss over forcing Rick Wagoner out at GM, it was refreshing to hear. And it's not unconstitutional, nor unAmerican. When the U.S. Government and the taxpayers are the majority of the solvent funds behind these companies, automotive or financial, then our representative, in this case, the Treasury Secretary, as a majority stockholder, has every right to demand replacement of the leadership team. That's the way corporate capitalism works in a democracy. Look it up in the Supreme Court Rulings from 1963, or dust off you basic High School economics textbook. Can't have it both ways, it is the way it is.
. . . .And GM is preparing for bankruptcy, as reported over on Politico, it now appears inevitable.

. . . . Putting more credence behind the legends of the Lost 10th, which are referenced often by me in this column, and putting weight behind their innocence of the false charges leveled against them so long ago by the Church, the Vatican said on Sunday in the London Times that the Knights Templar hid and took care of the Shroud of Turin for over a century after the Crusades while Saladin held Jerusalem for the Islamic faith, and Europe was engulfed in the Dark Ages.

. . . . .Good luck to Michigan State tonight as they go up against North Carolina in the NCAA championship. Being a native Michigander, and someone who has always pulled for the University of Michigan, only someone from there would understand, but it takes a lot for a Wolverine to pull for a Spartan, but in this case, it's wholehearted, and best wishes are sent. The Spartans have had an absolutely stellar run through the tournament, and Izzo proves once again why he's one of the best coaches of the game in the country. Go Sparty!

. . . . .Over on Open Congress, you can track H.R. 1388, the GIVE act, which is the bill from Senator Kennedy that re-vitalizes the money and purpose behind national service, funding groups like Americorps, the government service agency that is probably more in need now than at any other time in the recent past, I urge you to click the link, find out about the bill and let your Congressperson know how you feel about it.
. . . .Open Congress is where I track all the bills going through the House and Senate, like H.R. 1106, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act and H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009. and S.486, which is the Health Care Reform Act currently in the Senate.

. . . .Don't forget White House.gov, where you can stay in touch with the Administration, and Recovery.gov, which tracks stimulus money, and Financial Stability.gov, which tracks bailout funds.

. . . . . .Outta here for the day! Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the day, change your own world, and in so doing, change the world at large. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, and none of us gets to dictate the terms and conditions of how the ticket gets punched. It's not about tomorrow or yesterday, it's about right here, right now and what you do with it. This is the sight, sound and words that are about me changing my own life, and being willing to embarrass myself to pursue something that is my passion and makes my soul sing. What have you done for yourself lately?

The Desolation Angel

03 April 2009

Almost there, weekend coming round the bend

. . . . Wait! Before touching that little green arrow and shutting the podcast off, you just might reconsider. After getting through my little narrative, you'll find a playlist that I had too much fun putting together today. If you're over the age of 40, you'll especially enjoy it. There's one-hit wonders from the 70's, cover versions that you've probably never heard, Jackie Wilson, Joe Walsh and Warren Zevon. We've got Bruce covering Jimmy Cliff, and great forgotten Midwestern rock and roll bands. It's the weekend, you're probably sitting at home, or at an empty office. Turn it up, dance and enjoy!


. . . . .It's been a very heavy fall, winter and early spring. I've covered a lot of it, and you've all been watching it intently. Time for a little relaxation today. Let's start with a little poetry.

. . . .Spring's coming, and I've always loved e e cummings poetry, so much of which is centered around Spring, and allegory of new beginnings and possibilities.
Spring is like a perhaps hand (which comes carefully out of Nowhere)arranging a window,into which people look(while people starearranging and changing placing carefully there a strange thing and a known thing here)andchanging everything carefullyspring is like a perhaps Hand in a window (carefully to and fro moving New and Old things,while people stare carefully moving a perhaps fraction of flower here placing an inch of air there)andwithout breaking anything
 
Spring is like a perhaps hand (e e cummings)
 
 
. . . . .I wish . . . .I wish . . . .sometimes even I have to take a light day, and learn to relax and enjoy, and in my case, that's been a looonnng time. Long time coming, my friend.

. . . . .The imagery of the Desolation Angel, and the story behind it is simple. I truly do believe that there are angels in the desolation, fallen ones, who walk with us and are there to protect us, to guide us, to call out warnings to us and tell us to pay attention here to this or there to that. Nomads who wander the empty places of the heart, the desolation of the soul to be companions and to let us know that we are never truly alone or uncared for or unprotected.

. . . . .I've always said that human beings are born in search of 3 things; a sense of family and connection, the understanding that in growing up and in going out into the world, something will occur that will spur the quest for redemption, and in that same quest for redemption, a need to regain a sense of honor will occur as well.

. . . . I need to thank my Creator, all 3 have come my way. I have found that I am surrounded by good people, who daily help me to restore my shattered faith in others, in human beings, in the sense of purpose that I once so strongly possessed.

. . . . .I wrote the other day about a piece in Time magazine this week by Kurt Andersen called The End of Excess, I highly suggest you read it. From that, a conversation got started this week at work around precisely that subject, and the loss of sustainability that we all have experienced. (Yes, even outlaws, pirates, bikers, cowboys and renegades out on deepwater oil platforms are capable of those conversations, not everything is about tits and football). It was interesting to hear a group of us talk about our own culpability in what occurred over the last 3 decades. Yes, the CEO's of mega-banks and their high priests of the arcane world of financial derivatives were the engineers behind the onslaught of financial destruction, but each of us contributed on an individual level to the destruction. How many people actually saved 10% of their available real income each month? How many people lived on credit cards and revolving charges? How many people bought much more house and land than they could afford, if it was priced at its real value? I remember my Father drumming it into me over and over as a kid growing up that you never, never, never bought more house than you could afford, that it was a sure path to financial self-immolation, and that the house payment could never exceed 25% of the total take-home pay available to the household, and that included any loans such as home equity loans or anything that used the house as collateral. Yet, people bought more and larger houses, since everyone knew that real estate value could only go up, right?

. . . . .I'm a cheap fucker, that's all there is to it. I'd like to use the word frugal, but that doesn't go far enough, I'm cheap. I'm driving a truck with over 200,000 miles on it, and I'm not looking at a new one quite yet, the truck's still drivable, and I need a motorcycle, because I want one, and it's cheaper on gas, I'll buy used, you can betcha that. I know people with no job at all who are driving year or two year old cars right now and 500 dollar month payments, and the attendant insurance. That's stupid, and in this job market, a pretty sure path to bankruptcy.

. . . . .History teaches us that there are natural cycles in a national economy. Yet, somehow in our Reagan/Bush 1/Bush 2 mentality, we bought into the bullshit that the market could only go up, that values could only go up and that we all would somehow be rich, getting better paying jobs all the way throught.

. . . .It's like we all forgot completely everything that our parents and grandparents, those people of those generations attempted to teach us, and we all took off for that big Blackjack table and gathered around hoping to beat the house, that somehow if the breaks went our way, if it all fell just right, we'd hit it and have it made and not have to work anymore. What we'd been taught was the to get something of value, you had to work for it and earn it, we wanted the shortcut instead, we wanted the winning lottery ticket, the big score.

. . . . You wanna know what makes me sick? The number of people in their 50's, my generation and age, who are bitching and whining that they don't get to retire, or even worse, who aren't working right now and acting like they're retired and are worried that the current economic situation will crimp them. Who the hell told them that they could retire or deserved to? It was only one generation ago that retirement age was 65, and the generation before that it was 72! And life spans are longer now in only two generations. What the hell? It's that entitlement mentality that got us all in this fix to start with. "I'm tired". "I've worked long enough", "I don't like my job". My grandfather worked until he was 70, my Dad didn't retire, plain and simple.

. . . .That's why they call it work and why we get paid to do it! The alternative, that of doing nothing and just doing what we enjoy is called time off and you don't get paid for it!

. . . .I've noticed, at least in my small, limited world that somehow people's consciousness, their awarenesses, their worldview has shifted in the 60 some odd days since the inauguration. It's OK again to be interested in issues, to question and participate in the debate. It's cool again to be smart, instead of dismissive of intellectualism and thought.

. . . .It's like watching people come up into the light after a long time in the dark, blinking, squinting and breathing deeply again. I think we are just now realizing what an injustice was done to us over the 8 years, what criminal acts occurred that subverted the Constitution and marginalized us as citizens of the Republic.

. . . .My friend Gary sent along an e-mail today that Iowa, Iowa of all places, has decided the Gay Marriage is constitutional. When basic human values are coming back to the "Heartland", maybe, just maybe, things are truly changing in this Nation and we can begin once again to fullfill our promise.

. . . .President Obama's first overseas trip has proved that the World still looks to us to be that beacon. We can be you know. You're needed, your heart, your soul, your effort, your belief in the America we can be. Participate, now more than ever. It's what has always defined us, as Americans, we don't quit, we don't stop fighting, and we are the people that you want with you when you have to walk down a dark alley and you don't know what's at the other end.

. . . . .Go ahead, relax and listen to the playlist today all the way through, you'll find some guilty pleasures in there. Turn it up and dance, enjoy the day. And for those of you who know that the way I communicate is through symbolic language; that symbolic language being more than just these words, but music, sound, images, poetry all taken as a wholistic concept all mashed together, the answer to the question you're asking as you get through today's songs to the last one, for those of you who try to interpret my playlists and look for the arcane DaVince code clues in them, the answer would be "yes".

. . . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the day, change your own world and in so doing, change the world around you. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and we don't get to choose the time or dictate the circumstances of how and when that ticket gets punched. No one gets out alive, and this ain't no dress rehearsal, it's the real thing. Find something you love, or you've always wanted to do and do it! Don't think about it, don't talk about it, follow your passion, find your heart and find what makes your soul sing. Cry hard and laugh harder, ride the wind and soar. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now. This is the sound of me changing my life. What the fuck have you done lately?

The Desolation Angel

Friday Swamp Music

All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen
                                                                                                      - Ralph Waldo Emerson

 
. . . . . .The more I try to understand what's going on with the financial crisis that is now enveloping the world, and the more I find out and begin to understand, the more frustrated I become, mostly from a sense of not being able to do anything about it. I wrote in yesterday's column (access it at left in the archives) about what I'd read in Matt Taibbi's piece in Rolling Stone on how this mess developed and started, and so rapidly spun out of control. The more I read about it, and develop some knowledge, the madder I get. This entire meltdown isn't really about money (even though it is, it's striking at our wallets and bank accounts), and it's not about even banking and credit, but instead is about one man, Joseph Cassano, at AIG's financial investment office in London and his creation and manipulation of a heretofore unheard of form of credit derivative that he and his group created in order to create wealth. The 5 biggest banks bought into this contorted Las Vegas-style craps game/ponzi scheme and what resulted is a $500 billion real-dollar hole punched into the fabric of the universe, all created by these criminals.
. . . . .It strikes back to some very real principles that somewhere along the way we all forgot. When you really understand what Cassano was trying to do with these derivatives was a form of twisted alchemy, that is create something from nothing. It goes against the most basic principles, not just of finance, but of the universe. You absolutely cannot create something from nothing. It is, in the end, impossible to create wealth or profit without a real product, made by someone's hard work and skills, to sell or trade with. Energy cannot be created it can only be transformed, that's a basic law of physics, mathematics, chemistry and biology, the holy quartet of disciplines that explains our world.

. . . . .The Grateful Dead take the stage in North Carolina this month on the 12th, that tour will be worthwhile.

. . . .I took the time tonight to watch the series finale of ER. I didn't watch it for probably 12 of the last 15 years, but I felt it deserved some time and attention, as I'd watched it in it's inception so long ago. That particular drama, along with some others, wasn't so much character driven. John Wells made me envious, as watch for in a television show more than the acting, is the writing and directing. The ability to tell a story with words, music, visuals and convey a narrative. I think that's what many of us strive for.
. . . . . .Rescue Me returns to the FX Network this month with my hero and role-model Tommy Gavin, whom Dennis Leary so brilliantly portrays. And that's not a joke about Tommy being one of my heros and role models; good, bad, right, wrong or indifferent, that's the way it is.

. . . . .The House and Senate both passed budget bills tonight, with majorities in both chambers.  Earlier yesterday the the band of idiots known as the Republican members of the House came up with their own budget, which nakedly laid out their priorities and elitist predilections. Bob Cesca reports on it:

"It only makes sense that a party currently being wagged by fringe crazy people like Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Michele Bachmann would release its alternative budget on April Fools' Day.
Not only does the Republican plan freeze discretionary spending for five years in the midst of a recession which, by most accounts and proved by history, will countermand any sort of economic recovery, but it also cuts taxes by 10 percent for the same Wall Street executives whose actions largely got us into this economic mess in the first place. In other words: Congratulations, Republicans, you just released a budget that rewards wealthy corporate executives while blocking any attempt to dig us out of the economic catastrophe they created.
Smart!
The only bit of Republican legislation that'd be more ridiculous would be if Michele Bachmann were to introduce a constitutional amendment thwarting a fake plot to eliminate the dollar as the form of currency in the United States.
Oh wait. She's already done that.And 30 Republican congressmembers so far have co-sponsored the amendment. 30 Republicans have irrevocably tethered their wagons to the Bachmann crazy train. Excellent."
. . . .And speaking of Glenn Beck, who is rapidly ascending the lunatic ladder, threatening to pass up Rush, Sean Hannity, Ann Coulter and Michael Savage, I happened to catch him on Wednesday night and literally almost peed myself laughing at his "expose" of the Mercury Dime. The man was dead serious and that's what scary. The gist of it is we've all been marching towards fascism in this country ever since Woodrow Wilson introduced that dime and it's design. Apparently, the design on the back of the dime very closely resembles a symbol from a couple of centuries ago from an obscure corner of Europe that might have represented Fascism! You go Glenn! Keep us all safe from our loose change and it's idealogy changing powers! That damn Woodrow Wilson!
. . . .Just as Jon Stewart took on Jim Cramer publicly and made him change his tune, just as Keith Olbermann took on, and takes on Bill O'Reilly constantly, Stephen Colbert has made Glenn Beck his personal project to expose, especially Beck's well known opinion of 9/11 families, who according to Beck "make him sick, and are professional victims".

. . . .Finally, at least some conservatives are attempting to take their party back from the lunatic fringe of Limbaugh/Hannity/Coulter/Malkin/Bachmann et al, people who aren't conservatives and aren't really Republicans, but people who delight in attempting to tear this country apart; traitors all. Newt Gingrich finally had the spine to stand up to them on Thursday. CNN reports that Gingrich has finally threatened the Republicans with a third party if they don't find a way to come back to reality.
Former House speaker Newt Gingrich is warning of a third party mutiny in 2012 if Republicans don’t figure out a way to shape up. “If the Republicans can’t break out of being the right wing party of big government, then I think you would see a third party movement in 2012. Gingrich acknowledged that Republicans are partially to blame for the escalation in federal spending. "Remember, everything Obama’s doing, Bush started last year,”

. . . .Back to Geithner, the Washington Post will report on Friday that Geithner, as head of the Federal Reserve bank, before the election, could see what was coming, but was too close to the situation and players to do anything about it. It's not that he was guilty of anything, nor was he complicit, but was just too damn close to it to see it coming. Couldn't see the forest for the trees.

. . . . Like I said, the more I investigate and try to understand, the more I find out what I didn't know. I've advocated all along that bailout the banks was absolutely necessary, though personally distasteful. But the largest lending and savings institutions have to be stable in order to have stable markets, in order to have stable housing prices, in order to have some sanity in which to get some jobs back in the system. I wasn't understanding the importance of AIG until reading the Rolling Stone piece, and that information was backed up by this piece by Edward Jay Epstein over in the Daily Beast:

The question Spitzer does not ask, and which goes to the heart of the issue is: What would have happened if the Fed and Treasury had not acted decisively to bail out AIG after it informed them it was unable to meet its obligations?
AIG at that time was the world’s largest insurance company. It had more than $1 trillion in assets. With operations in 130 countries, it insured most international commercial transactions (including much of China’s exports to the United States). Its triple-A credit rating backstopped its portfolio of $2.7 trillion in derivatives contracts that, for better or worse, had spread throughout the globalized financial system. Here is what would have happened if AIG moved into bankruptcy proceedings:
For starters, it would have left the major banks of Europe short of their government-mandated capital requirements. AIG, through a French subsidiary called Banque AIG, had been providing these banks with what it innocuously called “regulatory capital.” These arcane derivatives contracts allowed banks to report to authorities high capital-to-debt ratios, so an AIG default that invalidated them would force the banks to call in hundreds of billions of dollars in loans. In addition to these dominos, AIG had sold hundreds of billions of dollars of credit-default swaps, assuming in the process the default risk on everything from securitized credit, such as subprime mortgages and credit-card debt, to the sovereign debt of countries from Eastern Europe to Latin America. Without the guarantees, these securities would lose their ratings and banks, pension funds, trusts, and sovereign investment funds would be forced to unload their holdings at any price, causing untold havoc.
The municipal-bond market would have also been thrown into turmoil. Not only was AIG the second-largest holder of municipal bonds, but also much of the money from the sales of municipal bonds—some $12.1 billion—had been temporarily invested in AIG vehicles called Guaranteed Investment Agreements, through which states and municipalities earned extra interest until they needed the money for construction and other purposes. If this money was unavailable, a large number of municipal bonds would be downgraded or, if they could not make up the shortfall, default.
Far more disastrous would have been the impact of a default on AIG’s insurers and the enterprises it had insured, which would have faced seizure by regulatory authorities around the world.The immediate problem was that AIG had loaned out much of the stock in its insurance companies’ portfolio to banks as part of an interest-rate play through its “securities-lending program.” As collateral for the stock, the banks had deposited on a short-term basis $43.7 billion in AIG accounts on which they earned the money-market rate of interest. AIG, to make a higher rate of interest, put the money in residential mortgages. But after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, the banks demanded their $43.7 billion back, as they were entitled to do as the contracts expired weekly, but, with residential mortgages now almost unsalable, AIG could not repay them or retrieve the shares backing its insurance policies.
. . . .But the idiots still don't get it. Ex-CEO of AIG, Maurice Greenberg testified in front of a Congressional panel and said that he and his leadership team had "nothing to do" with losses that so far have cost you and me $182 billion. 

. . . . The numbers on Friday should be dismal and continue to reflect this nation's economic freefall. MarketWatch will report that job losses for March should be 688,000; the worst one month job loss numbers in 60 years. The Department of Labor announced the numbers this morning, taking the national unemployment rate up to 8.6%, remember that this only counts those who are still on the rolls, and doesn't track those who have slipped off the rolls, or who are underemployed, or those small business owners, contractors and consultants who aren't eligible for unemployment.

. . . . Oh dear readers, which of you has Bruce coming to your town this Spring? I need some down time and some travel, and I try to never miss him on tour, let me know. By the same token, if you're in a city that U2 is coming to, or the Jackson Browne/Steve Earle tour let me know.

. . . .The thing about my job is travel. Which means airports, hotels and TV's. I'm pretty discriminating in my tastes; Lost, Battlestar Galactica, Saving Grace, Rescue Me and my guilty pleasure boogaloo, 24,  but it is impossible to miss or ignore ratings Godzilla American Idol. For one thing, this season has a young man on there who went to school with my oldest son, and who now works and goes to school in my old hometown, but what I wonder is this; Can you see Kid Rock or Eminem on that show? Grand Funk? Bob Seger? Bruce? The first time Simon told any of them that he didn't like what they did, all you'd hear is something along the lines of "It's go time asshole" and then a flurry of punches and Simon moaning in pain on the floor. And they'd walk out and still make music everyone wanted to hear.

. . . .Rod Blagojevich was indicted in absentia this week on 19 counts, while on vacation at Disney World with his family. One of the counts is that he tried to extort Rahm Emmanuel. No wonder he was indicted, arrested, and impeached. Silly man! Chuck Norris checks his closet at night to see if Rahm Emmanuel is there. That's one scary dude.

. . . .The President and Geithner had a good run at the G-20. The summit agreed to lend $1 trillion to the IMF and the World Bank to inject money back into the global economy; Obama's diplomatic skills did wonders compared to Bush's (even with the I-pod gaffe!) and his acceptance of some blame for America for this crisis did much to salve some splits, along with his acceptance of the G-20's insistence on new international banking regulations. All this, and he managed to break up a playground fight between the Japanese and Russian ministers. He's cool. On to the NATO summit!

. . . . .New study being released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration this morning shows that Arctic Sea Ice is melting at a much faster rate and most likely will be gone within 30 years. Anyone want to talk about carbon emissions and cap-and-trade now that they face the prospect of Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Miami all being under water in our lifetimes?

. . . .One of the best I've read so far on how the economy blew up in our faces and bitch-slapped us back to some kind of true fiscal reality, both on a national and personal level was written by David Brooks in the New York Times this morning. He explores both the greed narrative and the stupidity narrative, doing as many of us have done, pulling in a large numbers of writers, experts and viewpoints to try and get to some semblance of explainability. His conclusion? It was a confluence of both influences; greed and stupidity both. And yes, we all do share our culpability in it too, in not demanding more responsibility, accountability and transparency out of those who were managing the mega-chunks of money that make a national economy. It's well worth the read, check it out. 

. . . . .Outta here, I'll update throughout the day today, Friday. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the day, change your own world and in so doing, change the world around you. Remember that this rodeo is a one-way circus, and no one gets out alive, so it's about what we do right here, right now, not yesterday or tomorrow. This is the sight and sound of me changing my life. What the fuck have you done lately?

The Desolation Angel

02 April 2009

Allright . . . . back at it again!

There is, at the end of all things, a realization that for every ending, there has been a beginning; for every sunset, a dawn; for every door opening, one that closed; and for every death, a birth.

. . . .I'll be real honest, I feel like I've let a lot of you down, and haven't now, for over 3 weeks, been at my regular daily updates. There's been a lot of turmoil in my personal life, a lot of very busy activity in my work life, the thing I do that funds this, the thing I love. It's been hectic, busy but I feel like I'm starting to come out the other side of some things.

. . . . .Someone who is important to me was working on a new piece of glass this last weekend, it turned out to be an absolutely gorgeous globe, with red and yellow trapped inside, the fire contained within. There were some sustained burns, as the choice was made to work with short sleeves while turning glass in a 2300 degree kiln, nothing permanent or scarring though. For those who know me personally, and how I live my life, the fact that a sacrifice was made to contain the fire was significant.

. . . . I pay attention, stepped outside in the middle of the night the other night and the owls were hooting up a storm. A meteor flashed green overhead, moving in a straight line from South to North.

. . . . .My brother David went to see our Ate this last weekend, to talk with him about ceremony this summer, set dates, check in on him, etc. He feels that we all need to gather as a family this summer, and I listen. David has been with him a long, long time and Elmer has been his father in many ways. He knows that Elmer will be moving on soon, to the next world.

 
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in the sands of the desert.

A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

. . . .The Second Coming W.B. Yeats

. . . .The three best articles I read this week: Krugman in Newsweek as the Loyal Opposition; the cover article in Time by Kurt Anderson called The End of Excess on how this entire mess is good for us a nation, forcing us to re-examine our priorities and our values; and a savage, biting entirely accurate piece by Matt Taibbi in Rolling Stone on exactly how the financial mess started, why it centers around AIG, and how they were allowed to tear a $500 billion dollar hole in the fabric of the universe. A quote "The global economic crisis isn't about money - it's about power. How Wall Street insiders are using the bailout to stage a revolution" 

. . . .Click the links to read all three, they're entirely worth it and give background on three intertwined issues.


. . . .First; Krugman as the Loyal Opposition. For those who really only started getting deeply involved in politics in the last year. Krugman as been around a very, very long time. He won last year's Nobel Prize in Economics, and has been a blogger and New York Times Op-Ed writer for years. If you think he's hard on Geithner and Obama, yes he is, and accurate most of the time. His true savagery was reserved for Bush/Cheney/Rove and you can do your own back checks there. His argument with Geithner and Obama, that they've not done enough, gone far enough or been bold enough with bailouts and stimulus packages and to save the global economy, they need to go much further and deeper, and we as a nation and people need to realize that. Krugman is a true progressive liberal who had no use for the imperium of the Bush years, and saw this entire mess coming back when Phil Gramm gutted the Steagall act and allowed the creation of the "too big to fail" megabanks that were also institutional investors. 
. . . .Much was made during the election of the likeness of Obama to Lincoln, and Lincoln's ability to create teams of rivals. It's becoming apparent now, with the President's grasp of New Media that he had exactly that in mind, it just wasn't necessary to put Geithner and Krugman in the same office. He knew they would become natural rivals, and now the debate between Krugman/Volcker/Geithner/Summers is fueling the policies that allowed Timothy Geitner to hit last week's home runs with the public and with the markets.


. . . . .Time's cover article on the end of excess in America is really a treatise on the end of Reaganism, and on the need for us baby boomers to finally quit being so self-indulgent and navel-gazing and take a long, hard practical look at the generation that was our mothers and fathers, the "Greatest Generation" and get back to the values that made this country what it was. Instead of being so self-indulgent and narcissistic about every thing we've seen and done (assassination, Vietnam, Iraq, political corruption), instead of being so damn noisy and counter-culture and rebelling in the streets; this entire global economic crisis that we caused, (yes, we as a nation are guilty of setting it up and making it happen) can force us to re-evaluate and begin to work within the system, because it's a great system, a great Republic and great Nation with still the best system on Earth to change things for what we need.


. . . . . Speaking of which, this is still Bush's crisis, and the new Administration and Obama have only been at work for 60 days. It's important to not forget that. Especially in light of a couple of things that are coming to light this morning. There is a House oversight panel that is convening this morning to take a look at the Bush administration's role in the criminal actions and collapse at AIG (click the link and read Matt Taibbi's piece referenced up above in Rolling Stone.) The Hill is reporting this morning that the Republican's are scrambling to keep the ex-CEO of AIG, Hank Greenberg from testifying before the panel, which is the general signal that the "party of no", the imperialists, the true elitists of the far right are once again guilty and trying to close the barn door after the horse already done went out the door flying. 


. . . .The G-20 meetings are proving a rough go of it for Obama, Geithner and the Administration, as they find out just what the rest of the world thinks of the bailouts, the stimulus packages and the stinky financial global mess left for them to clean up by the previous administration. The Wall Street Journal is reporting this morning in the overnights that France and Germany are proving especially tough customers to deal with. 


. . . .I'll update throughout the day and add to as appropriate and as more news rolls in, and there's no lack of it these days. Gotta run and see if my helo is going to actually go.


. . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the precious moments with an open hand, change your own world and in so doing, change the world at large around you. This rodeo is a one-way ride out of the gate, and we don't get to dictate the terms and conditions of how our ticket gets punched, so it ain't about tomorrow, or yesterday. It's about right fuckin' here, right fuckin' now.


The Desolation Angel