Sunday

A Prayer for the New Year

A Prayer for the New Year

In our darkest hour may we be blessed with at least one Soul who will not judge us no matter how we may judge ourselves and when our tears have all been shed never fail to remind us that life awaits only our first step to unfold the path to a brighter tomorrow beneath our feet.

May the joy and beauty of our unique gifts find their expression in all our endeavors.

May our minds be at peace, our hands be gentle, and our words be kind.

In our hearts and minds, may we desire peace, prosperity and love as much for those who are against us as we do for ourselves.

Let us find a way to let peace begin with us.

______________________________________

Bless you all, and thank you for the caring and support you have shown me over the year past. I look forward with great joy to spending another year learning and growing with all of you.

Peace y’all

Sunday Poetry Series: Thump Thump Thump

My apologies to the DAS, I was incorrect in my previous statement that Tina Louise was up this week, its actually thepoetrymen, which I am sure you will enjoy every bit as much. Tina was up last go-round.

This weeks selection comes from Peace Tree Poets Society member, thepoetryman.
His piece this week is a little different than what you may be used to seeing in his work. Different is good now and again.

and now...

THUMP THUMP THUMP
Anybody's monologue

ANYBODY:

You ever heard dat fools rush in?
Well dat ain’ all dey do.
Fools rush in wearin’ dey glarin’ teef, ya see?
“Clatter click click clatter click clatter clatter”.
Dey fine demselves naked `n shivrin’.
Dey laugh, “heh heh heh…”
Dey don’ care!
Hell no dey don’! Dey don’ tink it matter!

Dis, “heh heh heh”,
dis ain’ no Mista Magoo laughin’.
Uh uh.
Ain’ no laugh of no inconsequential man, neither!
An' it ain' no chuckle o' no blather-sprung chicken!
No, siree! Lordy be! No way. No how...Uh uh…

Dat be de laugh of de nudge-n-wink man.
De laugh of a fella done stumble in
`n tooked de goddamn oath!
Whoooo! Sho’ `nuf!

More like de sumbitch confiscate `at sucka!

Sworn to de highes’ bureau o’ dis mighty lan’!
Oh my did’n he ever!
On de bible he place dat grimy-no-good han’
`n swore he’d not fornicate it never...
He swore t’ God above he did…
Uh huh…

Now look what he done gone `n did…
Umm ummm…

It funny, ya know…
Shore is, `cuz he had not one smidgen
of `n iota of a split millisecon’ flea’s ass
what de hell it meant!
Nudge-n-a-wink he did. Nudge-n-a-wink…

Heh heh heh,
dat’s de laugh of a empty-headed scamp
stretch taut o’ hubris
s'rounded by a unruly horde
o’ well dressed, warmongerin-sycophant!
"Yes, Missa President! Yes, dear leada!
No doubt `bout it, George!
Yessa, in a whiz! Couldn’ `gree more!
Right `way, sir! Bomb Iraq it is!"

Forget all dat understandin’ o’ de world!
Forget diplomacy! Forget de facts!
“Yessir! Right `way, sir! Yessssssssssa!
BOOM! BLAM! BOOM!”
Lordy! What de hell dat?

Nuttin, `merica,
Go on back t’ sleep.
Dat’s right. Close dem eyes.

BOOM! BLAM! PLANES IN DE AIR!
BOOM! BLAM! BOOTS ON DE GROUND!
Sendin’ little babies flyin’ t’ heaven…
Sad…
Sad like de sky a fallin’ kinda sad, ya know?

Yip.

Forget diplomacy long’s George `roun'!
Nuance ain’t fo’ dat frat boy
knee-deep-steep in `is own shit!

“Beer coolies fo’ everyone!
Duct tape `n gasmasks!
Water bongs `n apple pie!
Time t’ clear some brush!
Time t’ whistle fo’ de dog
`n drive `round in m’ truck!”

Goddamn fools we be!
Andy, Barney `n Otis
rolled tighter `n a crazie eddie!

Purple rain come down on de Buda-war!
Regular shootin’ gallery!
Daytrippin’ in de West Wing!
What goddamn fools we be!

Heh heh heh
…Jonesin’ a fix in Irack!

Jonesin’. Mouth workin’ de country.
Quada done reemed `im,
ripped de paper bag.

Thump, thump, thump go de bible
Lock `n load go de sarge,
`n "Give me ten.
Ten boy and ten girl.
Cut `em in half `n give me twenny!"

Body packin’ God’s drug to de cube skied dreamer!
Either ya pass `em `roun’ `n ingest `em,
`r ya kick de cowboy junkie out o’ de big house,
`cause dis here world’s `bout ta end…

Visit thepoetryman at his home blog for for of his fabulous work.

Peace y'all

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Friday

One More Death

The world has been informed that Saddam Hussein has been hung by the neck until dead.

Is the world a better place for the conducting of one more barbaric act of killing?

To some the answer is obviously yes... Brutality is wholly justified for the brutal.

Brutality is still brutality be it justifiable or not.

Lest we recognize the simple fact that brutality is still brutality be it justifiable or not, our own brutality and our suffering the brutality of others will never end, no matter how many dictators we support and then hang.
It will just go on and on....until we can choose not to support savagery when it suits us and meet savagery with savagery when it does not.

A great teacher once said "Love your enemies"
He was even willing to die for his.
America trades crime for crime with our enemies and then we dare to ask for this teachers blessings upon us.
How utterly disrespectful is that?

You do not destroy an idea by killing people; you replace it with a better one.
Edward Keating

Peace y'all

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The Achilles heel of American corporate fascism is BOYCOTTS, BOYCOTTS, & MORE BOYCOTTS.

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, Dr. W. Christopher Epler.

The Achilles heel of American corporate fascism is BOYCOTTS, BOYCOTTS, & MORE BOYCOTTS.

OK, we did the political thing. Progressives and liberals got the Congress back in 2006 and kudos to us!

But three desperately important (and related) things we also learned during these six horror show Bush/Republican years are:

(l.) Politics ain't enough! Indeed, wishful thinking notwithstanding, politics is now more part of the problem than the solution to our dying Constitutional Republic.

(2.) We've also realized with absolute certainty that the United States of America is a Dictatorship of the Rich. It is time to stop all the lies, games, and propaganda crap.

FACT: less of 2% of our country is making fools and servants out of all of the rest of us. However, Bush allowed the vampire rich to come too far out into the daylight, and now we can see blood on the lips of these astronomically rich elites, e.g., the Bush (alias Saudi) Royal Family.

(3.) The 3rd and logistically critical political realization is that America's dem centrists (e.g., the DLC, Carville/Clintons, Joe Lieberman, etc.) are mere lackeys of the pig, pig rich. In other words, the "centrists" (what a laugh!) constantly suck up to their multimillionaire and billionaire masters. To say it straight out, these collaborators with the vampire rich are the mortal enemies of the middle and lower classes. Hey, that's us, you know -- the 98 plus percent.

So, what to do, what to do?

One thing is to see dem centrists for what they are, i.e., revolting court jesters of the pig, pig rich.

Another thing is put on our thinking caps and find NON POLITICAL ways to save our country. Yes, the 2006 midterms went pretty well, so we do have a few political hand holds for a change, but that's not going to be nearly enough since the vampire rich are going to massively counter attack between now and 2008.

As we all know, they control the Judas media, so forget these pseudo "journalists". Fox Snooze, "Clear" Channel, etc. Barf bags aren't the solution anymore.

We need to build on our fragile political gains and to borrow a comic phrase: AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT.

You know, we really do have a secret weapon (with a money back guarantee) which will absolutely bring down corporate fascism. We really do, but it will take colossal internet networking to make it work.

Its boycotts, my friends, boycotts, boycotts, and so help me God, still more boycotts. What's the soft underbelly of the Bush/Cheney energy companies? You know, the companies whose profits have gone up SEVERAL HUNDRED PERCENT. Frankly, I don't know anyone in the middle or lower classes (the 98 plus percent again) whose income has gone up several hundred percent. Do you?

Anyway, the exquisite irony is that these vampires need us! Clear Channel would tank if we got key advertisers to stop their accounts. And why would they do that? Because we had a nation wide network of American citizens who stopped using the products of anyone who advertised on Clear Channel (or Fox Snooze).

Yes, it would be gigantic mess to get this off the ground. Granted, it would be a virtual political moon shot. Very, very delicate and complicated at the beginning, but if enough of us keep hammering at this theme, and FOLLOWING THROUGH with the network agreed upon boycotts, I think the extent of the healing of America would be quasi miraculous.

We can bring this vampire oligarchy to its knees with a one/two punch of continued political gains AND a national, internet procedure for systematic boycotts.

Hey, my friends, I'm groping here, but I KNOW this would work, and I think most of you do too. The thing now is not to let this logistic flame go out. Some of you computer pros (who can certainly run circles around me), what do you think? If it was ever life and death time to collectively brainstorm about our beloved country, this may be it!

We can boycott these evil pigs at the same time we continue our political activism (e.g., politically work to tax the living shit out of them), and then maybe, for the first time, the American Dream will be a reality.

Thanks for listening to my SOS. To end on a terrible cliché, "If there's a will, there's a way".

W. Christopher Epler (Bill)

_____________________________

Peace y'all

Thursday

Faith Without Works is Dead – the War in Iraq

Today we have a guest post by Tony Loyd of RFD Blog. Visit Tony at his home site for more of his work.

Faith Without Works is Dead – the War in Iraq

You’ve probably heard that saying, “Faith without works is dead,” or more precisely, “In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.” So, now let’s apply that to the war in Iraq. It is not enough to say we want the war to be over. We have to take massive action if we want to end the war. If we believe in peace, but we take no action, our belief is dead. But with massive action, our belief can be realized on the earth.

Here are a few actions you can take today to bring peace to the Middle East right now.

1. Take to the streets! Join in the March for Peace. They brought the troops home from Vietnam, after we took to the streets in massive numbers. It's time to take to the streets today.

2. Support a candidate who supports peace. Two declared presidential candidates have come out in favor of bringing our troops home - Tom Vilsack and John Edwards. You can contribute to their campaigns. You can volunteer to work for them. You can hold rallies in your home to support them. If you contact the campaigns, they will give you plenty to do to work toward peace.

3. Believe it or not, you can end the war with a little popcorn. That's right - popcorn. Screen a film about the war in your home. Brave New Theaters makes it easy. Go there and sign up to screen Iraq for Sale, The Ground Truth, or Sir No Sir.

4. Make a suggestion to your Congressmen/women. How about this for a practical suggestion? Do NOT cut off the funding for the troops on the ground. Instead, cut off the billions of dollars for missiles and ships and other methods of traditional warfare. That will get some attention at the Whitehouse and the Pentagon without harming our troops. If the Pentagon wants to choose to spend their billions on a pointless war, let them. But they're going to have to give up their toys to do so.

5. Heal the real wound that is causing much of the strife in the Middle East. End the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. Join with others at PeaceNow.org.

So, there’s the bottom line. If you want peace now, you’ve got to work for it. Faith that we will have peace in Iraq without direct action, is dead.

Let’s work together to bring peace to Iraq today.

____________________________

Peace y'all

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Wednesday

Fairly Unknown...yes...But Still Notorious TPT : )

A few thoughts on our latest subscriber by Peace Tree contributing author, Lori Hahn.

Knowledge and the Lemmings

Warning: I will be speaking heavily in acronyms for the next few minutes.

I was doing my usual reading this morning of Red Hog Diary and The Peace Tree, and noticed that the site owner of The Peace Tree had observed a hit from the Directorate of Automation Services (DAS) in Ft. Belvoir, Virginia.

Now, I had to go back in the old memory banks to my days at INSCOM (Intelligence & Security Command) , which is headquartered there. Seems that the DAS is the responsible to ensure that networks and e-mail systems are secure for organizations like USAREUR and INSCOM, which send volumes of classified messages and documents hither and yon.

Here’s the thing—it’s pretty apparent to me that the US Intelligence Community (NSA, NSC, DIA, CIA, etc.) is indeed gathering data on not only sites as they relate to terrorism, but small and fairly unknown sites with just over 22,000 visitors in the course of its life, that voices dissent regarding its own country’s leadership, the reactionary Right, and discusses other topics of social justice. In the time I’ve been reading and occasionally writing for this site, I’ve never once heard it espouse a desire to topple the government, call to assassinate leadership, or support Al Queda, Osama Bin Ladin, radical Islam, or in any way subvert our troops, despite a general disagreement over our involvement in this war.

It seems that many Americans think it’s okay to violate civil liberties in the cause of stemming the tide of terrorism. But, do they know at what cost? Is the rationalization that because you are not saying or doing anything that would be considered a risk, you have nothing to worry about?

As time goes by, and there is no direct impact on their own lives, getting around to understanding the mess that has become our civil liberties, or lack thereof, fades further into the background. So few people who have voted for the Bush agenda have taken more than a cursory glance at The Patriot Act and what it encompasses. Or have paid attention as the Bush Regime makes up it’s own rules regarding torture, interrogation, and which parts of The Geneva Convention they really can’t get away with disregarding out of hand.

What scares me more than being scanned, recorded, analyzed, and assessed with a threat level is the knowledge that the majority of our voting public are mere lemmings, following blindly uninformed, but so, so sure that they themselves are safe, until they topple over the precipice to the loss of democracy. It seems our government is ascribing to the adage, “Knowledge is power,” when its very subjects have missed that connection themselves. It is our responsibility to dissent if our leadership is doing the wrong thing—it is our country after all, they are merely our servants—something all parties seem to have forgotten.

The other fear I have is that the generations behind me seem not to have a clear understanding of history, and how it repeats. It reminded me of this, said at the end of World War II (and no, kids, that wasn’t in the 1700s or something): “In Germany they came first for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that time no one was left to speak up.” ~ Pastor Martin Niemoller

________________________

; ) Peace y'all

Tuesday

Is our new razor's edge between Carville/Clinton centrists and perfectionistic progressives?

Today we have a post by Peace Tree contributing author Dr. W. Chrisopher Epler.

Is our new razor's edge between Carville/Clinton centrists and perfectionistic progressives?

OK, on the one hand we've still got Naderesque ideologue types who trashed the year 2000 Presidential election. Ralph Nader was a zero in touch with reality politician and most of us will NEVER go down that counterproductive road again!

On the other hand, we have the gutless Clinton/Carville DLC (Democratic "Leadership" Council) which is now and always has been Republican light.

And a plague on both their houses!

If the 2006 midterms showed us anything, it's that most (voting) Democrats want something SIGNIFICANTLY LEFT OF CENTER. Does that mean we have to get Nadirized again? Certainly not, but it does mean DLC talk of "compromise" and "bipartisanship" with the Bush/Republican neo Nazis is an obscenity.

Yes, we have to be pragmatic, but we also don't have to be "told" we have to be pragmatic by marshmallow centrists. Hey, Howard Dean was pragmatic. Duh. That's how we won the midterms.

So where's the razor's edge in all this?

SIGNIFICANTLY LEFT OF CENTER, that's where it is! Our lives, country, and planet are now on the line and what we want are policies and politicians who are neither counterproductively "ideological" nor closet Republicans.

However, this really isn't complicated. Centrists didn't win the midterms nor did spaced out intellectualizers. WE won the midterms and we know who we are.

So listen up centrists and perfectionists, we are going to follow through with the muscular, moral progressive agenda we VOTED FOR.

This truly is life and death time for our planet and country and, guess what? We ain't gonna be talked out of our victory.

So Republicans, centrists, and election-give-away Nader types, buzz off. The REALISTIC progressive agenda is on a roll and it's going to stay that way!

Viva America.

W. Christopher Epler
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Peace Y'all

My Latest Subscriber, Army Directorate of Automation Services

Bloggers love watching their subscriber list grow, I am no exception. I have to wonder though, just what my latest subscriber finds so interesting about my little blog.

Personally, I think its probably the Sunday Poetry series that hooked them...lots of folks really like that little feature.

Naturally, I just had to google Army Directorate of Automation Services....not surprising that I did not find much out there about that....honestly I didn't spend a whole lot of time looking either.

Yeah....I bet it was the poetry : ) FYI: Tina is up next week...I bet you just can't wait...me either.

I just hope a real person is reading the blog and not some impersonal computer forever searchng for some keyword or another. Dangerous words like peace, progressive and liberal.

I suppose it would be impertinent and un-patriotic of me to ask just how much of mine and my fellow Americans tax dollars you are spending to check up on my little corner of the blogosphere? Maybe, at the very least, you worked out a good bulk rate deal for us taxpayers.

Well, be you human or hardware welcome aboard and as always,
Peace y'all

Monday

Newspeak and the Corruption of Politics

Greetings All,

I am back from my holiday travels and I hope all of you are enjoying your holidays as well.

Today we feature another fine essay from Peace Tree contributing author Dr. Ernest Partridge.

Newspeak and the Corruption of Politics
By Ernest Partridge, Co-Editor
The Crisis Papers

All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred, and schizophrenia. When the general atmosphere is bad, language must suffer. I should expect to find ... that the German, Russian and Italian languages have all deteriorated in the last ten or fifteen years, as a result of dictatorship.
George Orwell (1946)

“Politics and the English Language"

Language is the constant yet unnoticed current that carries our thoughts. Thus, in the game of politics, the party which controls the language, controls the contest.

Newt Gingrich knows this, GOP strategist Frank Luntz knows this, and George Orwell, their apparent mentor, knew this.

So why don’t the Democrats know this?

I don’t mean to suggest that we are necessarily captive to the currents of language. Like a skilled navigator, one can factor the currents of language into the calculations of one’s judgment. But only if a person or a party takes the trouble to pause and take notice of the language.

Regrettably, the Democrats have not. For a party that is allegedly preferred by intellectuals, the Democrats have been tactically naïve and stupid, prisoners of their discredited habits. To be sure, astute scholars such as George Lakoff have offered the Democratic Party chiefs the key to their jail cells and have shown them the way out, but they have been told, in effect, “Thanks, but no thanks.” And Noam Chomsky is regarded as “too extreme” and an embarrassment. Never mind that he is the foremost linguist of our time.

Newspeak Lives!

In “The Principles of Newspeak,” an appendix to his novel, 1984, George Orwell wrote:

The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for the [Party's] world-view and mental habits ... , but to make all other modes of thought impossible. It was intended that when Newspeak had been adopted once and for all and Oldspeak forgotten, a heretical thought - that is, a thought diverging from the principles of [the Party] - should be literally unthinkable, at least so far as thought is dependent on words. Its vocabulary was so constructed as to give exact and often very subtle expression to every meaning that a Party member could properly wish to express, while excluding all other meanings and also the possibility of arriving at them by indirect methods. This was done partly by the invention of new words, but chiefly by eliminating undesirable words, and by stripping such words as remained of unorthodox meanings... Newspeak was designed not to extend but to diminish the range of thought...

Orwell wrote this as a warning. The Right has apparently adopted it as its strategy. Thus we find “Newspeak” at work in Newt Gingrich’s self-explanatory memo, “Language as a Political Weapon.” And GOP strategist Frank Luntz has played the English language like Itzhak Perlman plays his Strad.

“Liberalism,” then and now.

Consider, for example, what the word-meisters of The Right have done to the word “liberal.”

Webster’s Dictionary gives us this traditional definition of “liberal:”

“From the latin, liberalis – of or pertaining to a freeman. Favoring reform or progress, as in religion, education, etc.; specifically, favoring political reforms tending toward democracy and personal freedom for the individual. Progressive.”

Throughout our history, up to the late twentieth century, "liberal" has been an honored word, applied approvingly by our founders. George Washington, for example, wrote: "As mankind becomes more liberal, they will be more apt to allow that all those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the community are equally entitled to the protections of civil government. I hope ever to see American among the foremost nations of justice and liberality."

Today, however, the propaganda mills of the right, and especially the regressive screech merchants of AM radio and cable TV, have turned the word “liberal” into an epithet, like a piece of rotten fruit to be hurled at the candidate or political commentator willing to be called a “liberal.” Remember the 2004 GOP ads? “Brie-eating, chardonnay-drinking, latte-sipping, French-speaking, Volvo-driving, New York Times reading, elite liberals.” The word connotes “tax and spend,” “welfare cheats,” bureaucratic interference in “free enterprise,” and a weak military. To Ann Coulter, it means nothing less than “treason.”

Thus it is no surprise that when pollsters ask the ordinary citizens to describe their political orientation, “conservative” comes out ahead, followed by “moderate,” with “liberal” a poor third.

And yet, when the same citizens are asked their opinions on Social Security, Medicare, environmental protection, public education, economic justice, racial tolerance, and the separation of church and state, by substantial majorities they endorse the traditional liberal agenda. In short, the American public remains liberal, even though it has been persuaded to despise and reject the word “liberal.” And that should be regarded as good news by The Left, for it is the ideology and the program that matter. "Liberal" is merely a word.

Recall the quotation from Orwell above:

“... a thought diverging from the principles of [the Party] - should be literally unthinkable... This was done partly by the invention of new words, but chiefly by eliminating undesirable words, and by stripping such words as remained of unorthodox meanings...”

Now try to explain and defend the “liberal” ideas of Franklin Roosevelt, Adlai Stevenson, and the Kennedys. You can no longer do so simply by casually dropping the word "liberal" in conversation and debate. The word “liberal” has been spoiled by the relentless assault upon it by The Right, and thus today it has become useless and even harmful in ordinary discourse. In Orwell’s words, right-wing propaganda has succeeded in “eliminating” this “undesirable word,” “liberal,” thus making its original meaning simply “unthinkable.” And there is no word available yet to take its place. So what is the (old-definition) liberal to do? The remedy is simple: drop the word “liberal” and give the program a new name: “progressive.” Unfortunately, it will take some time for this new word for old ideas to take hold in the general population.

The Right has learned its lesson well from its mentor, George Orwell.

Who is a “Conservative.”

Imagine that you meet a visitor from abroad who is fluent in English and well acquainted with American history. However, he knows nothing about contemporary American politics and its rhetoric, and he is eager to learn about it.

You explain that there are two contending political ideologies:

One ideology is out to uproot the founding documents of our republic, the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, and take our society and economy back to the condition it was in over a hundred years ago. The other steadfastly endorses and defends those founding documents, and defends the gains in economic and social justice painfully obtained throughout the history of the American republic.

You then tell the visitor that one of these ideologies calls itself “conservative.” Which one would he reasonably conclude that you were referring to? If he selects the second, he is in agreement with Webster's, which thus defines “conservative:” “The practice of preserving what is established; disposition to oppose change in established institutions and methods.”

How then should one describe this first ideology, which advocates and strives to achieve a return to an earlier condition of the economy and society. Clearly “conservative” won’t do. How about “regressive.” That’s what I’ve chosen, and I urge that you do likewise. If the Democrats were to adopt “regressive” to describe the policies of the Republicans, and if they were to use the word “regressive” persistently in their publications, speeches, and media appearances, it might have a devastating effect on the GOP.

In fact, “liberal vs. conservative” is a false dichotomy. It is possible to be both, and indeed a thoughtful progressive is both. Janus-like, the progressive looks both backward and forward in time: backward, by cherishing and preserving the priceless legacies of the past; and forward, identifying injustices to be set right and anticipating problems that must be faced and dealt with.

Accordingly, the progressive should never refer to his opponents on the right as “conservatives.”

Doublespeak.

Wikipedia defines “doublespeak” as “language deliberately constructed to disguise or distort its actual meaning.” (It does not appear in Orwell’s novel, but emerged shortly after its publication in 1948, probably as a conflation of Orwell’s “Newspeak” and “Doublethink.”) In the hands of the GOP wordsmiths, words are often “distorted” to the point of outright contradiction. We are all familiar with Bushista doublespeak:

“Clear Skies Initiative”. (Relaxes clean air standards for industry).

“Healthy Forests Initiative”. (Allows clear cutting in federal land).

“Clean Water” proposal. (Exempts Clean Water Act protection of 70% of US streams).

Finally, Bush tells us that the objective of his foreign policy is to “spread democracy.” We’re all in favor of democracy, of course, and would like to see it “spread.” But take a closer look. Can one really believe that Bush wants to “spread democracy”? Apparently our foreign policy amounts to approval of “the peoples’ democratic choices abroad” so long as they are our choices as well. But if not, we try to impose alternative “choices.” For example, in Palestine, Belarus, Venezuela and, yes, Iraq. In addition, consider what Bush is doing to our democracy. As one wit put it, if the Iraqis want a new Constitution, they can have ours -- we're not using it.

Framing:

Far more subtle, and therefore insidious and seductive, are cognitive “frames,” a concept famously brought to public attention by George Lakoff, who describes them as “mental structures that shape the way we see the world.” Lakoff continues:

You can’t see or hear frames. They are part of what cognitive scientists call the “cognitive unconscious” – structures in our brains that we cannot consciously access, but know by their consequences: the way we reason and what counts as common sense. (George Lakoff: Don’t Think of an Elephant. p. xv).

From the concept of framing, Lakoff derives this warning: “When you are arguing against the other side: do not use their language. Their language picks out a frame – and it won’t be the frame you want.” The Republicans are well aware of the framing phenomenon, and use it with consummate skill. The Democrats carelessly take the bait and fall into the GOP trap by adopting the GOP language, with the able assistance of the mainstream media, of course.

Lakoff offers the example of the term “tax relief.” “Relief” suggests an “affliction.” “And the person who takes it away,” says Lakoff, “is a hero, and anyone who tries to stop him is a bad guy.” But Oliver Wendell Holmes suggests a different frame: “taxes are the price we pay for civilization.” According to this frame, taxes are the “dues” of citizenship. But you are unlikely to encounter this frame in current political debate, not even from the Democrats. Thus the game is lost even before it begins.

The “false dilemma” is one of the demagogues’ favorite framing devices. From the cold war we had, “better dead than red.” (How about neither?) Today it’s: “we’re fighting them over there so that we don’t have to fight them over here.” (How about negotiating instead? And what evidence is there that if we don’t “fight them over there” our enemies will immediately pack up and set up shop in the United States?).

Another device is the “implied opposite.” The anti-abortion movement uses this to great effect. For example, if you are not “pro-life,” then you must be “pro-death” or “anti-life.”

“The war on terror,” a metaphor, carries a huge baggage of presuppositions. “War” entails mobilizing the military, restricting civil liberties, and invading other countries.. But what if we instead treated terrorism, not as a “war” but as a “crime”? Our approach would be radically different, and would invite international cooperation.

Finally, there is Bush’s surveillance program. Call it a “domestic surveillance program” and it is downright un-American – Fourth Amendment and all that. But call it the “Terrorist Surveillance Program,” a name attached to the program after it was exposed, and, well, who can be against that?

Creative Dissonance.

According to the late cognitive psychologist, Lawrence Kohlberg, minds are changed and moral growth occurs when individuals are faced with dilemmas and contradictions. The resulting discomfort (“cognitive dissonance”) motivates one to search for new cognitive structures (“frames”) that will resolve the dissonance. For example, moral and political dilemmas that are irresolvable by authoritarian rule or conventional belief may be resolved from the perspective of “the social contract.” This, in fact, was the “solution” worked out by the framers of our republic.

Of course, cognitive dissonance can be destructive, depriving the individual of autonomy and initiative. This was the objective of The Party’s slogans in Orwell’s 1984: “War is Peace.” “Freedom is Slavery.” “Ignorance is strength.”

“Constructive dissonance” takes place when conventionally contrary concepts are appropriately combined. This can “break” the frames of one’s political adversaries, and prompt them to seek other frames – perchance, yours. Here are two examples:

When asked your political persuasion, say that you are a “conservative progressive.” Sounds like “freedom is slavery.” But as we noted above, the contradiction is only apparent. Change the conceptual frame, and the contradiction is resolved.

When asked my religious orientation, I answer that I am a “secular Christian.” But how is that possible? I reply that while I do not believe traditional Christian theology and prefer the scientific view of the origin of the universe, the earth, and life, I accept the ethics of Jesus of Nazareth. Upon encountering the seemingly incoherent concept of “secular Christianity,” one might take a fresh look at Christian ethics, and perhaps find common ground with someone thought to be an adversary.

In sum, the wise progressive – and in particular, the progressive aspiring to political office, or activity in the public media – should first of all step back and identify the “frames,” which is to say the hidden assumptions and implications of his opponents, and also of himself. Then one must refuse to accept the language or adopt the frame of the opponent.

George Lakoff advises against attacking an opponent’s frame directly, for it only reinforces it. Instead, the progressive should introduce and utilize the language and frames of progressivism. Specifically, avoid the word “liberal,” for it has been put in a negative frame by the right. Instead, identify yourself as a “progressive,” and act aggressively to give meaning to the word. Do not call the right “conservative.” They aren’t. They are regressive, so use that word, repeatedly, until it begins to “stick.”

The regressives have invested millions of dollars and devoted more than three decades to the task of establishing their agenda and policies. They have done so through their foundations, think-tanks, media control, and now their control of the federal government. And they have taken control of our political language. They are formidable opponents.

For all that, they are vulnerable. The right faces an invincible adversary: reality. Their denial of reality, which they label "faith" and "intuition," cannot abolish evolution or the laws of atmospheric physics and chemistry that determine climate change. Their "faith" will not put fossil fuels in the ground that are not there now, nor will their " faith" overcome the inevitable economic consequences of the approaching decline in oil production. Mitigation of the crises before us must come through scientific research, technological development, international cooperation, and government initiative, in contravention of regressive beliefs, policies and practices.

Remember too that the American public still accepts the liberal agenda, even though it rejects the word “liberalism.” But it’s only a word. Liberalism – the program and the ideology – is distinctly and inalienably American. It is in our founding documents. It is validated by our history of emancipation, of scientific and technological advancement, of the improvement of the workplace, of the emergence of the middle class, of the advancement of civil rights, and of the emergence of the environmental movement.

What we are enduring today is an aberration. The regressives are now in control, and they will be ruthless in their determination to remain in control. But their rotting foundation is beginning to crumble. Dissenting messages of truth and justice are breaking through in the mainstream media, while they are thriving in the alternative media. The public is waking up, as the approval ratings of the Bush and his crime syndicate continue to fall. The coalition of the right is falling apart, as libertarians, evangelicals and moderate republicans defect. We may all pay a terrible price in the struggle ahead to bring down this regressive regime. But a regime based upon groundless faith, lies, greed and injustice cannot stand forever.

Copyright 2006 by Ernest Partridge

Dr. Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He has taught Philosophy at the University of California, and in Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly" and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers". His book in progress, "Conscience of a Progressive".

___________________________________

Please visit Dr. Partridge at his site links above.

Peace y'all

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Dear Friends

Greetings to all of you!

I will be out of town for the next few days and I hope that your holidays bring you joy, cheer and peace however you may choose to celebrate them.

Blessed be the peacemakers.

Happy Holidays y'all

Sunday

A Song For America

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, Bill Epler.

A Song of America

Its night and you're out in the country driving someplace. You're tired, but the moon is out and the wind is a kiss. The kids are asleep in the back seat and you feel wrapped in the arms of a decent, rational country.

Not everyone is so lucky. Talk about an extended family! This is the good ol' U.S. of A. Home.

God, how we love this place.

Or maybe it's a seashore in the early morning, with that sharp, salty wind -- hair blowing, horizon glowing, anticipating fishing with friends, lots of beer, and just plain happiness.

God, how we love this place.

Patriotism for us isn't something we talk about or brag about or paint on political sweatshirts. It's more like those rock solid aunts and uncles who always had one foot in the world and a lap saved just for us. It's a trust thing: no games, no greed, no lies; nothing fancy, just reliability and decency.

But all Gardens of Eden have serpents and our nest of s serpents is called the Bush Royal Family and they've been hissing at us for quite some time now, telling us they know what's best for us. But where's our retirements? What happened to our health care? And where are our children who they keeps dressing up in macho costumes to fight their oil wars . . . until they find themselves on the ground in a foreign country, crying for their Moms and Dads because they're dying or maimed for life? Listen! Do you hear them? These cries of boy/men and girl/women without futures. But don't listen too closely. It will break your heart.

Our big cities are rich in magic. Never a dull moment if you have a little time and money. Layers and layers of American Pie. Yeah, it gets a little scary sometimes, but hey, it's our world, not Tokyo or London or Moscow. These are our cities, our adventures, our restaurants, and our parks.

God, how we love this place.

It makes you cry to see what these corporate piranhas are doing to our sweet country. It really makes you cry. The Republicans have turned Mother Nature into a whore for Texas energy companies. God in Heaven, why would they do that? Aren't the Bush's rich enough already? Aren't these Texas oil and gas companies rich enough already? Why do we now have to take food off our tables to pay for the gasoline we need just to drive back and forth between our several jobs? Remember how it used to feel to have just one job; before the neocons, before tax breaks for multi millionaires and billionaires -- and back breaks for all the rest of us.

And remember how it felt when we knew our government would always be there for us and that o our noble Constitution was sunk deep into the soil of America, beyond the reach of pamphlet-drugged religious fanatics. God, that felt good, didn't it? In those days, the rule of law couldn't be turned off and on like a faucet by Cheney/Halliburton's and Rove's; and most of all by the Bush Royal Family (alias the Saudi Royal Family).

Probably the thing that hurts most of all is the loss of ordinariness; that sense that all's well with the world (at least more or less) and that our government truly belongs to us -- not the Bush/Saudi Royal Family.

God Bless American is still a great song, isn't it? All that purple mountain majesty stuff these Constitution killing fascists are trying to wipe off the face of the Earth may outlast them yet. Patriotism again, real patriotism, that stuff in the marrow of our bones. It kills you, doesn't it; to see Republican neo Nazis desecrate patriotism to make astronomically rich people, astronomically richer. George Bush should wash his mouth out (and soul) before he utters the word "patriotism".

And not to forget the infinitely self righteous and hate gorged Fundamentalists. How dare these people rationalize their pathetic fear of life with a sitcom version of Jesus Christ? Jesus was love incarnate, but what do you feel when you look at a Pat Robertson or Tom Delay (ugh!). They wouldn't have fooled Jesus and they don't fool our hearts -- same thing, right?

All the songs keep coming back and the wind and the oceans and eagles. America, our beloved America. Yes, apple pies (why not?) and fishing and neighborliness and our glorious national parks and holding hands in those carnivals that come and go through middle western towns like summer storms.

The Beast, the Bush/Republican Beast t is at our gates! It's in our halls of justice and its stink fouls the Earth. Americans, Americans, don't let these traitors kill our county!

It helps to hum a few bars of the Star Spangled Banner and remember what coffee tastes like when it's brewed on the bank of a river at night.

God, how we love this place.

W. Christopher Epler

_____________________

Peace y'all

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Saturday

Sunday Poetry Series: Because

The selection this week is from Peace Tree Poets Society member, Tina Louise.
One excellent post from Lori Hahn on the world of adoption and foster kids deserves an equally beautiful poem in honor of the love and dedication of a parent.

Tina Louise on "Because"
For my precious one and only child Stephanie on her 17th birthday, August 2004. She is my world, my reason to be and my greatest accomplishment in life.

and now.......

Because

Because I hold, the keys to your future,
Because you’re innocent, new and pure,
Because you will reap, all that I sow,
Because you will learn, all that I know,
Because the sea, won’t always be calm,
Because evil, can be coated in charm,
Because life, won’t always be just,
Because hearts break, if spirit is crushed,

I must,

I must,

I must...

...make sure you know it’s not about ashes,
Dust to dust or where the cash is,
Balance educational indoctrination,
Teach through loving adoration.

Make clear what’s right, and good and true,
Make safe little paths, for you to pass through,
Make sense of the world, you exist in,
Make peace in the chaos, calm in the din,
Make sure the holes, are all sign-posted,
Make life a lesson, with wisdom quoted,
Make open the roads, on which you will travel,
Make loose life’s knots, for you to unravel,

I shall,

I shall,

I shall...

...show you the links from here to eternity,
Reveal the depths of spiritual identity,
Stress how ‘NOW’ really is the biggest thing,
With more value than any diamond ring.

Show you reality, and the costume it wears,
Show you how, to side-step dares,
Show you nature, in all it’s glory,
Show the joy, of a bedtime story,
Show you unconditional love,
Show you how to rise above,
Show you life, without the veil,
Show you why we should save the whale,

I will,

I will,

I will...

...open my heart and set you free,
Watch you grow, blooming like poetry,
Sure that your future will be as it should,
That as your mother, I did all that I could.

Please visit Tina Louise at her home blog

____________________________

Peace y'all

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Friday

Iraq Study Group

Today we have a guest post by Peace Tree Contributing author, Progressive American.

Recently, an Iraq study group tried to find out what the best strategy for the U.S. is when dealing with Iraq. The results of this study only go to prove that what the left has been saying all along has been correct.

Here is what the study group recommended:
The White House needs to come up with and announce a plan to begin pulling back our troops, whether or not the Iraqis are ready. (Their reason behind this is both brilliant and true. The study group pointed out that keeping American forces in Iraq will signal to the Iraqis that Washington will continue to prop up the Iraqi government with military forces, which would give them no incentive at all to hurry and get their stuff together. What kind of message are we sending to the Iraqis by keeping our forces over there to "help create a stable government." Besides, it is clear that we are not doing very well: Iraq is in a civil war, 72% of the troops think they should be brought back in '07, and we have killed at least 49,642 Iraqi civilians (contradictory to the liars in the Bush Administration, slaughtering nearly 50,000 innocent Iraqis is not helping the people of Iraq.)
In response to the study group's recommendations, the Bush Administration has said:

"This business about graceful exit just simply has no realism to it."

What a load of crap! Of course we can exit. Bush just wont stop terrorizing the Iraqi people and killing our soldiers because he wants oil, and he doesn't want to admit that he screwed up.

Everyone knows that this war is no good. Why do you think Rumsfeld sent a memo to Bush telling him that he needs a new strategy in Iraq? Why do you think that only 31% of Americans approve of Bush? Even Dick Cheney thinks this war is a bad thing. Of course, he won't tell you that now, but if you go back to 1991, he describes the same exact situation we are in right now, and he calls it a 'quagmire.' Here is what he said . . .

"I think that the proposition of going to Baghdad is also fallacious. I think if we were going to remove Saddam Hussein we would have had to go all the way to Baghdad, we would have to commit a lot of force because I do not believe he would wait in the Presidential Palace for us to arrive. I think we'd have had to hunt him down. And once we'd done that and we'd gotten rid of Saddam Hussein and his government, then we'd have had to put another government in its place. What kind of government? Should it be a Sunni government or Shi'i government or a Kurdish government or Ba'athist regime? Or maybe we want to bring in some of the Islamic fundamentalists? How long would we have had to stay in Baghdad to keep that government in place? What would happen to the government once U.S. forces withdrew? How many casualties should the United States accept in that effort to try to create clarity and stability in a situation that is inherently unstable? I think it is vitally important for a president to know when to use military force. I think it is also very important for him to know when not to commit U.S. military force. And it's my view that the President got it right both times, that it would have been a mistake for us to get bogged down in the quagmire inside Iraq."-Dick Cheney, the Washington Institute's Soref Symposium, 4/29/91

See? They know we are in trouble. They are deliberately lying to you and to the rest of America. That's why they refuse to follow the Iraq study group's recommendations.

Here is something else that the Iraq study group said should happen . . .

A gradual pullback of the 15 American combat brigades in
Iraq.

Yet, Bush refuses. He refuses on the grounds of 'terrorism.' But if he would just read all of the recommendations laid our by the Iraq study group, he would see that there is a way to fight terrorism without having our troops killed. The recommendations clearly point out that the U.S. should
use Iraqi forces, and have "special operations" forces to deal with Al Qaeda.

When viewing this, there isn't one person who could honestly believe that we must keep all our troops in Iraq to fight terrorism. Besides, before 9/11 Bush is the one who cut funding for anti-terrorism units, and intelligence. If we would just fund them a little bit more, like we used to (which worked for Clinton, who thwarted several terrorist attacks), and followed the recommendations laid out, we should be just as secure.

It is very frustrating to read a clear plan (that would work) laid out by this Iraq study group and Bush completely writes it off just because he wants to carry out a war that would serve his own interests and the interests of his corporate buddies rather than the interests of America.

If only people would have listened in 2004 . . .

Visit Progressive American at his home blog.

___________________________

Peace y'all

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Fix It, Please

Today we have a post from Peace Tree Contributing author, Lori Hahn.

Fix It, Please

Ya' know, Madonna and Angelina didn't have to travel all the way to Africa to adopt. In 2005, there were 513,000 children “in care” in the formal foster care system. This does not include all of the informal family foster situations that existed. That number is probably close to the same. So, that’s a lot of kids, right?

So, what happens to those kids who ended up “in care?” Their chances, statistically, are pretty grim. They are more likely to have suffered severe abuse, are more likely to drop out of school, live in poverty, go without adequate healthcare, become drug/alcohol addicted, suffer from mental illness, and become pregnant themselves. Once parental rights are terminated, after sometimes years of reunification attempts, these children are often placed up for adoption.

Here’s the really hard part. All over the country, human services and private adoption agencies who assist the states and counties placing these children in adoptive homes, have to find a way to “market” these children to prospective parents. Among other methods, there are adoption picnics (which potential parents and kids both attend), professional photography sessions (where the kids’ natural beauty is revealed in B&W), and by information via website descriptions that are often accompanied by a very cute picture of a single child.

What they haven’t told you is that even those children classified as having “minor” problems are going to be tough on the average parent. And, that single child is often part of a sibling group they hope to place together. To make the children attractive, substantive facts are often left out and parents end up walking into something ill-equipped or uninformed. The State has kids—they need to place them—what are they going to do?

I was a foster parent--and I wanted to adopt more eventually. My adoption experiences and the problems those children experienced made me feel quite competent to take the next step. After going through the training and orientation, consulting foster mentors, and after having poured over mountains of information to prepare myself, I was still unprepared for what happened. I ended up with two siblings—one following the other a couple of months later—and had to coordinate visits with yet another sibling located in another foster home. My parental exuberance knew no bounds at this point.

Details of their tenure in my home aren’t really important. I did my job—getting them through a myriad of issues, struggling to find resources within an overworked, understaffed agency, and helping them finally receive the termination of parental rights they needed to start life anew. But, it was a job—and a hard one. I never had a social worker come to my home, never received additional training or information once some significant issues were identified, and pretty much ended up in a heap of blubbering goo the day they were moved to therapeutic care, which took me months of advocacy to get for them.

The other day, an acquaintance asked my advice about fostering/adopting older kids. Even now, after all the years have passed since my experience, I still remember the pain etched in their faces and the pain that wracked my entire body when they left. I sat down with this acquaintance, I laid out the potential scenarios, and I showed her how to identify the buzzwords in the website descriptions so she’d know what questions to ask. I spoke to her about the courts, the social workers, the adjustment problems and inability many of the children have to attach. I gave her a list of books to read and recommended foster support folks with whom to speak. Mostly, I let her know that far from being "easier than having another baby,” it was going to be an experience that would test the strength of her marriage and her family in untold and unpredictable ways.

I don’t regret my tour of duty. In fact, once mine are grown and gone, I’d be open to fostering queer teens who might need some help transitioning to adulthood.

My fervent desire would be that instead of pouring kajillions into the war machine in Iraq, perhaps we could just take a teeny, tiny portion of that tax money and expand the ability for our weary old social services system to ensure its charges and the foster/adoptive parents receive and continue to receive the services and support needed to create the best chance for ultimate success for these kids. Increase pay for social workers to identify and investigate abuse and monitor placements, hire more of them, create more therapeutic facilities and staff them appropriately with the medical and psychiatric professionals it needs, provide mandatory ongoing training and respite services for foster parents, and provide a solid way to help teen foster kids who are going to “age out” of the system set themselves up for success. Maybe, we can stop this endless cycle dead in its tracks, once and for all. Now, wouldn’t that be a good way to start the New Year instead of sending thousands more of our troops to Iraq?

Visit Lori at her home blog Hahn at Home

Peace y'all

Thursday

The Public Interest and the Limits of Volunteerism

Today we have a post by the newest Peace Tree contributng author, Dr. Ernest Partridge.
Ernest is a very talented writer whose debut post provides us with a taste of his upcoming book, "Conscience of a Progressive".
I am very pleased to welcome him aboard and I hope you will enjoy his work as well.

Dr. Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy.

He has taught Philosophy at the University of California, and in Utah,
Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly" and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers". Check out his book in progress, "Conscience of a Progressive".


The Public Interest and the
Limits of Volunteerism

Ernest Partridge
The Crisis Papers

Adapted from Chapter 5 of “Conscience of a Progressive” – a book in progress.

See the book for references and citations.

Libertarians often tell us that personal voluntary restraint and charitable contributions are morally preferable solutions to social problems than government coercion and taxation. Ronald Reagan probably had this in mind when he said in his first inaugural address that “government is not the solution – government is the problem.”

To be sure, personal self-control and charity are virtues, while political coercion and taxation are not.

The trouble is, in numerous and significant instances, volunteerism doesn’t work.

Example: The Catalytic Converter

Consider the catalytic converter as a solution to the problem of air pollution. (The numbers are “made up” as accuracy is not important. This is a hypothetical “model” based roughly on generally known technology and demographics).

The catalytic converter is a device placed on a vehicle’s exhaust system which eliminates (let us assume) 90% of exhaust pollution. Assume further that purchase and installation of the unit costs $200. In the Los Angeles airshed (near my residence) are ten million vehicles.

Would I be willing to pay $200 to clean up the air in my neighborhood? In an LA minute! Will I clean up the air by volunteering, all by myself, to install a catalytic converter? No way! If I install the device, I will reduce the pollution by slightly less than one ten-millionth. In effect, no reduction at all. And I will be out $200. To put the matter bluntly: in cases such as this, volunteerism is not only futile, it is irrational. The solution is obvious and compelling: require that all vehicles have working catalytic converters. This has in fact been done in California. It's the law. Result: the air pollution in LA has been dramatically reduced, to the relief of the vast majority of Angelinos, and at an individual cost acceptable to that majority.

If a proposition to repeal the catalytic converter requirement were put on the ballot, it would be soundly defeated (assuming the public was correctly informed). The solution is straightforward, rational and popular: “mutual coercion mutually agreed upon,” as the late Garrett Hardin put it, imposed and enforced by “big government.”

This solution is a cost to the individual (“bad for each”), but the “social benefit” is well-worth it (“good for all”).

Example: The Support of Public Safety Agencies

Consider next the voluntary support of public safety agencies. Presumably, most of you have received phone calls from a member of the local police and fire departments, asking for donations to assist them in their work. This is a recent phenomenon, for which we can all thank the resurgent Right. I doubt that I ever received such a solicitation before 1981, when Ronald Reagan told us all that “government is the problem, not the solution.”

When I receive such a call, I agree to make a small donation. But then I ask, “Isn’t this the sort of thing that we pay our taxes for?” Invariably the individual on the other end agrees and we commiserate about the shameful neglect of our public safety institutions.

The solicitation of private contributions in support of public institutions amounts to an excise tax on charity and civic responsibility. The individual citizen who declines to contribute is as safe from crime and as protected from fire as those who contribute. (This is the well-known “free rider” problem, for which I have yet to hear a plausible reply from the libertarians). Voluntary financing of public safety agencies is unjust on its face. Clearly, those who benefit from these services should be required to support them, according to these individuals’ ability to pay. The method devised to accomplish this purpose is well-known to us all. It’s call “taxation.”

Social Good and "The Commons"

Air quality, which is improved by mandatory use of catalytic converters, is what is known as a “common good,” or more briefly, a “commons.” Other “material” or “resource” commons include, water, oceans, “open range” pastures, public parks, etc. But there are also “non-material” commons that are equally, if not more important to the quality of social life and the justice of a political order. These include the rule of law, the quality and level of education in the community, trust in the government and the prevailing sense among the citizens of that government’s legitimacy, the degree of civility and the “moral tone” extant in the society. When unscrupulous individuals act to their own advantage, heedless of the consequences to others, they can degrade “the moral commons” – the mutual respect and constraint that is implicit in every well ordered society. For example, when outlaws are unpunished, the rule of law suffers. Worse still, when corrupt politicians and government officials put themselves above the law and betray the citizens by accepting bribes from special interest and by violating the Constitutional protections of those citizens, they erode the trust that is essential to good government. And when there is reason to believe that the ballot has been compromised and there are no offsetting procedures to assure the accuracy of the ballot, the very legitimacy of the government and of legislation is diminished.

In a just political order, based on the principles of our founding documents, government and the rule of law are the common “property” of the citizens at large, and of no class or faction in particular. This principle is stated explicitly in the Declaration of our Independence: “to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”

The libertarian Right insists that so-called “public goods” and “public interest” are nothing more than simple summations of private goods and interests. Indeed, as Ayn Rand put it, “there is no such entity as ‘society,’ since society is only a number of individual men... The common good” (or “the public interest”) is an undefined and undefinable concept..." (“The Virtue of Selfishness”).

Good for Each, Bad for All

In fact, and contrary to libertarian dogma, in numerous identifiable cases (which I discuss in “Conscience of a Progressive”), the individual pursuit of optimum personal freedom and benefit can be detrimental to society at large – “good for each, bad for all.” Conversely, constraints upon individuals may result in benefits for the society – “bad for each, good for all.” For example, consider the case of antibiotics which medical practice has clearly demonstrated lose their potency the more they are prescribed. The widespread use of antibiotics, while clearly to the advantage of each patient, results in loss of potency which is to the disadvantage of all patients. Thus it is “in the public interest” to discourage the use of antibiotics by non-critical patients. And as we saw in our opening example, because it is to the advantage of all citizens (i.e., in "the public interest") to breathe clean air, each citizen is justly required to have a catalytic converter on his vehicle. Clean air is thus a “public good” which can be enhanced through the imposition of “personal bads” -- the cost of mandatory catalytic converters. Clearly “the public interest” and “public goods” are in these cases, as well as many others, distinguishable from the summation of private interests and goods.

The coordinate principles, "good for each, bad for all" and "bad for each, good for all," resound throughout the history of political thought -- from Aristotle, through Thomas Hobbes, Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau, and Thomas Jefferson, on to the present day. Indeed, the practical applications of these principles are implicit in successful communities, from the present extending far back into pre-history. They are the key to the survival of communities of social insects such as bees and termites, and of social animals such as wolf packs, wherein evolution, not rational deliberation, provides their validation.

And yet, amazingly, those who presume to call themselves "conservatives," reject these principles, in favor of another: "good for each, good for all." This principle of the political right, exemplified by "trickle-down economics" and the assurance that "the rising [economic] tide raises all boats," is immediately appealing. Who would not desire that collective "goods" should result from the achievement of personal well-being? And in fact, the progressive will readily admit that many human endeavors that achieve individual benefits, also benefit society at large. “Good for each, good for all” is true in particular and identifiable cases, such as artistic creation, technological invention, and yes, business entrepreneurship.

Is there a simple and unfailing means to distinguish "the invisible hand" (good for each, good for all), from "the back of the invisible hand" (e.g. the tragedy of the commons, "good for each, bad for all")? When I posed that question to my late friend, Garrett Hardin, he replied "that is a Nobel Prize winning question." Until that Nobel Prize winning genius comes along, we must continue to do what the empirical and pragmatic progressives have routinely done: experiment. If individual behavior appears to have socially destructive results, try out a meliorative policy or law, and if it "works" for society -- if we find a device that benefits society at an acceptable cost to individual citizens -- then fine, we'll keep it. If not, try something else. And if it becomes clear that the best policy is for government and the law to leave well-enough alone (good for each, good for all) -- for example, maintaining the separation between church and state, or refusing to prohibit sex acts between consenting adults -- then let non-interference be the government policy. Right-wing propaganda to the contrary notwithstanding, progressives are not eager to expand government interference and control over the private lives of its citizens. It is not the progressives that are demanding Constitutional amendments against gay marriage, abortion, and flag burning.

The error of the libertarian Right resides in its embrace of the principle "good for each, good for all" as dogma, to be applied a priori to society and the economy, virtually without exception. By rejecting, implicitly, the principle of "good for each, bad for all" and vice versa, the Right recognizes no personal price that must be paid for the maintenance of a just social order, and pays no heed to the social costs of one's personal "pursuit of happiness."

For theirs is a radically reductive view of society. According to the "free-market absolutist" faction of the falsely-labeled "conservatives" (better, "regressives"), an optimal society emerges "naturally" and spontaneously out of an aggregate of individuals in exclusive pursuit of their personal self-interest. To the regressive, "the common good" and "public benefit" are myths. Indeed, so too is society itself, as Ayn Rand insists. Accordingly, we are asked to believe, so-called "society" is merely an aggregate of private individuals, like a pile of sand grains, occupying contiguous space. Ideally, say the regressives, all associations are strictly voluntary. And because "there is no such thing as society," there are no systemic social harms. It follows that those who are poor are not "victims" of society or the economy, they choose to be poor due to their personal moral failings.

The Necessity of Government

For the libertarian right, the only legitimate functions of government are the protection of the three fundamental rights of life, liberty and property. Hence, the only legitimate disbursement of tax revenues is for the military (protection from foreign enemies), the "night watchman" police (protection from domestic enemies), and the courts (adjudication of property disputes). Because there are no "public goods," compulsory tax payment for public education, research and development of science and technology, medical care, museums, libraries, promotion of the arts, public and national parks, etc., is the moral equivalent of theft. According to this account of human nature and society, with the exception of the just noted protections of life, liberty and property, there is nothing that government can accomplish that private initiative and the free market cannot achieve with better results.

No regulation, no governmental functions beyond basic protection of life, liberty and property, no taxes except to support these minimal functions. Any governmental activity beyond this should, in Grover Norquist's words, be "drowned in the bathtub."

In contrast, the progressive views society as more than the sum of its parts; it is what philosophers call an "emergent entity," with properties and principles of the whole distinct from those of its components just as, analogously, chemical compounds (e.g. water and salt) have properties distinct from their component elements. In this sense society and its economy are "systems" like a computer, an engine, an ecosystem, a living language, consisting interacting and interdependent parts which accomplish together what none can accomplish alone. If the social system malfunctions, there are innocent victims -- the poor, the oppressed, the addicted, the uneducated -- and the system is thus in need of adjustment or repair or even overhaul and redesign. These corrections are best diagnosed and treated when the system is examined and analyzed, as a system, and not as an amalgam of distinct individuals. And diagnosis, adjustment, regulation, repair, overhaul, redesign of the community-entity are legitimate functions of a government established to act in the interests of all.

Copyright 2006, by Ernest Partridge

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Peace y'all

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