Rebane's Ruminations
August 2012
S M T W T F S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

ARCHIVES


OUR LINKS


YubaNet
White House Blog
Watts Up With That?
The Union
Sierra Thread
RL “Bob” Crabb
Barry Pruett Blog

Mike McDaniel

Any quality strategy should include a performance matrix to analyze said strategy.  The progressive strategy, jump started in 1913 (16th Amendment and Federal Reserve Act- later amended in 1977), put on steroids under Franklin D Roosevelt’s “New Deal” and Lyndon B. Johnson “Great Society,” has failed Americans.  If the intention of the progressive movement was birthed by virtuous or evil hearts is a completely different debate.  Performance metrics used to grade the impact on either the individual or society as a collective shows that the progressive movement has failed (continues to fail).

This analysis will in large part ignore the desecration of individual liberty and focus on the deterioration of the quality of life of the collective due to progressive policies.


The following tenets are at the heart of the progressive strategy:
•    Politicians, government planners and bureaucrats (Federal Reserve, “Department of XYZ”, etc) are required in order to provide equality to society through the sacrifice of individual liberty.
•    Politicians, government planners and bureaucrats are capable of managing, manipulating and forcing the economy in a manner that serves society; through law (controlling interest rates, regulations, tax code, fees, etc).
•    Politicians, government planners and bureaucrats are required to protect citizens from themselves, bad luck and the acts of others (via regulation, educations, etc).
•    Politicians, government planners and bureaucrats can be trusted with power.
•    Assets (private property) are first and foremost the property of the government.
•    Policies designed to provide ‘safety nets’ for ‘unlucky’ citizens (lost jobs, limbs, health, etc) are a fundamental right and providing for such will benefit society.

Providing equality, through force, is an immoral and futile exercise.  Despite onerous employment laws, irrational powers granted to employee unions (public and private), a progressive tax system, countless regulations bought by special interests equality has not improved.  Wealth equality (“Wealth Gap”) is unchanged from 1913 to 2008 (the top 1% of society still hold approx 18% of the total wealth).  Progressives don’t dispute the wealth gap (or the highly comparative “Income Gap”), they simple choose to ignore the fact that the same gap existed before their ideology took root.
 
The mandate of the Federal Reserve is ‘price stability’ and ‘employment.’ The objective of every decision by the Federal Reserve is focused on either/both decreasing inflation or combating unemployment. How is the Fed doing?  A dollar in 1912 would be worth fewer than 5 cents today. Fail.  Today’s unemployment rate of 8.3% is over double what it was in 1912.  The recent ‘great recession’ marked the highest unemployment rate since 1977 (when the ‘unemployment mandate’ was signed into law).  The Federal Reserve has obviously failed its mandate.
  
The impact of regulations seems to be working against society.   Habit derived ailments rise (pick your data point, one example, obesity has increased from 45% of population in 1965 to over 70% in 2005).

Despite more regulations the number of disabled Americans is at an all-time high (and rising). Shouldn’t increased regulations equate to decreased disabilities?
 
Despite all the safety nets (including but not limited to unemployment insurance, workers compensation, public education, government sponsored career enrichment programs, etc) and regulations dependence on government is at an all time high. Keeping inflation neutral in the calculations, more than 15 times the resources were committed to paying for people who depend on government in 2010 than in 1962. 70.5% of federal spending now goes to dependence-creating programs, up dramatically from 28.3% in 1962, and 48.5% in 1990. Today US government spending on dependency programs (entitlements, education, farm subsidies, housing, food stamps, disability) is more than the total discretionary income of all Americans combined.   Soon the resources of the independent will not be enough to provide for the dependent.  This reality is smacking much of Europe in the face.   [Here we must ignore the notion that some progressives may see government dependence by society as an achievement]

The political process (and thus the rule of law) has been denigrated by the influences of corporatism (whereby corporations, labor unions, foreign nations, etc buy political influence). Limit the power of government and you will limit the ability of special interests to buy special treatment.  Witness the collapse of sustainable/healthy farming (growth of agribusiness to an oligopoly with a nations food source in the hands of few), the media monopoly, skyrocketing healthcare expenses, rising education expenses, war on drugs and the never ending cycle of American led wars via the military industrial complex as some of the byproducts of corporatism. Corporatism is the result of government wielding too much power and not having the integrity (or checks and balances) to revere such power.  Corporatism is made possible by the progressive’s belief that governments are worthy of near-absolute power.
   
Public education is another great example of progressive government bureaucracy gone wrong.  The quality of education in the US continues to decline despite various reform programs and increased spending on education.  Average Scholastic Aptitude Test scores fell 41 points between 1972 and 1991 and the number of kids scoring over 600 on the verbal part of the SAT has fallen by 37 percent since 1972. Pick your study; US rankings among other nations in math/science are abysmal.

Progressive policies require (growing) government spending.  Unchecked spending has left the US (and Europe) drowning in debt.  The interest expense that taxpayers pay on US debt is up over 212% since 1980; in 1912 there was no national debt (thus no interest expense).  Today US debt is larger than the total 2012 US Gross Domestic Product. Today, the US Government debt is equal to over $139,000 per taxpayer.   Progressive policies have required an unsustainable/unserviceable amount of debt. The slightest increase in interest rates (currently being manipulated lower via the Federal Reserve’s Quantitative Easing Programs/monetization of debt) will have a dramatic impact on interest expense.  It should go without saying that increased interest expense decreases the funds available for government services and forces higher taxation that hurts the economy.  The growth in debt cannot continue.
 
In summary, the progressive strategy requiring the empowering of politicians, government planners and bureaucrats has failed both the American individual and American society as a collective.  The progressive strategy has brought about higher unemployment, inflation and (unhealthy) dependence on government. The power bestowed upon central planners has been pimped to special interests to the detriment of society.  Most importantly the progressive ‘holy grail’ of a more equitable sharing of wealth/income has not come to pass as progressive policies have had no material impact on equality as measured by the “Wealth Gap” or “Income Gap.” 

[Mr McDaniel is a wealth management professional in Nevada County, California.]

Posted in ,

193 responses to “American Progressivism – Epic Failure”

  1. Gregory Avatar

    Ben, first, if you give the President war powers, we’re at war. The way to stop the wartime footing is for Congress to reverse this. We’re at war now as much as we were during the Viet Nam years.
    Second, Arar, a Canadian and Syrian citizen, wasn’t rounded up by the US because he was a Muslim, he was taken into custody because the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (think Canadian FBI, eh?) had put him on a suspected terrorist list, and they refused his reentry back into Canada.
    You may not realize this, Ben, but if you’re in a foreign country and they decide you are a persona non grata, you will be deported, and probably to the country you are a citizen of. In Arar’s case, Syria because Canada, to their shame, washed their hands of him.
    How you can make that into a US wrongdoing is beyond my ken.

    Like

  2. Paul Emery Avatar

    George, on another topic. Do you believe the internment of 127,000 United States Japanese American citizens was the right thing to do in WW11 and would you support such action against Muslim Americans citizens under similar circumstances?

    Like

  3. THEMIKEYMCD Avatar

    I consider Mas a great friend. When a government is too powerful (immoral)…
    http://www.theunion.com/article/20111122/NEWS/111129974&parentprofile=search

    Like

  4. Ben Emery Avatar

    Well George,
    Legal memos used by the Bush administration authorized, among other things, the use of torture and you seem to think it is just fine. I know of first hand stories of how US soldiers treated others in Central and South America. I don’t pretend it doesn’t happen but would not condone or advocate the policy. I talked with at least a dozen Japanese Americans from the camps and I asked about their treatment and if there was any torture, not one of them ever saw anything like torture being done.
    For the record Islam is not the enemy of the US. It is sad to see you romanticize such a brutal and immoral practice.

    Like

  5. TomKenworth Avatar

    For a realistic view of the world’s Muslim population and trends:
    http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1872/muslim-population-projections-worldwide-fast-growth
    Now since we already have 5 million or so here in the USA, one must accept the fact that if they were all suicidal maniacs, Aurora would have gone unnoticed amidst the general mayhem.
    So, rather than using the term, “Ragheads,” which is ancient derogatory slang for Arabs in general, why not be much more specific and precisely identifying, and try using, “I-Borgs?” This way the emphasis is put on the tunnel vision behavior of domination through the hive mind, of folks, using the Islamic religion variants, as cameoflage, rather than stereotyping and calling all peaceful Muslims militants, which they are not.
    Do you consider the Westboro Baptist Church to be a Christian organization, or is it a gang of thugs extorting money by getting people angry enough to attack them? (They carefully record it all and then sue in court, that’s how they keep it all going, WBC has nothing to do with Christianity, other than window dressing,)

    Like

  6. Paul Emery Avatar

    I believe you have the facts wrong Gregory. It was the US that instigated his rendering based on wrong information. You might find this NYT article illuminating.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/18/opinion/18wed2.html
    “Mr. Arar was seized at Kennedy International Airport in 2002 as he tried to change planes on his way home to Canada from a family vacation. He was held in solitary confinement and subjected to harsh questioning before being sent to Syria. He was tortured there and imprisoned for nearly a year in an underground cell the size of a grave until the Syrians finally let him go.
    In 2007, Mr. Harper’s government set an admirable example of decency. After an extensive investigation that concluded Mr. Arar had no ties to terror, Canada offered him a formal apology and compensation worth millions of dollars for providing the unsubstantiated information to American officials that helped trigger his nightmare.
    By contrast, the Bush administration stonewalled the Canadian inquiry and brushed off Mr. Harper’s request that the United States, which bears the bulk of responsibility for Mr. Arar’s abuse, acknowledge “inappropriate conduct.” When Mr. Arar sued the United States for denying him his civil rights, the Bush administration — predictably — argued that for reasons of national security the case should never be allowed to come to trial. “

    Like

  7. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1015am – I consider our formidable military to have been on balance a force for good in the world, and its cost to us a necessary payment to assure our own QoL with the monies that we have left (which is considerable). Without such a military, that has worldwide reach, the level of warfare in the world would and would have been be much higher. (BTW, that’s why I’m a conservetarian and not a true libertarian.)
    I consider the sacrifice of life and limb as the ‘cost of doing business’ in a dangerous world. I and my compatriots in the military most certainly believed we were the sacrificial point of the spear and understood our function in maintaining western civilization. Freedom is not free.
    Re your 1021am – Yes, and yes “under similar circumstances”, and it is those circumstances (time, mood, events, …) the ignorance of which causes so much heat in discussions removed from such circumstances. All of this would be avoided or at least minimized in a culturally cohesive country. But such occasional incarcerations are the attendant costs of maintaining a welcoming policy to immigrants of all cultures with hope that they will quickly assimilate. But that is another barn we have circled here.
    My family and I were interred from 1945-49 in a UN displaced persons camp. While our freedoms were limited, we were not tortured, and our only fear was for our lives should Harry Truman decide to send us back to the tender mercies of Uncle Josef Vissarionovich. But we were never confused as to why we had to be where we were.

    Like

  8. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    Who or should I say what are we at war with, terror? How does terror surrender? The war on terror is a perpetual war that will only escalate because violence breeds more violence. Military Industrial Complex dream come true.
    It is very specific in the constitution who has the power to declare war. War powers act/ resolution are limited to 90 days, which is bs and American supremacy at its worst. 90 days of bombing and destruction are acts of war no matter which way we try and slice it. It took less than a day for congress to pass a declaration of war on Germany and Italy- December 11, 1941 both Germany and Italy declared war on the US, by the end of the day the US officially declared war on the two nations. Trying to justify modern injustices with past injustices is a position of a weak individual or culture.
    So here is the question that war hawks refuse to answer.
    Why and what conditions cause people to become terrorists?
    Islam is used as tool much like other organize religions to recruit soldiers but is not the reason for the willingness to join. So please think a bit deeper about the subject since killing other human beings seems to be your solution.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3eKEe3VzA4Y&feature=related

    Like

  9. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 1037am – you and I must use different dictionaries for ‘romanticize’.
    Re Islam as America’s enemy – given their own reported actions and attitudes toward America, I suggest that ‘enemy’ is a good placeholder label to characterize Islam until a better one comes along. And Islam is not only America’s avowed enemy, but also the declared and centuries practiced enemy of western civilization – again by their own words. Your ignoring their taught and observed practice of taqiyya is noted in this discussion.
    None of this ignores the longstanding conflict between Islamic and western cultures. Islam has always spread by the sword, and it still does. Christianity was guilty of that also for a good part of its history, but has now become a toothless belief system that has run out of other cheeks to turn (I believe we have only four, all which have been respectively slapped and kicked).
    TomK 1039am – “I-borg” is a sanitary and an unknown label that does not have any intrinsic pejorative connotation. Raghead is better, especially in the precise sense that I have defined it.
    I have no idea what WBC’s Christianity is. Their burning of the Quran is a long practiced and established, if not now dated, response to “heathen scriptures” that was common in all Christian countries of yore – other religions (e.g. today’s Islamists) have been known to just kill you for having unauthorized scriptures. If WBC can make money from it, then they join the company of so many other religions, cultures, ‘races’, … who continually get cash awards through courts that punish all kinds of real and imagined slights.

    Like

  10. Gregory Avatar

    Paul 10:57, sorry, try rereading your link: “After an extensive investigation that concluded Mr. Arar had no ties to terror, Canada offered him a formal apology and compensation worth millions of dollars for providing the unsubstantiated information to American officials that helped trigger his nightmare.”
    If it wasn’t for Canada, the country that had issued Arar’s passport, telling the US he was a danger, it would not have happened. Before he was put on the Syrian express, Canadian officials interviewed him. Arar was then sent to the only country that would take him, his native Syria.
    Yes, the NYT wanted it to be something to hang on Bush, but that’s their bias, and, probably, yours.

    Like

  11. Gregory Avatar

    “Why and what conditions cause people to become terrorists?” -Ben
    In the case of Palestinians and other Moslems, I think the inability to sweep the Israeli Jews into the sea after exhorting Palestinians to evacuate their homes in order to facilitate the bloodbath that didn’t happen had a lot to do with it. So did the decision of Palestine’s Arab neighbors to not assimilate their Palestinian brothers and sisters, keeping them in refugee (aka concentration) camps and indoctrinating their children, grandchildren and great grandchildren.
    Then there’s the dysfunctional Arab street and the 13th century feudal structures of many of their countries whose leaders anxious to channel anger towards the West and not within towards religious and tribal leaders. And Moslems have their own mainstream/evangelical split; leave them alone and the Sunni and Shia will fight it out among themselves.
    Since I answered it, I must not be a “war hawk”. Thanks.

    Like

  12. Ben Emery Avatar

    George,
    Merriam Webster dictionary
    romanticize
    transitive verb
    to make romantic : treat as idealized or heroic
    I get the feeling from you that you are missing the good ol days when people really knew how to turn the thumb screws.
    We are not at war with Islam and I put much of the blame on people like yourself in a two fold way
    1) glorifying war/violence as a noble solution to settle differences
    2) promote the idea of exploiting poor nations with free trade
    Once again I will give you the actual interview not the two minute cartoon that explains what is a major factor for the creation of terrorism against the western cultures. Here is preface to the ideas put forward in the video and a longer arc to understand how terrorist come to be, remember American revolutionaries were considered terrorists. Colonialism, which exploitation and theft of resources from the indigenous population through force/ violence (my definition). On top of teaching violent take over of regions oppressing the indigenous people to generational abject poverty.
    Here is the new legal way of colonization through World Bank, IMF, WTO, and so on.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fVAifnnlg0&feature=related

    Like

  13. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    Here is another one, since I guess a man being picked up at a US airport detained and knowingly sent off to be tortured from the very nation he fled to avoid military service is just fine with you.
    The case of Binyam Mohamed and the cover up by the Obama administration of the Bush administration crimes. I gave Obama a year to actually to change the direction of the human right violations of the Bush administration. I don’t where the line of the Bush crimes becomes the Obama crimes but if we aren’t there yet we must be getting very close. I don’t care what Binyam Mohamed allegedly did , which he has since been cleared, due process and the rule of law needs to be followed.
    Democracy Now!
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOHAJOLRV0I

    Like

  14. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    “Why and what conditions cause people to become terrorists?”
    I agree that poverty and being oppressed create the conditions that breed terrorism.
    So the answer cannot be invading/ occupying Islamic nations forcing a western culture onto them, supporting oppressive regimes for corporate American interests, and having dumba$$’s claiming we are at war with Islam while we are torturing primarily Muslims.

    Like

  15. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 101pm – Now this is a convenient example of the Great Cognitive Chasm between you and yours, and me and mine.
    The fighters of Islam have a long declared war on western civilization that began an hiatus with their loss at Vienna in 1683. They have kept the peace in the interval only because they were relatively no match for Europe. That war settled and gave rise to a long period of quiet between the two civilizations.
    When Europe (and the west) again showed its weakness, the assault was re-initiated on ALL fronts. Only raw brutal strength is respected in such confrontations. In the case of war, it takes only one to tango. The denialists wind up dead, in concentration/labor camps, and as third class citizens for decades/centuries until the next war.
    And I strongly believe that you and your like-minded cohorts in the politics of apologized peace are those who invite renewed violence on all fronts. Naifs and those ignorant of history loudly declare to the sheeple that ‘war does not settle anything’; when, as Churchill taught in his monumental history, it is exactly the opposite. It is only the outcome of wars that settle and redirect the efforts and energies of human societies – the pen is powerful only to the extent that it can evoke the sword.
    And as collectivists in the last century, you have shown yourselves to be the first to pick up the sword, for that is the only way you have to acquire productive capacity to prolong intrinsically failed economies.

    Like

  16. Ben Emery Avatar

    George,
    You’re lust for warfare is a dying breed. I will put it to you in other example. Even in nations of Islam there is your beloved topic of the Great Divide. In those nations there are those just like yourself giving examples of western civilizations history and ongoing assault on their faith and culture of their nation(s). Your Muslim conservative/ conservatarian counterpart’s answer is to use violence and force because raw brutal strength is the only language the west understands. Genocidal war becomes your only solution. Unfortunately peace isn’t as monetarily or politically powerful as war.
    I believe we are in the process of the next enlightenment. We (globally) will have a new form of government and economic model we live our lives by. It will be a more decentralized and cooperative form of economics and governance. And yes, global warming/ climate change will play a huge role in shaping it. I don’t know if it will happen in my lifetime but I think my kids generation will see it happening for sure.

    Like

  17. billy T Avatar

    The Islamic countries understand one thing. That thing is strenght. Obama has transmitted weakness since his run for President. He was told before his Cairo speech that the Muslim Brotherhood was not allowed to attend by Egyptian authorities. Obama insisted and brown nosed the Brotherhood. That gave them the go ahead to start arming and training and take down countries from Egypt to Libya. They saw a weakness and pounced upon it. The liberals cling to being the party of peace and understanding. Yet, history is quite clear. It is the progressive mind set that believes in confiscation by force and stomping on indivual liberties by force, most often thru the iron hand of government. Government is their hope and salvation in their group think. But it is not always government the progressives use. It is also mob rule that tramples individual rights asunder. Look at OWS vs the Tea Party rallies. Who barred the press from coverage and pelted TV vans with rocks? Was it the Tea Party Patriots? The TPP were labeled an “angry mob” by the progressives, yet who were the angry ones? Who were the mobs? Who sought to achieve their goals thru mob force? Anyone with two brain cells left could win every agrument that it was not the Tea Party Patriots who sought to squash rights by mob rule, nor engaged in violence. Did the Berlin Wall fall peacefully because of America’s weakness or by America’s strenght? Walk softly and carry a big stick. A very big stick. A stick for all to see. The policy of appeasement has historically failed.

    Like

  18. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 355pm – “global warming/ climate change will play a huge role in shaping … a more decentralized and cooperative form of economics and governance.” From your mouth to God’s ear.
    Any role that GW, especially the belief in AGW, plays in human affairs will be from the vantage of strong centralized governments that will use raw force to shape societies and eliminate the last vestiges of liberty – all for our own good, of course. It has already started, and California is leading the way to naked autocracy through the populist application of what else, democracy.

    Like

  19. billy T Avatar

    When Lord of the Flies was publiched, it rocked the Western World. How could such sweet schoolboys act that way when they were seperated from and free of authority? Surely mankind was more enlightened than that. Lord of the Flies was controvestial because the theme was man had a protensity to do evil. Then there was A Clockwork Oragne and it was society’s fault. Remember when the nation was shocked beyond belief when a jogger was raped by 7 young men in Central Park about 25 years ago? Made national headlines for days upon days. As people grasped to find the meaning of this horrific event, the only answer was it had to be society’s fault. No other explanation was pausible. Nowadays a gang raping by teenager boys of a mentally handicapped 11 year old girl is just another story that passes without any commentary. Must be society’s fault. NOPE. “We must REJECT the idea that everytime a law’s broken, society is quilty rather than the lawbreaker. It is time to RESTORE the American precept that the individual is accountable for his actions.” Ronald Reagen.

    Like

  20. Ben Emery Avatar

    George,
    If you look at the small few that control energy, agriculture, banking, pharmaceuticals, ect… you will see huge amounts of waste involved, especially regarding transportation. As we break these industry’s up and restructure the way our world works we will see a more localized style governance and economy. I am sure you are familiar with the term bio regionalism. As energy REOI goes upward due to costs, environmental damage, and scarcity we will be forced to rethink where our necessities are coming from and we will bring it closer to home. By default government will become more local oriented and the federal government will have to take a back seat on many of the issues we face today. There will be a federal government but it will be more focused on how to serve the states and municipalities instead of being the mouthpiece and enforcer for the large few companies that control every industry presently.

    Like

  21. Ben Emery Avatar

    Billy T,
    What you are describing is the isolation from community. We are so disconnected on so many levels in today’s world it is easy for those who once were seen and connected by the whole community go unnoticed today. That sense of belonging to something larger than just ourselves has be chipped away for many decades through materialism and technology. This is one of the things I like about church, it brings people together and gives a sense of unity. That is what the military does for many. That is what the Tea Party has done for many disgruntled conservatives. It seems to be what AA is based on. It is why organizing labor was so powerful and why big money and big business hate unions so much. As an individual worker you have little say and feel helpless but come together with great numbers the atmosphere changes and the sense of empowerment and pride takes the place of fear and helplessness. None of us are islands and the sooner we realize it the better off we will be.

    Like

  22. Gregory Avatar

    “since I guess a man being picked up at a US airport detained and knowingly sent off to be tortured from the very nation he fled to avoid military service is just fine with you.”
    Ben, don’t be such an ass. It isn’t an issue of being “just fine with” it, it’s what happens under international law when a persona non grata needs to go. Blame Canada! (That might make a great song). They filed the incorrect information about the guy, and later fessed up and apparently paid up millions to help right the wrong THEY were responsible for.
    Yes, he was a Syrian draft dodger. Can’t blame his family for getting him out of there.
    Now, if you recall, Iraq was the aggressor circa 1990 and continually violated the cease fire agreement that was put in place by the UN. Afghanistan’s Taliban hosted al qaeda. And the palestinian concentration camps on Arab soil for the unassimilated have been in operation since about 1947. Is there a link? Well, before the Baathist regime was changed, they were paying $25,000 honoraria to the families of Palestianian martyrs willing to turn busloads of Israeli schoolchildren into red goo. Haven’t heard much about that lately, have we?
    Ben, you seem to think its ignorance that drives folks who don’t agree with you but it’s the knowledge, wisdom and rationality that you seem to lack that seems to be the problem.

    Like

  23. billy T Avatar

    Ben, I agree that none of us are islands. And I believe no man is a law to himself, save psychopaths and anarchists. And I truly believe in a sense of community. Take a hopeless drunk and make him or her the appointed coffee maker of an AA meeting and watch his/her sense of belonging and part of something bigger than themselves blossom. Isolation is a killer. Same with the quilting club or any thing you can image. We are born with the herd instinct to socialize. When I beat death and could barely walk or stand, I was approached by people to volunteer building the P.L.A.Y. structure behind Hennessy. Being unable to lift anything or help, I was told I could watch the children of volunteers. To this day I feel part of the fabric of the play structure, even though I have not seen it in years. Where I differ from some of my peers is the role of government in our affairs. Hillary wrote it takes a village to raise a child and Obama believes it takes a government to build a business. I see gov’t as the entity to turn to as the last resort when you are flat on the canvas and the ref is counting 7,8,9….Government should never be the lender of first resort. Yes, we need a safety net for those who CANNOT for a variety of reasons make it in this world. We need to dispense a good kick in the rear for those who WILL NOT get off the couch or sit around the barn and eat all the hay. Gov’t is at the bottom of the totem pole in the hierarchy of society and does what we tell them to do and nothing more, IMHO. Karl Marx was dead wrong on one point. He never envisioned the billions of dollars philatelists would freely donate, nor the outpouring of charity by countless individuals in a society, be they mighty or small. Even the most noble of progressive ideals result in institutionalization of the populace, exactly like a man who sits in prison for years fearing making it on the outside when his release date approaches. Conservative ideals frees the spirit to soar above the prison walls.

    Like

  24. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    I will try and make this as brief as possible but still connecting many dots.
    As for your opinion of being an ass, what other conclusion can I come to when you divert responsibility of the US government rounding up people without charge to everywhere and everyone else? I thought you were a libertarian leaning person?
    In 1990 Saddam Hussein got the OK from the US government to move into Kuwait.
    From US Congressional Minutes
    “Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, how did the 20-year war get started?
    It had been long assumed that the United States Government, shortly before Iraq invaded Kuwait in August of 1990, gave Saddam Hussein a green light to attack. A State Department cable recently published by WikiLeaks confirmed that U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie did indeed have a conversation with Saddam Hussein one week prior to Iraq’s August 1, 1990, invasion of Kuwait.”
    “In it, Ambassador Glaspie affirmed to Saddam “the President had instructed her to broaden and deepen our relations with Iraq.” As Saddam Hussein outlined Iraq’s ongoing border dispute with Kuwait, Ambassador Glaspie was quite clear that, “we took no position on these Arab affairs.”
    In the 1980’s Saddam was the darling of the Reagan and Bush administrations being removed Iraq from states supporting international terrorism and supported Saddam with intelligence and weapons to fight Iran. At the same time through the Iran/ Contra crimes the Reagan administration supported Iran with military equipment and parts to maintain and repair US military equipment from when we (US) overthrew Mossadeq in the 50’s and propped up the brutal authoritarian Shah, which directly led to the 1979 revolution and hostage crisis. The US acting in their corporate “interests” have had a direct influence on the rise of extremism, which we seem to keep perpetuating. It is a self-fulfilling prophecy. I won’t come back to the ruthless illegal murders funded through the Reagan administration for brevity sake.
    Now onto to Afghanistan- the senior members of the Taliban such as Mohammed Omar fought with the Mujahideen along side with Osama bin Laden. As the Soviets exited the US turned a blind eye to the horrible human rights of Mujahideen who would become the Taliban. Refugee camps in Pakistan were petri dishes for the extremist Madrassas. The biggest funders of extremist Madrassas were and still are the wealthy businessmen of Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia another brutal authoritarian government propped up by corporate US “interests”.
    Everything I just typed out is true and is completely ignored by those on the right side of the aisle, which is both the leaderships of the democratic and republican party’s.
    Now for the back at you with the ass remark. What makes you an ass is your smugness toward others like you are intellectually superior, which you are most definitely not.

    Like

  25. Ben Emery Avatar

    Billy,
    I think you and I are on the same page with many issues.

    Like

  26. Michael Anderson Avatar

    Greg hissed: “Ben, don’t be such an ass.”
    A red flag on the play, GG goes into the penalty box for showing general bad manners and a uncivil disposition. Perhaps a dietary change is in order?

    Like

  27. Gregory Avatar

    “As for your opinion of being an ass, what other conclusion can I come to when you divert responsibility of the US government rounding up people without charge to everywhere and everyone else? I thought you were a libertarian leaning person?”
    They responded to an RCMP flagging of a naturalized citizen of Canada being a danger. Canada refused that person reentry into Canada and the other choice was returning them to the only country that would take them?
    The responsibility was Canada’s, Canada has admitted responsibility and made reparations.
    And I didn’t make any grand pronouncements; you put up the one name you seemed to place the most gravitas, and it was a case that I’d read about and discussed before. It was Canada that flagged them and Canada that refused reentry of their own citizen, effectively renouncing his naturalized status. Probably Canada that suggested they be repatriated to Syria.
    “What makes you an ass is your smugness toward others like you are intellectually superior, which you are most definitely not.”
    So, you are upset that I’m doing what you’re trying to do, only being better at it? Now, aren’t you always talking down to TJ as if he’s a dunce, despite his winning elective office and you couldn’t even outpoll the certifiable loon that was running against you on the Democratic ticket? Ben, you’re spinning snide sarcasm over and over. Snark, over your fabricated straw man arguments and mischaracterizations, over and over. That’s being an ass.
    What a shame the Obama administration has hidden so many of those crimes of the Bushies you are so sure of. I know a 9/11 truther who once held elective office in Nevada County who was sure Bush and Cheney masterminded 9/11, and a far lefty mutual friend and associate took great exception to my characterization of that as being irrational. That was before Obama was elected. You’d like them both.

    Like

  28. billy T Avatar

    Sucks, just when I thought we were really for a group hug. Like him or not, I have to give it to Mr. Ben Emery for trying over and over again to find some common ground. That is more than I have been willing to do. I have gone as far to drop the term libbowels recently, as to not to tarnish the reputation of Dr. Rebane and stretch his patience. Guilt by association and all that. Back to the free flowing exchange of ideas: I am skeptical concerning Mr. Ben Emery’s faith that Big Gov will over time divest power back to the states, and in turn the States back to local communities. Big Brother Mega Gov has an insatiable appetite to expand coupled with her unquenchable thirst for more power and control. Absolute control and control absolutely. The nail that stands up must be pounded down. Its the nature of the beast. Do you think for one millisecond that Big Brother Mega Gov will relax the Endangered Species Act or give up anything without threats and an iron fist?? Do you think for one second that local school boards or PTAs can announce that we want our children to learn this and that and we don’t want our kids to be mandated to be taught this or that anymore? The fury of the State will fall on that nail standing up. Marx also believed that worker owned/controlled businesses in time would make a heavy handed centralized government unnecessary. He forgot human nature. The beast is never satisfied, its belly never full. Like fire, it can only consume.

    Like

  29. Michael Anderson Avatar

    Hey Greg, you continue to use your shovel in an inappropriate manner. Lawyers are terrible things, and when they start sending out documents all kinds of things happen. I hope you are ready to have a good lawyer party, because everything is lining up very nicely. You might want to email me in private just to get a sense of what is in store. Thanks.

    Like

  30. Gregory Avatar

    Mike, you’ve made vague threats a number of times in the past… that link was a publically available (from your old twitter page) self caricature of yours in response to your 7:50pm snark.
    Perhaps your humor meter is just stuck on ‘morose’…?

    Like

  31. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    I picked a random case that had made it into the media, nothing more. It was an example but you hung everything onto it like it was an isolated incident.
    Here is the fact, he was picked up and he had done nothing wrong. You seem to think that he was on some list that had any merit to it. Ted Kennedy and Cat Stevens were on the same list.
    As for TJ and public office. What TJ displays on the blogosphere is incredible. It is childish mudslinging and very unproductive. If he was under 15 years old I would have more patience with it but he is in his 60’s. Our run for office was and is a part of a big transformation in politics. What our campaign stood for was everything those who participated in the Occupy Movement are concerned about. It is real and a genuine concern that will change how politics is funded, which in turn will change how our government functions.
    If there is nothing to hide then why the treatment of Bradley Manning and why the legal witch hunt for Julian Assange to be extradited to the US. There is plenty to hide. All governments do things the people would not approve of but we are silenced through the ignorance of the truth and treated like children. It is for our security we are told and those who question the authority have always been considered rabble from those who pull the levers.
    “An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.”
    Mahatma Gandhi

    Like

  32. Michael Anderson Avatar

    I assure you GG, my humor meter is pegging 11. Don’t worry your pretty little head about that.
    Speaking of comedy, what’s the best way to send you certified mail?

    Like

  33. George Rebane Avatar

    BenE 842am – for a long time now your comments on these pages have hinted at the coming of a new type of government for the US. Every once in a while I can almost make out the hazy outlines of what you are hoping for, but then again, I may have it all wrong. And others may be in a similar situation.
    Would you consider writing an extended summary of how you see the new government functioning? If you email it to me, I will post it and we’ll have a go at it.

    Like

  34. Ben Emery Avatar

    Billy T,
    I comment at RR not to change minds but to show different views. Despite our political differences I happen to believe George as a very decent person. We’ve only met once but I know many who know him and say he is a good guy. We just see the world through different perspectives. Why I keep coming back is for information and links to things I never hear on the left. Both right and left have very valid concerns and solutions but having it all one side generally doesn’t work. That is why I like to try and find the common ground. As for big gov. I trust the federal government about as much as I trust Goldman Sachs, Exxon, Monsanto, United Health, Pfizer, NewsCorp, or Lockheed Martin. All these companies and the industries they are in own and control our government, so my trust for them are the same. The one humungous difference between the two is I am supposed to have a say in the federal government. I protest in front of government buildings or our representative I am exercising my rights but if I protest a private company or CEO I will be arrested. That is the big difference.

    Like

  35. Ben Emery Avatar

    George,
    I will give it a try.

    Like

  36. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    I bet we all are waiting with bated breath for that. I can guess it might be as simple as the form of government practiced by the King of Qatar.

    Like

  37. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    I’m quite frankly astounded that you of all people would support the internment and property confiscation of American citizens under any circumstances. This was a most sordid chapter in American history. Look out Muslim American citizens. You have no property rights or personal freedom. Don’t all citizens have equal rights?
    03 August 2012 at 11:25 AM
    1988 that congress and Ronald Reagan apologized for this countries actions and gave about 20,000 dollars to each Japanese. But what is often not noted, a total of around 400 million dollars worth of land was confiscated from the Japanese, bettering the wealth of the American Government.
    R

    Like

  38. Ben Emery Avatar

    Todd,
    Childish and unproductive. I would guess at least 50% of your comments when using your real name are childish and unproductive. 90% when The Union used to have open commenting and you had the anonymity of other monikers. I hold public officials active and retired to higher standards and that is why I have such little patience with your approach in the blogosphere.

    Like

  39. Ben Emery Avatar

    Greg,
    Your link with the bunny ears served what point? Once again, very childish. No wonder you defend other childish commentary on RR.

    Like

  40. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    BenE, your attitude is why you cannot proceed in the elected world. Having been all the things you wish you could be, I must say, I certainly understand your dejection.
    If you actually supported American values, you would get some respect.

    Like

  41. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 944am – “I’m quite frankly astounded that you of all people would support the internment and property confiscation of American citizens under any circumstances.” There you go again; pray where did you get that impression? While swallowing a lot of futility, on RR we do try to keep the arguments a bit more precise than that. I take it you are misconstruing my 1125am, which BTW you should cite specifically as a courtesy to readers who might want to check on what I actually said.
    No, I don’t support “property confiscation” or even internment “of American citizens under any circumstances.” FDR’s handling of Americans of Japanese and German descent was more than heavy-handed with regard to depriving them of their property without due process. Given the evidence at that time of Japanese-Americans taking pictures and recording data about US defense installations and passing these to Japanese nationals, and the nature of the 7dec41 attacks, a reasonable case could be made for interring such US citizens. Recall also that at the time an invasion of the US west coast was still feared (no matter how stupid that was).
    Bottom line – yes, I believe that a nation-state may impound citizens who bear certain similarities to its existential enemy, and whose sentiments and intentions are not known. It’s where you draw the line on instigating such detentions where the problem starts. And there we are all equally concerned. But all of it should be done with built-in provisions that minimize long term harm in the later discovery that a mistake has been made (even on a case by case basis).
    And while being “frankly astounded”, you also missed the point about my family’s internment – that “we were never confused as to why we had to be where we were.”

    Like

  42. George Rebane Avatar

    re ToddJ’s 1051am – Here we see another example of the dichotomy. BenE probably gets a lot of “respect” from his fellow Leftwingers. But his view of history and understanding of human nature is not respected by most people on the Right, no matter that he puts them forth in civil and sincerely argued comments.
    I personally respect BenE’s comments for the power of their communication value to a large segment of America’s voters – i.e. I don’t discount his ideology because it is ascendant in an increasingly democratic welfare state. In short, it’s the same kind of respect I would show to a charging bear or even a dedicated Islamist.

    Like

  43. TomKenworth Avatar

    : Michael Anderson | 04 August 2012 at 12:09 AM I have a few choice items that Greg has posted and then arranged to have deleted, and would be happy to add to the pile.

    Like

  44. Ben Emery Avatar

    Well George,
    Even with a compliment you can’t control yourself and have to make it degrading in some way. That’s OK. Those who read RR to see the discourse will also see how individuals handle themselves. Agree or not agree I try and present opinions and information with respect. Do I succeed 100% of the time? No but that is the goal.
    I will end it here for the day, just finishing up irrigation and need to get to composting.
    Despite being considered radical on RR my opinions are in line with the mainstream of America.
    Making tax system more fair 60%
    Decreasing Defense Budget 61%
    Public Option/ National Health Care 62%
    Environmental Protections 70%
    Disapproval of Iraq occupation/ Invasion 63%
    Ending Fossil Fuel Subsidies 59%
    GMO Labeling 80-90%
    Too much influence in DC
    Lobbyists 71%
    Banks 67%
    Large Corporations 67%
    So say what you will but I am in the opinion of majority of Americans right on target and many at RR are the small fringe.

    Like

  45. TomKenworth Avatar

    “George, do you really think this sock puppet will ever participate in a conversation. or will they just keep following the same pattern of leaps of illogic the guy with his hand up his wahoo is known for?”
    H. U. W. GoodNugget at his best. He still hasn’t quite figured out L. W. GoodNugget, such a pity!

    Like

  46. billy T Avatar

    There is a big difference between peace time and times of War. Our young nation had no standing army and each abled bodied man was suppose to have a weapon in case of invasion or the call to arms. Later Lincoln faced a cacophony of criticism for suspending habias corpses during the War between the States. His actions are still refered to this very day as a blueprint for trampling personal liberties in times of War. No one doubts Abraham Lincoln’s committment to indiviual liberities and justice for all. He had a higher calling which was to preserve the Union. The stone work in a park in my hometown is rumored to be built by Japanese Americans during WWII. German spies were found across our homeland. A Japanese submarine surfaced just north of Santa Barbara and fired upon a once standing oil storage facility. Mines were closed in our area to prevent the Japanese from getting their hands on our gold, lol. Kaiser Alumunim was built inland about 280 miles from the coast in Spokane, WA to protect against attacks. Our Pacific Fleet was discimated and the entire West Coast was wide open after Pearl Harbor. It was War time. Even German U boats were on our East Coast. The same reason we had Canadian and NATO fighter planes patrolling our skies and escorting commerical aircraft after 9/11. War time. As Custer said before he plenty blew Big Horn, “War is Hell.” Don’t know who said “All is fair in love and war”, but I once quoted that to lift my spirits after walking away with a small suitcase in hand from a house, bank account, cars, and a dog immediately following an unpleasant divorce. Radical Islam declared war on us, not the other way around.

    Like

  47. TomKenworth Avatar

    “Radical Islam declared war on us, not the other way around.”
    Monomaniacs fueled by oil money and using a literal reading of the Quoran as a core values guide and window dressing attacked us. Over a billion other folks who use the non violent parts of the Quoran as a guide to daily living and slave to the fact that apparently we die, did not attack.
    I-Borgs to describe the current followers of the late Osama, would be far more accurate, or at least acknowledging the small size in proportion to the majority of the followers of Islam. Even if there were 1 million in the Radical Camp, that would only be one in 1,000 followers of that faith.
    That’s the Lickspittle of it all, now back to http://www.zooniverse.org

    Like

  48. billy T Avatar

    Tommie, I am certain you would defend to the death my right to agree with you.

    Like

Leave a comment