Â
“The national government may be in the hands of sell outs and ideologues, but there is still work to be done.â€Â  Jim Hightower
                                                        Â
Â
Before getting to the subject of a Manual for Change, two important questions must be asked and answered. First, do I really care if the situation changes or not? After all, we’ve been living in a form of autocracy, including the corporatocracy, Nerocracy, crime, greed, arrogance and ignorance of our national leadership for many years. Do I care, for example, that as a middle class citizen I’m paying for and supporting this corruption and “legal” crime. How do I feel about that? I personally feel somewhat badly about it, because I was aware of some of it; but generally gullible like, apparently, many Americans, and “life went on.â€Â I’m as guilty of apathy as anyone. I’ve read the stories of those who stood up to the government and refused to pay taxes, or a portion of them, because the money helped an immoral and unethical cause. They suffered the consequences, but perhaps they did so with a clear conscience.
Â
The second question is more difficult. If I decide to actively participate in the change, can I do so peacefully, without being driven by anger and hatred, because if I point a finger of blame at anyone, it might as well be me.
Â
We’re all going to die anyway and how that happens may not be our choice; but does it really matter? And the change probably won’t happen in our lifetime. Look at how long it took for women to gain the most basic of human rights. Just consider what the efforts of a rather shy homemaker, wife and mother, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, along with her friend, Susan B. Anthony, did for this nation.
Â
Take a minute or two and consider this. Depending on your personal answer, read on or just stop and get on with your life.
Â
*****
I’ve had ideas roaming around in my brain on how to get to an actual Manual for Change of our corrupt government when, true to the “100th Monkey Phenomenon,†(check it out at Google if you’ve forgotten it) I find out that the idea and action are already happening around the country at the grassroots level. According to Jim Hightower, a national radio commentator, writer, public speaker author, including the book “Thieves in High Places: They’ve Stolen our Country and it’s Time to Take It Back,â€Â “…grassroots people are so much stronger, more resilient, and more American than the gooberheads at the top, and they’ll not be long held back.â€
Â
One of the main concerns I had was how could anyone reach high office and not “owe†something to a special interest group, whatever form that might take.
Â
As it turns out, there has been a movement underway for some time called “Clean Elections.â€Â Again, you may want to check under Google to see all that is happening. In the past decade, 8 states and 14 cities have passed “Clean Election†laws to end the money chase and other states and cities are moving toward passage of such laws this year.
Â
This means, among other things, that regular people can run for office because public financing is provided to candidates who agree not to accept money from corporations or other favor-seeking interests.
Â
And it works! According to Jim Hightower, in Maine in 2000, for example, half of the state’s senators and 30 percent of house members were elected without taking a dime in special-interest money. Today, 83 percent of its senate and 77 percent of its house is made up of legislators who ran “clean.â€Â And not only that, Maine became the first state to pass a bill providing health care for all of its people!! This could never have happened in a political situation dominated by private campaign contributions.
Â
On many other issues on which Washington is the enemy, great progress has been made. (You won’t hear about this in the mainline media.)
Â
So the answer to apathy is to join with the grassroots groups that are taking action and making progress. Become part of the renewal right where you live.
Â
There is always a way. When I was stopped by the U.S. Department of State from mediating a truce with Usama bin Laden against killing Americans when our national leadership wouldn’t, I started this site and I continue to write letters to newspapers and to government leaders. If enough people did even this much, we would begin to see change.
Â
But what about finding those leaders, and what qualities should we be seeking in them? Think about it and let me know. I plan to cover this next. I’ll give you a hint on a couple ideas I have: think about a version of the Selective Service System (Draft) and the jury service selection process….
Â
Thank you,
Joe
Month: March 2006
-
A Manual for Change – Part I
-
Viva Chavez!
A recent Reuters news article noted that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has ordered special training for the country’s military forces and civilians to repel an invasion by U.S. forces. The training adopts a doctrine emphasizing “asymmetric war†or resistance against a more powerful foreign force.
Â
True to form, U.S. officials are attempting to portray Chavez as a negative influence in Latin America. I don’t know President Chavez personally; but I do know what our leaders are capable of, as does anyone who has read information by noted people, knowledgeable on the subject.. I would tend to believe and support President Chavez to do what is necessary to protect his country from U.S. imperialism.
Other factors are building that spell trouble for Americans, primarily the low approval rating for GWB.  The good news is that people are finally catching on that we have corrupt, inept and criminal leadership. The bad news is that the Rove machine must go into high gear to re-instate the “fear factor†in us to help the ratings, particularly before the November elections when many seats in congress will be up for change.
Â
This could mean that we might expect an “al-Qaeda†attack on Americans or on American soil itself. Michael Scheuer, the former CIA chief of counterterrorism has noted that GWB’s policies have helped to strengthen al-Qaeda and that the most likely point of attack is Houston, TX, by means of a truck crossing the border from Mexico.Â
Â
Based on additional information, I believe that should al-Qaeda decide not to attack in a timely way for some reason, our CIA “al-Qaeda impersonators†could fill in for them.
Â
If there is no attack, GWB can then claim that his security measures are effective. He wins either way.
Â
This might not even be of interest to many people, were it not for the fact that our leaders have no concern for the deaths of innocent people, when it furthers their agenda. It then stirs up a “patriotic fervor†that also works to their benefit.
Â
It appears that there’s “no way out,†which, in fact, there may not be under our current structure. But I’m an optimist and will, soon, discuss a “Manual for Change.†(Your thoughts on this are always welcome. I have one idea I’ll present later.) We can always just smile at the situation because death is really not a bad thing. In some spiritual thought, it’s just another step of life. I just have a problem with the pain that may be associated with it.  🙂Joe
Â
-
The Modern Neros
Thank you, Thom Hartmann. The article below is a rational summary of the current world situation. I differ with the sense, probably not intended, that this is a relatively new phenomenon. I believe that we are experiencing a re-creation of world affairs that have repeated themselves century after century. The Roman Empire never fell, it just changed names. And the leaders’ names have just changed a bit as well. Instead of Nero, Caesar, Alexander, etc. we now have the likes of Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Bush (I and II), Reagan, and Clinton. (Not so impressive, name wise, I’ll admit, but no less dangerous, arrogant or greedy.)    So I would add “Nerocracy†to the new dictionary along with “corporatocracy.â€
Â
After reading this article and other submissions to this and other sites, as well as numerous relevant books, you may have a number of reactions – anger, fear, *hopelessness, depression, disgust, for example; or you may feel inspired to action. What specific action may not be clear and within a few days of “normal†life, the “feeling†may just go away.Â
Â
If, however, the feeling remains and is fortified by ongoing information received from reliable sources, you may be among those who want a *â€Manual for Change.â€Â What can us common folk do to get our democracy back, have a true voice in running our government and create a relative modicum of balance, compassion and cooperation in the world?Â
Â
Think about it. We’ll discuss it further……
                                                                               Â
(*Thanks to Leah and Janet for your “words.â€)
*******
Monday, February 27, 2006 Â
Â
Published on Monday, February 27, 2006 by CommonDreams.orgWhen Americans No Longer Own America
by Thom Hartmann
The Dubai Ports World deal is waking Americans up to a painful reality: So-called “conservatives” and “flat world” globalists have bankrupted our nation for their own bag of silver, and in the process are selling off America.Through a combination of the “Fast Track” authority pushed for by Reagan and GHW Bush, sweetheart trade deals involving “most favored nation status” for dictatorships like China, and Clinton pushing us into NAFTA and the WTO (via GATT), we’ve abandoned the principles of tariff-based trade that built American industry and kept us strong for over 200 years.
The old concept was that if there was a dollar’s worth of labor in a pair of shoes made in the USA, and somebody wanted to import shoes from China where there may only be ten cents worth of labor in those shoes, we’d level the playing field for labor by putting a 90-cent import tariff on each pair of shoes. Companies could choose to make their products here or overseas, but the ultimate cost of labor would be the same.
Then came the flat-worlders, led by misguided true believers and promoted by multinational corporations. Do away with those tariffs, they said, because they “restrain trade.” Let everything in, and tax nothing. The result has been an explosion of cheap goods coming into our nation, and the loss of millions of good manufacturing jobs and thousands of manufacturing companies. Entire industry sectors have been wiped out.
These policies have kneecapped the American middle class. Our nation’s largest employer has gone from being the unionized General Motors to the poverty-wages Wal-Mart. Americans have gone from having a net savings rate around 10 percent in the 1970s to a minus .5 percent in 2005 – meaning that they’re going into debt or selling off their assets just to maintain their lifestyle.
At the same time, federal policy has been to do the same thing at a national level. Because our so-called “free trade” policies have left us with an over $700 billion annual trade deficit, other countries are sitting on huge piles of the dollars we gave them to buy their stuff (via Wal-Mart and other “low cost” retailers). But we no longer manufacture anything they want to buy with those dollars.
So instead of buying our manufactured goods, they are doing what we used to do with Third World nations – they are buying us, the USA, chunk by chunk. In particular, they want to buy things in America that will continue to produce profits, and then to take those profits overseas where they’re invested to make other nations strong. The “things” they’re buying are, by and large, corporations, utilities, and natural resources.
Back in the pre-Reagan days, American companies made profits that were distributed among Americans. They used their profits to build more factories, or diversify into other businesses. The profits stayed in America.
Today, foreigners awash with our consumer dollars are on a two-decades-long buying spree. The UK’s BP bought Amoco for $48 billion – now Amoco’s profits go to England. Deutsche Telekom bought VoiceStream Wireless, so their profits go to Germany, which is where most of the profits from Random House, Allied Signal, Chrysler, Doubleday, Cyprus Amax’s US Coal Mining Operations, GTE/Sylvania, and Westinghouse’s Power Generation profits go as well. Ralston Purina’s profits go to Switzerland, along with Gerber’s; TransAmerica’s profits go to The Netherlands, while John Hancock Insurance’s profits go to Canada. Even American Bankers Insurance Group is owned now by Fortis AG in Belgium.
Foreign companies are buying up our water systems, our power generating systems, our mines, and our few remaining factories. All because “flat world” so-called “free trade” policies have turned us from a nation of wealthy producers into a nation of indebted consumers, leaving the world awash in dollars that are most easily used to buy off big chunks of America. As www.economyincrisis.com notes, US Government statistics indicate the following percentages of foreign ownership of American industry:
· Sound recording industries – 97%
· Commodity contracts dealing and brokerage – 79%
· Motion picture and sound recording industries – 75%
· Metal ore mining – 65%
· Motion picture and video industries – 64%
· Wineries and distilleries – 64%
· Database, directory, and other publishers – 63%
· Book publishers – 63%
· Cement, concrete, lime, and gypsum product – 62%
· Engine, turbine and power transmission equipment – 57%
· Rubber product – 53%
· Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing – 53%
· Plastics and rubber products manufacturing – 52%
· Plastics product – 51%
· Other insurance related activities – 51%
· Boiler, tank, and shipping container – 50%
· Glass and glass product – 48%
· Coal mining – 48%
· Sugar and confectionery product – 48%
· Nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying – 47%
· Advertising and related services – 41%
· Pharmaceutical and medicine – 40%
· Clay, refractory, and other nonmetallic mineral products – 40%
· Securities brokerage – 38%
· Other general purpose machinery – 37%
· Audio and video equipment mfg and reproducing magnetic and optical media – 36%
· Support activities for mining – 36%
· Soap, cleaning compound, and toilet preparation – 32%
· Chemical manufacturing – 30%
· Industrial machinery – 30%
· Securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related activities – 30%
· Other food – 29%
· Motor vehicles and parts – 29%
· Machinery manufacturing – 28%
· Other electrical equipment and component – 28%
· Securities and commodity exchanges and other financial investment activities – 27%
· Architectural, engineering, and related services – 26%
· Credit card issuing and other consumer credit – 26%
· Petroleum refineries (including integrated) – 25%
· Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments – 25%
· Petroleum and coal products manufacturing – 25%
· Transportation equipment manufacturing – 25%
· Commercial and service industry machinery – 25%
· Basic chemical – 24%
· Investment banking and securities dealing – 24%
· Semiconductor and other electronic component – 23%
· Paint, coating, and adhesive – 22%
· Printing and related support activities – 21%
· Chemical product and preparation – 20%
· Iron, steel mills, and steel products – 20%
· Agriculture, construction, and mining machinery – 20%
· Publishing industries – 20%
· Medical equipment and supplies – 20%Thus it shouldn’t surprise us that the cons have sold off our ports as well, and will defend it to the bitter end. They truly believe that a “New World Order” with multinational corporations in charge instead of sovereign governments will be the answer to the problem of world instability. And therefore they must do away with quaint things like unions, a healthy middle class, and, ultimately, democracy.
The “security” implications of turning our ports over to the UAE are just the latest nail in what the cons hope will be the coffin of American democracy and the American middle class. Today’s conservatives believe in rule by inherited wealth and an internationalist corporate elite, and things like a politically aroused citizenry and a healthy democracy are pesky distractions.
Everything today is driven by profits for multinationals, supported by the lawmaking power of the WTO. Thus, parts for our missiles are now made in China, a country that last year threatened us with nuclear weapons. Our oil comes from a country that birthed a Wahabist movement that ultimately led to 14 Saudi citizens flying jetliners into the World Trade buildings and the Pentagon. Germans now own the Chrysler auto assembly lines that turned out tanks to use against Germany in WWII. And the price of labor in America is being held down by over ten million illegal workers, a situation that was impossible twenty-five years ago when unions were the first bulwark against dilution of the American labor force.
When Thomas Jefferson wrote of King George III in the Declaration of Independence, “He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitutions and unacknowledged by our laws, giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation…” he just as easily could have been writing of the World Trade Organization, which now has the legal authority to force the United States to overturn laws passed at both local, state, and federal levels with dictates devised by tribunals made up of representatives of multinational corporations. If Dubai loses in the American Congress, their next stop will almost certainly be the WTO.
As Simon Romero and Heather Timmons noted in The New York Times on 24 February 2006, “the international shipping business has evolved in recent years to include many more containers with consumer goods, in addition to old-fashioned bulk commodities, and that has helped lift profit margins to 30 percent, from the single digits. These smartly managed foreign operators now manage about 80 percent of port terminals in the United States.”
And those 30 percent profits from American port operations now going to Great Britain will probably soon go to the United Arab Emirates, a nation with tight interconnections to both the Bush administration and the Bush family.
Ultimately, it’s not about security — it’s about money. In the multinational corporatocracy’s “flat world,” money trumps the national good, community concerns, labor interests, and the environment. NAFTA, CAFTA, and WTO tribunals can – and regularly do – strike down local and national laws. Thomas Paine’s “Rights of Man” are replaced by Antonin Scalia’s “Rights of Corporate Persons.”
Profits even trump the desire for good enough port security to avoid disasters that may lead to war. After all, as Judith Miller wrote in The New York Times on January 30, 1991, quoting a local in Saudi Arabia: “War is good for business.”
Thom Hartmann is a Project Censored Award-winning best-selling author of over a dozen books and the host of a nationally syndicated noon-3pm ET daily progressive talk show syndicated by Air America Radio. www.thomhartmann.com His most recent books are “What Would Jefferson Do?” and Ultimate Sacrifice.