Wednesday, September 28, 2011

From the Bill of Rights Defense Committee: Not without a warrant!

To those on the email lists.
 
I sign lots of stuff that I never acknowledge just because that would be all I would be doing.  And I don't send half the begging emails I receive for worthy causes around the globe.  But this one strikes at the very heart of our freedom of speech and our right to privacy. 
The Ruling Class waits and even works toward the opportunity to shut down the free thinkers.  If a law is unclear or if no law exists, they move in. 
So, in case one of their robo puppets is reading my boring email, here's a royal red middle finger salute to you! 
 
Carl Jarvis
 

Subject:  Not without a warrant!

Date:  Tuesday, September 27, 2011 11:42 AM

Dear supporter,

Did you know that federal law says the government can read your email and
track your movements without getting a warrant from a judge?

That's what a 1986 law, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, says.
Don't you think it's time for a privacy upgrade?

The Bill of Rights Defense Committee is joining the Digital Due Process
coalition and groups across the political spectrum in calling for Congress
to restore online privacy rights.

Our position is simple and logical:  if the government wants to enter your
house or seize your papers, the Constitution says it needs to get a warrant
from a judge.  That same rule should apply to all the email and private
photos and documents you store online.  And before the government turns your
mobile phone into a tracking device, it should go to a judge and get a
warrant.  That's our best protection against government intrusions and our
best way to ensure privacy--and democracy--survive the 21st century.

Sign the "Not Without A Warrant" petition.

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/498/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=8302

And please pass on the message.  Tell Congress to bring the Constitution's
Fourth Amendment into the digital age.

Shahid Buttar Executive Director

Bill of Rights Defense Committee

8 Bridge Street, Suite A, Northampton, MA 01060

www.bordc.org

info@bordc.org

Telephone:  413-582-0110

    Fax:  413-582-0116

Subscribe

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/498/p/salsa/web/common/public/signup'signup_page_KEY=3986

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Six ways the rich are waging class war against the american people

 from an email news line  called native news:  
 
6 Ways the Rich Are Waging a Class War Against the American People | | AlterNet

 

http://www.alternet.org/story/152512/6_ways_the_rich_are_waging_a_class_war_against_the_american_people?page=entire

6 Ways the Rich Are Waging a Class War Against the American People

Denying the very existence of an entire class of citizens? That's waging some very real warfare against them.

September 25, 2011  |  

 

 

 

violence in this country for generations, so what, exactly, does "class warfare" really mean? Is it just an empty political catch-phrase?

The American Right has decided that returning the tax rate paid by the wealthiest Americans from what it was during the Bush years (which, incidentally, featured the slowest job growth under any president in our history, at 0.45 percent per year) to what they forked over during the Clinton years (when job growth happened to average 1.6 percent per year) is the epitome of class warfare. Sure, it would leave top earners with a tax rate 10 percentage points below what they were paying after Ronald Reagan's tax cuts, but that's the conservative definition of "eating the rich" these days.

I recently offered a less Orwellian definition, arguing that real class warfare is when those who have already achieved a good deal of prosperity pull the ladder up behind them by attacking the very things that once allowed working people to move up and join the ranks of the middle class.

But there's another way of looking at "class war": habitually vilifying the unfortunate; claiming that their plight is a manifestation of some personal flaw or cultural deficiency. Conservatives wage this form of class warfare virtually every day, consigning millions of people who are down on their luck to some subhuman underclass.

The belief that there exists a large pool of "undeserving poor" who suck the lifeblood out of the rest of society lies at the heart of the Right's demonstrably false "culture of poverty" narrative. It's a narrative that runs through Ayn Rand's works. It comes to us in bizarre spin that holds up the rich as "wealth producers" and "job creators."

And it affects our public policies. In his classic book, Why Americans Hate Welfare, Martin Gilens found a striking disconnect: significant majorities of Americans told pollsters that they wanted public spending to fight poverty to be increased at the same time that similar majorities said they were opposed to welfare. Gilens studied a number of different opinion polls and concluded that the disconnect was driven by a widespread belief that "most welfare recipients don't really need it," and by racial animus – "perceptions that welfare recipients are undeserving and blacks are lazy."

That narrative ignores two simple and indisputable truths. First, contrary to popular belief, we don't all start out with the same opportunities. The reality is that in the U.S. today, the best predictor of a newborn baby's economic future is how much money his or her parents make.

It also ignores the fact that living in an individualistic, capitalist society carries inherent risk. You can do everything right – study hard, work diligently, keep your nose clean – but if you fall victim to a random workplace accident, you can nevertheless end up being disabled in the blink of an eye and find yourself in need of public assistance. You can end up bankrupt under a pile of healthcare bills or you could lose your job if you're forced to take care of an ailing parent. Children – innocents who aren't even old enough to work for themselves – are among the largest groups receiving various forms of public assistance.

Of course, there are always people who game the system, but they represent a tiny minority of recipients; a Massachusetts study found that fully 93 percent of all cases of "welfare fraud" were committed not by the "undeserving poor," but by vendors – hospitals, pharmacies, nursing homes, etc.

Smearing those who face real structural barriers to achievement or who will inevitably face real and random misfortunes in a "dynamic," capitalist society – that's some real class warfare. Here are six excellent examples of the form.

1. Registering the Poor to Vote is 'UnAmerican'

Matthew Vadum is a very special wingnut. His current pre-occupation is attacking Zombie ACORN -- an organization that sane people know to have been killed off last year by James O'Keef's selectively-edited videos but which Vadum insists is alive and well and looking to undermine America by organizing poor communities.

Vadum recently wrote a very special column in The American Thinker, in which he railed against efforts to get poor people registered to vote. What made the column noteworthy is that Vadum skipped the usual conservative blather about "voter fraud" – a problem that's virtually nonexistent – and offered a refreshingly honest take on the subject. The problem, according to Vadum, is that "the poor can be counted on to vote themselves more benefits by electing redistributionist politicians. Welfare recipients are particularly open to demagoguery and bribery."

Registering them to vote is like handing out burglary tools to criminals. It is profoundly antisocial and un-American to empower the nonproductive segments of the population to destroy the country -- which is precisely why Barack Obama zealously supports registering welfare recipients to vote.

Rarely has so much wrongness been packed into so few words. Less than half of those receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) – the most significant anti-poverty program remaining in our welfare system after the Clinton-era "reforms" – are unemployed. About a quarter work jobs that earn poverty wages, and the rest aren't in the workforce because they're disabled, caring for a relative or they're children. In fact, almost half (48.1 percent) of all TANF families receive benefits only for the kids, not the adults. It's true that children are, in strictly economic terms, "nonproductive," but they will be productive someday, and more so if they receive adequate nutrition, housing, health care and the like.

The other problem with this argument is the idea that the poor vote for "redistributionist politicians." First, because all politicians are "redistributionist" – it's what government does – and second, because, as Martin Gilens discovered, while Americans hate the word "welfare," large majorities – 71 percent of Americans; not just the poor – believe that spending on anti-poverty programs should be increased (as long as you don't call it welfare).

Contrary to Vadum's beliefs, there is only a small number of true reactionaries who desire to live in a society that doesn't care for the poor and disabled, and it is in fact they who are "profoundly antisocial."

2. Unemployment Benefits Have Created a 'Nation of Slackers'

Media Matters says, "It's taken three years, but America has finally graduated from being 'a nation of whiners' in 2008 to 'a nation of slackers' in 2011 — at least, that's what Rep. Steve King (R-IA) believes we've accomplished." King, a right-winger's right-winger, took to the floor of the House to deliver this word-salad:

The former speaker of the House, Speaker Pelosi, has consistently said that unemployment checks are one of those reliable and immediate forms of economy recovery, that you get a lot of bang for your buck when you pay people not to work, and they will go out and spend that money immediately, therefore we should pass out unemployment checks and stimulate the economy. That statement is ridiculous where I come from, Mr. Speaker. To pay people not to work, and somehow in that formula it stimulates the economy.…

The 80 million Americans that are of working age but are simply not in the workforce need to be put to work. We can't have a nation of slackers... We've gotta get this country back to work and get those people out of the slacker rolls and onto the employed rolls.

Here, too, we have a shining gem of wrongness. And a common one – the belief that unemployment benefits discourage people from working is widespread on the Right.

Here's a simple reality-check: there are no jobs! According to the Economic Policy Institute, "there are 6.9 million fewer jobs today than there were in December 2007." Of course, the working-age population has grown by over 4 million in that same time. Do the math. As Mike Thornton noted on AlterNet, when you add people who are working a part-time gig but want a full-time job to the unemployed, you get 25.4 million workers vying for 3.2 million full-time job openings, "or 8 unemployed or underemployed workers per job."

This is more of the same: King's painting a picture of the undeserving poor living the good life on the tab of hard-working Americans. So it's worth noting that among developed countries, the US offers some of the stingiest unemployment benefits around – only two countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) replaced a smaller share of a worker's earnings than the U.S. in 2004, and only the Czech Republic offered unemployment coverage for a shorter time.

In 2008, those unemployed Americans who qualified for benefits got $293 per week, or about 35 percent of their lost income, and that's why conservative spin that the jobless are living it up on their unemployment checks instead of trying to find work is so ludicrous. (There is, however, some evidence that this is actually true in places like Scandinavia, where people who lose their jobs still take in 70 percent or more of their income, and in some cases can do so for an unlimited amount of time.)

King drives his point home using a classic tactic: take big numbers out of context to distort reality. There are in fact 85 million "Americans that are of working age but are simply not in the workforce," and he would have you believe they're all "slackers." But that figure includes stay-at-home spouses, people who live off of investment income rather than a job, entrepenuers, and of course the disabled and ill – people who can't work. Back in January 2001, when the unemployment rate was just 4.2 percent, there were 69 million working-age adults who weren't in the labor force. And the working-age population has grown by about 22 million since then.

And, of course, Nancy Pelosi was right that unemployment benefits have a huge amount of stimulus bang-for-the-buck -- King is not only a brazen class warrior, he's also economically illiterate.

3. You Can't Really Be Poor if You Have a Color TV!

Is it not the height of class war to make a conscious effort to erase the poor from the public's view? That has been a longterm project on the Right, and one of the classic, if shopworn arguments goes like this: back in the 1930s (or 1950s, or 1970s, depending on the speaker), most poor people didn't own color TVs, but now 97 percent of them do! So the poor really should stop bitching – they're living the high life!

Now, as of this writing, Craigslist offers the following items for free in the San Francisco Bay area: several TVs, multiple armchairs, a set of swivel bar stools, a stainless steel refrigerator, a Nordictrak elliptical trainer, a bunch of sofas and bed-sets – including a "like new" leather couch – a countertop grill, a "beautiful pine armoir" and some "Hydro Massage Soaking Tub and Sinks." Those are just the listings posted in one morning. We create a lot of goods and people want the shiniest, newest things, so there are a ton of obsolete but still functional items like TVs and washer-dryers out there that one can get for nothing or next to nothing.

Perhaps my favorite example of the genre is the claim, accurate but divorced from context, that our poor have it good because they don't necessarily live in shoe-boxes. As the Wall Street Journal was happy to point out, "The average living space for poor American households is 1,200 square feet. In Europe, the average space for all households, not just the poor, is 1,000 square feet." Case closed! American-style capitalism for the win!

Well, not really. This is a simple matter of population density: in the EU-15, there are 120 people per square kilometer; in the United States, we only have 29 people per kilometer. And that average obviously includes people living in sparsely populated rural expanses. I live in a tightly packed U.S. city, and given that most middle-class people here can't even dream of affording 1,200 square feet, I don't think our poor folks can either.

4. Food-Stamps: 'A Fossil That Repeats All the Errors of the War on Poverty'

Sometimes what passes for an "argument" is just stating a simple reality in an ominous tone. Consider this string of English words, offered by the Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector:

"Some people like to camouflage this by calling it a nutrition program, but it's really not different from cash welfare," said Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, whose views have a following among conservatives on Capitol Hill. "Food stamps is quasi money."

There are strict limits on what can be purchased with food stamps, which isn't true of money, but, yes, they do contribute to a household's financial health in the same way that cash does. That doesn't negate the fact that it is, indeed, a nutrition program. But Rector wasn't done – it gets better:

Arguing that aid discourages work and marriage, Mr. Rector said food stamps should contain work requirements as strict as those placed on cash assistance. "The food stamp program is a fossil that repeats all the errors of the war on poverty," he said.

Perhaps this works in the same magical way that gay marriage "discourages marriage" – I don't know. But what is clear is that, in the words of one anti-hunger activist, "Without food stamps, we'd have starvation." According to the USDA, "14.5 percent of households were food insecure at least some time during" the past year, and "5.4 percent of households experienced food insecurity in the more severe range, described as very low food security." It's also the case that about a third of those who are eligible to receive nutritional assistance don't, in part because of the stigma that people like Robert Rector has worked so hard to encourage.

These are real people experiencing very real problems making ends meet, yet Rector and his ilk would make it more difficult to get assistance because they've embraced the fact-free idea that the poor are plagued with a "culture of dependency." That's some serious class warfare.

5. 'The Main Causes of Child Poverty Are Low Levels of Parental Work and the Absence of Fathers.'

On Wednesday, the New York Yankees clinched the American League East title. On Thursday, it rained in New York. There is a correlation here, but only a fool would suggest that the Yanks' victory caused it to rain the following day.

Yet, the Heritage Foundation (it happens to be Robert Rector again) sees a lot of poor, single-parent households, and would have you believe that "the main causes of child poverty are low levels of parental work and the absence of fathers."

This gets the causal relationship wrong. The number of single-parent households exploded between the 1970s and the 1990s – more than doubling -- yet the poverty rate remained relatively constant. In fact, before the crash of 2008, the poverty rate was lower than it had been in the 1970s. So, as the rate of single-parent households skyrocketed, poverty declined a little bit. Saying single-parent homes create poverty is therefore like claiming that the Yankees victory caused the sun to shine the next day.

As I noted recently, this is an essential piece of the "culture of poverty" narrative, and it is nonsense. Jean Hardisty, the author of Marriage as a Cure for Poverty: A Bogus Formula for Women, cited a number of studies showing that poor women have the same dreams as everyone else: they "often aspire to a romantic notion of marriage and family that features a white picket fence in the suburbs." But low economic status leads to fewer marriages, not the other way around.

In 1998, the Fragile Families Study looked at 3,700 low-income unmarried couples in 20 U.S. cities. The authors found that 90 percent of the couples living together wanted to tie the knot, but only 15 percent had actually done so by the end of the one-year study period. And here's the key finding: for every dollar that a man's hourly wages increased, the odds that he'd get hitched by the end of the year rose by 5 percent. Men earning more than $25,000 during the year had twice the marriage rates of those making less than $25,000.

Writing up the findings for the Nation, Sharon Lerner noted that poverty itself "seems to make people feel less entitled to marry." As one father in the survey put it, marriage means "not living from check to check."

6. Taxing Working People Less Than the Rich Is 'Perverse'

That half of Americans "pay no taxes" is a simple lie that will never die, regardless of how frequently it is debunked. It's pure class-war, feeding into the narrative of the parasitic poor feeding off the blood of the industrious. And it is totally divorced from reality – in the real world, the working poor and the wealthy have virtually the same tax rates.

Yet the belief that only a minority pay taxes is ubiquitous among conservatives. Senator Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said last month, "I don't want to tax the truly poor, those who would help themselves if they could, but you can't tell me that 51 percent of all households are the truly poor." And here's where the lie was created: "No matter what these Democrats tell you," he said, "the wealthy and middle class are already shouldering around 100 percent of the nation's tax burden and 51 percent pay absolutely nothing in income taxes."

Note the sleight-of-hand. Federal income taxes make up only 18 percent of the taxes collected in this country. It also happens to be among the more progressive taxes, and with median wages stagnating for years, many people today don't earn enough to have to pay them.

Hatch takes this fact, which again pertains to less than a fifth of the country's total tax burden, and transforms it into "the wealthy and middle class are already shouldering around 100 percent of the nation's tax burden" – completely and totally untrue. If we looked only at the regressive payroll tax, and dishonestly pretended that no other taxes exist, we could make a similarly twisted argument that the wealthy pay virtually nothing in taxes – billionaire investor Warren Buffett doesn't pay a penny in payroll taxes.

When you include all taxes – not just those that erase working people's contributions – you see that we really have something close to a flat tax. That's the conclusion of a 2007 study by Boston University economists Laurence J. Kotlikoff and David Rapson, who found that when you add it all up — state and local taxes, federal taxes and excise fees – "The average marginal tax rate on incomes between $20,000 and $500,000 is 40.3%, the median tax rate is 41.8%, and the standard deviation of all of those rates is 5.3 percentage points. Basically, most of us pay about 40%, plus or minus 5.3 percentage points."

Class War

All of these narratives are designed to protect a status quo that's serving the interests of a rarified elite, but is obviously not working well for the working majority in this country. All are intended to distract from the structural causes of poverty and inequality, or to ignore the fact that some people will always experience genuine misfortune – the myriad surprises in life that can happen to anyone – because they'd choose low taxes over caring for them.

But it's also a narrative that denies the very existence of class differences in this country. As noted earlier, the United States is anything but a true meritocracy. What millions of white working-class Americans understand – intuitively, even if they can't articulate it – is that class still matters. And by erasing the very idea of class, of structural barriers to getting ahead in this economy, they are left with a nagging sense of grievance against those they perceive to be bringing them down: foreign powers, immigrants, people of color and liberals, with their "job-killing" regulations and the like.

Ultimately, to deny the very existence of an entire class of citizens is to wage some very real warfare against them.


 

Friday, September 23, 2011

Governor Gregoire wants special budget session in November


Desperation breeds anger.  Who do you suppose angry, unemployed men and
women will strike out against?  One thing for certain, we blind folks are
very, very vulnerable.  Can you hear it now?  "Why should we support
training for the blind when so many able bodied people are looking for a
job?"
"Why should my taxes go to house some worn out old blind people when they
have families to care for them?"
"Spending our meager resources on educating blind children is laughable.
Just who's going to hire them?"
And so it will go for all vulnerable populations.
I can't help but be frustrated when I see our organizations still feuding
among ourselves and sitting by doing little to bring our pending crisis to
the table.  This is a world-wide depression looking us in the face.  Perhaps
we can't do much, but we need to be proactive.  We need to talk about our
choices.  Even as we sit by, hoping against hope that the blind will slide
by, the Super Committee may be cutting us off at the knees.  Where are our
eyes and ears?  What can we do?

Curious Carl 

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: joe harcz Comcast
  To: Blind Democracy Discussion List
  Sent: Friday, September 23, 2011 4:33 AM
  Subject: Re: Governor Gregoire wants special budget session in November


  Here's the deal Dear Miriam...Not matter what you or I might wish
for...The
  economic world is getting very desperate.

  I see it all around me and in nearby Flint with all the poverty and
  unemployment and indeed lawlessness.

  Roger might weigh in here on the need for a Revolutionary vangard and all
  the Marxist theories for such revolutionary or reactionary times. One
might
  flip a coin to find the result of this. I suspect the empire builders have
  rigged that coin too.

  I don't know anymore, but again things are very desperate for increasing
  segments of the population.

_______________________________________________
Blind-Dem

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind


Some aspects of human nature are very similar to those of Cat Nature.  Take Winston the Wonder Cat for example.  About a year ago Cathy noticed that Winston's left eye did not look normal.  By the time Doctor Nice Man--that's what we call the Vet in an effort to brainwash Winston, by the time he got a good look it was definitely a case of Glaucoma.  The left eye was gone and it was questionable how much Winston could see with the right eye.  But nonetheless we began putting drops in his eyes, if for no other reason than to keep the pressure down and minimize any pain. 
Winston did not seem affected for several months.  The drops appeared to work and he went about his job as the main mouse trapper in the garage.  Out here in the Deep Dark Forest we have an abundance of field mice.  These wise little fellows do not care for open fields when there is a warm protected garage around. 
And for some reason they really like digging into the insulation in the truck's engine.  So Winston has a very important job as a member of the Jarvis household.  His other two outstanding features are his ability to give you, "that look", when you call him.  First the look, then the slow strut off in any direction other than yours, and of course he has a great survival instinct, seeking Cathy's lap anytime she makes one.  He can stay on her lap for hours, if we'd let him.  Me?  About five minutes and he's had it.  But he realized early on that it was Cathy's heart he'd need to win to become a full member in the home.  So now she's hooked. 
But back to the Glaucoma.  Yesterday we declared Winston officially blind.  He meowed at the garage door, wanting in, and when Cathy opened it he promptly walked into her leg.  He looked a bit startled, but then turned and walked into the door. 
"Winston's blind", Cathy called out to me.  Sure enough, as we watched him pick his way across the mud room, the kitchen and into the living room, he would encounter objects he had always walked around, hitting them square on, jumping back, shaking his head and looking as if he would shinny up our leg for protection. 
"Well," I said, "There goes our mouse insurance". 
"Look again Bucko," Cathy advised, and sure enough, there on the garage mat was what was left of a field mouse.  But Winston is doing what so many of our clients do when they first lose their vision.  He is still trying to function as a seeing cat.  I have begun counseling him, but it's too early to tell if my people skills can transfer to cats.  Frankly I don't hold out much hope. 
 
Curious Carl
 

Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind


We considered getting Winston the Wonder Cat a dog guide, but no self respecting dog would volunteer.  "So we trained several seeing eye mice.  They worked out pretty well, but kept disappearing.  We did find a tail or two around the house, but no mice. 
Presently I am working on a Kitty whistle that Winston can blow and use the sound to give him direction. 
 
Curious Carl
----- Or

A word from God

subject: Re: A word from God
 
Once again a major speech was not reported by the Mass Media. 
According to internal governmental memos and emails, there is a plan to discredit God by making him out to be an old bumbling fool, mumbling strange words in Olde English and tossing lightning bolts at golfers. 
"If we can turn the PGA and the LPGA against God, we'll have a large portion of the American public", said George Bush II.  "Everybody I know plays a round...golf, I mean." 
At a secret Swiss Castle, a meeting of the heads of the world's ten largest Mega Corporations declared that God has outlived His usefulness.  "We just don't have the time any longer to humor Him", said Hiram VonGoldiggar, CEO of the world's largest conglomeration, XZQ, formerly Blackhole Incorporated. 
"we'll make him Pope.  That will guarantee that nobody will listen to Him." 
 
Curious Carl
 

Winston Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind

Subject: Re: [Wcb-l] Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind

Debby,
That reminds me.  There is an organization named, ACE.  Association of Cat Escorts. 
Years ago in Ballard, Land of All that is New and Creative, a fellow made little houses for cats.  Like dog houses.  All fancy sorts of little houses that he stacked around his business.  The big sign over the door announced, "The Cat House". 
Another fellow in Seattle was just as creative.  He had a Venetian blind shop and had a fleet of trucks dashing about the city installing and servicing these Venetian blinds.  On the back of his trucks was a sign that read, "Caution, this truck driven by a blind man". 
Another favorite of mine was the church reader board out near Green Lake which read, "To you who are blind to the Truth Everlasting, come join us and we will give you a Seeing Eye God". 
 
Carl Jarvis
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2011 1:13 AM
Subject: Re: [Wcb-l] Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind

Thanks for the laugh, I could use it today.    Peace,    Debby PS
have you tried a  guide cat?  There are several training schools
for those--Cat Guides for the Blind, Sight first for Blind Cats,
the Cat Association for the Blind.  Lol.

Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind

Subject: Re: [acb-l] Winston the Wonder Cat now officially blind

Winston the Wonder Cat is the same sassy, rolly polie, independent, snuggly ball of black fuzz that he was prior to blindness.  Just as I am.  Well, I'm not fuzzy black.  But the point is that we are not shaped by our eyesight. 
Winston the Wonder Cat roams the house, hops up on the counter in the mud room where we keep his food so the dogs don't gulp it down, and continues to catch mice in the garage.  The only way we can tell that he is either totally or nearly totally blind is that Cathy can now walk up to him with his eye drops and he doesn't try to hide.  He still protests with a very sad cry, but he never sees it coming. 
Our neighbor's had a blind pony for many years.  This clever little fellow could always find a way out of the pasture and I would find him coming up our road, munching grass as he wandered.  He always knew just where he was.  In fact he followed me around like an oversized puppy dog. 
 
Curious Carl
 

Georgia Board of Pardons Rejects Clemency for TroyDavis

Subject: Re: News Alert: Georgia Board of Pardons Rejects Clemency for TroyDavis

A sad day indeed. 
This Legal Murder scheduled for tomorrow is exactly why I am absolutely opposed to the death sentence. 
It is my belief that were not carrying out justice through the legal murder of another person, but instead, we are simply seeking revenge.  But worse than that, legal murder is not distributed equally in our Land of the Free and the Rich White. 
Let's say that I murder Granny Bell for her Welfare check.  Let's go one step further and say that I am a Person of Color and Granny is White.  The public is outraged, and rightly so.  What they shout is, "Justice!", but what they want is revenge.  And so a jury of my peers...mostly white men and women...find me guilty and recommend the death penalty. 
Now let's say that I am a White Man of great means.  I have been placed in a position of authority and trust.  Rather than grabbing the purse of a single defenseless old woman, I lie to the people whose trust I hold, and I use my authority to bring about illegal wars which kills thousands of men, women and children.  I further lie to the people who trust me, by telling them that we must hold people in prisons and torture them without the benefit of legal counsel, because they are a threat to our Freedom. 
I could go on but my question is, what was the outcome of my trial? 
Oh, you say there was no trial?  But where was the cry of outraged citizens, calling for revenge? 
Think about this when the next poor dumb slob is dragged from his cell and strapped down in the name of Justice. 
Are we really a Nation of Laws?  Are we really carrying out Justice?  Is Justice really blind, or is she peeking from behind those sleep shades? 
I understand that Justice now lives on a high hill behind a security gate, bought and paid for by the "gifts" of money showered upon her by the Empire Builders. 
 
Curious Carl
 

"Vengence is mine", thus saieth the citizens of Georgia

Subject: "Vengence is mine", thus saieth the citizens of Georgia

Troy Davis must die to bring closure to the family of police officer Mark MacPhail, . 
So says the Georgia Board of Pardons in denying a stay of execution. 
It appears that closure is far more important than guilt or innocence.  And it appears that Justice turns her blind eyes to any talk of irregularities in the trial, such as witness tampering. 
So, once Troy Davis has been legally murdered, how is that going to bring closure?  Well, Mark MacPhail's mother will feel fine.  She has convinced herself that Troy Davis is the murderer of her son.  So to her, a death for a death is justice.  And so, at 7:00 PM., EST, she will suddenly be at peace.  Even if the wrong man is legally murdered, she will have her pint of blood. 
So where does that leave all of the families and friends of the victims of 9 11?  Are they all at peace now that thousands of lives have been taken in retribution for the murders of their loved ones?  Strange, I can't seem to feel peace in the air. 
And if closure really comes from the legal murder of those responsible for killing, why are we not screaming for the blood of those who lied to us and dragged us into illegal wars that have not only taken innocent lives throughout the Middle East, but cost hundreds of American lives? 
Why does closure work in the case of one man's legal murder, but not in the case of a large number of people responsible for mass murder? 
Will we ever learn that murder does not solve our problems?  Wars do not bring peace. 
 
Curious Carl

*************
Too long have the workers of the world waited for some Moses to lead them out of bondage. I would not lead you out if I could; for if you could be led out, you could be led back again. I would have you make up your minds there is nothing that you cannot do for yourselves. --Eugene Victor Debs
1855-1926
 
"I am opposing a social order in which it is possible for one man who does absolutely nothing that is useful to amass a fortune of hundreds of millions of dollars, while millions of men and women who work all the days of their lives secure barely enough for a wretched existence."
Eugene Victor Debs 
 
 

*************
Too long have the workers of the world waited for some Moses to lead them out of bondage. I would not lead you out if I could; for if you could be led out, you could be led back again. I would have you make up your minds there is nothing that you cannot do for yourselves. --Eugene Victor Debs
1855-1926

fed-up Americans are beginning to stir


It doesn't matter which nation you pick, the Ruling Class never learns.  The signs of unrest and resentment are beginning to bubble up in the United States of America, and the Ruling Class just keeps on its course of greedy plunder.  There most certainly are hard times ahead for the 98% of Americans, but the Ruling Classes days are numbered. 
 
Curious Carl
----- Original Message -----
From: S. Kashdan
Sent: Wednesday, September 21, 2011 7:17 AM
Subject: (right now!),fed-up Americans are sitting in a soaked park on granite slabs in themidst of towering skyscrapers,surrounded by police (who have at times become violent),demonstrating their dissent against the outrages of Wall Street.

(right now!), fed-up Americans are sitting in a soaked park on granite slabs
in the midst of towering skyscrapers, surrounded by police (who have at
times become violent), demonstrating their dissent against the outrages of
Wall Street.

http://www.truth-out.org/wall-street-occupation-live-stream/1316548371

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America, the Land of the Deceived


Can it really be happening?  Do we actually hear that taboo word, "Class", in conjunction with our beloved America, Land of the Deceived?  
Of course we have said for many years, Working Class, Middle Class, and Upper Class.  But we never actually believed that these were separate and distinct Classes.  Not like the Cast System in India.  Why in America folks could move freely from one class to another.  But of course we were fooling ourselves.  Few moved from working or middle class upward to the Upper Class.  In recent times the opposite has been true, people dropping down the ladder from one class to the next and on into the newly emerging Poverty Class.  And if you thought it was hard to move from Middle Class to Upper Class, leaving the Poverty Class is fast becoming impossible. 
It is, in fact, this new expanding Poverty Class that is sounding the wake up call to the fact that we do now, and always have had distinct classes. 
In the past we could do very little about our class structure because it is difficult to impact something that is not recognized as real. 
But it's beginning to look as if the times they are a changing. 
 
Curious Carl
 

execution

Subject: execution

The unspoken law is that when a cop is killed someone must die. 
 
Curious Carl
 

Georgia killed Troy Davis

Subject: Re: Georgia killed Troy Davis

Tonight Americans will go to bed feeling so much safer knowing that Troy Davis has been legally murdered by the good citizens of the state of Georgia. 
Thank you Georgians for caring enough for all Americans.  Putting Troy Davis down like a mad dog will let the world know that we are a nation of Law and Order.  Yes, for the first time in years I can go to bed without double locking my doors.  Troy Davis is dead. 
And as I kneel at my bedside wondering if I should pray to a God I'm not certain exists, I think of that dear old mother whose son was taken from her.  Now she can sleep peacefully, too.  Someone, Troy Davis by name, had to die to bring closure to her son's murder. 
In this great land of law and order, justice will prevail.  Troy Davis was found guilty by a panel of his peers.  So guilty he is. 
We do not need to question how they arrived at their decision.  If they were lied to by witnesses pressured by police who wanted...needed...to catch the brutal murderer. 
 We need only to know that our system of justice will always be there for us, looking over us through our cell phones and computers and long distance surveillance, as well as through trusted eye witnesses and honest cops. 
Come to think of it, I'd better double lock those doors after all. 
Peace be to you Troy Davis.  Of all the people involved in your legal murder, you alone will be at rest. 
 
Curious Carl
 

Sunday, September 18, 2011

good times...if you're rich

Once again we are barraged with deliberate lies from morally bankrupt individuals.  No names are ever attached.  No one takes responsibility.  But once out and circulating, these lies which have been designed to play on people's fears, sound plausible.   
It is designed to shift greedy, unfeeling behavior from the Ruling Class to the politicians. 
It's mind boggling.  The Ruling Class owns the politician, yet uses him as a scapegoat.  The Ruling Class own the mass media, yet declares it to be, The Liberal Press. 
The Ruling class owns the government, yet they paint it as incompetent and even worse. 
And we go willy nilly along just lapping it all up.  We never seem to get the picture.  The Ruling Class is doing just fine.  They've never had a recession.  They have never had a recession.  I said it twice so maybe someone will get the idea.  We're being snookered, hood winked.  The Ruling Class has made no sacrifices.  None.  Doesn't that suggest just a wee little bit that they do have the best government that money can buy? 
 
Curious Carl
 

Scott Walker and the GOP Reveal Depth of Their Voter-Exclusion Plan

Subject: Re: Scott Walker and the GOP Reveal Depth of Their Voter-Exclusion Plan

This is like a prize fight turned Gang Bang. 
Obama is taking one body punch after another while the referee(Supreme Court) chats in the corner with the Koch brothers. 
Curious Carl
----- Original Message -----
From: S. Kashdan
Sent: Friday, September 16, 2011 10:04 PM
Subject: Scott Walker and the GOP Reveal Depth of Their Voter-Exclusion Plan

Scott Walker and the GOP Reveal Depth of Their Voter-Exclusion Plan



By Roger Bybee



In These Times, Posted on September 15, 2011



http://www.alternet.org/module/printversion/152405



(9 links at the URL above)



A new Department of Transportation memo reveals how thoroughly Wisconsin
Republicans intend to make the newly imposed voter ID process--fiercely
opposed by labor--as onerous and expensive as possible for the low-income
people seeking the IDs.  Wisconsin's fundamental pillars of democracy have
been under sustained pounding ever since Gov. Scott Walker, with a
right-wing playbook from the American Legislative Exchange Council tucked
under his arm and cash from the billionaire Koch brothers bulging out of his
suit coat, was sworn into office back in January.  Within five weeks, Walker
had dropped what he privately called "the bomb" on public employees by
unleashing legislation known as Act 10, which makes their unions impossible
to operate and sustain.  The law was approved on a 4 to 3 vote by the
Supreme Court...
 

sound bites

 
This government, Of the Wealthy, By the Wealthy and For the Wealthy, is doing a grand job for the people.  We just don't happen to be "the people". 
How can the Working/Middle Class have become so confused that we can't figure that one out?  One major problem is that we have been conditioned for years to think in sound bites.  Everything is in the here and now.  We have no history.  What we have is a distorted collection of Fairy Tales. 
Once again I will beat the drum for the one very basic history book that focuses on Americans, working men and women, and that book is Howard Zinn's, A People's History of the United States. 
Yes, there are lots of other books that are far more accurate than those Mother Goose Tales we peddle to our children, but Zinn's account gives the big overview and serves as a base from which we can weigh other accounts of our history. 
 
Curious Carl
 

Polls

 
My problem with polls is that they are usually testing what people think rather than why.  As a result they are worthless. 
 
Here is part of a recent Jarvis Poll: 
 
Do you feel that America is in financial crisis? 
yes(X)
no--
 
If yes, do you feel that it is because the Ruling Class has spent years robbing the Working Class of their labor and destroying the Middle Class? 
 
Yes(x)
No--
-
 
Which Political Party do you feel better serves the Ruling Class? 
Democrats --
Republicans(X)
 
If you could be a member of the Ruling Class would you share your ill gotten gains with the Working Class? 
yes--
No(Not only no, but Hell no!) 
 
Can you name the last liberal president? 
 
answer: Bolivier
 
Curious Carl
 

profiteering from 911 tragedy

One Part Hero, Ten Parts Crook. 
This man and his crooked "Wanna Be Heroes" should be locked away and forgotten. 
After working for years with a very vulnerable population, the Elder Blind, I have lost any compassion for the dirty, slimy, predators who crowd in to take advantage of people's suffering or misfortune.  9 11, Think of it!  The most horrible mass murder in our lifetime and even as we grieve, foul little scum are scurrying about clutching and grabbing at whatever they can get their claws on. 
Of course after venting, I suddenly realize that they are no different from the Big "Can't Fail" Boys.  Only the scope of the raping and plundering separate them. 
 
Curious Carl
 
Subject: profiteering from 911 tragedy

Onetime 9/11 hero gets prison in NYC bribe case

 

By JENNIFER PELTZ

 

NEW YORK

 

A former government official hailed for helping two people escape the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 was sentenced Friday to at least a year in prison.

It's a Long Way from Bunker Hill By Michael Moore

Subject: It's a Long Way from Bunker Hill By Michael Moore
 
Michael Moore is an Academy-Award winning filmmaker and best-selling author

September 16th, 2011 6:17 PM
It's a Long Way from Bunker Hill
 
 

By Michael Moore

Last night, on the 3rd anniversary of the start of the Wall Street Heist of
2008, I spoke at Bunker Hill Community College in the Charlestown section of
Boston. It is not, to say the least, a wealthy neighborhood. It is
roughscrabble and working class, a place where there are few magic doors
that open to the Promised Land. (If you saw Ben Affleck's movie, "The Town,"
or the exceptional Broadway play this year, "Good People," then you have an
idea of what the area is like.)

The college is, of course, named after one of the first battles of the
American Revolution. And Charlestown looks like it could use a new
Revolution these days. They, like so many millions in so many towns, have
been sealed into a lockout of the American Dream. It is sad and scary to
wander through it.

As I waited backstage for the college administrator to introduce me, he
launched into something I, in all my years of speaking at hundreds of
American colleges, have never witnessed. He began begging the crowd for
money. Money for their student body's "Emergency Fund." The student body
consists of many who are single parents and live below the poverty line. He
didn't ask for tuition money or money for books. He begged the crowd for gas
money. Babysitting money. Money to fix a car that's broken down, or for
electricity that's been turned off. He listed all the things that cause a
student to miss a class -- or drop out. Students (79% of them) who work
near-minimum wage jobs AND try to be full time students at the same time.
Community college is the only escape hatch they have, and even that is a
crap shoot in this 21st century kleptocracy we live in.

He then told the crowd that he would hand out some envelopes and he asked
them to put whatever they could in them.

Welcome to America! Where schools are turned into beggars as the rich on the
other side of town post record profits and bonuses and the top corporations
get away with paying no tax at all. I took the stage and began a 20 minute
howl rejecting the America I just witnessed. A country that puts the
education of its young dead last. DEAD LAST. A country that has purposefully
abandoned the human right to an education in favor of sending millions of
ignorant, uneducated, lost young people out into this world. This is no
accident. Those in power cannot stay in power UNLESS the population they
rule over are stupid and ignorant. To be smart is dangerous -- and they know
that. If the ignorant were to know anything about civics (no longer taught
in most schools), that could be nothing short of explosive. Because, if you
are taught how to have a say, how to fight city hall, how to run for office
and WIN -- well, look out, 'cause you will then have democratic change. The
people who would make up a smart, educated majority would then start calling
the shots. And we certainly don't want that because you know what those
people from south Boston, from Toledo, from Pittsburgh, from Raleigh, from
Flint are going to do? They're going to stop the wars. They're going to
spend the money on their kids' schools, on their parents' health care, on
laying down some railroad tracks so they can get from Chicago to Milwaukee
in a half hour. That and dozens of other things that benefit the many, not
the few.

So last night, I just couldn't take it, folks. I turned away from this
Dickensian "alms for the poor" scene and screamed "Enough!" I asked how many
in the audience had come from the "other" sections of Boston to be here
tonight. About half the crowd raised its hand. I then asked them to please
put as much as they could afford into those envelopes and I would match it,
dollar for dollar. By the end of the night I think we raised about ten grand
for the Bunker Hill Community College Student Emergency fund (and with my
match, it became a total of $20,000).

And then I asked all who were in the arena to make a pledge with me to
reject this vision of America that has been thrust upon us. Reject it, fight
it, fix it -- and to fix it, it will require a rumble. But hey, I was in
south Boston, and if there's anyone who knows how to rumble ...! What I
asked for was a nonviolent rumble of citizen participation.

The crowd spontaneously got up and clapped and shouted. I asked them if they
would raise a ruckus in the months to come. The crowd shouted yes. And I
believe they will. Here comes trouble? Ha! The kleptocracy had better brace
themselves. It won't be long before they wish that had been just a cute
title on an overpriced book.

(Speaking of ruckus, tomorrow on Wall Street, many brave souls have declared
their intention to occupy it with a tent city and turn it into an American
Tahir Square. They will be crushed within minutes. But they won't be the
last ones to rise up. You can only foreclose on so many millions of homes,
bankrupt just so many millions of the former middle class, and deny just so
many millions access to health care (59 million now go without insurance at
least part of year and Harvard Medical School researchers estimate that
44,000 died this year because they couldn't afford to go to the doctor or
hospital.))

How long, Mr. Goldman, Mr. Sachs, Mr. Merrill, Mr. Lynch, how long? How high
can you build the gates? I know you didn't receive a beggar's education, so
that means you know the historical answer: You can't build them high enough.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

"Oh we'll all go together when we go"--Tom Lehre

 
Subject: "Oh we'll all go together when we go"--Tom Lehre


Oh We'll all Go Together When we Go"--Tom Lehre.
 
 
I hear the distant whine of the Butcher's knife. :I'm just slicing away the fat from our state budget," he says.  Poor people, sick people, old people, little children, disabled people are all falling to the Butcher's floor where they will be swept away and tossed into the dumpster.  Only the healthy, lean, young and rich will be left, "I'm creating a stronger less costly population," he says, turning back to his grim task. 
Carl Jarvis
************
 
State sharpens budget knife
 

Gov. Chris Gregoire's call to plan budget cuts of up to 10 percent sounded draconian a month ago. But they may become reality – as the governor and others now fear Thursday's revenue forecast will erase $1 billion to $2 billion more from state coffers.

By BRAD SHANNON
The Olympian/TNT
September 13, 2011

Gov. Chris Gregoire's call to plan budget cuts of up to 10 percent sounded draconian a month ago. But they may become reality – as the governor and others now fear Thursday's revenue forecast will erase $1 billion to $2 billion more from state coffers.

The governor's worst-case scenario called for cuts across all of state government totaling $1.7 billion. The state Health Care Authority's share at the 10 percent cut level was $445 million – a situation that is putting some Medicaid programs and the Basic Health Plan firmly on the chopping block.

One of the most severe Medicaid cuts would end state payments for prescription drugs for Medicaid participants no longer in a hospital or nursing home.

"I still can't get to $445 million without eliminating prescription drugs at some point,'' authority director Doug Porter said in an interview last week. "Without prescription drugs (cut), I get to $300 million.''

Agencies all across state government must submit plans to the governor's Office of Financial Management on Sept. 22, exactly a week after the revenue forecast. Including money in a voter-approved "rainy day" fund, the state has just $163 million in reserves to last through June 2013, according to OFM, so a bad forecast of any size puts the state into the red.

Porter thinks he could save $45 million over two years by eliminating Basic Health, which subsidizes health insurance costs for low-income workers. Democrats fought hard to preserve BHP in scaled-back form this year, calling it a bridge to federal health care reform in January 2014.

Another $38 million might be saved by cutting health coverage for children who can't document their legal residency or who have been in the country legally for fewer than five years.

Getting rid of the Disability Lifeline, which provides medical care and shelter to disabled people ineligible for other aid, could save $110 million. Similarly, Porter could go after certain kinds of funding for hospitals to save $63 million.

"It's (all) doable mathematically, and it should be doable legally," Porter said. "I can't defend any of this as good policy. People say is this a good idea to do this, I'd say no … It's where you can do it; it's not where you should do it.''

If the cuts come to pass, Porter said, he needs 30 to 60 days' notice before starting them, because there are legal notice requirements. So he needs to hear soon – if cuts are to be enacted by Jan. 1, as OFM's budget instructions require.

For state prisons, legislative action would be needed to allow early release of inmates, which is one option for spending cuts cited by the Department of Corrections.

Spokesman Thomas Shapley at the Department of Social and Health Services, which is preparing for cuts of up to $573 million, said his agency is working with numbers and developing its plan. But he did say in an email that "it is certain that a reduction of this magnitude would be felt across our programs and services and have serious impacts on the people we serve."

Ingrid McDonald of AARP Washington said last week that she fears the DSHS cuts would include another reduction in home care hours, or tighter eligibility rules, that make more of the elderly and disabled ineligible. Home care hours were cut by 10 percent in March, and McDonald said home care helps people stay in their homes, avoiding costlier nursing homes.

AARP sees other threats on the horizon from the federal government that would be compounded by state cuts. "What I think is more likely is cost shifting of Medicaid to the states,'' she said. "Some people think of Medicaid as a poor people's program."

"The decisions and ideas are not very palatable, that's for sure,'' state budget director Marty Brown said Friday. "My biggest thing now is – am I asking for enough? Is 10 percent enough? It is an awful question to have to ask.''

Brad Shannon: 360-753-1688 bshannon@theolympian.com www.theolympian.com/politicsblog

 

Monday, September 12, 2011

find a friend inside yourself

I responded to a note from a friend who suggested that without God in our lives we would be isolated and lonely.
Curious Carl
 
What a great question you put to Mike.  It goes directly to the heart of why rehabilitation works for some folks and not for others. 
You asked:
"Don't you get lonely without someone other than yourself to rely on, believe in, have faith that there's something beyond this vale of tears?"   
 
In fact, the job of the rehabilitation teacher is to show you that you do have the inner strength and resources to go the distance. 
Having or not having Faith in a Greater Power does not let us off the hook.  Whether we believe God has led us there, or a kindly, wise rehabilitation teacher, or Mother Goose, the bottom line is that we must come to terms with that person curled up inside us. 
We must pull that person up by the nose, shake him/her around until he/she stands on his/her own two feet.  Rehabilitation happens when that inner self looks around and says, "Hey!  I really can stand on my own two feet!"  It does absolutely no good to simply turn your life over to God or some other Great Power and then sit back and wait to be comforted and cared for.  How would you like a friend who always came running to you whenever they stubbed their tow?  We call such folks, Needy.  They are takers and after a while they can really get on your nerves.  I can imagine God sitting there on His royal Throne in His Royal Throne Room.  "Oh Myself!  Here comes that Carl Jarvis again.  What can he be wanting today?  Yesterday he whined that he lost his last pair of clean socks and wanted me to find them...and while I was at it, could I please do his laundry?" 
Lots of folks wonder why God never seems to answer their prayers.  Frankly, I'd take my phone off the hook, too.  But my point is that you can believe that you are guided by this Greater Power and still become totally isolated and lonely.  Unless you also learn that you have a real friend living right inside you.  Working together, sharing with one another, weeping and laughing together.  You'll never be alone again.  With or without God. 
You can tell folks that you heard that from a practicing Agnostic. 
 
Carl Jarvis, who is still wondering if I can prove that I exist...
 
 

A Decade After 9/11: We Are What We Loathe By Chris Hedges

Subject: Re: A Decade After 9/11: We Are What We Loathe By Chris Hedges
   
Ch ris Hedges writes, "...We have still not woken up to whom we have become, to the fatal erosion of
domestic and international law and the senseless waste of lives, resources
and trillions of dollars to wage wars that ultimately we can never win." 
 
Overall the article is right on.  But I would suggest that 9 11 did not change us, it merely lifted the mask from our eyes.  We have always been in denial of who we are.  We want so much to be the loving mother and father taking our young to Sunday School, happy picnics and long summer evenings around the backyard bar bq. 
We simply have blocked out those years of slaughtering the people who actually occupied our American Promised Land.  We blank out how our brand of slavery was the most monstrous form on entrapment ever used.  We just shrug at our treatment of the Chinese Coolies, the Mexican field laborers and all of the non whites who came to our shores.  We wanted to believe that we were the good guys, the guys in the white hats.  We would never bomb innocent people.  We just shut our eyes and ears to the memories of world war two and the hundreds of lives we wiped out. 
Anyway, all I'm trying to say is that 9 11 merely brought out into the open all that we'd been doing for the entire history of this Great Free Nation. 
I just don't want us to pretend that we were ever anything other than human.  We were never different from all the other people of this planet. 
 
 
Curious Carl ******



A Decade After 9/11: We Are What We Loathe
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/nationalism_in_the_aftermath_of_9_11_201
10910/
Posted on Sep 10, 2011
By Chris Hedges

I arrived in Times Square around 9:30 on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. A
large crowd was transfixed by the huge Jumbotron screens. Billows of smoke
could be seen on the screens above us, pouring out of the two World Trade
towers. Two planes, I was told by people in the crowd, had plowed into the
towers. I walked quickly into the New York Times newsroom at 229 W. 43rd
St., grabbed a handful of reporter's notebooks, slipped my NYPD press card,
which would let me through police roadblocks, around my neck, and started
down the West Side Highway to the World Trade Center. The highway was closed
to traffic. I walked through knots of emergency workers, police and firemen.
Fire trucks, emergency vehicles, ambulances, police cars and rescue trucks
idled on the asphalt.

The south tower went down around 10 a.m. with a guttural roar. Huge rolling
gray clouds of noxious smoke, dust, gas, pulverized concrete, gypsum and the
grit of human remains enveloped lower Manhattan. The sun was obscured. The
north tower collapsed about 30 minutes later. The dust hung like a shroud
over Manhattan. 

I headed toward the spot where the towers once stood, passing dazed, ashen
and speechless groups of police officers and firefighters. I would pull out
a notebook to ask questions and no sounds would come out of their mouths.
They forlornly shook their heads and warded me away gently with their hands.
By the time I arrived at Ground Zero it was a moonscape; whole floors of the
towers had collapsed like an accordion. I pulled out pieces of paper from
one floor, and a few feet below were papers from 30 floors away. Small bits
of human bodies-a foot in a woman's shoe, a bit of a leg, part of a
torso-lay scattered amid the wreckage. 

Scores of people, perhaps more than 200, pushed through the smoke and heat
to jump to their deaths from windows that had broken or they had smashed.
Sometimes they did this alone, sometimes in pairs. But it seems they took
turns, one body cascading downward followed by another. The last acts of
individuality. They fell for about 10 seconds, many flailing or replicating
the motion of swimmers, reaching 150 miles an hour. Their clothes and, in a
few cases, their improvised parachutes made from drapes or tablecloths
shredded. They smashed into the pavement with unnerving, sickening thuds.
Thump. Thump. Thump. Those who witnessed it were particularly shaken by the
sounds the bodies made on impact. 

The images of the "jumpers" proved too gruesome for the TV networks. Even
before the towers collapsed, the falling men and women were censored from
live broadcasts. Isolated pictures appeared the next day in papers,
including The New York Times, and then were banished. The mass suicide, one
of the most pivotal and important elements in the narrative of 9/11, was
expunged. It remains expunged from public consciousness.

The "jumpers" did not fit into the myth the nation demanded. The fate of the
"jumpers" said something so profound, so disturbing, about our own fate,
smallness in the universe and fragility that it had to be banned. The
"jumpers" illustrated that there are thresholds of suffering that elicit a
willing embrace of death. The "jumpers" reminded us that there will come, to
all of us, final moments when the only choice will be, at best, how we will
choose to die, not how we are going to live.  And we can die before we
physically expire.

The shock of 9/11, however, demanded images and stories of resilience,
redemption, heroism, courage, self-sacrifice and generosity, not collective
suicide in the face of overwhelming hopelessness and despair. 

Reporters in moments of crisis become clinicians. They collect data, facts,
descriptions, basic information, and carry out interviews as swiftly as
possible. We make these facts fit into familiar narratives. We do not create
facts but we manipulate them. We make facts conform to our perceptions of
ourselves as Americans and human beings. We work within the confines of
national myth. We make journalism and history a refuge from memory. The
pretense that mass murder and suicide can be transformed into a tribute to
the victory of the human spirit was the lie we all told to the public that
day and have been telling ever since. We make sense of the present only
through the lens of the past, as the French philosopher Maurice Halbwachs
pointed out, recognizing that "our conceptions of the past are affected by
the mental images we employ to solve present problems, so that collective
memory is essentially a reconstruction of the past in the light of the
present. . Memory needs continuous feeding from collective sources and is
sustained by social and moral props." 

I returned that night to the newsroom hacking from the fumes released by the
burning asbestos, jet fuel, lead, mercury, cellulose and construction
debris. I sat at my computer, my thin paper mask still hanging from my neck,
trying to write and catch my breath. All who had been at the site that day
were noticeable in the newsroom because they were struggling for air. Most
of us were convulsed by shock and grief. 

There would soon, however, be another reaction. Those of us who were close
to the epicenters of the 9/11 attacks would primarily grieve and mourn.
Those who had some distance would indulge in the growing nationalist cant
and calls for blood that would soon triumph over reason and sanity.
Nationalism was a disease I knew intimately as a war correspondent. It is
anti-thought. It is primarily about self-exaltation. The flip side of
nationalism is always racism, the dehumanization of the enemy and all who
appear to question the cause. The plague of nationalism began almost
immediately. My son, who was 11, asked me what the difference was between
cars flying small American flags and cars flying large American flags.

"The people with the really big flags are the really big assholes," I told
him.

The dead in the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania
were used to sanctify the state's lust for war. To question the rush to war
became to dishonor our martyrs. Those of us who knew that the attacks were
rooted in the long night of humiliation and suffering inflicted by Israel on
the Palestinians, the imposition of our military bases in the Middle East
and in the brutal Arab dictatorships that we funded and supported became
apostates. We became defenders of the indefensible. We were apologists, as
Christopher Hitchens shouted at me on a stage in Berkeley, "for suicide
bombers." 

Because few cared to examine our activities in the Muslim world, the attacks
became certified as incomprehensible by the state and its lap dogs, the
press. Those who carried out the attacks were branded as rising out of a
culture and religion that was at best primitive and probably evil. The
Quran-although it forbids suicide as well as the murder of women and
children-was painted as a manual for fanaticism and terror. The attackers
embodied the titanic clash of civilizations, the cosmic battle under way
between good and evil, the forces of light and darkness. Images of the
planes crashing into the towers and heroic rescuers emerging from the rubble
were played and replayed. We were deluged with painful stories of the
survivors and victims. The deaths and falling towers became iconographic.
The ceremonies of remembrance were skillfully hijacked by the purveyors of
war and hatred. They became vehicles to justify doing to others what had
been done to us. And as innocents died here, soon other innocents began to
die in the Muslim world. A life for a life. Murder for murder. Death for
death. Terror for terror.

What was played out in the weeks after the attacks was the old, familiar
battle between force and human imagination, between the crude instruments of
violence and the capacity for empathy and understanding. Human imagination
lost. Coldblooded reason, which does not speak the language of the
imagination, won. We began to speak and think in the empty, mindless
nationalist clichés about terror that the state handed to us. We became what
we abhorred. The deaths were used to justify pre-emptive war, invasion,
Shock and Awe, prolonged occupation, targeted assassinations, torture,
offshore penal colonies, gunning down families at checkpoints, massive
aerial bombardments, drone attacks, missile strikes and the killing of
dozens and soon hundreds and then thousands and later tens of thousands and
finally hundreds of thousands of innocent people. We produced piles of
corpses in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan, and extended the reach of our
killing machine to Yemen and Somalia. And by beatifying our dead, by
cementing into the national psyche fear and the imperative of permanent war,
and by stoking our collective humiliation, the state carried out crimes,
atrocities and killings that dwarfed anything carried out against us on
9/11. The best that force can do is impose order. It can never elicit
harmony. And force was justified, and is still justified, by the first dead.
Ten years later these dead haunt us like Banquo's ghost. 

"It is the first death which infects everyone with the feelings of being
threatened," wrote Elias Canetti. "It is impossible to overrate the part
played by the first dead man in the kindling of wars. Rulers who want to
unleash war know very well that they must procure or invent a first victim.
It needs not be anyone of particular importance, and can even be someone
quite unknown. Nothing matters except his death; and it must be believed
that the enemy is responsible for this. Every possible cause of his death is
suppressed except one: his membership of the group to which one belongs
oneself."

We were unable to accept the reality of this anonymous slaughter. We were
unable because it exposed the awful truth that we live in a morally neutral
universe where human life, including our life, can be snuffed out in
senseless and random violence. It showed us that there is no protection, not
from God, fate, luck, omens or the state.

We have still not woken up to whom we have become, to the fatal erosion of
domestic and international law and the senseless waste of lives, resources
and trillions of dollars to wage wars that ultimately we can never win. We
do not see that our own faces have become as contorted as the faces of the
demented hijackers who seized the three commercial jetliners a decade ago.
We do not grasp that Osama bin Laden's twisted vision of a world of
indiscriminate violence and terror has triumphed. The attacks turned us into
monsters, grotesque ghouls, sadists and killers who drop bombs on village
children and waterboard those we kidnap, strip of their rights and hold for
years without due process. We acted before we were able to think. And it is
the satanic lust of violence that has us locked in its grip. 

As Wordsworth wrote:

Action is transitory-a step, a blow,
The motion of a muscle-this way or that-
'Tis done; and in the after-vacancy
We wonder at ourselves like men betrayed:
Suffering is permanent, obscure and dark,
And has the nature of infinity.

 
We could have gone another route. We could have built on the profound
sympathy and empathy that swept through the world following the attacks. The
revulsion over the crimes that took place 10 years ago, including in the
Muslim world, where I was working in the weeks and months after 9/11, was
nearly universal. The attacks, if we had turned them over to intelligence
agencies and diplomats, might have opened possibilities not of war and death
but ultimately reconciliation and communication, of redressing the wrongs
that we commit in the Middle East and that are committed by Israel with our
blessing. It was a moment we squandered. Our brutality and triumphalism, the
byproducts of nationalism and our infantile pride, revived the jihadist
movement. We became the radical Islamist movement's most effective
recruiting tool. We descended to its barbarity. We became terrorists too.
The sad legacy of 9/11 is that the assholes, on each side, won.


 
AP / Richard Drew

A person falls from the north tower of New York's World Trade Center after
terrorists crashed two hijacked airliners into the 110-story twin buildings
on Sept. 11, 2001.