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Wealth Inequality Run Amok

January 18, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

Wealth Inequality Run Amok

I recently read with horror the 2017 wealth inequality run amok review by Oxfam, entitled, An Economy for the 99%.

Oxfam is an organization that fights against world-wide poverty. They are the ones that Christoper McCandless (aka Alexander Supertramp) donated his Harvard tuition to before he set out for the wilds of Alaska in the incredible movie (and true story), Into the Wild.

The most salient fact in the report is that 8 of the world’s richest human beings now own as much wealth as the poorest 50% of all humans. That’s right…8 own as much wealth as 3.5+ billion.

That’s not the 1%, that’s the .00000023%.

That degree of wealth concentration has increased greatly over just the last few years. The last time Oxfam reported the figure it was 62 of the richest owned more than 1/2. So, it’s evident that wealth inequality is rising rapidly and exponentially in similar fashion to global warming. Together these are the twin threats that might just do us in once and for all as a species.

I read an interesting article on Vox (Ezra Klein’s blog) this morning written by an entrepreneur, who, despite the fact that he had done well, refused to take full credit for it. In fact, far from it. He attributed his well-doing primarily to privilege (and luck). It was refreshing to read about someone admitting as much, as opposed to grandiose boasting about bootstrapping his way to success.

The fact is that our entire economy is largely based on a privileged class of capital-hoarders-cum-job-creators who exploit the less fortunate and thereby amass increasing levels of concentrated wealth and power that pass from privileged generation to privileged generation. That’s our “American” neoliberal-infused style of capitalism run amok folks.

And we just elected the poster man-child of this f’ed up system as president of the United States!

I was watching one of those CNN “town-halls” the other day where they had good-ole Bernie Sanders answering questions from the crowd. This Trump supporter stood up and lofted what he thought was a doosey at Bernie. You see, he was a “small business owner” who hated regulations. So he asked Bernie, what about that?…what about guys like him drowning in the regulatory tsunami? Bernie asked him very plainly what particular regulations he was referring to.

Most of the time, they are referring to the tax code, which is, admittedly, ridiculous. But do you know why it is that way? Because of guys like Donald Trump.

Yea, that’s right, Donald Trump!

The guy who won’t even release his tax returns to the public. The guy who we know used a yuuuuge net operating loss carryover to wipe out years of taxes. The guy who, despite his billions, pays no taxes! So who does pay them? Joe Blow small business owner who’s standing there trying to trip Bernie up, that’s who.

Guys like Donald Trump pay millions upon millions to lobbyists who little by little, layer after layer, convince the Federal government to turn the U.S. tax code into the morass of complexity that it has become. They do so for a reason, to benefit themselves at the expense of YOU.

The result, they keep getting richer, while the rest of us keep getting poorer. And the worldwide effect of that is exactly what Oxfam is reporting.

It is amusing and alarming to me that there are so many Joe Blow small business owners out there who actually think Donald J. Trump is the solution to their problems, when, in reality, he is the cause of them!

What’s the solution to wealth inequality run amok? Well, this entire blog, with its message of impact mindfulness, I believe qualifies as an idea to combat the problem. The Oxfam report certainly lays out similar ideas pretty well. You can read a summary of those here. In fact, I would consider it “required reading” for any fan of this blog.

The next 4 years may be our final wake-up call. The impending failure of the Donald Trump presidency might just be the lesson we were destined to learn…the one we desperately need to learn.

Perhaps that’s the one good thing that can come out of this fiasco.

That, I’m afraid, is my best hope for the near future.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Donald Trump, Oxfam, wealth inequality

A President Who Made Me Proud

January 11, 2017 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

A President Who Made Me Proud

I’ve experienced a total of 10 Presidents during my 56 years on this planet, some of whom I was too young to remember. But of the ones I can remember, I can’t really say that any of them inspired me to any great extent…well, except for this last one.

Now, does that mean I agree with EVERYTHING he did?

Hardly…

There are many things regarding the Presidency of Barack Hussein Obama that I didn’t like. However, none of them have the slightest thing to do with his birth certificate, his heritage, ethnicity, or the name that his parents chose to bestow upon him.

My objections have more to do with his promising a lot of change and delivering far too little. He was a too neoliberal and not nearly progressive enough for my preferences.

But his farewell speech last night was a great one. He always did give great speeches, you’ve got to give him that.

I particularly liked these lines…

So regardless of the station we occupy; we all have to try harder; we all have to start with the premise that each of our fellow citizens loves this country just as much as we do; that they value hard work and family just like we do; that their children are just as curious and hopeful and worthy of love as our own.

And that’s not easy to do. For too many of us it’s become safer to retreat into our own bubbles, whether in our neighborhoods, or on college campuses, or places of worship, or especially our social media feeds, surrounded by people who look like us and share the same political outlook and never challenge our assumptions. In the rise of naked partisanship and increasing economic and regional stratification, the splintering of our media into a channel for every taste, all this makes this great sorting seem natural, even inevitable.

And increasingly we become so secure in our bubbles that we start accepting only information, whether it’s true or not, that fits our opinions, instead of basing our opinions on the evidence that is out there.

There’s a great message of inclusivity in those lines. Earlier in this speech, I believe I even heard him use that all too familiar line that I’ve used quite often in this blog…”we’re all in this boat together.”

However, I am afraid that contained within that inspiring rhetoric is an ominous warning for the years to come.

Today I am watching with amazement (as well as amusement) the stark contrast between the President we said goodbye to last night and the reality posed by the one we face today. Donald Trump gave his first press conference. It was nothing less than I expected…in short, “a circus.” But wouldn’t you say that’s a fitting description for most of what surrounds this new President.

The problem, as I see it, is that I could never imagine Donald Trump uttering inspiring lines like those I lifted above from Obama’s farewell speech. I just don’t think Trump has it in him. Trump is a lot of things, but inclusive is not among them. Trump is about Trump. Either you’re for him, and what he stands for, or you’re an enemy. His press conference displayed that truth very well.

Now, I know many just loathe Obama. Many are my friends and acquaintances from my youth, growing up in South and North Carolina. That’s not Obama country! I’ve seen that hatred on display every day in my Facebook feed for the past 8 years.

However, I’m always a bit curious as to why. I’m afraid that all too often that hatred has as much to do with his birth certificate, his heritage, ethnicity, or the name that his parents chose to bestow upon him, as it does with any actual policy disagreement.

And therein lies the legacy of this president…

The legacy of an average middle class black man with an above average intellect, compassion and willingness to make an impact, who brought out the best in us and weathered the worst in us.

But, more than anything else, he is and always will be a president who made me proud.

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Barack Hussein Obama, Obama, President Obama

What Does it Mean to Be an Expat?

December 26, 2016 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

to be an Expat

I’ve been an expat in Costa Rica for a long time now. From a physical perspective being an expat means absence from one’s home country and presence in some foreign country.

However, to be an expat has more than simply physical connotations.

Let’s first discuss what it certainly does not mean…

To be an expat does not mean one is unpatriotic in any way. Some may feel that it does, but they’d be dead wrong.

In some ways I’ve grown more patriotic as a result of living out of the country for many years now. I believe that in large part stems from my being an observer, or someone on the outside looking in. I’ve been able to observe with a heightened sense of objectivity certain things about my country of birth that concern me deeply.

For example, I’ve been able to observe how U.S. interventionist or imperialistic polices have affected certain people negatively, which in my case means Latinos. I’ve been able to discern that if that has been the case in Latin America, perhaps our interventions in other areas of the world, such as the Middle East, have also been less than laudable.

I’ve been able to observe with a heightened sense of objectivity how the form of capitalism run amok that prevails in my country of birth has widened the inequality gap. It has also led to a reckless disregard for how the pursuit of money and material has taken a heavy toll on the well-being of people and planet. Sometimes those effects aren’t as readily apparent to those on the inside of a wealthy nation like the U.S. as they are to those in the so-called 3rd world.

These observations have not caused me to have contempt for my country, but rather to long for it to be the world leader for positive change that it historically has been.

The U.S. has in large part lost its way in that regard. And the entire world is suffering for it. The world needs the U.S. to lead in positive directions, away from soaring income and wealth inequality, and away from dependence on fossil fuels. But the U.S. refuses to lead. And the recent election of Donald Trump only strengthens its resistance to assume the role of positive leadership in the world at large.

To be an expat means to have one’s eyes opened. To get the chance to really see things from the perspective of others who are very different. It provides ample opportunities to exercise the empathy muscle and to improve one’s capacity for altruism and impact. I call that expat mindfulness.

To be an expat does not have to mean permanent physical removal from presence in one’s country of birth. The ability to go back is always an option. Of course, one can also be a part-time expat.

I believe time in a foreign country can truly heighten one’s ability to make an impact in one’s country of birth. It sensitizes you to things you might otherwise be desensitized to. It heightens your sense of awareness. You become a more well-rounded human being. And all those are very positive traits from undergoing the expat experience and increasing your expat mindfulness.

I’ve written much in the past in my blogs and books about how being an expat in Costa Rica has changed me. It has made me a more humble and compassionate person. Some of my former friends and family members in the U.S. will say that it’s turned me into a left-wing loon.

Well, it has made me more progressive. It has made me more inclusive. It has allowed me to see the error of capitalism run amok in ways that I probably would’ve never detected without the expat experience. It has made me care more about my impact than about my economic self-interest. It has allowed me to see things more from the perspective of the Big US. It has removed many impact blinders that I came to Costa Rica wearing.

In short, it has been responsible for implanting impact mindfulness as my current mindset and worldview.

In that sense, I guess it has turned me into what I like to call, a Revolutionary Misfit. However, I don’t view that transformation in any negative light.

If you’re thinking of taking the plunge and moving to a foreign country, perhaps motivated by the recent election, remember this…no matter where you go, you’ll still be an “American” by birth. If you love your country it can actually make you love it more, albeit for different reasons. It will make you long for change and might even provide the motivation to be a catalyst for that change yourself.

To be an expat and thereby increase one’s expat mindfulness can be an intensely patriotic endeavor. [It’s Tweetable!]

You can read more about Expat Mindfulness, Impact Mindfulness and Being an Expat in Costa Rica in my books.

Click here to go to my author page.

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: Expat Mindfulness, impact mindfulness

The Politics of Political Expression

November 30, 2016 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

The Politics of Political Expression

Isn’t it true that we tend to live our lives in the “grey areas”, while we express ourselves politically in stark black or white terms?

Why is that?

Perhaps it’s because politics, in the U.S. and in other countries throughout the world, is like a team sport.

Think about it. Political parties market themselves much like sports teams…with colors, logos, slogans, heroes and such.

It would seem that the explosion of Donald Trump onto the political scene has only increased that “team” aspect.

And we like being part of a team, don’t we?

That need for “team” solidarity is embedded in our DNA. We feel secure as part of a team. There is strength in numbers, right? We like the popularity we experience with other team members. We like the solace of being part of a like-thinking tribe.

We believe it increases our chances of winning.

Even so, in the reality of our day-to-day lives we live shoulder to shoulder with opposing team members. And so far, we’ve been doing a pretty good job of it. Your co-workers aren’t all team members, are they? And yet you get along with them…at least well enough to get the job done…right?

But all that “kumbaya” is quickly tossed out the window as soon as politics enters the discussion and the polarization of team membership kicks in.

It seems that so far we’ve done a pretty good job at separating real life from politics. We’ve been managing the politics of political expression fairly well in the hum-drum of daily life.

Now, that’s actually a semi-facetious statement, since our real lives are governed to a large extent by what transpires, or fails to transpire, in politics. Nevertheless, the point is that we normally get through Thanksgiving Dinner without throwing a turkey leg at uncle so-and-so.

Of course, politicians on opposing teams hardly ever get along. And that often renders them basically ineffective. But we can’t live our lives that way…can we? If we did, boy what a mess that would be!

However, it also seems more and more these days that political expression is seeping into our day-to-day lives. That might be largely due to the time we spend living them on social media…don’t you think?

And perhaps for too many people, the politics of political expression translates into spending too much time posting polarizing memes on Facebook, or “mean tweeting” insults about the opposing team.

What happens when this polarization becomes such a predominant aspect of our lives that we as a society can no longer get along?

Can society survive that? Is it sustainable? What does it mean for future generations if society suffers complete breakdown as a result of the politics of political expression?

Kind of a scary scenario, isn’t it?

We could be headed in that direction. There are some strong indications that we are.

My message this morning is only this: maybe we should give that some serious thought.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: Donald Trump, political expression, removing impact blinders, the big us

The Impact Blinder of Black or White

November 29, 2016 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

The Impact Blinder of Black or White

This has been quite the month in the life of one David Scott Bowers (aka Costa Rica Guy)…

For starters, my most ardent supporter, and defender, for the last 55 years passed away at the beginning of it…my mom.

Right on the heels of that came the election of my “platonic” arch-nemesis, Donald Trump, as President of the U.S. Now I realize that’s not a good use of the adjective, but I use it only in the sense that, thankfully, we don’t have any actual relationship (never met the man). Otherwise, I’d surely be the subject of some seriously spiteful tweetings.

Finally, just in the last week, we’ve seen the passing of a larger than life figure who cast a shadow on all 55 years of my life on planet earth. I’m speaking of the passing of Fidel Castro.

I’ve long been inspired by the story of Fidel Castro, the revolutionary. You know the Cuban revolutionary misfit who, along with a ragtag group of around 80 men, set sail from Mexico to Cuba on the leaky yacht, the Granma. There was also a guy onboard named Ernest “Che” Guevara. I’ve written quite a lot about Che Guevara in this blog.

They were ambushed upon arrival to Cuban shores and out of the 80 some odd men that originally set sail, only around 18 made it up to the Sierra Maestra mountains in the interior of the island. From there they spent two years amassing a revolutionary force of peasant farmers who were successful in taking control of the island country and resting it from the hands of the U.S. backed and brutal dictator, Fulgencio Batista.

The revolutionary government of Fidel Castro started out pretty good, with laudable aims. Some of those were actually accomplished. For instance, did you know Cuba has one of the highest literacy rates in the world and that it produces more doctors than any other country of its size? It also is quick to come to the aid of other developing countries, as was witnessed recently with the Ebola epidemic in West Africa a few years ago.

But we also know that Castro gradually morphed from revolutionary hero to oppressive dictator. He suppressed the free speech of the Cuban people and jailed thousands as political prisoners.

What’s for sure is that Castro’s death is showcasing the tendency for us to think in black or white terms when it comes to anything politically tinged. I believe that’s not only true in the U.S., but throughout the world. If you’re a democrat, then all republicans and their ideas are bad…and vice versa. For people whose passions have been inflamed by Castro’s passing, he was either a monster or a saint.

However, the truth is that we don’t live our lives in those stark black or white terms. We rather tend to live them in the grey areas.

Thinking in this polarized way is at the root of many of the problems we face in American society and throughout our world. The election of Donald Trump certainly seems to have exacerbated this type of thinking.

I would call this mode of thought the impact blinder of black or white. It blinds us from the truth. The real truth is rarely found in the black or white of political propaganda, lately expressed in mean tweets and non-factual Facebook memes, but in the grey areas of actual facts.

So, a lesson we can and should learn from these momentous events of the month of November 2016 is this: always step back and ask, what are the facts? What is the truth?

The truth is that Castro did some good stuff and he did some bad stuff. He did stand up courageously against the imperial inclinations of the world’s greatest superpower. He also failed miserably in the human rights department, especially in terms of upholding the rights of his own people.

We will get along with one another and progress as a society when we stop thinking in terms of the black or white nature of political propaganda and instead embrace the actual truth. The truth that applies across the board.

You see, the truth is the truth and facts are facts. They bear no political or ideological affiliation. They are not democrat or republican, capitalist or socialist.

Why not remove the impact blinder of black or white thinking and instead wilfully embrace facts and truth?

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Donald Trump, Fidel Castro, removing impact blinders

Expat Mindfulness

November 23, 2016 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

Expat Mindfulness

Donald Trump is President. That’s a fact.

That will mean different things to different people. Some will rejoice. Others will lament.

But what will it really mean, in general, for people and planet?

More than likely it will mean change. Things are probably going to change in the U.S.A. and in the world. The question is, will they change for the better?

I’ve been writing in my blog for quite a while now that America, and the world, does in fact desperately need a change in direction. I just don’t believe that Donald Trump is the right one.

Trump’s election will most likely usher in a renewed sense of “putting America first”, or of “American Exceptionalism”…as if the rest of the world just doesn’t matter all that much.

And in that effort, jobs will likely be created. Heck, the stock market is already rallying in anticipation of all that pent-up demand being released into the market-sphere.

However, I have a sense that there are many, millions even, like me who believe that a heightened emphasis on money as the measuring stick for human prosperity in the context of a zero-sum, us versus them, world view, is not really the right direction to go in.

It certainly wasn’t the direction strongly suggested by that anti-Trumpian counter-revolutionary named Bernie Sanders…now was it?

However, in my estimation, that’s exactly the direction in which “we” are going…at least for the next four years.

I’ve been operating on dual “career paths” in the last couple years. One in which I espouse this mindset I call “impact mindfulness” in my blog, Revolutionary Misfit, and in books, like The Impact Revolution and The Revolutionary Misfit Manifesto.

And the other where I tout the Costa Rica expat life and offer services for guided Costa Rica Expat Tours, or Costa Rica Expat Consulting, to anyone who thinks they might like to give Costa Rica expat living a try.

I have decided that it wouldn’t be a bad idea for those two paths to merge into a concept you might call Expat Mindfulness. And the change that has now been unleashed in the world, in the form of the Donald J. Trump, is a prime motivator behind my thinking.

Certainly this epiphany is part economically motivated. I do anticipate that many will decide that the direction the U.S.A. is going in just ain’t consistent with their values anymore. I believe that might give rise to more demand for my services.

Hey, we’ve all go to make a buck…right?

But there’s more to it than just that.

I’m thinking more in terms of tribe building.

If you’re one of those who might be thinking of making a change as drastic as leaving your country of birth…well, I want to give you some solace and some inspiration.

Solace in being part of a tribe of others who are of similar mindset. And inspiration in the form of a cogent reason to make your expat move…

Expat Mindfulness.

What Costa Rica offers is the opportunity to simplify one’s life…to reduce the clutter. It offers the opportunity to learn to be happy with less. The ticos, or citizens of Costa Rica, are wonderful examples of that.

Because, you see, the last “change” that the world needs is an even stronger sense of the accumulation mindset. That what really matters is my capability as an individual to become “super successful”, measured in terms of my ability to accumulate more stuff in a dog-eat-dog competitive context.

On the contrary, what the world needs right now is love, sweet love…to steal from a song.

No, really, what the world does need is a heightened sense of togetherness…of the Big US.

What the world needs right now are more people willing to put their impact over their self-interest.

What the world needs right now are people willing to reject the impact blinding messages whispering that what’s most important is accumulation of more, more, more…even if it comes at the expense of people and planet.

Hasn’t our planet indeed been sending us ample signals as of late about the folly of that type of thinking and doing?

Trump and those who lifted him to his current position as most powerful man on earth seem to want to just completely ignore those signals.

But our planet will return the favor and ignore us unless enough of us rise up and resist.

Now, you can choose to resist at home, or abroad (in a place like Costa Rica!). If you’d like to give Expat Mindfulness a try…

I am here to offer you a hand in that effort.

In addition to the blog you are reading right now, learn more (and participate) about Expat Mindfulness at one or all of the following locations…

The Costa Rica Expat Tours website

The Costa Rica Expat Living Facebook Page

The Impact Revolution Facebook Page

Filed Under: Impact over Interest, Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: Expat Mindfulness, impact mindfulness

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