Revolutionary Misfit

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The Politics of Divide and Conquer

March 19, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

The Politics of Divide and Conquer

What America now faces, if we do not want to change the fundamental structures of the relationship of money to legislative power, is neither mob rule nor democracy, but oligarchy.

Zephyr Teachout, Corruption in America: From Benjamin Franklin’s Snuff Box to Citizens United

I smell a rat.

Don’t you?

Well, if you can’t smell it, there are over the counter remedies.

I often get embroiled in Facebook debates on political issues. These are generally friendly, or at least they tend to end friendly…

but they can get downright ugly at times.

Often, it seems, that the participants are occupying diverse planets…at least in terms of their political viewpoints.

I can almost certainly guess that those of us participating in these discussions are components of that vast swath of Americana known as the middle class.

The one that politicians always claim, come election time, to be concerned about.

Now, it’s funny that the middle class consists primarily of folks who blame everyone, but themselves, for the problems that are befalling our nation.

We love to point fingers…usually at each other, or at those on that dreaded level below us…

the “dependency class”, as some derogatorily refer to them.

And we all love to point our bony fingers of indignation at government, as we are pretty much in agreement that “it” is failing us.

And even though we might have distinctly different reasons for doing so, there does exist that strong common ground amongst us.

Government is failing us.

Now let’s explore the real reason behind that mutually agreeable fact…

I’m currently reading a book by Zephyr Teachout, professor of law at Fordham University, on political corruption.

Teachout’s underlying premise is that the driving force behind rising inequality is corruption in politics. Not quid pro quo type corruption, also known as bribery…

but structural corruption.

Corruption that is “built-in” to the system itself.

Teachout claims that such corruption has always been around, but it accelerated in the 70’s and reached its zenith with the Supreme Court’s landmark 2010 decision in the Citizens United case.

That’s the case in which the court held that the First Amendment prohibits the government from restricting independent political expenditures by nonprofit corporations. The principles articulated by the Supreme Court in the case have now been extended to for-profit corporations, labor unions and other associations.

Basically, it paves the road for the uninhibited flow of “dark money” into campaign coffers.

Now, Teachout’s point, and one that I agree with, is that it’s utterly nuts to think that all this money doesn’t buy influence.

And influence is the sine qua non of corruption.

Government is supposed to act in the public interest, not in the interest of its wealthiest donors. Tweet it Out!

So, what we end up with is a system that’s money-driven, rather than people and planet driven.

And that’s perpetuating this growing inequality, as more and more wealth is being “driven” into the hands of fewer and fewer folks.

A phenomenon that is accelerating to alarming levels, as shown to us by Thomas Piketty, the celebrated French economist, in his now famous economic treatise, Capitalism in the 21st Century.

As long as the ones on the receiving end of this great wealth concentration are pulling the strings, nothing will be done about it…

Well, except for events that none of us really want to bear witness to. Events like wars, bloody revolutions, or severe economic depressions.

Yes, it has all happened before.

Therefore, I believe that we, the 99%, should stop pointing fingers anywhere but up.

The problem is not government spending on poverty and other social causes society actually benefits from…

It’s the fact that government action is by and large being manipulated by those at the top of the wealth pyramid…

And for middle class folks to argue and fight over spending that actually does “us” good is a red herring that won’t do anything, but make matters worse…

That’s exactly what “they” want us to do, point the fingers at each other, point them anywhere, except at them!

And as long as we’re fighting amongst each other…

they’re laughing all the way to the bank!

That really is the politics of divide and conquer and, at the moment, we’re letting them get away with it!

image credit: We the People – Needham via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: removing impact blinders, the big us, Thomas Piketty, Zephyr Teachout

An Exceptional Idea

March 17, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

An Exceptional Idea

I always get very concerned when I hear that term “American exceptionalism” being bandied about…

usually, these days, on Fox News.

Indeed, “America” (or, the part that encompasses the U.S.A.) is exceptional in many ways…

It was founded upon an exceptional ideal…

for a government of, by and for “the people.”

It’s funny these days that the folks who seem to have co-opted the phrase are the ones who want to do away with government altogether…even though it was our form of government that made us “exceptional” to begin with!

And throughout the years we have made good on the characterization…

We have, actually…acted exceptional…

by ending the institution of slavery…

in overcoming a Great Depression…

in defeating fascism…

in educating our people…

in giving equal rights to vote…

only just recently, in providing equal access to health care (one that was long overdue, by the way)…

and many other ways that have had as their impetus, government action.

Our hallowed military, which is the paramount example of our exceptionalism, in the eyes of many, is the largest government program in the history of the world!

Now, it seems, that this idea for exceptionalism gets twisted and warped in the minds of many…

Who think it means that we are somehow better than the rest of the world.

That it means that we have somehow earned the right to impose our will on the rest of the world.

That we are possessed of a degree of wisdom that the rest of the world lacks.

That “they” are, to put it bluntly, lesser beings.

And that, my friends, is a dangerous way to think.

I believe that particular ideology of exceptionalism, which often almost rises to the degree of a “theology”, puts wind in the sails behind our impetus to intervene in the affairs of others…

to try to mold them in the image of us…regardless of how “they” might feel about it.

To try to mold the entire world in our image and likeness.

I believe that makes the world a more dangerous place…

because it causes others not to like us all that much…

even hate us to the extent of trying to do us harm.

It gets us into messes we ought not be in!

We’ve got better things to do. We’ve got important problems to solve right here at home…so that we can actually live up to the manner in which we seem fond of characterizing ourselves.

The truth is, even though our form of government is at its core tenets, exceptional, as compared to others that have been tried, it doesn’t mean “we” are!

We aren’t better than the rest…different maybe, but not better, nor different in a better way, which is what “exceptional” implies.

We’re all made of the same stuff, flesh and blood…and with the same basic desires…

to live a dignified, good life, free of exploitation and free to be the masters of our own destinies.

Everyone wants that. Everyone deserves that.

And we can’t impose our ideas of how that should be accomplished on others.

Let them try it their way. And let us get out of the way, whilst they’re doing it.

This old world is big enough for more than one idea of what constitutes exceptionalism. Tweet it Out!

Our hope should be that others out there can be exceptional in their own way.

That the entire world can be exceptional.

It may come as a surprise to many, but…

it’s not a contest!

How’s that for an exceptional idea?

image credit: FDR Presidential Library & Museum via Compfight cc

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders, The Big US Tagged With: exceptionalism, removing impact blinders, the big us

LA County Jail Part 2: The Indomitable Flaco

February 27, 2015 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

LA County Jail Part 2

In Part 1 I wrote about some of the characters I met during my 3 weeks in LA County Jail.

However, I didn’t mention one in particular who deeply impressed me…the indomitable Flaco…

I’d been pacing the concrete floor of the holding tank adjacent to Division 30 of CCB (criminal courts building) for hours. Lunch had already come and gone and my hope was building for a release at 5:00 PM when the court finally closed for the day’s business…

In walks a young latino dude, medium height and build, close crop hair and a stern look.

You always size people up in jail. Are they a threat? I guess it’s because we’re conditioned to believe everyone you meet in jail is.

But, they’re not.

This dude walked around the tank, not speaking a word to anyone. He seemed to be lost in thought. He would study the graffiti on the walls and occasionally would scratch at them as if trying to make his own personal mark.

I’d struck up a conversation with another guy who looked Mexican as hell, but didn’t speak a word of Spanish. At some point the new dude walked over and asked us something…I can’t quite remember what…maybe if we knew the time.

“What they get you for?”, asked my new friend.

The young guy told us he was there for a preliminary hearing regarding his charge of attempted murder. He told us that he was defending himself, as he had zero faith or confidence in the court appointed attorneys that were automatically assigned in all cases.

OK, now that’s interesting.

He told us he was known as Flaco. He’d been studying the law diligently while inside and felt quite prepared to take on “the system.”

Then what ensued was sort of a jailhouse soapbox diatribe by Flaco about the system and its evils.

Flako told us that the entire criminal justice system of LA County was designed to trap and hold young black and latino men. That they had strong economic incentives for doing so.

It kind of goes like this, according to Flaco…

They get you for something stupid, like drugs, or perhaps gang related violence. That’s your entry point.

They may give you a light sentence as a first-time offender. Then you get put on probation, or maybe you do you a short stint and then get released. But released as an easy mark for future capture.

The second time, your sentence will be longer. Definitely will involve probation. They assign you to classes, maybe for anger management or drug addiction. The classes are weekly and cost about $30 to $40 a pop, no small sum over the years you’re required to attend them.

If you miss a probation meeting, or a class, skip town for a romantic fling, or to see a family member, or any other of the myriad ways to violate probation…bang!…back in you go.

And this cycle will continue for years, perhaps for the duration of your life.

So, Flaco had had enough. He vowed to fight the system.

Our conversation steered towards the politics of LA County Jail…the racial division.

Flaco told us that such nonsense was supported by the system. It started decades earlier, but it had been perpetuated by the system.

He told us that the system had an incentive to keep inmate groups at odds with each other. It had an incentive to foment hate, perhaps even violence. Because violence again was an assurance that those trapped in the system would stay there.

That racial division was carried to the outside…to the streets. So that latino gangs would hate black gangs and vice versa.

He told us of the real truth…that we were all in this together. That the racial politics was a fiction imposed by the system. It was a blanket that shrouded and obscured the real truth.

That the system was designed to oppress, to dehumanize, to rob one of hope.

But why Flaco?, we asked. What purpose does all this serve?

It serves an economic purpose. There was money, big money to be made by the system. Prisons make money…pure and simple…and in order for that to happen, jails need inmates and prisons need prisoners. Otherwise, the system runs out of steam.

Poor black and latino communities of LA County were breeding grounds for a continual supply of what makes the system hum like a Ferrari engine…fresh young inmates that can be recycled through again and again…

robbed of hope and given the incentive to resort to a life of crime that would guarantee recidivism.

Flaco was one impressive dude.

About that time, Ms. Griffith entered the tank. My heart sank as her entrance was an indication that my nightmare had yet to end.

I left and said goodbye to Flaco. I hoped I would see him again.

About a week later, I was on my way to the bus, chained to three other inmates, and once again being transferred to somewhere else in the system…

when I saw him.

I yelled out “Flaco!”

He looked at me and smiled.

I won’t soon forget Flaco.

I wish him well.

image credit: hellosteph via Compfight cc

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: LA County Jail, the big us

On the Need for a Bigger Boat

December 23, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

On the Need for Bigger Boats

I once heard the quote…

Capitalism rewards the owners of capital.

I’m not sure where I heard it. But it is true, isn’t it?

Throughout human history we’ve rewarded the hoarders of capital with luxuries that the rest of us can hardly imagine.

It’s like what Chris Rock said recently, “if poor people knew how rich people [live], there would be riots in the streets.”

I was thinking, wouldn’t it be more appropriate, rather than reward capital accumulation, that we reward people according to their impact?

That is, we create these luxurious experiences, but then only allow those who’ve impacted humanity to the greatest degree to enjoy them, from time to time.

Because the problem with trying to live an impactful life is how to do that and still just get by…to make a living…to put a roof over the head and food into hungry dependent mouths.

And maybe even indulge in a luxury or two, from time to time.

There are guys like Scott Harrison of charity:water who seem to have figured it out.

So, I guess it’s not impossible.

But, it’s damn hard.

And, really now, does that make the slightest bit of sense?

For the richest of the rich, the oft maligned 1%, to be grossly rewarded for their exploitative excellence.

While the rest of us can barely afford a decent one-week vacation every 365 days?

They are the ones raping and pillaging the planet, grossly underpaying labor, and concentrating all the earth’s stores of wealth into fewer and fewer hands…

They create, by sheer effort, the situation of the haves and the have nots.

And we reward them for that?

And they decry any attempt at reallocating that wealth downward in the slightest degree as being contrary to the hallowed laws of capitalism.

As if those laws were brought down from Sinai by Moses himself.

At certain times in history wealth has indeed been allocated downward, but it always takes wars, depressions, and other horrible human calamities for that to happen.

Why?

I guess we just live in a broken world.

We look for material solutions to our problems.

And the human impulse, when it comes to stuff, is bent towards greed.

We look upon all that bright and shiny shit and want more, more, more…

Capitalism tells us that we can have more…

Hell, we can have it all!

So we strain and strive to accumulate.

We focus our efforts on the need for a bigger boat, because we’ve been deluded into believing that in it we’ll be sheltered from all of life’s stormy woes.

No storm (or shark) will be big or strong enough to capsize my personal Titanic.

But then that tiny unexpected iceberg appears and tears a whole in our expectations.

And down we go…

Capitalism, or at least the strain of it that has run amok, has planted the idea in the mind of our society that the bigger boat solution is the only one that is realistic.

So we sit back and allow “our” capital, the capital that the earth offers to all of its inhabitants, to just flow like a river and concentrate directly into the hands of…

the Koch brothers.

But the reality is that there’s only one boat, or one planetary ship, that we’re all doomed, or blessed, to be riding on…depending on your perspective, I guess.

It’s developed a few holes in recent decades and is rapidly succumbing to the risk of capsize…

What are we going to do about it?

The Koch brothers reassure us not to worry…

they’ve got it all under control…

But they’re the very ones making the holes.

Should they really be rewarded so handsomely for that?

image credit: lacountyfed via Compfight cc

Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Koch brothers, the big us

A Fresh Look at Impact Mindfulness

December 20, 2014 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

we have met the enemy and he is us

Every year brings both the good and the bad…this one hasn’t been all that stellar for me, I’ll readily admit.

But, it’s been a learning experience!

Next year will mark some really big changes in my life. I plan to move to Portland, Oregon.

Isn’t that big enough?

I plan to take the Oregon bar exam and re-enter that profession, albeit with a far different motive, after a decade long hiatus.

OK, now we’re really talking.

Oh and I’m sure some other big and unexpected changes will come along the way.

I’ve been writing in this blog now since January of 2013…two complete years.

It’s been a slow go.

I still believe wholeheartedly in the message, but it’s hard, damn hard, to attract the attention of anyone else.

I guess what with the 152 million other blogs out there, that’s completely understandable.

Nevertheless, I believe the message of this blog can and should resonate with someone…in fact, a whole lot of someones.

So, I’ll keep slugging away until it does…pissing off some and, hopefully, delighting others with the message of Impact Mindfulness…

What’s that you ask?

A-ha, thanks for that invite to provide a fresh look at Impact Mindfulness!

It’s not that mindfulness is anything new or novel…

everybody’s talking about it.

And if you follow almost any of the lifestyle blogs out there, they usually get around to talking about the importance of an impactful life… as an afterthought.

But, I don’t know any of them who are putting it all together in the way this blog does.

Supplying the why…as I like to say.

Here I write about this “mindset” of impact mindfulness as resting on three foundational principles…

#1 Prioritizing Impact Over Interest

I think this is where I might lose some people…and since it’s the first and perhaps most important principle…

that’s not a good thing.

So, let’s flesh it out a bit for a better understanding.

You see, I believe that many, perhaps most, of the problems faced by people and planet are self-interest oriented. We’re just too caught up in this overly materialistic world in satisfying the cravings of the self, or this ethereal entity we call ego.

Of course, these days you read a lot about minimalism and living sustainably as lifestyles that are less materialistic.

But the reasons often given to live such lifestyles tend to turn on self-interest. It’s all about me…my pleasure, happiness, fulfilment, dreams and desires. It’s about me having the good life.

Great! Nothing wrong with all that…unless it’s your primary focus for being.

Because I believe it’s not…our primary reason for being.

I believe that we’re here to make life better for others, i.e., impact. And in so doing, we enhance our own enjoyment of it.

In fact, the only way that our world can get off the destructive path that it seems to be careening down at an ever-increasing velocity, is for plain folks like you and me to prioritize our impact over self-interest.

Self-interest taken to the extreme leads to greed. People and planet are suffering from the effects of rampant greed.

And I don’t think that there’s a government solution to this problem. You can’t legislate impact mindfulness!

I believe there has to be a mindset change solution…or…revolution.

One that prioritizes the impact of our choices and actions on the larger world over how those choices and actions promote our own self-interest.

We have met the enemy and he is us.

Pogo daily strip, 1971

The change that will save this world is not out there…it must come from within ourselves.

#2 Embracing the Big US

We tend to see the world through the prism of group affiliation. We desperately want to belong there. We feel our very lives depend on that limited belonging. And that desire to belong causes us to adopt an “us versus them” mindset.

The people on the inside with us matter…those on the outside…not so much.

Anyone politically minded who reads just a little of my blog will readily identify me as a leftist progressive. I don’t like such labels, but I guess I’ll proudly wear that one. Because I believe those on the right suffer from an ideology that is isolationist and dangerous for the rest of the world.

It’s not just the right…you see it with groups like ISIS as well.

That is, the inability to recognize that it’s a big world out there and that you belong to it.

You are part of the whole…as opposed to the warped idea of being that whole with unrelated and undesirable parts on the outside.

We once viewed our world in similar terms, until science showed us it was untrue.

Take the recent Obama action with regard to Cuba. The harshest opposition came from the right. Why? Because of the us versus them mentality. Cuba is the communist enemy of the U.S., right? We’re the whole and they’re definitely on the outside.

But that’s not reality. Cuba is just as much an integral part of this planet as we are. And the people there are suffering. And it’s in their best interest for this change in policy to take place.

Why can’t the right just see things in those terms?

Because they are too wrapped up in the ideology of us versus them. That’s how they see the world.

When the fact of the matter is that we’re all on this planetary ship together and until we begin to see things that way, to embrace the Big US, we’re going to continue to witness grave problems in our world.

#3 Removing Impact Blinders

I mentioned ISIS above when talking about the Big US. But the ISIS mentality also dramatically reveals the impact blinder problem.

You see, they believe their religion requires them to do the utterly inhuman things we’ve witnessed before our very eyes over the last year.

Religion!

Something that’s a complete fiction that they’re willing to die, and kill, for. It makes no sense, until you realize that religion is an insidious impact blinder.

And ISIS is not alone. There are millions of folks who suffer under the same delusion because of religion. And it motivates them to take action that is impactful for sure, but in a negative way to people and planet. Or, to do nothing at all, as they wait to be raptured away from this sinful and fallen world.

Now, granted, there are some who’ve been motivated religiously to have great impact, such as Mother Teresa, or MLK…but those are exceptions. And while religion may have been a motivating factor for them, I believe it was secondary to the impact they sought to make in this world.

Another impact blinder is blind patriotism and intense nationalism. It causes us, again, to view the world in us versus them terms. When George Bush stood at ground-zero and pledged death and destruction to those who had knocked our towers down, he unleashed a nationalist fervor that we now know resulted in America sacrificing long-held values…like not succumbing to the barbaric impulse to torture your enemies.

It motivated us to invade a nation under false pretences.

It completely blinded us to the fact that some 150,000 Iraqis were killed in that effort…compared to the tragic loss of around 5,000 Americans…but we only focus on the latter statistic…

Why?

Impact blinders.

I believe it’s high time we take those off and see things as they truly are.

The idea behind impact mindfulness presents nothing new. All this has been around in one form or another for a long time.

What’s completely novel is this singular mindset that brings them all together.

A mindset that I believe is needed for the betterment of people and planet, who are in an increasingly worse situation because of greed, small us thinking and impact blinders.

A mindset I believe the universe has implanted in my heart and has given me the burning desire to do the same in others.

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

Tortured Logic

December 10, 2014 by costaricaguy 1 Comment

Tortured Logic

It has now become painfully apparent that the CIA, in pursuit of Bush administration war policy, used torture as an accepted interrogation technique.

And lied, wilfully, to the American public about the full extent of said use.

Now comes the scramble, mostly on the right, to justify that…

to make it OK.

But many of us know that it’s not OK.

If it were, then why the painstaking attempts at covering it up when it was taking place?

I saw the Bill O’Reilly talking points clip in which he says, “it is morally correct to [use torture] to protect innocent lives from barbarians.”

He justifies the use of torture because he knows people who lost loved ones in the 9-11 attack.

Now let’s consider that for a moment…

We, meaning us in the U.S., aren’t alone on this planet.

We’re not the only ones who’ve lost loved ones in war.

In fact, there are many who’ve lost them at our very hands.

So, does that mean that the Iraqi version of Bill O’Reilly would be correct in saying the same thing…

that it’s “morally correct” to use torture against Americans?

No, of course in that case it wouldn’t be.

Well, then according to what tortured logic is it OK for us to use it?

There is strong evidence that torture does not “protect innocent lives from barbarians.” That the only thing it does is extract words out of the mouths of its victims in order to make the suffering stop.

Even Senator John McCain, a man who knows a bit about torture, said as much.

So, why then, did the CIA persist in its use? Why would they sacrifice our values for no real useful purpose?

Perhaps, retributive justice?

You see, back when this was going on, our collective anger at the rest of the world, especially the Muslim world, was at a fevered pitch.

We wanted blood.

It’s kind of like when Michael Brown’s stepfather yelled to the crowd, “burn this MF down!”

We were collectively yelling, “burn those entire MF’ing countries down!”

Do whatever it takes to exact justice on those who had the gall to attack us on our own soil.

That anger was understandable, both in the Brown case and in the 9-11 one.

But it doesn’t justify lawless action…and that’s what torture is.

Why?

Because torture offends common human decency. We just don’t treat other human beings that way…regardless of the circumstances.

There were times when it was commonplace…but we recoil at those barbaric times. In fact, just hearing about what was done in those “dark prison” dungeons is revolting, isn’t it?

If you say not, then you need to go see a professional about that.

I’m pretty upset about this torture report. What upsets me even more deeply is the reaction, or lack of reaction, of many towards it. It’s as if it really doesn’t matter.

We got rough with some bad guys, so what?

You see, the “so what” is, IMHO, that the very fact that some would justify torture as being OK when it comes to us…but a horrible war crime when committed by anyone else…points to a serious problem in the American mindset, at least the one held by around 150 million of us…

This idea of America being so “exceptional” that the rules just don’t apply to us.

That’s a dangerous concept for anyone living outside of our borders.

One that might make them not like us all that much…

perhaps even want to destroy us.

In fact, it’s a mindset that makes the world a more dangerous place for all of its inhabitants.

The very fact that we think the rules are suspended when it comes to us, lends to a mindset that devalues other people.

That the idea of “all men being created with inalienable rights” really only means, all “American men.”

But we know that’s not true, right?

At least I hope we do.

This torture report could potentially be the dawning of that realization.

The dawning of the concept of The Big US.

image credit: Shrieking Tree via Compfight cc

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Filed Under: The Big US Tagged With: Bill O'Reilly, the big us, torture report

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