Please understand something…

If they took all the money of everyone who earns more than $200,000 a year in the US it would make, at most, a small dent in the US debt because at the present the US debt is somewhere in the area of 14 trillion, that’s 14 thousand billion, dollars. Even taking everything, that is the entire gross domestic product of the United States for one year, in taxes would barely cover it.

Blame is irrelevant. We have to seriously ask what we want government to do and make drastic cuts in our spending to keep things afloat. Adding MORE debt is like giving a drunk another bottle in the hope they may some day sober up.

Two thoughts…

on the current government shutdown in Minnesota and the pending Federal shutdown.

Good for us because maybe we’ll have to learn to do things by ourselves or reach out and cooperate with neighbors, friends, and family to take care of each other. After all, the government isn’t our “community” .  A little empowerment and a lot less nanny state may be just the ticket to get us up and back on our feet.  The truth is that the government needs the citizens much more than the citizens need the government.

Good for us, as well, because all these arguments and debates mean that freedom in some form is still alive and well. We may not like how things are working but at least we can gripe, moan, manuever, politicize, and argue all we want. Representative democracy, despite the fact that it often looks like making sausage, is actually a good thing. There are more than a few places in the world where people have simply given up on the give and take of it all and opted to have a single person or party make all the decisions (Iran, Chicago, etc…). Temporary fix perhaps but a long term desecration for sure. I’d much rather have the messy stuff that comes with freedom over the efficiencies of a dictator.

And, of course, the commutes are always easier…

History repeats?

From the front page of today’s Drudge Report. Why is it that the language of power and war always seems the same?

MARCH 19, 2011
OBAMA: 'Today we are part of a broad coalition. We are answering the calls of a threatened people. And we are acting in the interests of the United States and the world'...
 

MARCH 19, 2003
BUSH: 'American and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger'...

It's a moral issue…

whether we want to believe it or not. We’re stealing from future generations and if we keep on we’ll bankrupt ourselves. Somewhere along the line we’re going to need to face this and decide what things we really need and don’t need from our government and how we plan on paying for them. Making our children and grandchildren paupers for our convenience should be off the table.

We'd like to think…

the unrest in the Middle East is about freedom, democracy, and the rule of law. As Americans it fits into our cultural narrative and colors the way we see things. Several weeks ago, though, I saw something telling on television, a spokesman for some Egyptian protesters with a dark spot on his forehead. My guess is that many people simply passed it off as a birthmark or something of the kind. I’m not sure.

Very devout Egyptian Muslim men may have a dark spot on their forehead which can come from repeated touching of the forehead to the ground in prayer. Besides being a mark of piety it can be also be a political statement of sympathy for an increasingly “Islamic” culture. It would be good to notice, as well, the large number of women in burkas seen at these protests. Again such dress can be a symbol of Muslim piety or a political statement about the desire for a more “Islamic” society, especially in countries where the full burka has not been the usual garment.

Suffice it to say even the President and his staff may be preparing for Islamic States emerging as the current governments in some parts of the Middle East. Instead of something we would recognize as democracy the protests may be the first events in the replacement of corrupt dictatorships with repressive Islamic regimes. The effect of this on religious minorities could be catastrophic and the idea of more well armed and oil wealthy Islamic governments will certainly make the world a much more complicated place.

One can still hope that the people in the streets will somehow be able to take a leap out of their culture, their history, and their religion to establish genuine democratic institutions. Yet the odds are probably very slim that any group of people have that kind of “hops” and going backwards requires so much less effort.

 

I always thought there should…

be a constitutional amendment barring anyone who went to high school or college in the 60’s from running for office. An exaggeration perhaps but the era of my childhood continue to haunt America.