Following up on the idea of sparking a campaign to give an opposition party a new vitality, here are some thoughts about what's outside the box of conventional dualistic thinking. I was listening to a very cogent conversation on our progressive radio station, KPFK, this morning, between two people who share my political points of view. However, I was struck by a limitation in their thinking that extends throughout the body of people who are trying to get this to be a more equitable world. The subject of the conversation was taxes, in light of pending legislation where tax cuts for the highest earners are about to be enacted as a way to stimulate the economy. The guest, John Ritter, a professor at Wheaton College, was knowledgeable about the bottom line issues — what the cuts are and what their effect will be — but through it all I heard a mind-set that bears thinking about. The premise of the liberal camp, as part of the zeitgeist of the times, is that we must fight the rich for benefits to the poor. It is such a pervasive ideation that we don't even think of it as a choice. My thoughts this morning were about how, with this perspective, there always will be struggle. War is struggle at its most dramatic level, and, indeed, we do not conceptualize a world without war. Listening this morning, however, I did. As I listened to battle plans — fighting the rich was what we had to do, and the only action we could take was to organize — I thought about how endlessly we would be at this, and how much we were in need of a different idea about what is going on and what to do about it. Starting at the grossest level, if putting more money in the pockets of the rich is what stimulates the economy, based on the idea that if the rich get richer they spend more, and then we make policy to insure that, we are somewhat nuts. It's good for us all if the inordinately wealthy have more estates? We also could find fault with thinking these cuts would be the fix we need to get more money flowing. Do the rich calibrate their spending based on disposable income, or, with the upper echelons having so much, will what they get in cuts be more to stash and not more to spend? The game is acquisition. Who has the biggest fortune wins. It's not about who spends the most, because when you're really big you can't for the life of you spend it all. Instead of fighting the enemy, how about talking a different kind of turkey? How about everybody getting sober and giving up those money based scorecards, let alone the ultra-palatial life styles that the super rich indulge in? Now, we are revolted by the over the top spending on homes and boats and shower curtains by the officers of the various bankrupt corporations who bled the public so mercilessly to get what they've got, but how about being put off by anybody who is living with that kind of ostentation? How about it being politically incorrect to live in ways that flaunt money? You know, the rich would still be rich, and their lifestyles would still be full of luxury if extreme excessiveness were not in play. Each person in the cast of “Friends” is making a million dollars an episode. That's obscene in my schema. When you move on to the estate tax, it's not a done deal as to the equity of it, as we liberals would have you thinking, where this is a tax cut to the rich who don't deserve it. I'm more comfortable with a whopping high top tax bracket for earnings — it's OK with me if it goes to 90% — but that estate tax needs pondering. It is in fact an arbitrary imposition of a way for the government to get income. It doesn't make inherently defensible sense that you should be taxed for dying, and the liberal outrage needs deeper consideration. If there were a conference table where leaders of thought worked with what the needs of the world are, and the possibilities to fill them, perhaps they would arrive at an understanding that the spirit of America is for each person to make their way. And that wealth coming to heirs is not necessarily good for them — there are support groups for rich kids who don't feel entitled to their money. So, maybe a rational look at the situation would have some intelligentsia deciding that it was good for the national character to limit inheritances. We could talk about heirs being just plain lucky, and that luck shouldn't uphold the incredible schism between the rich and the poor that is perhaps the most threatening social dynamic in the world. Or maybe not — maybe double taxation isn't suited to the American spirit of entrepreneurship, where, if you are successful, part of your reward is to be able to pass it on. That's a conversation worth having. One nice thing about what I'm proposing is that it's something that we liberals can do amongst ourselves. We can develop a new body of thought — the New National Understanding — which is nothing less than the times are calling for. This is what we need to do to get a true opposition party and to invigorate the Democrats with a way to deliver the vision of equality that it always has stood for. Ideation comes first. Progressives would still be out there, critical as could be, but not avowing to fight the enemy. We would be educating everyone, encouraging the mutual understanding that would free us from all our enslavements to a dysfunctional system.
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CROP CIRCLE SMARTS
I came across some cogent comments about crop circles on cropcirclenews.com . The site is in development by Allen Branson, a new listmember who got activated to the croppie cause by seeing the movie, “CROP CIRCLES: Quest for Truth” — you can buy a video or DVD on his site. If things go well for Allen, the site will be a central source for all things crop circle related, including conversation. In England, military helicopters are frequently seen above crop circles, and Allen has some interesting reflections about the military being involved in making them: The possibility has been raised that what's creating crop circles is a satellite technology being tested by the military — that precision masers (the microwave version of a laser) are fired from satellites, “cooking” the plants and causing the formations. Although we have those masers, which could be fired from on high in a tightly focused beam into the fields, and microwave energy is a credible explanation for what affects the plants, still there are unanswered questions concerning the application of such technology. How could the beam be precisely focused through cloud cover (a great many formations come in very bad weather)? Given the height of the crops in fields in which formations are found, and that the beam would have to be shot at an angle to hit the base of the plants, how could this be done without also “cooking” the tops of the plants nearby? And how, for instance, would such a device selectively flatten only one species of plant, leaving others standing (given that fields of crops usually have a few brightly colored poppies in them, and sometimes thistles or other extraneous plants which do not flatten with the crop that goes down)? Also, how about formations with several layers of floors that are patterned differently? There's another obvious question, given any explanation for the crop circle phenomenon that involves the military. Why would they test this technology out in the open, taking such pains to create beautiful art work that incorporates very sophisticated geometry? Is this what Sun Tzu meant by The Art of War? PS: When I was working on the filming of the movie, in England, someone interviewed me on video. Here's the video interview — it's about 10 minutes. It was shot where I was staying, and includes footage of the researcher community that I hosted all summer. The video on the Net is choppy, but the voice is smooth, with me giving some of my favorite opinions.
“Misinterpreting Osama’s Message: Erring on the Side of Danger”
Sometimes, when the media presents information in one way, I read along and listen along with a little voice in my ear saying, “Huh?,” which I basically ignore because nobody is seeing what I see so I guess I must see wrong. After all, who am I to think the one original thought? But then, sometimes, a lone voice gets published saying what I was thinking. So it is with this piece, “Misinterpreting Osama's Message,” sent by listmember Rick Ingrasci, where Diane Perlman heard what I heard in the most recent communication from bin Laden — that he was talking about creating peace and not just threatening war. Here are some quotes from a very original, fascinating , and bottom line truth-telling article: We unconsciously refuse to perceive what bin Laden is actually saying, as if understanding this evil person is a betrayal to ourselves and is letting him win. Our dangerous assumptions can lead to self-fulfilling prophesies… Bin Laden's messages are misinterpreted as unconditional threats and vows to attack. This is incorrect. They are all conditional warnings that whatever we do, they will respond in kind. What is missed by media and political leaders, whether intentionally or unconsciously, is the conditionality, the centrality of our role in provoking retaliation or preventing retaliation and reducing terrorism…
We have an opportunity to avert disaster. We need to clearly and accurately hear messages even from our most hated adversaries. If we go to war, we will create more Saddams and Osamas who will emerge in future years. The stakes are as high as can be. It will take major miracles to prevent this war, but we can start with consciousness.
I end this by repeating bin Laden: “The road to safety begins by ending the aggression.” The choice is ours.
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