Tag Archive for 'american-culture'

What’s In Your @#$@#$ Wallet???????

If you are definitely voting for McCain, if you are even considering voting for McCain, you really ought to think about the economy. Why is the American economy experiencing the worst losses in half a century? Forget corporate greed. Forget corporate arrogance. Forget million dollar, billion dollar, bonuses for corporate executives managing failing companies. All that doesn’t explain why the largest insurance company in the world, AIG, needs (and gets) an $85 billion dollar baleout. Some of that is my damn money, my tax money, my “cut my taxes” tax money.

By the way, if you go to the AIG website, you will see their motto: “The Strength to be There.” Give me a break!

Why? Republican policies. Republican policies of doing away with government regulations because it is killing small businesses. Republican policies of false, hypocritical faith in the “free market.” They believe the free market solves all problems. Republicans deny to their last sorry breath that there is any evil in the free market. @#$@#% the free market. It works until its excesses and abuses catch up with it and then we (working people) pay for it.

Everyone in America had better thank whatever God they believe in that we are going to baleout these sorry sacks of feces, because if we didn’t, you just wouldn’t like the world you live (exist) in.

Republicans love unregulated business because it makes them tons of money, but it also allows business to put the dollar (the love of which I have heard is the root of all evil) ahead of wise business decisions. The corporations that are doing this are not the small business down the street skimming a few bucks out of the cash register. These corporations are multinational, have more money than any individual can even dream about, and are powerful enough to put you out of a job or a mortgage or a home when they risk your financial security so they can make another dollar.

If you think this election is about abortion, you are a moron. If you think it is about morality (gay marriage) in government, you are a fool. You should look in your investment portfolio, your wallet or more importantly, your employer’s wallet, and see which you love the most: your morals or your financial future.

If you vote Republican in November, I sincerely hope you reap what you sow.

No, I don’t think the Democrats are going to miraculously change all of this overnight. They are not going to eliminate waste and corruption. They are not going to solve all our problems. But if there is one damn thing the Democrats understand, it is corporate power. If there is one thing the damn Democrats know how to do, it is regular the s*** out of business. And by god, I am ready for a little of that with these bastards!

By the way, I didn’t lose a dime! I wouldn’t put my money in the stock market if you guaranteed me a 50% return.

“Race: A History Beyond Black and White”

It is hard for me to discuss “race” in a meaningful way. Like most whites, I would swear that I am not prejudiced, and yet, as a lawyer I see people get screwed everyday at the hands of people who would also swear they are not prejudiced. I have no reason to believe I am any more capable of being objective than they are. I get confused about who can say this word or that word, and who can joke about or criticize this or that conduct based on some perceived racial characteristic.

In this interview Marc Aronson discusses this not so simple question: “What is race?” His new book about race deals with the issue of race from an historical perspective. Actually, according to Marc, this idea of racial (color) discrimination is a relatively modern one and it may be one that is unique to America. Consider this: Of the 10 to 12.5 million slaves abducted from Africa, less than 4% were brought to America. The overwhelming majority, 96%, went to Brazil and the Caribbean. Why? The surgar plantations? So why does the social aftermath of slavery seem to be so different when comparing the US to Brazil or a Caribbean nation?

You will have to read the book and form your own opinion, but one point Marc makes is this: The civil rights movement resulted in legislation that swept away, virtually overnight (okay, a little literary license here), the public exhibitions of racial prejudice. However, it did nothing to change our private expressions of racial prejudice. In fact, it seems there was an unwritten rule that racial prejudices were not matters to be discussed, just denied. They were not issues for us to understand, just excoriate.

Compare the racial sins of Germany in its treatment of Jews. Marc points out that after the fall of Hitler the German people not only transformed the public display of discrimination, but they also sought to understand how it had happened, how individuals fell prey to such strong racial prejudices, and in addition, the struggle through which they dealt with them after the war. As a nation, we have not had this introspective analysis of our own feelings and experiences. We simply subjugate the racial rumblings and deny they have a right to exist. Have you ever read a book devoted to someone’s struggle in overcoming racial prejudice in America? I don’t mean the two paragraphs that explain the before and after, I mean the struggle! It is almost like it wasn’t a struggle, it was just a decision and once decided, it was over, done with.

Obviously, it can’t be that easy. So, a lot of our current struggles with “race” is probably the result that we never went through any national therapy.

According to Marc, race is an 18th century phenomenon that replaced religion as the standard by which people judged themselves superior to others. In the days of Rome, that superiority was determined by whether or not you were free or a slave. Slavery in Rome was not associated with race, but depended on whether you were poor and sold into slavery by your family or whether your community had been conquered by the guys in short dresses with swords. After Rome, the church’s influence in society made religion the standard by which people were judged to be good or bad. And then, along came America with a novel idea: All men are created equal! Social status and religion were discarded, but not color. Race conveniently provided the judgmental standard: black, red-man, yellow horde.

Did you know the 1795 Naturalization Act described the qualifications for a person to become a naturalized US citizen? Those qualifications: (1) free, and (2) white. The law remained on the books until 1952. “Americaness” was “whiteness” even before there was a “colored bathroom.”

Does Marc have a way out of this racial mental illness? Read the book!

 
 Marc Aronson, Author, Race [10:07m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (1386)