Sunday, December 30, 2012

Reflections and Plans


 REFLECTIONS:
Most of us view the New Year holiday as a day to stake stock of the year that has passed and make plans for the year ahead. Of course some of us will view this holiday as a time to get over that hang-over from the night before. I don’t do that anymore. My advancing years and growing aversion to pain have taught me not to go down that road again. So for the New Year holiday we just chill out, relax and do a little thinking about the past year and what lies ahead.

To say 2012 has been a big year is a serious understatement. The year got off to a big start with a birth in the family. Our younger daughter gave birth to a beautiful baby girl in January. Anyone who has read this blog knows I’ve written about Kaya a couple of times and mentioned her several other times in these essays. That’s five grandchildren for us, from age twelve down to (almost) age one. We take particular pride in each one of them. They are very special people in our lives and each one brings a special kind of happiness to our existence. We always keep our grandchildren in mind as my wife and I engage in some of the social/political actions we’ve taken this year, and they are always foremost in our thoughts as we continue to develop ideas and actions related to the world we live in. If there is anything sacred in our belief system, it is that we want to contribute to a better world for our children and our grandchild to inherit.

The past year has been a year of professional change for me and my kids. For me a change has come in the form of a new job with all new areas and subject matters to learn about. This is a return to management in a great organization. The challenges have been many, but I have thoroughly enjoyed the ride. I said some time ago in this forum that I enjoy learning new things and I view change as one of those things in life that keep us young at heart. In the past year I’ve also told you about the advances in both my daughters’ careers, and how proud we are for their achievements.

In addition to all the changes and new aspects of life we've experienced, I’ve had many moments of both fun and consternation watching our government and our politics weave its way through our culture and our lives. What a year it has been! In spite of the last gasps of partisanship we’re seeing in these last weeks of this year as we peer over the fiscal cliff, I still believe this was a defining year for the country. I think the country loudly said that the extreme conservatism that has dominated the news is not what this country really wants. Instead, I believe the electorate said in a pretty clear voice that moderation, common sense, and middle class people deserve government’s favor- not the rich or these mythical “job creators” we’ve heard so much about. Several movements sprang up for a while then faded into the mainstream like the Occupy Movement. It didn’t last long as a physical presence, but I think it helped set the stage for those who recognized there is basic economic injustice in our country.  That movement got people to notice the issue, and I believe it mattered in November when we cast our votes.

Of course this was also a year to be remembered for its disasters, natural and man-made. Many people suffered loss from horrendous and unprecedented storms. Many around the world suffered from the ravages of war and domestic conflict. At home, violence claimed the lives of many thousands who died needlessly. The image of the innocents who died was captured momentarily in our conscientiousness by the death of little children in Newtown. Saddest of all is the thought that they are only 20 of the nearly twelve thousand who die each year from gun violence. Perhaps the tragic events this year will finally give rise to a new movement to start ridding our culture of these instruments of death and violence. 2012 may be the year we look back on and say, “We finally decided to do something about it”.

There were so many things of importance that happened in our collective public life that it is impossible to recount them all. Thanks for giving me an outlet to comment on these events and on my family over the last year. Being able to write- just the act of writing- has been a healthy thing for me personally. I have had some very positive responses and some very negative reactions too. It is all good- if we can share some thoughts about the events that affect us, and continue to exchange ideas in respectful ways.
PLANS:
It just so happens, this is the 100th essay I’ve published since I began doing this blog. It’s kind of strange that this landmark number falls right on the New Year. Believe me; I didn’t plan it that way. These essays have been read over 3500 times and they have been seen in over two dozen counties around the globe. It has been seen on every continent, except the Antarctic. (The blog site keeps track of all this for me, and I’ve enjoyed tracking it) This widespread viewing is not a testament to my writing by a long shot- but it is a testament to the reach of the Internet and it demonstrates the power of this global network connected to our homes, our businesses and our person. It also informs us that movements, causes, and ideas can travel very fast, and that change can happen when just a few determined people have a message the world is ready to hear.

I have really enjoyed the process of writing. My goal when I began doing this was to share some thoughts with anyone who might care to read them, but more importantly to exercise my own brain by writing. For many years I’ve been very regular about exercising my body with consistent visits to the gym. But over the last two years I wanted to make sure that I gave my mind a little more work to do in order to keep it in shape too. I know these aren’t the typical blogs, with one-page or half-page attention grabbers. These take a few minutes to read and they don’t feature many catchy graphics. But I wanted to do something that really got into a subject area for more than just the “quick bite” most of us experience in our media.  For those of you who have read them, I thank you so much.

I plan to change my “blogging” habits this year. From the time I began doing this in March of 2010, I have been pretty consistently doing one of these a week. This year I’m going to reduce the frequency of these essays to around one every couple of weeks or so. The new job I began this summer has now expanded and I will have many more responsibilities than when I began. So I’m giving myself a little more room to stretch in my new professional role. I hope in doing that, I can be more thoughtful and better in what I present in this blog- and you won’t have to put up with me every week. Another reason to cut back a bit on this is to revisit some of the other activities I enjoy, but didn’t engage in so much while I concentrated on the writing. I want to get reacquainted with my old love of photography and get back to working on my painting. I have no particular talent in these art forms- but damn, I love doing them. I also want to work on my archery, a new interest I took up last year.  And, just like doing this blog so regularly the last two years or so, I’d just like to do some other things I enjoy too. There is only so much time in a day or a week, and I think we should all do the things that make us happy. I am so lucky to have several interests that I enjoy and the wherewithal to pursue them.

As I plan for the year to come I know that sometimes the best-laid plans can get left by the side of the road. We never know when events, opportunities, or unexpected setbacks put us on a course we didn’t see coming. That was the case for me this last year. Fortunately the unexpected changes I went through were good ones. The lesson for me is that we need to be open to new things, open to new challenges and (forever) open to learning. Learning new things, and experiencing new things is the key to longevity and happiness. I don’t want to ever feel stuck in a life that holds nothing new. 

I am planning to have a great year- but I’ll take whatever comes from 2013. I hope you have a great year too. I’ve written quite a bit about the idea of “community”, because I believe when we act as a community we all prosper. I rely on the community of my family and the community of my friends- but I continue to believe in the greater community we all share. Perhaps this will be a year when the value of “community” will return for all of us.

Happy New Year!!

Thanks for looking in.    

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Christmas Card

I'm not sure exactly why, but I've had a very difficult time writing a Christmas message this week. Perhaps the rigors of the difficult political climate we've endured over the last year, with so many people marginalized or blamed for our problems; or thoughts of the constant struggles of economic hardship for many families has finally caught up to me. Perhaps I'm feeling the numbness of sorrow mixed with outrage over the senseless deaths in Newtown just week ago that will surely mare the Christmas season for those families, and many others for years to come. Perhaps I'm just having a week when words don't come to me so easily as they do other weeks.

So I thought I'd just share a simple song of hope this Christmas season. I considered John Lennon's Christmas song: So This Is Christmas (War is Over). I decided not to share it because the video imagery is very difficult to see, particularly this week. Even though the message is good, the video contains many vivid images of child-victims of war and violence. Instead I selected another iconic John Lennon song: Imagine. It isn't a Christmas song per se, but it is a song of hope and speaks of imagining (maybe even creating) a more peaceful world.

Lennon was an artist in every sense of the word- a musician- a poet- and a dreamer. This year more than any in our recent past it might be good to devote this Christmas season to imagining a better world- and maybe doing some small thing to make it happen.

I will be spending a quiet, peaceful holiday with my family. They are the foundation in my life, and I hope all of you can say the same about your family. The best times of my life are the times  when we are all gathered together. Even though we do that often, Christmas is a special gathering and one we all enjoy most of all. All the best to you during the Holiday season.

Happy Holidays!
Thanks for looking in.




Sunday, December 16, 2012

Catholic Social Teaching & The Fiscal Cliff


One thing I admire about the Catholic Church is its teachings on social issues and social justice. The Church is a global entity and there is much to be critical of in both its doctrines and its practices in modern times, and throughout its history. But, there are a few areas where I could not agree more.  The Church has a long history of developing its teachings on social justice, and a quick review of the evolution of those teachings shows that they have changed over the years, but never in a way that varies much from the core values they have always reflected. Much of the Church’s doctrine in this area comes from the thoughts and writings of early intellectuals like St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Augustine of Hippo. In spite of some evidence to the contrary, the Church has always professed its allegiance to helping the poor, and often done remarkable work to aid the poor.

As I was listening to some political pundits on a Sunday morning talk show I got to thinking about the connection between the big issue of the day (The Fiscal Cliff) and my recollections about Catholic Social Teachings. (On a side note: in my youth I would have been at Sunday Mass during this hour instead of watching TV, but my relationship with the Church has obviously changed) Nonetheless a relationship between these two issues was crystal clear in my mind.  “The Fiscal Cliff” is the name given to a set of government events all scheduled to take place on January 1st. These events are: 1) The Bush tax cuts on all incomes will expire and old (higher) rates go back into effect, 2) The payroll deduction tax break we got three years ago will vanish, meaning that paychecks will have more taxes taken out, and 3) Massive program cuts will go into effect automatically, based on an agreement (placed in law) - known as the “sequester”. The sequestered cuts were put into place by the Parties themselves to put political pressure on both Parties to get a deal and avoid having to go over the cliff. The sequestered cuts are horrible news for both Parties; there will be massive cuts to social programs Democrats like, and monumental cuts to military programs Republicans like. Many believe that failure to resolve our fiscal problems and going over the cliff will lead to another recession.

The Congress and the President have had about a year and a half to resolve the fiscal issues they created the last time they haggled over the debt ceiling but, of course, they are waiting until the last minute. As of now both sides have shown little movement towards arriving at a compromise. The president wants higher taxes on the wealthiest Americans (among other things) as part of his solution, and the Republicans want to preserve tax breaks for the wealthiest and cut social programs and Entitlement program spending as part of their solution. Both sides seem pretty stuck on their point of view, so little progress is being made as they watch the days pass by. The President believes he should not give up his core position because he won the election campaigning on this very issue, while the Republicans believe their position reflects their constituent’s beliefs and Party doctrine. This is all fairly simple to understand- it’s just that neither side will give in and make room for a deal. All the national polls favor the President’s position and indicate the Republicans need to give in. But they probably won’t.

As the pundits were going over this ground in their panel discussion they began to talk about why the public so overwhelmingly supports the idea of taxing the rich more. That’s when the Catholic teachings hit me. One of the panelist mentioned that over the last thirty (30) years middle-class income has been stagnant- the middle class has not advanced at all. During the same thirty years the wealth of the top 2% of Americans has increased almost 300%. It struck me that our desire to see the rich taxed more is a matter of social justice. The Catholic Church has a saying that “there can be no Peace without Justice”. That is an incredibly profound and accurate statement. I don’t think it is possible for humans to accept peace or negotiate in peace as long as fundamental injustice rules the day. The income disparity in this country today is at its worst level of “unbalance” in our history, and it is fundamentally unjust. I believe this truth was reflected in the results of the last election- many voters connected with the President's message on tax increases for the rich.

The early thinkers in the Catholic Church developed the notion about the injustice of accumulating wealth while others suffered. Those thoughts were first published in an encyclical letter by Pope Leo XIII, in 1891- Rerum Novarum.  This encyclical advocated for Distributism while at the same time condemned the pure capitalist and pure socialist ideologies of the day. Distributism holds that property ownership is a fundamental right and that the means of production should be spread as widely as possible among the general populace, rather than being centralized under the control of the state (pure Socialism), or by accomplished individuals (pure Capitalism). Distributism therefore advocates a society marked by widespread property ownership, and according to some economists, maintains that such a system is key to bringing about a just social order. It basically recognizes that income and wealth should be fairly distributed in a fair and just society. Governments achieve this, and manage it through fiscal and social policies.

The idea of economic justice (promoted by Catholic teachings) is at the heart of overwhelming public opinion supporting higher taxes on the wealthiest Americans.  Unfortunately the issue of taxing the wealthy more is the primary stumbling block in resolving the fiscal cliff. I’m not sure how many Catholics are aware of the Church’s teachings on this matter, but these teachings can inform the voting public and those making critical decisions. My guess is that many Catholic voters in the U.S. are unaware of the Church’s position. I say that because (for example) the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops declared the Paul Ryan budget proposals “immoral”, yet many Catholics supported Ryan's candidacy for Vice-President. My point here is that many people of faith profess to vote their moral (faith based) conscience, but in reality tend to pick their positions based on more secular, political  beliefs. For my money making decisions based on secular thinking is just fine- it’s the way I do it. But there are a great many among us who use their religion to guide them in these matters-they just don’t  do it very consistently.  

I’ve never understood how devout Christians can cling so tightly to extremely conservative ideas. In the last thirty years Christianity and conservatism have become almost synonymous. In a country like ours there is tremendous diversity of ideas, and a great many issues over which to disagree. I know that it is impossible to attach comprehensive, all-encompassing labels (religious and political). For instance a good Catholic could never support the more liberal causes having to do with reproductive choice, but could easily support liberal social and fiscal programs if they go by the Church’s teaching on economic justice.  Often candidates and party policies embody mostly liberal or mostly conservative platforms, thus creating a difficult conflict for the faith-based voter in a secular government. Still I see in the story of Jesus (The New Testament) a great deal more material dealing with the poor and the down trodden, and social justice, than I see about sexual or reproductive matters. That says something to me about where the emphasis of Christian teaching lies, and why I never understood the connection between conservatives and Christians. Conservatives of today are all about shrinking the programs that address the issues Jesus spoke about. It is the opposite of Distributism. They tend to focus on some punitive form of accountability (fairly or unfairly applied) more than on the aspects of charity Christians preach.

Today as we stand at yet another manufactured crossroad of fiscal crisis, the core values we hold as a people should give us the guideposts by which we decide such important issues- not political motives driven by greed and favor for the rich. Whether those guideposts are planted in our path by religion or by our unique human conscience, I think we should look deeply into ourselves and our beliefs to arrive at a place marked by social justice. I hope our leaders can do the same.

Thanks for looking in.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Speaking Truth to Power


Our current gun culture simply ensures that more domestic violence disputes will end in the ultimate tragedy, and that more convenience store confrontations over loud music coming from a car will leave more teenage boys bloodied and dead…Handguns do not enhance our safety. They exacerbate our flaws, tempt us to escalate arguments, and bait us into embracing confrontation rather than avoiding it…What I believe is, that if he didn’t possess/own a gun, he and Cassandra Perkins would be alive today.”                   Jason Whitlock, Fox Sports Columnist

Speaking truth to power is never easy. Power doesn’t want to have the truth spoken. Power wants to control the message and never have it' message challenged. Power will often vilify and punish those who have the courage to speak real truth. Eventually truth wins. Eventually those who try so desperately to convince us that evidence, common sense, and our shared experience isn’t real, will succumb to the truth. It sometimes takes a very long while, but I always have faith that truth wins in the end.

Just a little over a week ago Kansas City Chiefs football player Jovan Belcher shot and killed his girlfriend, and the mother of his child. He then proceeded to the Chiefs facility where he committed suicide by shooting himself in the head in the presence of his Coach and the team’s General Manager. Sports writer Jason Whitlock wrote an article criticizing the Chiefs organization for going ahead with a game the next day in the face of this horribly tragic event. His column went on to urge a serious conversation in this country over gun violence. The quotation above is part of that column. On the NBC Sunday Night Game that same weekend, sports announcer and commentator Bob Costas made a statement during the half-time show quoting Whitlock’s column and adding comments of his own favoring a real debate in this country over gun control.  As you might guess, Monday morning brought a torrent of criticism and downright hatred aimed at both Whitlock and Costas. The National Rifle Association (NRA) issued a strong statement against both men, and the right-wing talk radio machine ratcheted up to full strength crazy. They referred to Costas’ statement as a “rant”. On and on it went, as it always does. 

As you know the NRA is willing to defend any level of gun ownership, and in fact promotes gun ownership at every opportunity. The NRA has taken the position that gun ownership is an absolute right under the Constitution and is required in order to maintain this nation as a free country. They believe that any attempt to limit gun ownership or limit the types of arms or ammunition in America sets this country on a slippery slope to totalitarian rule and the total loss of our democracy. The NRA also has shown its willingness to use any political or economic means to silence those who would question their point of view or attempt to institute changes that threaten their absolute, intractable position on guns. So it was no surprise that when Costas and Whitlock used the Belcher situation to even raise the question for debate, they were met with the full force of NRA sponsored backlash. There were calls for Costas’ firing and for Whitlock’s dismissal. The more rabid nut-balls and “ditto heads” called for much worse treatment. But we have come to expect that thick-skulled thinking from the Limbaugh and Hannity crowd. Too many of them needed a class in critical thinking, but must have skipped school that day.

Situations like the one in Kansas City and all the other gun violence cases that have populated the news lately grab our attention and hold it for a short while. Then we settle back into the constant drone of the NRA rhetoric until the next horrible and avoidable shooting. It seems we only pay attention to the sensational cases, the athlete/celebrity cases, or the when someone has the audacity to mix an important civic issue with our football. But the real tragedy of the gun issue is that affects many thousands of lives a year that most of us never hear about. Guns are the cause of a pandemic of pain and loss in this country-and we need to change that.

I won’t bore you with the volume of evidence that supports gun control. The numbers are there-and they paint an unmistakable picture of a culture that is destroying itself because it clings to outdated notions instead of recognizing the plain facts staring us in the face. Reciting those same statistics now would be a useless waste of time. Instead I simply urge people to stop believing the old lines and allow yourself to speak truth and hear truth. The truth is that we need to control fire arms in America. My position would be to simply eliminate handguns from our culture. Go ahead, keep your shotguns and hunting rifles- but get rid of the handguns. There is only one purpose for handguns -and that purpose is to shoot people. The NRA is fond of its saying: guns don’t kill people-people kill people. The real truth is: people with guns kill people. Every legitimate study proves that guns kill hundreds of times more people than are ever protected by guns. It is time to re-examine the old myth that guns keep us free and protect us from our own government? Does anyone really believe that armed citizens would be any match for the US military- the most powerful armed force in the history of man? So don’t keep perpetuating the macho fantasy that our government would fear a bunch of guys with .38s and .357s. The Constitution is rarely absolute- it is subject to new interpretations and the 2nd Amendment is not immune from legal re-examination. That's the real beauty of the Constitution. Remember that slavery was sanctioned in Article 1 of the Constitution- but that got changed.

The power that opposes rational debate over guns is the NRA and the congressmen they own. The NRA has been able to get its way in spite of all evidence to the contrary, because they are willing to walk into a congressman’s office and threat to fully finance a campaign against them if they cross the NRA. This act of political blackmail has been effective in preventing reasonable laws controlling guns and led to 11,700 gun deaths a year in this country. It is so important to learn the truth, then speak that truth over and over until it is heard.

Guns are just the latest example of our willingness as a culture to “believe” instead of “think”. We have seen the same pattern of thinking on global climate change. Those who denied the truth are far fewer now than just a few years ago- because we’ve decided to look at the undeniable evidence of climate change. We are finally accepting the truth that giving rich guys tax breaks doesn’t create jobs, and that wealth doesn’t “trickle down”. Why? Because there is no evidence of it- it’s just the opposite. For thirty years those who had a stake in us believing falsehoods got away with foisting economic lies on us. All along there were those who spoke truth to power and were shouted down, marginalized, made fun of, or just ignored- until they couldn’t be ignored any longer.

I am not a person of religious faith- but I have unshakable faith that the truth of things wins out in the end. History informs us that every myth eventually falls prey to evidence, rational thought, and undeniable evidence of truth. Some see the truth before others and I hope they keep shouting it at the powers that be. When it comes to guns, shouting the truth before another year passes will save thousands of lives.  We should be thanking Jason Whitlock and Bob Costas for their willingness to speak truth to power, as they give all of us the courage to do the same.

Thanks for looking in.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Greatness!


It isn’t very often that we get to witness greatness. Greatness in leadership usually only occurs when the times, and a special person come together at a moment when they are most needed.  That’s happened only a few times in our short history as a nation. I began re-thinking my notions about greatness after seeing the Steven Spielberg film Lincoln. I’ve always been very interested in our 14th President, having read three different Abraham Lincoln biographies over the years. So, it was a special treat for me to see this movie. The portion of Lincoln’s life covered in the film only involves the last four or five months of his life. It’s based in the Doris Kearns Goodwin book Team of Rivals and concentrates on Lincoln’s efforts to get the Congress to pass the 13th Amendment, outlawing slavery. The movie provided a truly fascinating glimpse into Lincoln’s life and character, as well as giving us a good look at the political atmosphere of the times. To top off the experience of that film, Daniel Day Lewis gave an extraordinary performance as Abraham Lincoln. When the film ended I felt as if I had actually seen the real Lincoln. Some years ago I had the chance to be in Washington D.C. and visit the Lincoln Memorial. For me, it was the most moving part of our visit to the Capital. Being there at the memorial, I could actually feel the greatness of Lincoln.

Reflecting on that experience and other thoughts I’ve had about great leaders in our history, I recognized that greatness is hardly ever recognized in its own time. For good reasons I think, greatness can only be truly appreciated when viewed through the long lens of time. For that matter some evils and other mischief also require a bit of time before we see it for what it is. An example would be the horrible Communist witch hunts of the 1950’s spearheaded by Senator Joe McCarthy. His particular brand of evil went on for several years before anyone dared rise up to stop it-meanwhile so many lives and careers got ruined. Returning to Lincoln, his greatness was not appreciated in his time in spite of the fact that he presided over the secession of half the country and the bloodiest war in our history in order to restore the country. No other President had, or has had to contend with a challenge of that magnitude. He met that challenge and saved the country while at the same time changing the very nature of the nation by leading the way to abolish slavery. Nonetheless, he faced unbelievably harsh criticism at every turn and was roundly despised by many in the country and by many in the government. Today’s political chicanery, name calling, and ugliness are nothing compared to the practices in Lincoln’s time. Through it all,he stayed very true to his duty as President. He preserved the nation- he preserved the Constitution- and he altered the social fabric of the country by causing those around him to heed the call of freedom upon which the whole thing was based. He did so largely by the force of his will and his indomitable character. That is greatness!

Lincoln’ claim to greatness came from his deep convictions and core values. That is not to say that he was always resolute in every position or solution. His election itself was the beginning of secession. Lincoln was the first President elected as a member of the relatively new Republican Party. Republicans were the more radical party of the day, replacing the Whigs, and were solidly anti-slavery. As Lincoln launched the Civil War to restore the Union and bring rebellious states back into the country he often struggled with the issue of slavery. He was deeply opposed to slavery but felt his obligation to preserve the Union was greater. Because of that conflict in his heart, he had some rather “inventive” thoughts to deal with slavery. For instance, he proposed moving all slaves back to Africa- to the country of Liberia (which he helped establish for that purpose). He also proposed moving freed slaves to western territories or just having the Federal Government simply buy all the slaves, then free them. For the first two years of his Presidency he was singled-mindedly determined to bring the Union back together and deal with the slavery issue separately. That strategy neither advanced the war effort nor paved the way to ending slavery. It finally came to Lincoln that freeing the slaves was the best way to achieve his goal of restoring the Union AND abolishing slavery. The Emancipation Proclamation was his temporary solution to give more popular purpose to the war for Northerners, and set clear boundaries about reunification for Southerners. As the Civil War was ending, Lincoln needed to abolish slavery by law once and for all, and do it before the Southern states rejoined the Union; because he knew it could not pass with Southerners back in the Congress. Greatness was on display in his genius for molding the events and the times to achieve great ends. He was both cunning and determined achieve his ends.

Lincoln wasn't our only leader to demonstrate greatness that passes the test of time. Woodrow Wilson took us the through the “war to end all wars” and conceived of a planet governed by reason instead of global war. His idea for a League of Nations never came to be. Instead the world punished Germany and returned to isolationism which gave rise to the Nazi party, National Socialist movements, militaristic empires, and even more unspeakable death and destruction. It took two World Wars to see the greatness in Wilson’s vision. FDR was also a man of greatness. Often facing a fiery minority opposition, he led the country out of Depression by replacing fear with hope and crafting social changes that define our country to this day. Incidentally he also led us through (along with other great men) through WWII, the most devastating war in the history of man.  Lyndon Johnson’s greatness was in his willingness to forsake future political power to continue Lincoln’s work of ensuring civil rights for African Americans, and continuing FDR’s work of providing dignity to working men and women through the passage of Medicare and other social programs.   

Greatness is an amazing thing to behold and appreciate for its achievements, and for its rarity. We are facing huge fiscal, social, and international diplomatic issues today-most of them near crisis level. I believe that greatness lives somewhere in the mix of current events and today’s leaders, and is waiting to show itself. We have extraordinary men and women in leadership positions today. Like those who found greatness in the past, today’s leaders are suffering the pettiness of small-minded detractors who cannot recognize the core principals upon which greatness is built. These detractors harp at the small issues, mired in their partisan ideologies. Today we see that at work in the petty efforts by a few Senators to pick on Susan Rice in a desperate search for a scandal to pin on the President, or stick to non-sense pledges made to lobbyists in place of their duty to govern.  Folks like this have always been part of the American political landscape, but they have always faded in history’s memory because history prefers greatness to pettiness. Jefferson, Lincoln, Wilson, FDR, and all those who advanced our country dealt with the worst elements of political life, but overcame obstacles placed in their way by the puny and ignorant because they had a vision, and values that transcended pettiness.

Today’s fight is to rescue and restore the middle class from the ravages of economic and social unfairness and injustice. This turning point in our history will determine whether greed and selfishness robs the country of its remaining wealth and we fail, as other great societies of the past failed, when too few had too many riches; or whether government will stand for the middle class to create growth and prosperity as it did during other periods of prosperity in our past when the emphasis was on building the middle class, not catering to the obscenely wealthy. My best hope is that those who look through the long lens of history generations form now, will see that greatness overcame all obstacles once again.

Thanks for looking in.    

 

Sunday, November 25, 2012

The Boy with No Arms


Last April a baby boy was born to parents who had been wanting a child for a long while. All the early signs indicated the pregnancy was going well, and that their son would be a perfectly healthy child. Shortly before his birth an ultrasound exam revealed that their child did not have arms from the point just above where the elbow would normally be. His parents had some time before his birth to prepare themselves to care for a child with this disability. My daughter and son-in-law are friends with the parents, so our family has known about this boy since the time before his birth. As you might imagine, his parents have gone through a range of emotions, both before their son’s birth and since. They have agonized over the choices that have to be made concerning his care. A child with no lower arms or hands can’t sooth himself as other children do. He cannot learn to hold a bottle or satisfy the developmental urges his brain sends out to reach or grasp an object. He cannot learn to balance or scoot using his arms to create movement. Because of this impairment this boy is often very difficult to calm and comfort, and his natural frustration requires much more parental effort than the monumental effort parents would normally give a new baby.

Among the choices and decisions that needed to be made were choices about how and when to introduce prosthetic arms to this baby. It is not as simple a choice as you might think for a number of reasons, but his parents chose to begin the process now in the hope that their son will learn to gain utility from the prosthesis sooner rather than later. That choice was made even more difficult by the costs involved. I know that in matters like this, and other health decisions people make, costs should not be the deciding factor. But sadly, it is a real issue. The issue of money gave me the opportunity to meet this baby and his parents. My daughter and others have decided to assist this family with the costs; and the parents began a web site to share their story and ask for help in securing funds. It is called “Helping Hands Needed”

About a week ago we attended a pancake breakfast and fund-raiser to support Helping Hands Needed for baby Jameson. My daughter, her husband, his family, and other friends of the family put this event on. It was very successful. One of their friends even arranged to get two local TV crews to come out to do a news story about Jameson and put the donation information out in the news cast. This was a wonderful out-pouring of generosity and support for this family. A great deal of money has been raised and I know the family was deeply touched by the heartfelt support.

Aside from the great efforts to help this family afford what Jameson needs, and my personal admiration for all those who gave of their time and their money, I still left feeling very badly about this situation. As I said, this out-pouring of generosity was truly inspiring- but the problem is that even with this effort, not enough money (needed for even one set of prosthetics) was raised. Jameson’s prosthetics will cost approximately $25,000.00 a year, every year while he is growing. The family has insurance- but their policy covers well less than half the costs. I won’t go into all the details about why the costs are so high, but it has to do with needing different sets of prosthetic arms for different functions during his development. Jameson’s father works, while his mom cares for him during his dad’s work time. This is a responsible family, faced with a huge personal and financial challenge through no fault of their own.

I have been thinking about this issue a great deal lately, not just because of Jameson, but because of other situations close to me as well. Over the last year I’ve written four essays about our dear young friend Molly. (Molly’s Story, Parts 1,2,3 and 4) Molly is still dealing with Breast Cancer as a young wife and mom. Her most harrowing challenge may be yet to come. The latest chapter in her story is the financial burden her cancer treatment has caused. She too has insurance through her husband’s employment, but their portion of the bills will put them in to bankruptcy, and cause the loss of their home, their possessions, and all they’ve worked for. Molly recently put out a plea on a social network for help from her friends, so that her little daughter could have a Christmas gift this year.  Yes, it is that bad! It is heartbreaking to see this young woman battling for her life, have to face the crushing and humiliating financial burden she and her family now faces. In my immediate family, my son-in-law went through cancer treatment some years ago. He was forced to go bankrupt and has only recently been able to right his financial ship after losing (literally) everything because of illness.  

There are about 1.5 million bankruptcy filings every year. 62% of bankruptcies are due to medical expenses, having nothing to do with financial irresponsibility. Of those due to medical expenses, over 75% of the filers had medical insurance. Those are the raw numbers, and most of us are aware of these numbers to some extent. But I ask that you think of those raw numbers in terms of people you know. In my small circle, I know three families experiencing extreme hardship because of health care costs. The plain truth is that most American families would be ruined by the costs of health care if they have a serious illness, accident, or chronic condition to deal with. The bankruptcy numbers don’t even count the millions who struggle for years with these costs and can’t or don’t file for bankruptcy. In spite of wonderful intentions, there are not enough pancake breakfast fund-raisers, bake sales, or pleas for help on Facebook to solve the problems so many of our neighbors face. Hands for Jameson will cost $75,000 in just the next three years alone. Is it right that his family or Molly’s family should have to go to bed every night not knowing where the money will come from, and knowing that the costs will eventually overwhelm them leading to life-long debt and deprivation?  In the richest country in the history of the world, this should not be happening.

There is a solution for these families and the millions more across our country who struggle with the overwhelming burden of health care costs. I hope that situations like the ones I’m describing cause us to start thinking about government policy in terms of people we know; and more importantly using our vote to promote new policies that change this horrible health care system. Policies matter- the values of policy-makers (elected officials) and political parties matter. We should conduct the business of health care in this country on the premise that health care is a right. We can and should decide, as a people, that our nation has an obligation to ban together to care for its members-not only to provide the actual health care, but to protect families from financial ruination. A financially ruined family does not enhance the moral fiber or economic strength of this nation.  

I know there will be those who will cry out that we can’t afford to provide for everyone- they will sound the alarm bell of individual responsibility. But I challenge that assumption. This country comes together to provide for the defense of everyone- we provide for a sustenance for all our elderly members- we come together for any number of things most of us take for granted. Our nation is still the richest nation in the world- so we can choose what to spend our wealth on. For instance we are now spending two billion dollars a week for a forsaken war in Afghanistan. For reasons I cannot understand we have built a health care payment system that relies on employer provided group insurance or private pay insurance for the majority of us. The common feature of this system is that is a financial enterprise with a fiduciary obligation to produce profits for share-holders. In essence, we entrust insurance companies with decisions about our health and finances knowing that they exist to produce a profit with our premiums, by controlling what they will pay for. Their very existence is based on a profit motive-not a health care motive! No other advanced country does this. Those countries have seen the wisdom of using the collective power of their societies (and yes, I mean slightly higher taxes) to provide for the common good of their citizens. They have come to realize it is well worth it to have single-payer systems that don’t need to produce profits. Families in those countries don’t need fund-raisers to make sure their kids have medical care. These systems cover all citizens, emphasize prevention, and have lower costs. We have the highest quality health care in the world- but rank far down the list in health outcomes because we leave too many of our fellow citizens without coverage or with inadequate coverage. Our great health care should not be reserved for the richest among us- but it is.

The last election demonstrated that a majority of us still value the idea of community in this country. We have to continue that march. It is important to remember that there are people in our lives who are directly impacted by policies and decisions in government. That’s why government is ultimately you and me. You and I need to think about Jameson, and Molly, and Landon when we consider what kind of country we want this to be, who we will elect to run it, and how we treat our fellow citizens.

Thanks for looking in.

P.S. Jameson’s parents are recording their lives on the link below.  If you have an interest in following Jameson’s story, or wish to contribute to his family please go to:


   

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Thanksgiving 2012


2012 has been a year to remember for any number of reasons. In my life it has been a pretty good year. I know that suffering and deprivation continues in the world, and all of us of good conscience need to keep up the fight to raise awareness and take action where we can. Nonetheless, I can claim some very good fortune for myself and our family. I’m not one to seek explanations from unearthly forces or deities taking an interest in my life- quite the opposite. So when I give thanks it is more a feeling of understanding how fortunate I am, and recognizing that I should never take the good in my life for granted. As we all found out last month, when Hurricane Sandy came, good fortune can be a fleeting thing lost from us in an instant. So I am thankful, in my own way, for some wonderful events that took place in 2012. I’ll mention a few that are particularly meaningful to me.

January brought another grandchild into our life. Our daughter Emily and her husband Jake had a baby girl before the new year was two weeks old. Kaya joined her brother Ben in this great family and thus joined our extended family. Some six years earlier Ben came into the world in very hurried fashion and very early too. His birth was just fine for him, but made for a bit too much drama for his parents and the rest of us. All was well in the end for his grand entrance, but Kaya’s arrival was so different. She was full-term and she was peacefully delivered in a planned manner. Lee and I were there with Jake and Em as she went through a fairly mild labor. I was not permitted in the room for the actual birth (a decision I agreed with) - but Lee was there and got to see her last grandchild take her first breath. Even as I listened at the door, I could tell it was all a picture-perfect birth. Lee came out a few moments later with a look on her face I had rarely seen before. She was so entirely moved to have seen Kaya’s birth. The rest of the day was spent quietly with our youngest daughter, her family and the little girl they wanted so much. In the months since, Kaya has been a total delight. We’re very fortunate to be near all of our grandchildren and have so much contact with them. Kaya is truly the baby of the family and she seems to know it. She has the most contented, big smile and pleasant manner. Our family is our great treasure and we’re thankful for each of them.

There were some great, but challenging professional changes that took place for several of us in the family this year. After almost 15 years in my last job I made the choice to try something new. I was fortunate to get a great new job as a Regional Manager at Goodwill. I even surprised myself with this one. Given my age, I thought I’d likely just stay put where I was. But one of my goals this year was to expose myself to new things. I did, and I’m incredibly glad I did. Goodwill has been great so far. I’m happy in my new job, learning new things and coming to appreciate yet another outstanding agency with a mission to invest in human capital to make a better world. And, I’ve met some really remarkable people too. I like that. But just as I was finding myself with new challenges, both of our kids found new opportunities in their professional lives. Get this, while Emily was on maternity leave she got promoted to Director of Sales- an executive position in a large food distribution company. She went back to work after maternity leave and is doing great.  Shortly after Emily’s new development occurred, our older daughter Erin had a huge advancement in her profession. In a series of events, Erin got promoted to Supervisor, then to Director of the Victim Advocacy and Prevention Department of Lutheran Community Services. Erin weathered a tough summer of new duties and responsibilities with staff shortages and agency wide changes- but she came through like a champ and has now settled in to an incredibly important job directing Spokane’s program to assist and advocate for women who have been victimized, sexually assaulted or traumatized. Lee’s professional career involves more now too. She continues to direct an outstanding Child Care Center for Catholic Charities, but has also added consulting on a community-wide basis. I’m proud of this the family- but very thankful too. Each member of the family, including my two sons-in-law contributes their talents and their hearts to this family and their community in ways that are unique to each one of them. This is a family to be thankful for.

As think about the last year and the new things that have come my way, I’m feeling very grateful that I have a life that allows me to try new things, enjoy new activities and meet new people. I know it is not that way for everyone. Only this week I met a young man at work who is very special. I’d just gotten into work when I got a call from our Human Resources office. They were calling to see if one of my staff could give a tour to a blind man who wanted to learn about Goodwill. I told them I didn’t have anyone specially trained to work with the blind- but I’d be happy to assist him. The young man showed up right on time. He was waiting for me in our reception area. There I found a 26 year old African-American man who was totally blind and had severe hearing and speech problems. I introduced myself and he took my arm as I escorted him up to the second floor where we could talk. His speech was very difficult to understand. He patiently told me that he knows people can’t understand him very well and that if I was having trouble, I could just ask him to repeat himself. He didn’t want me to feel uncomfortable with his disability-what an incredibly gracious gesture on his part.

We spoke for about half an hour. I learned that he had sight and hearing until he was about 13 years old. He lost those abilities in an auto accident. I also learned that he wasn’t there to find out what Goodwill could do for him- he was there looking for a job. He asked that I give him a tour of our facility’s production area. He held my left arm with his right hand and held his cane in his left hand as I gave a blind man a sight-seeing tour. We stopped at several stations in the production area as I described what was happening at each spot. Although he has severe sensory and neurological issues, his intellect is keen, his body fit, and his determination was evident. He would touch some of the items and feel his way around the tote bins and production tables as he was trying to determine how he could do the work. He kept telling me that he does not let his problems ever stop him. He had a work history before moving back to our town and was proud that he is a hard worker. After the tour I filled out a Job Application for him and took him back to where the Special Mobility bus would pick him up. I told him I wanted to shake hands and he said he did too. If it is possible to physically feel the emotions of determination and courage (in the face of adversity)- I think I did in that handshake.

For all the ugly political rhetoric of this past year; with talk about “urban people” and “takers not makers” and the 47% who don’t take personal responsibility, it’s easy to feel cynical. Then I got meet this young man who has every reason to give up- but doesn’t. This young man wants to contribute in spite of the fact that it takes him three times the effort and trouble just to get somewhere, let alone do the work. He is a guy who makes me feel grateful for all I have and reminds me that the cynics who blame the poor for their troubles are just wrong. This young man could have been the poster child for all those who used race and disadvantage to create divisions in our country, or provide an excuse to promote the idea the privileged among us are the ones in need of favors. The young man I met wasn’t there to get “free stuff” or accept “gifts” from government or anyone else. He was there to find a place to work and contribute anything he could.

The professions some of us in this family have chosen are not the kind that will lead to great wealth- but we knew that at the time. And, I’m not opposed to those who have great financial success- provided their riches don’t blind them to the fact that many in our world will never have all the opportunities that some have, and that we are all in this society together. On this Thanksgiving, I’m personally grateful that my profession and my life gives me the chance to meet people who don’t have many breaks in life, yet still find ways to achieve and inspire. It’s a great feeling and revelation, and not one I would want to selfishly keep to myself. So I suggest and urge anyone who can, to find a way to get to know people who don't have all the advantages we have, and learn more about them. This isn’t about charity- it’s about making a connection with people we normally wouldn’t connect with. If we can all learn to respect the value of all people- charity will take care of itself.

My best wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving to all. Thanks for looking in.

   

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Brand X


In the less sophisticated days of early television advertising, commercials used a basic technique to sell their products. Many of the products advertised were household products. The common method was to make the comparison between the favored product and the vaunted BRAND X. “Brand X” was always product that is simply inferior.  I know there will be a thousand different explanations to tell us why the recent election turned out the way it did. As I was watching the results come in and thinking about what happened, the idea of “Brand X” really felt like an apt metaphor for the defeat Mr. Romney and so many other Republican Senate candidates suffered on election night.

Getting right to the point, President Obama wasn't in the strongest position during his campaign. Though I believe he had done much better as a President than some of his staunchest detractors would admit. Still, he was presiding over an improving, but very sluggish economy. Normally an economy with a very slow growth rate would spell defeat for a sitting President. So the question is why Mr. Romney could not capitalize on these circumstances and eke out a narrow win. My sense is that Mr. Romney was a weak candidate who could not overcome the Republican brand. Before I move on to the Republican brand, I call Mr. Romney weak because he could never find a core set of positions to campaign on. The Republican Party literally forced Romney into extreme right-wing positions during the laughable Primary races. He felt compelled to go far-right just to compete with the likes of Perry, Santorum, Bachmann, Trump, Cain et al.(Clown College) Once there, he was kind of stuck. His late dramatic reversals and shifts betrayed a lack of genuineness in his political and moral fiber. And to top it off, he was in the same package as the rest of Brand X.

If there is a lesson to be learned from this election, it is that the Republican brand needs a makeover. The simple truth is that this brand just doesn’t sell any more, when compared to the other product (Party) on the market. It is also clear that the Republicans don’t understand the market, because the market for political favor has changed and it will continue to evolve in ways that don’t mesh with the message of today’s Republicans. In the last few days I’ve actually heard the voices of some reasonable Republicans who see the need to change direction. These were people who are still Republican, but more moderate in their views. They are finally speaking up after years of being afraid to stick their heads up for fear of being booted from their own party, as many moderates were. This is encouraging. At the same time I continue to hear the same old denial from the far right who will blame everyone but themselves, using some truly amazing twists of logic. The Party seems to be in as much disarray as they were after the first Obama victory.

On the all-important economic issues, The Republicans turned out to be Brand X. Exit polls confirmed that economic confidence is growing. The constant chant that “he made it worse” wasn’t true and didn’t sell. If you want to see “worse”, go back and read the headlines from September 2008. Then follow the trend lines since then. 56% of those responding on exit polls said President Bush was to blame- not Obama. Employment is improving, not regressing to 700,000 job losses a month. Most voters (particularly low and middle class) voters knew Mr. Obama, not Mr. Romney, had their interests at heart. There also seemed to a growing awareness of the overwhelming evidence that cutting taxes on rich people does not create jobs. The Trickle Down fantasy never worked and today’s reality only proves it. Mr. Romney was stuck with the brand that only has a few ingredients: for a full list of ingredients look at the radically conservative Republican National Platform. It just doesn’t sell (or add up).

Mr. Romney lost huge among women because his Party has been systematically demeaning women for years now. The crazy “legitimate rape” and “God intended it” remarks are not wild anomalies. They are positions the Republican brand has been pursuing for years through attempts to dictate a woman’s reproductive life, limit a woman’s access to health care, and ignoring wage disparity. It has been promoted in State houses and in Congress for quite a while now. The real trouble for the Brand began when those yahoos went out said it in public-and let the cat out of the bag. There goes plausible deniability for the Republican brand. All Mr. Romney could do was ignore the questions on these subjects. He literally pretended not to hear the questions. Women noticed-and the gender gap was a major factor in his defeat.

Perhaps the biggest market share mistake Republicans made is in relation to minorities. The oldest tradition in American politics is that white people run this country. White people need to get used to the idea that racial minorities combined, now (or will within a few years) outnumber white people. The Republican brand has not appealed to this demographic truth. It is no longer acceptable to find ways to work around their problem- Republican policies are the problem. On immigration, the Primary contenders mostly talked about how high to build the fence and how much lethal voltage should be used to electrify it. There were so many racially charged (racist) comments from Republicans in this campaign it was a national shame. Mr. Romney went so far right that he talked about how he would repeal the Dream Act- and how to institute “self-deportation” (perhaps the dumbest comment of the whole campaign). The Party has alienated minorities for years and done nothing to resolve the basic issues of racial injustice- they hardly even recognize it. As a Party this brand was only noteworthy for attempts to suppress voting in minority communities. Minorities noticed. 96% of African-Americans, 73 % of Asians and 76% of Latinos voted for Obama. The time of the ruling white class officially ended with this election. Diversity is no longer a PC thing to say, or a winking joke. It’s real, and this Brand X doesn’t get it.  No political Brand will succeed in the future unless their policies include justice and inclusion for people of color. It is the future of the country and it is right to embrace it.

Finally, this Republican Brand miscalculated the effectiveness of the fear tactic. Conservatives by nature want to preserve old ways. They want us to live under more’s and values that are “traditional”. To achieve that they often resort to the language of fear. They tell you that change and growth themselves are things to be feared. This brand has tried to convince us to fear or ignore science, and gotten far too many of us question actual facts by persuading us that things we see are not real. I will never forget the comments Mr. Romney made at his convention mocking the President for “trying to stop the oceans from rising”. Two months later, rising oceans and other effects of climate change swallowed up much of the east coast, leaving behind unimaginable pain and loss. It’s not a laugh-line now- but that’s what this brand has been pushing. In this election we saw a concerted effort to paint Mr. Obama as a figure to be feared and despised. He wants to take your freedom, or your guns, or your health care options, or your religion. He hates businesses, he hates white people, and he hates America! We were told to fear minorities, fear gays, fear "the other". In the last week of the campaign Paul Ryan stooped so low as to say that if the President won, it would be the end of Judeo-Christian values in this country. The growth of the Tea party is ample evidence of the politics of fear. As one commentator said the other night; “this will have to end sometime, we’re running out of angry, old, white men.” All the fear whipped up by right-wing hate-talk radio shows and the SUPERPACS to prop up this brand didn’t sell this time. I find that comforting.

I believe the end of this particular Brand X is near. The ice has been broken, voters said no to the old intolerances. After years of being swayed by fear, voters approved same-sex marriage in all three states where it was on the ballot. Overwhelmingly, the public feedback on the election is a call for cooperation, reconciliation, moderation, and governance. Brand X thought they could regain the White House this year by simply saying “no” to everything. They sometimes said “no” to their own ideas if they thought the President agreed with them. (Prime example: Obama Care) If they take that path again, they risk being irrelevant. If they choose not to govern- not to work for the people this time their Brand will gone forever. The country has monumental, pressing problems to tackle and it will take patriots and statesmanship working in cooperation to resolve them.

My best hope is that the Republican Party will alter its Brand. I hope they will abandon the extreme elements that have ruined the Brand and return to the business of governing by reason instead of stubborn, intractable ideology. I don’t wish for the death of the Party. Dynamic conflict helps the system work- paralyzing conflict just hurts the country. I wish for an opposition party with opposing views that are reasonable, and populated by members who put Americans first, and Party second. I had hoped that this election would be the beginning of a cultural change that recognizes the need for new directions. I think that has happened. Even though this was a very close contest for the Presidency; the result, and the result of many Senate races tells us that the majority of the country simply won't buy Brand X.  

Thanks for looking in.

    

 

 

Sunday, November 4, 2012

90 Million People: Missing!


The time has finally come to see the reckoning of years spent in the pursuit of that one indispensable possession so many of us take for granted. The election is upon us. The indispensable possession is our individual vote. In the next few paragraphs I’ll share my own thoughts about this precious thing, as well as sharing thoughts of very prominent Americans. As I was thinking about our right to vote, and seeking the ideas of others about the importance of this civic duty, I was reminded of the sad fact that far too many of us don’t vote. Current estimates are that about 125 million votes will cast in the upcoming election- but 90 million more Americans who are eligible to vote will not vote.  Over 40% of us who can vote, do not.

I find it remarkable that so many Americans favor having our children cross oceans to fight wars in other counties to help secure liberty there, but can’t cross the street to vote. Most studies conducted on this subject find that the number one reason citizens choose not to vote is the claim that they’re just too busy. The next most frequently cited reason is they don’t think their one vote matters. It seems we have done a very poor job as a country in passing on the importance of voting.

“Impress upon children the truth that the exercise of the elective franchise is a social duty of as solemn a nature as man can be called to perform; that a man may not innocently trifle with his vote; that every elector is a trustee as well for others as himself that every measure he supports has an important bearing on the interests of others as well as on his own.”     Daniel Webster 1840

As our country has grown from smaller beginnings to a nation of 310 million, perhaps the importance of voting, or knowing that our vote counts, has been lost. We need only look back a few years to see just how important each vote can be. In the election of 2000, only a relatively few votes in Florida made the difference in the Presidential election. In my own state, our current Governor was elected to her first term by a margin of 100 votes. These elections, and our participation as voters, are vitally important. In an address after the landmark Voting Rights Act was passed, President Lyndon B. Johnson said: “The vote is the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men.”

LBJ was making the point that our individual vote is the one thing that provides for our liberty. I have been concerned to see efforts over the last few years to erode the ability to vote in so many states. We’ve seen this effort in the voter ID laws, passed on the pretense that there is an epidemic of in-person voter fraud taking place all over the country. There is not- never has been. Unfortunately several Republican led States have used this gambit to gain political advantage. Most notably this happened in Pennsylvania, Texas, and Ohio. In Pennsylvania, the state Republican Party Chair was so bold as to even proclaim the voter ID law would cause his party to win. I was actually surprised to see our Courts consistently strike down these blatant attempts to suppress the vote. Even the conservative Roberts’ Supreme Court refused to allow Ohio to limit early voting (by refusing the case). Even in these hyper-polarized times the courts have upheld the sacred right to vote and denied those who seek to limit it. I think that speaks to the power of the vote and the deeply held reverence we have for this right.

I have been equally concerned over the decision that allows unlimited funds to be spent by (what could be) anonymous donors in an effort to buy our vote.  The effect of the “Citizens United” case is yet to be determined. Still I have the nagging sense that allowing millionaires and billionaires to pour limitless amount of money into campaigns is essentially wrong for two reasons. The first reason is that it allows candidates and their SUPERPACS to saturate the airwaves of TV and radio with relentless messaging that may or may not be true- and we are seeing this very thing happen now. With the amount of money that becomes available, candidates need not worry about truth. They can injudiciously and promiscuously keep pouring money into false ads with no accountability. The second reason is that these mega-donors (individuals who make personal contributions in the tens of millions) must want something in return. No one admits to it- but it simply stands to reason there is an expectation of having the favor returned. I cannot be convinced that these successful business people make that kind of investment without wanting to see a return on the investment. If they didn’t, they wouldn’t be the successful business people they are. This level of money influence, by its nature, corrupts the process of voting.

To protect the integrity of the vote, and thus our democratic system of government, I would like to see two major reforms. The first reform is total public financing of campaigns. A level playing field would provide the voter equal access to ideas instead of overbearing ad campaigns. It would shorten the campaign season and focus the nation on the issues. The idea of actively campaigning two years for a four-year job is nothing but a distraction from actual governing, and keeps us all focused on the quest for political power instead of being focused on the issues of the day. Moreover the constant campaigning obsessively occupies our elected officials to the point that it hinders their very purpose for being in office.  The second reform would be to actively seek to bring the 90 million missing people back into our democracy. If only 60% of us vote, and the country is pretty evenly divided- then roughly 30% of all eligible voters pick our leaders. I doubt anyone who really understands how few people elect our government would see that as a true picture of the democracy we tout around the world. Recent attempts to limit the vote are exactly the wrong approach to protecting the right to vote. Those truly concerned with our personal freedoms and liberties ought to be fighting to expand the vote-not limit it. Yet it is the same people who shout and bluster about the loss of personal freedoms lately, who are the ones behind efforts to suppress the vote. Can you imagine what elections would be like if 90 million more votes were at stake.  Many of those 90 million are the poor, the disabled, and the disenfranchised, among others.

A movement for full participation in government has never been tried. Perhaps those in power, from both parties, may fear an election that includes ALL citizens because the dynamics of an election involving all those systematically eliminated, or socially stigmatized would change the face of government and most certainly tip the balance of power in this country away from the privileged. There are many ways to increase citizen participation once we come to recognize the value of expanding the vote. Some have been instituted, like early voting and voting by mail. But we have a long way to go. We can make election day a holiday, so people don’t have to miss work to vote; we can begin teaching civics in school again in order to teach the value of participatory government; and we can begin campaigns and activities that bring people into the system instead of scaring them away.

For those who claim concern for our freedoms yet don’t vote or worse, try to limit the right of others to vote please see the words of Thomas Jefferson: “The elective franchise, if guarded as the ark of our safety, will peaceably dissipate all combinations to subvert a Constitution, dedicated by wisdom, and resting on the will of the people.”

Thanks for looking in.

P.S. Tuesday is election day- PLEASE VOTE!!!

 

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Ten-to-One


Over the last few weeks I’ve tried to write about political matters in a way that focuses more on the issues than the particular candidates in the upcoming elections. I’ve also tried to describe my thoughts about these issues in different ways than we normally hear around the water-cooler or in the hallway debates. The media and the campaigns not only tell us where to stand on the issues, they decide what the issues will be, and they give us a frame-work on defining the issues. Over the last month we’ve had a chance to see four debates (if you want to call them actual debates) for the Chief Executive jobs- President and Vice-President. Having watched all that, and keeping close track of the public reactions to each debate I’ll comment on the issues that have come to mind for me in the closing weeks of a campaign that seems to have gone on forever. I have no illusion that anything I say, or for that matter, anybody says will be persuasive to anyone or change minds at this point. After all, one third of the country has already voted, and I don’t know of a single “undecided” voter. I tend to agree with comedian and commentator Bill Maher when he says that if you’re an “undecided voter” at this stage, you’re an idiot. This has been going on so long and had so much coverage that anyone who can’t decide by now just hasn’t been paying attention, or is too addled to cast a coherent vote. I also believe we are so polarized that most Americans knew who they would vote for months or even years ago- regardless of what happened or what was said.

It’s no surprise I am among those who decided a long time ago that I would be voting Democrat in this race. But I hearken back to one of the opening events in this long, protracted campaign season that really stuck with me. The date was April 11, 2011-more than a year and a half before the election. Fox News was sponsoring a Republican Primary debate. All eight of the Republican contenders for the nomination were there trying to out-conservative the other. Near the end of the debate the moderators were getting frustrated as they tried to get any of the candidates to be specific about tax increases in the face of growing deficits. Finally the moderator asked for a show of hands if the candidates would reject a deal that provided one dollar of tax increases in exchange for ten dollars in reduced government spending. The candidates all looked at each other- then one-by-one each raised their hands. (You Tube this priceless moment)

Yes, it was a long time ago; and yes, it was during the primaries. For my money this was the seminal moment for the Republican Party. That one moment told me more (than any other single moment)what governance would be like, whether a Republican wins the Presidency or Obama is re-elected. That one gesture re-confirmed everything I had seen in the previous years as Republicans obstructed the President at every turn- and everything the Republican Party would do if they gained the White House. It told me that an intractable, radical, right-wing agenda had so captured the Republican Party that nothing can break through the ideology of this new wacko Party.

Our system of government requires compromise, and for many years the ability to compromise was actually considered to be the art of governing. Those who were willing to find compromise and still maintain their core values were called “statesmen”. Today, no one even uses the word “statesman” because the qualities of statesmanship are lost. Every new President in my memory has promised to change the culture of Washington, and every single one has failed. I don’t view that as a failure of the President who couldn’t pull it off, be it George W. Bush or Barack Obama. It is the failure of our political evolution as a people that values stubborn ideology more than governance. We tend to thrive on polarizing conflict- and turn everything into a blood-sport.  This is the FoxNews approach that says: everything we do-good; everything they do-bad. Even conservative icon Ronald Reagan compromised. His methods would be called treason by today’s Republican Party standards.   

The Republican Party has proven they had no intention of compromise or governance. They vowed that beating Obama was their prime objective and they proved it. They have stopped every economic initiative the President proposed by a record number of filibusters in the Senate, then they go on the campaign trail to say the President failed work with them-and failed in general. After all the crazy talk in the Republican Primaries, Mr. Romney is furiously trying to find a tenable moderate position on just about every issue. The debates with the President have really illustrated this. In order to curry the favor of the radical elements in his party, he had to raise his hand with those clowns to say "I wouldn’t even take a ten-to-one deal". Yet in recent weeks he’s talking a very different line on health care, taxes, and even abortion. He talked tough about the President’s “failed foreign policy” then turned around in the foreign policy debate and adopted the very policies the President is implementing. Mr. Romney has really boxed himself in- it’s just that we can’t figure out which box he’s in because he’s got a different position every time he speaks. Even going back to that fateful day in April of 2011 when he said he wouldn’t take a ten-to-one deal, we have ask how he plans to govern when he adopted an all-or-nothing position. I know he’s changed his position now (yet again!)- But which one is the truth? If elected, will he honor his pledge to Grover Norquist or his promise to work with the other party like he claims he did in Massachusetts? Should we believe that his “business experience” is his main qualification to be President, or be skeptical of a businessman who turns down a ten-to-one deal? What reasonable businessman does that? It’s all very confusing at best, and pandering nonsense at worst. But it seems to be working.

Perhaps Mr. Romney is the candidate we created. Perhaps his “say anything, do anything” approach to campaigning is the method we’ve wanted all along and he’s just the guy who perfected it. Perhaps he’s the candidate who is capitalizing on the culture we’ve fallen in to. It is a culture that likes immediate reward without much effort or thought, so we can just go along with the last thing we heard because it’s too damn hard to keep track of reality. Political and economic reality is hard and complicated.  I can’t think of a better explanation for a guy who changes his position constantly then even tries to tell you he never had the old position in the first place. (Never-mind that pesky video tape) President Obama is not the ideal President and his record isn’t perfect. There have been failures – but there have also been triumphs. And any reasonable person (and I emphasize REASONABLE) would say he probably did the best anyone could have done with the total mess he inherited. But at least he is not a chameleon changing his appearance depending on the surroundings. This is predicted to be a very close race, and I’m sure it will be. I believe the President will win re-election, but I’m coming to grips with the possibility Mr. Romney could narrowly pull it out- it’s that close. It’s been said that no matter who wins, the next President will have a difficult time governing because the members of the House and Senate will claim the winner does not have a clear mandate. I don't know how Mr. Romney could possibly have a clear mandate when he doesn’t have a clear position. But, like I said, maybe that’s what the people want-a malleable person who will just tell us what we want to hear.

The ten-to-one pledge that night also reminded me that this involves more than a President. Just like football quarterbacks, Presidents often get more credit than they deserve, and more blame than they’re responsible for. That debate in April told me that our Congress will hold the key to the future as much as the Chief Executive. In the last two years the Republican led House has been shameful in their inaction and their disregard for the welfare of the nation-all for the purpose of beating the President.  The Senate Minority has used the filibuster to stall any meaningful aid to the country. Just before the last recess the Senate even filibustered a jobs bill to put returning war veterans back to work. That’s how committed to creating chaos (based on ideology) the Republicans have become.

We can’t count on the next President to change the culture of Washington. The ten-to-one debate showed us the truth about today’s political climate. The solution comes from citizens who refuse to allow business as usual. It starts from the ground up- with us telling our Representatives and Senators we will vote them out unless they start heeding the will of the people, regardless of Party. This is where we can have the most impact as voters and constituents. The one thing almost all of us agree on is that we are sick of the dysfunction created by destructive adherence to an ideology instead of a commitment to governing.

Thanks for looking in.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Women's Issues


 With all the talk of how close the Presidential race has become, the news pundits have been dissecting the race by micro-examining each sub-group of the electorate. One of the groups getting a lot of attention over the last months and most particularly over the last weeks has been women. The conventional wisdom is that President Obama is stronger on “women’s issues”. That really got me thinking about what makes an issue- a “woman’s issue”. After much thought I concluded that dividing issues by gender is a very subtle way of continuing to discriminate against women.

I started thinking of the kinds of issues that have been assigned to women. One of the ways we can see which issues have been designated as a woman’s issues is to look at the issues that have occupied our First Ladies. I think it goes without saying that if one of our First Ladies had actually been President; these issues would have been far from the national front burner. But, as you know, we have never had a woman President. (Though I’m absolutely convinced that Hillary Clinton would have been President if she could have beaten Barrack Obama in the primaries- there is no way the country was going to elect a Republican after the Bush fiasco) Since that didn’t happen, let’s get back to the “women’s issues”. Almost every First Lady has had a pet project and many have been worthy matters needing our concern, but none of them important enough to be dealt with from the Oval Office. Dolly Madison led an effort to care for female orphans. Jackie Kennedy’s passion was refurbishing the White House. Pat Nixon promoted volunteerism for women. Barbara Bush was active in promoting literacy, and Laura Bush promoted education. Lady Bird Johnson spearheaded an effort for national beatification. Let’s not forget Nancy Reagan’s youth drug abuse campaign. Betty Ford worked to provide more mental health care, and Michelle Obama’s campaign is to address childhood obesity. That’s just a few, but nearly every First lady had her issue or project.

Looking back at these issues, a pattern begins to emerge. These issues fall into categories that fit well with female stereotypes. We see care for children, education, hearth and home- beautification, and women’s volunteerism. In essence these causes have almost exclusively been about kids, schools, houses, pets, and giving the “ladies” something to do.  I’m not saying that many causes championed by First Ladies were not worthy causes, I’m merely saying these causes tend to fit a stereotype that can be seen as “lesser” causes. The only time a First Lady actually tried to move the country on a serious and important issue was the work Hillary Clinton t did to create a national health care system. President Clinton asked his wife to lead this effort and I think we all remember the result. Hillary Clinton was mistreated by the Congress (even members of the President’s Party) and the public, and was roundly criticized on every front. My memory was that the criticism went well beyond the issue itself, and it became a scathing personal attack about her “place” and even her femininity. Mrs. Clinton never again enjoyed the kind of positive public regard afforded to most First Ladies. Of course she went on to become very successful on her own as a Senator and Secretary of State. But in her role alongside a man, she was severely constrained by her gender.

We never designate certain issues as "Men’s Issues". Our culture has simply assigned the big issues to men by default. In matters of war, politics, high finance and industry, and governance our first image is never that of a woman at the seat of power. There are notable exceptions, but they remain exceptions. I challenge you to research how many women are CEO’s of the Fortune 500 companies. You’ll see a few, but only a very few. Look at our Congress and you will see a shockingly low percentage of women. Our current Senate has only 17% women, while our House of Representatives has 18% women. Women are one half of the country and less than 1/5th of the body that governs it. Perhaps we just like our women to stick to those lesser issues.

If we look to the “Women’s Issues” at play in this election an even more disturbing pattern emerges. Our institutional discrimination against women has now turned its full force onto the glaring aspect of gender. The political debate is now focused on women’s sexuality and reproduction. When we allow these issues to be placed in the category of “women’s issue”, we are unwittingly engaging in a just another form of discrimination against women.  Sexuality and reproduction by their nature involve both genders. But we have allowed our politics to place all the responsibility, all the stigma, and all the guilt on women. Unfortunately it is women who normally bear the consequences, and have to face the judgments of others. But, I argue that this part of our culture is just wrong and needs change.

Listening to the political debate, you hear the arguments about who gets to decide what kind of medical coverage  women have available to them, including contraception (woman’s issue)- personhood amendments (woman’s issue)- who can get funding for reproductive health care (woman’s issue)- what defines rape as opposed to "forcible rape" (woman’s issue)- and even if fair and equal pay should be protected (woman’s issue). As you think about these issues remember that over 80% of those who will decide the outcome are not women. To even consider these issues is to place women alone, in the position to be judged about their sexuality, morals, and their characters. (Remember the Limbaugh “slut” remark) This is a fundamental issue of human rights. And even as all the male captains of industry and leaders of government smugly decide the fate of women’s bodies and their very status as citizens, very few males have stood to defend women against this degrading categorization or offer to fully share the burden now placed on women.

Women’s issues are men’s issues too. Fair and equal pay should be a matter of economic justice for men just as it is for women. Women are in men’s lives- we can’t separate the welfare of one gender without effecting the welfare of the other. Fundamental issues concerning women’s’ reproductive choice and health should be as important to the fathers, sons and husbands as it is to the women in their lives. To allow the politicians to create a false distinction about what is important to women does a disservice to both genders. It is that kind of thinking that has held women to a lower status throughout time. I hope we can evolve someday to a position of true gender equality. It starts with recognizing that “women’s issues” are human issues and it takes acceptance of that fact, and reason to stop the cruel stigmatizing that happens now. Wouldn’t it be a different world if every time some congressman (and those doing it now are all men) decides to introduce a law that, in any way, effects a woman’s body, sexuality or reproduction, there has to be an accompanying law that effects a man’s body, sexuality or reproduction with equal force? I think we would see the end of this kind of discrimination very quickly.

The political war on women is not new. Men throughout history have controlled women by regulating their reproductive lives and sexuality.  Over the last two years legislative attacks of this nature have gained  momentum in our State Houses and in the Congress. To stop this most fundamental form of hatred and disdain for women we must call upon our best instincts and our best behavior to make it stop. One way to start down that path is begin the realization the issues we call “women’s issues” are equally important to men. That makes them fundamental human issues and we all have a responsibility to protect them-both men and women. Relegating these issues to the category of “women’s Issues” only perpetuates the problem, and lets half of us off the hook.

Thanks for looking in.