Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

Turning Point


2010
04.11

The assassination of John F. Kennedy is often cited as a major turning point of American politics.  His death was tragic and left a great scar across the political face of the country, leaving it in a state of shock. Whoever was running on the Republican ticket was certain to have a tough time arguing against the policies of a dead man. Yet, Lyndon Baines Johnson’s resounding victory over Barry Goldwater in the election of 1964 was a turning point in itself, and not necessarily a good one.

“Barry Goldwater?  Ain’t he the warmongering racist who opposed the Civil Rights Act?”

Indeed he was, if you believe his detractors.  Though Kennedy’s assassination shadowed his candidacy from the start, his opposition to the Civil Rights Act would doom him to the popularity of a fringe candidate.  Coupled with his consideration of using nuclear weapons in Vietnam, he was easily painted as an extremist, out of touch with the mood of the day.

Yet, the resulting era of dirty politics and over-reaching federal powers still endures to this day.  Barry Goldwater may not have been a great alternative to LBJ, but even had he done what his critics threatened he would, he may still have been a better President than Johnson turned out to be.

Despite the claim, Goldwater didn’t actually oppose the Civil Rights Act because he was a racist.  To him, telling people who they could and couldn’t let onto their property wasn’t consistent with the principles of a free society.  The policy of segregation, of exclusion and public discrimination toward blacks was quite reprehensible, backward even for the 1950s.  Yet, like the 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution before them, Federal  statutes only forced compliance, but didn’t address the underlying problem of racism, especially in the South.   ”You cannot pass a law that will make me like you — or you like me,” Goldwater told one rally. “That is something that can only happen in our hearts.”  Goldwater’s downfall was opposing an Act that traded a principle of free speech and association, hateful as it was being employed by some, to treat the symptoms of racism, but not the cure.

People just assumed he was a racist because he opposed the Civil Rights Act.

Barry Goldwater also predicted the current form of the Republican Party.  In an interview with the Washington Post in 1994, the then-retired Arizona senator said

When you say “radical right” today, I think of these moneymaking ventures by fellows like Pat Robertson and others who are trying to take the Republican party and make a religious organization out of it. If that ever happens, kiss politics goodbye.

I think we all know how that turned out.

Though Goldwater had alienated many in his own party with his offhand, often reckless remarks, gone against the Civil Rights Act, which on the surface seemed like a positive step for a divided country, it was LBJ’s “Daisy” campaign which sealed the election and led to the biggest victory by a presidential candidate in the 20th century.

“Daisy” was a commercial that ran briefly, featuring a little girl counting to ten, then having that count reversed by a baritone voice down to zero, at which point a nuclear bomb exploded.  Johnson successfully depicted Goldwater as a warmonger who would resort to a nuclear attack on Vietnam.

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It was true, Goldwater had openly said that small nuclear bombs could be used to destroy the foliage in the jungles, reducing the Vietcong’s cover, which was the cornerstone of their  military strategy.  What he had said made a little sense from a military perspective and perhaps even from a human perspective. He didn’t appear to want to direct the bombs at population centers, but rather at forests, which may have reduced human casualties.  It’s not a great argument, but I suppose an argument could be made. However, in the context of political debate and without acknowledging the gravity of using nuclear devices as weapons in war it was a careless and costly remark.  Goldwater had hereby supplied his opponents with enough fuel for him to be burned as a warmongering psychopath who would love to drop the a-bomb on Vietnam.

Yet, once Johnson was elected, he quickly reversed his rhetoric and hurriedly drew up plans to escalate the Vietnam War, fabricating the Gulf of Tonkin incident to drum up support for full-scale war.  Agent Orange, a chemical agent, was used on the jungles of Vietnam to defoliate them, resulting in 400,000 deaths and 500,000 children born with birth defects.  The war was undeclared by the Congress, unconstitutionally expanded the power of the Executive branch, took over ten years and resulted in the deaths of over four million Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian men, women and children.  Who was the extreme warmongering psychopath again?

At least Goldwater wanted to get in and leave quickly or get out altogether.

An interesting article in Reason discusses the Goldwater movement and how, after the political beating he got in the election, a joke about the election went:

They told me that if I voted for Goldwater, we’d have a war in Southeast Asia, civil and racial unrest, and a ruined economy. I went ahead and voted for him anyway, and it turned out they were absolutely right.

At the time of the campaign, Vice-President Johnson was telling the public, “We are not going to send American boys nine or 10 thousand miles away from home to do what Asian boys ought to be doing for themselves.” Meanwhile, his advisors were drawing up plans to put 200,000 troops in Vietnam within a year.  His “Daisy” commercial made Goldwater seem like the warmonger that Johnson himself actually turned out to be.

The use of military force without a declaration, in direct violation of the Constitution; the expansion of Presidential powers beyond their constitutional limits;  these were the results of Johnson’s election.  “Daisy” ushered in a new age of dirty politics, giving rise to creeps like Richard Nixon and the religious Right’s brand of morality.

Goldwater wasn’t a racist, but he came across as one because he had no idea about how his views could so easily be misconstrued or even just misinterpreted.  When you stand against something, you’d better propose a better alternative and market it well or someone else will define your stance for you.  Once Goldwater stood against the Civil Rights Act on the grounds that it overstepped the bounds of a constitutional Federal government, he needed to propose a better solution for curing the social ills of racism and segregation.  Instead, he became a magnet for the KKK and a whole manner of other segregationists who assumed he just hated the darkies as much as they did.

Such is the destiny of the politician who means well, but is not aware enough of the game to play it effectively.

Showing sympathy for Goldwater and his politically incorrect opinions may not win me any friends.  It may even make me some enemies.  But I liken his stance to that famous phrase attributed to Voltaire:

I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.

If freedom is only reserved for the prevailing attitudes of the day, and all other views are punished, then there will surely come a day when the prevailing attitudes are usurped to enforce one group’s notion of freedom at the expense of other groups or individuals.  When freedom is supported in principle, it must be supported for all.

Wars of ideology need to be fought with ideas.  Freedom is not a state which can be granted by the government.  It is the inherent state of human beings.  Governments  have trampled on more rights through over-reaching regulations and unnecessary wars than have racists who refuse service to blacks.

Goldwater lost because the public could not see the distinction between not supporting the Act and not supporting that particular cure for racism. Currently, as we continue to fight two wars in the Middle East, have our freedoms usurped through wiretapping and dismissal of the right of habeus corpus, as we relinquish more and more of our freedoms, even the freedom whether or not to buy health insurance, it seems that the public today are even less capable of making that distinction as they were in 1964.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Viva La Republique! (a poem)


2010
03.22

Left and Right should not fight,
They should instead combine their might,
For nurture plays its vital role,
So society needs its Liberal,
But Liberty is a delicate flower,
Easily trampled by runaway power.
To ensure that freedom ever lives,
Society needs its Conservative.
The Founders knew these facts of course,
For they were intellectuals,
Learned men of poise and grace,
Who wanted to put government in its place,
To ensure the freedom that all desire,
While raising the standard of living higher.
They were a part of the Enlightenment,
Weary of the heavy hand of Government,
Where whim rules the fates of all,
Corruption breeds and freedoms fall.
They chose another road instead,
Leaving Kings and Queens for dead,
They founded a nation of Common Law,
With the pursuit of happiness at its core.
For happiness is not a guarantee,
Just a right to keep your property,
If some person has not enough,
You can’t just steal someone else’s stuff,
For if you did, then what would be,
The proper role of charity?
Plus how could such a thing be right,
To forcibly take through government might?
The founders knew that some need care,
That community support should always be there,
But not by chopping down the law,
And the freedom they fought the British for.

~

Adam Smith had demonstrated,
And with economic model calculated,
A notion new and elegantly grand,
That the market had an invisible hand.
As free people traded at a rapid rate,
The hand stepped in to regulate,
When businessmen lied and stole,
Their supply of wealth soon went cold,
For fickle is the buyers’ taste,
When competition rules the marketplace.
Without the use of government favor,
Business could only grow through labor,
By being better than all the rest,
Not buying favor through lobbyists.
So thus it went and all was well,
Until an idea began to dwell,
As the Founders’ time had come and gone,
Had they been right all along?
Or could the balance be tweaked a bit,
To make society give a shit,
About the poor, the sick, the needy,
“Ah ha!” they cried. “Let’s tax the greedy!”
And thus the guilt trip foiled the plan,
To have freedom rule the land,
For how can one be truly free,
When others may claim your property?
But once that principle was signed away,
The poor they grew, day-by-day,
A new currency had shown its creed:
The currency of necessity.

~

When the needy get the greater claim,
It makes more sense to do the same,
So interest groups they grew like weeds,
To propagate their list of needs.
But soon the rich ran out of dough,
And saw the way they had to go,
They used the government to promote their cause,
By adding a clause into the Laws,
That helped their business thrive and grow,
By buying people in the know.
Enter the age of Corporatist glee,
From Goldman Sacks to AIG,
They cheat and steal and bribe and curse,
To get a piece of the public purse,
All this because we deemed it wise,
To use the government to equalize,
Just like Religion’s old advice,
That good will come from sacrifice,
We kept believing through and through,
That a little bit more would finally do,
Until we looked around and saw,
There was nothing left to give anymore.
And not just that (surprise, surprise)
The claims of need had all been lies.
By helping people out of poverty,
The people had lost their liberty,
The Corporations which had grown so great,
Against whom none could regulate,
Divided up the public spoils,
Plundered the workers of their toils,
And yet the Liberals cry and moan,
“Capitalism took my home!”
Conservatives, now bought and paid,
Looked for nations to invade,
All the while the Corporation grew,
(Thanks to Haliburton and Blackwater too!)
The people marched and demanded Change!,
So it bought a candidate, trademarked the name.
The people breathed a sigh of relief,
At having a fresh Commander in Chief.
And yet, though this one had a brain,
Things somehow remained the same,
Wars continued, defecits grew,
Pundits argued ’til they were blue,
But no-one seemed to really know,
“Just where did all the money go?”
In the South, they chanted and they screamed,
“Give me back my American Dream!
They marched and Teabagged avenues,
Attracting whackos and their crazy views,
While in the North the Federalists surged,
“Protect us from this awful scourge!
Give us what the Frenchies have,
Their way of life doesn’t seem so bad!”
Yet wanting to be just like the rest,
Ain’t what made America the best,
The source of greatness plain to see-
The U.S. was the champion of Liberty!

~

But that was quite some time ago,
Now Left and Right bicker to and fro,
Trying to gain the upper hand,
To spend their way to oblivion,
Ignoring the elephant in the room:
‘Round the corner bankruptcy looms!
Though money flows in the people’s name,
The politicians treat it like a game,
“The economy is about to tank,
Let’s print more from the Central Bank!”
They call Bernanke on the phone,
And arrange to secure another loan.
Crisp green bills like cannon fodder,
With the interest zero on the dollar,
The politicians can spend again,
And act as if they’re noblemen,
Passing bills on the Senate floor,
Then heading back to ask for more,
Never pausing to reflect,
On how they might pay back the debt.
Yet History makes its lesson plain,
That lack of money leads to pain,
Empires past should make us wary,
For their downfalls were always monetary.
So Left and Right, I’m here to say,
There truly is another way,
It’s time to let people be free,
To feed the tree of Liberty,
To end the Wars to End the Fed,
Before the Republic is truly dead.

Popularity: 1% [?]

A New American Revolution


2009
03.31

I’m sorry America, but you seem to be screwed.  In future, when people apply to become citizens of the United States, there will be a $100,000 fee which will be thrown toward the national debt. This will be added to the fact that each taxpayer and that taxpayer’s children will already have a lifetime of payments to make toward a deficit which increases at a faster rate than it can be paid.  Eventually, the benefits of being a United States citizen will be outweighed by the costs, though it is hard to imagine there are very many benefits even now.

As it is, U.S. students score well below other developed nations.  In a 2006 international science and mathematics test, U.S. 15-year-olds scored 30th in Science and 35th in Math (behind Latvia and Estonia).   The money for Social Security has been spent.  One in every 31 Americans is either in jail, on parole or on probation.  Meanwhile, the government keeps handing out trillions of dollars to corporations who had a hand in the current financial crisis.

Internationally, the US government (on behalf of it’s largely ignorant populace) has carried out simultaneous wars around the globe, maintained its military presence in over 70 countries and has engaged in assassination and torture.

The revolution is coming.

sinking-ship

How long can a population have their productivity taxed, their savings stolen, their good name tarnished and their children retarded by an ever-growing system of incompetence and corruption?  How far will the American Empire stretch before it totally collapses?  All I know is, it can’t be much longer.

America is a geographical location, no longer an idea like it used to be.  However, the principles America was founded on are no longer visible, except as a horribly disfigured Dorian Gray contortion of themselves.  Freedom used to mean something, not just the right to shovel as much food in your face as possible.  Somewhere along the lines, true freedom was bartered for 24-hour movie channels and the strong, independent-minded American just became the loud, obnoxious know-it-all whom everyone despises, yet no-one will tell to shut up.

So where did it all go wrong?  We don’t know the exact date, but we do know that the system was broken long before either of the Bushes, though they did more than their fair share.  What we do need to focus on is the solutions.  Here are my top ten:

1. Wake up.  Address reality, not the fiction you mistake for reality.  Americans have long believed that they were number one, that what they are doing is right, that they can do no wrong and live however they please.  Rationality over mysticism, facts over opinions and science over religion.  

2. Halt the income tax, replace it with a flat tax on spending.  Why, oh why do we tax income?  Hard work should be encouraged, not punished.  Income tax is not only unnecessary and immoral, but it’s also the reason your politicians can redistribute obscene amounts of money to their corporate friends.

3.  Tie down the currency.  You must realize that as you read this, you are being taxed invisibly.  Each time the Federal Reserve prints new money (ie. all the time) the value of your money goes down.  That’s a tax on savings.  It’s immoral and it’s like a credit card with no limits in your name being spent on your behalf by politicians.  Link the currency to a commodity like gold and then the politicians can’t spend money they don’t have.  Simple.  Surprisingly it’s our old commie friends Russia and China who have offered this up as a logical way of bringing stability to international markets.  You know things are bad when the communists know more about capitalism than you do.

4. Bring home your troops.  Yes, all of them.  America, you do not own the world.  Nor can you afford to maintain your world empire.  Even if you could, you’re not welcome.  If your presence was a positive influence, then maybe.  However it has long been known that you have long conspired against foreign governments to further your own interests while creating more conflicts than you solve.  Your military help would be better on-call and then, only if it’s absolutely necessary.

5. Update education to a 21st century methodology.  Old laws and regulations keep new thoughts and ideas from being implemented.  Teachers’ unions make the education system both bloated and ineffective.  Any field in which competition is discouraged suffers from the same falling standards.  Less regulation, more independence and the demolition of the DoE.  Allow the market to provide schools which will be rewarded or punished depending on their quality.  Just like we do with food.

6. Decriminalize drugs.  Where in your constitution is the right to dictate what others do with their bodies?  In the interests of “public safety” your legislators have helped the drug lords to get rich.  Were drugs legal, they would be placed on shelves and served to adults in controlled amounts and of a predictable quality.  Contrast this to now, where people of all ages are dealt drugs of unpredictable quality to be used in secret for fear of discovery and legal consequence.  Drug dependence is a health issue, not a criminal issue.  Addicts need help and adults in a free society need not be told what they can or can’t do with their own bodies.  It does seem that this one is catching on in the mainstream media, albeit slowly.

7. End the culture of violence and paranoia.  In line with #4, you have a lot of work to do at home to correct the pervasiveness of weapons and violence in your own culture.  It’s almost impossible to find an American movie that does not have a gun featured at one time or another.  Gun control is one answer.  Education and a culture of brotherhood addresses the bigger picture of aggression.  We have lost our sense of community, not just in America, but in most modern societies.  We need to find ways to repair the social fabric of which we are all a part.

8. Stop blaming capitalism and let insolvent companies fail.   The system of capitalism is the fairest and most efficient economic system devised by man.  ’Capitalism run amok’ has been blamed for the current crisis.  Companies have been bailed out because of some apparent shortcomings of the system.  Excuse me, but capitalism is just fine.  Capitalism is a system whereby foolish moves are punished.  If you’re a bank and you bought some bad assets, then you lose.  When you fail, others will capitalize and then grow in your stead.  Capitalism made America great and gave you the lifestyle you currently enjoy.  Learn what it is and what it’s not.  Bailing out companies with public money is the very antithesis of capitalism as it rewards stupidity.  It should come as no surprise then that the current system is not capitalism and hasn’t been for a long time.  We live in the age of corporatism where companies lobby to receive favors and funding from the government.  Where excess legislation creates barriers to new entry, thereby reducing competition.  Your Founding Fathers would turn in their graves to know that the majority of Americans today still think they live in a capitalistic society.

9. Take personal responsibility.  Educate yourself on politics, the correct way to educate your children, on healthy eating, on philosophy, the world, on history and science.  Reality is all around you and you are personally capable of understanding it all.  You just have to open your eyes and try.

10. Get on the metric system.  If anything is a more glaring indicator that America is still way behind in science, it’s the fact that they still use the arbitrary notions of feet, inches and gallons when the entire world uses metric (Myanmar and Liberia excepted).  Wouldn’t it be nice to have a system of measurement which is easily convertible between units and which is based on the dimensions of the world, not of some ancient king’s shoe size?  Are you guys just jealous because France came up with the idea first?

Popularity: 77% [?]