Monday, October 31, 2005

The New New Deal

If the Democrats are ever going to win another election, people say, they have to win on the issues. The post-9/11 environment has made this almost impossible, since terror apparently trumps everything else, and as mind-boggling as it is, the fumbling President and his dutiful Christian soldiers seem to provide comfort to the fearful.

But the tide is turning. The further removed we are from 9/11, the less the right wing can exploit the public's fear to push their agenda. But what agenda will take its place? If the safety and security crowd loses steam, what can Democrats sell to the public to revitalize debate and unite the country?

Energy independence to protect the American way of life.

A vision that incorporates environmentalism with open-market capitalism, exploiting the new awareness of America's energy dependence brought on by the Iraq war. Conservation must be discussed. Making America efficient. Clean energy. America taking the lead on climate change.

No more brown-outs, black-outs, or wiped out American cities. No more blood for oil. Healthier land, healthier people. No more fat Americans, no more fat corporate executives, no more fat cat Republican oilmen in the White House.

If we are to save this precious earth, the most powerful nation cannot be seen as a pig at the trough, devouring as much as it can before the rest get their fill. The vision put forth by the Bush Administration is that America is unique, and therefore need not play by the rules. America is indeed unique, but must lead by example, or risk losing the power it currently has to _set_ the rules.

The authority America used to have was in its values. How it treated its citizens. America must restore its reputation as respecting individual rights and democracy. America must lead in terms of providing support for its poorest citizens, or risk furthering the economic and political divide. America must abandon the failed War on Drugs, and work towards providing infrastructure and jobs for the working poor, with a vision that supports diversity, builds communities, and rewards innovation and initiative. America's leaders must acknowledge that poverty is a symptom of a failed economic system, not an inevitable result of freedom.



Thursday, October 27, 2005

Beyond Reason

The Blog | Susan Smalley: What's Beyond Reason? Intuition and Well-Being | The Huffington Post

I believe that we have entered an era where reason has become obsolete, no longer beyond the strangling grasp of politics. New media have enabled those with access to these tools to obfuscate and manipulate ideas so that reasoned debate is no longer possible. The public, having to deal with massive amounts of information can no longer sift through the messages. We would use our intuition, but the cognitive dissonance caused by so much conflicting information just makes us give up. Our intuition tells us, "don't believe anything."

Friday, October 21, 2005

Canadian Perspective on the American Reality

Arianna Huffington: Sorry, Judy... Everybody Didn't Get it Wrong on WMD | The Huffington Post

I've enjoyed reading Arianna Huffington lately and the rest at the Huffington Post as reality begins to set in on the good ol' US of A. It's like finally exhaling after holding my breath for the past four years.

It's especially satisfying to re-read what was being written before the Iraq War by others who hadn't drunk the proverbial kool aid. Those of us who didn't buy into the fear and lies from the beginning have been watching a completely different story unfold ever since. And I think it will take a long time for the rest to get on the same page.

Friday, October 07, 2005

Ikea Furniture

My Ikea furniture is all the same. It always breaks. Always.

You know back when they made stuff, you know, uh, like they used to?

Remember having a 40-year old phone, or a vacuum from the 70s? That shit was solid.

But nowadays, if a company manufactured an item that was still being used decades later the guy who built it would lose his job. It doesn't serve anybody's purpose to build something to last, folks.

Anybody, I guess, other than future generations and such...

But Ikea really ought to be commended for their ability to ensure that each and every lamp they design breaks after a certain amount of time. And those items that tend to last, like rugs and such, they start to look damn ugly after a few years too, fashion-wise. Those Ikea-bots sure make 'em to be trashed.

What do you do with a rug that is electric blue and green?