Sunday, August 24. 2008Critical ThinkingCritical Thinking I should be writing more about politics at this time, but the spirit just doesn't move me much anymore. Politics is critical at this time, and people need to know that. To be honest, I'd rather be writing another movie commentary, or working on fiction, and that means I'm forcing myself here. My problem is, however, that all I seem capable of when it comes to the subject is a bunch of incoherent cussing and blather. I do believe that the irrationality of the whole political scene has become so idiotic that any attempt to insert a word or two of sense and meaning simply leaves one blabbering like the baboons running the whole show. If you need further examples of what I mean, observe the Democratic Party and its illustrious leader, Howard Dean. I'm sure there was a time in his life when what he had to say made sense and had meaning. But, all things considered, it simply cannot happen anymore. It's like someone took the Democratic Party, buttered it lightly all over the political scene, then dropped it in the cat's sandbox, buttered side down, now no one will touch it…and you can hardly blame them.
I wrote that about three years ago-- http://wm-monje.com/politicalblog/archives/45-Self-Government-Is-About-Not-KnowingIt-Seems.ht In fact I wrote a lot of stuff back then, and most of it offended people because I questioned their critical thinking, if not legitimacy in their attempts at self-government. What’s more, I still question it. At that time, three years ago, I was questioning the American public’s unwillingness to question or even acknowledge cronyism in high places and their total ignorance of such institutions as the World Bank and the power over all the people of the planet being achieved by multinational corporations and the handful of individuals who will ultimately control the whole shooting match…stuff like that. At present there seems to be yet another variation on our overall failure in critical thinking. Critical thinking can be defined, at least in part, as an intellectual process of perception, analysis, evaluation, logic, experience, reasoning and credibility. It is an extensive mental procedure, but one which much also recognize one’s own proclivity toward bias or prejudice, particularly when influenced by an indoctrination of belief systems imposed by external and coercive forces. It must also practice a high degree of intellectual honesty and humility, specifically a willingness to admit to one’s errors in judgment and past convictions when evidence may prove one wrong. The art of persuasion, especially as practiced by salespersons, politicians and religious leaders, I would say, is a deliberate assault upon an individual’s ability to think critically. When one is asked to trust or have faith, particularly where the word “sacrifice” is used as some sort of glorious human virtue, and when one has bought into that line, one has relinquished their critical thinking and been enticed into intellectual surrender and mental captivity. I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy. -- John Adams If ever there was a war this country fought that was truly righteous, it was the Revolutionary War. All others may have been perpetrated under the guise of “national defense,” but beyond that virtuous sounding characterization of mass death and destruction made possible by an ignorant, gullible and nationalistic people’s sacrifice of life and fortune, it all amounts, in the long run, to imperialism in the form of multinational corporations who serve their bottom line. It was not all so noble as we have been led to believe. We have served the stockholders of Halliburton well and made the world safe for Monsanto, Boeing, and General Electric. To quote a line from the Australian movie The Coca-Cola Kid, "The world will not be truly free until Coke is available everywhere." It is the end result that matters, and the end result is a kind of international corporate feudal system. The corporate elite are the new lords and ladies of our time, and we their surfs and servants. What’s more, we consider it our good fortune to belong to their fiefdom. The John Adams quote above was appropriate at the time. It is no longer applicable in reference to future generations. We are the future generations for whom he studied war and politics (although, in fact, he did have a classical education as well, as did virtually all of our founding fathers). The great interest in higher education today seems to be the MBA, the Master of Business Administration, which includes the ultimate academic achievement of our present president. It is a degree of variable time and effort conceived in the USA for the sole purpose of teaching the youth of the nation how to perform in business. This is not the pursuit of any particular business, not a business of personal interest and youthful aspiration, just business in general. That is a significant issue. I think it says a lot about the degree of personal enthusiasm, or lack thereof, in learning a distinctive profession that stimulates the ambition of natural and inherent talents that have excited the souls of inspired and creative young people down through the ages. Today, it seems, the pursuit of an indeterminate and nameless business, for the sake of mastering the business of business, has replaced the time-honored aspirations of the hopeful and gifted youth of our nation. Where can such indifference toward intellectual and cultural values lead us as a nation? Whatever happened to art, literature, drama, history, philosophy and all the studies in all the humanities? Perhaps they have little to offer in an increasingly mind-numbing, anti-intellectual, corporate society where the cold, hard, and sometimes deadly teachings of war, politics and business seem to be the only way to succeed, if not simply survive. There seems to be a growing absence of learning that might appeal to our nobler dreams, a tendency toward the dulling of the mind and imagination and a conformity to the mundane and commonplace with profit the only remaining motivating goal of the human spirit. Beyond the type of education one pursues there is also the significant difference between an education received and what one has actually learned. I have known, for instance, persons with masters degrees in theology who do not know what a scientific theory is, who have a dearth in classical literature and art appreciation, and not only don’t have a clue about higher math but can’t balance a checkbook. We’re talking about an individual who has been highly educated with the evidence to prove it on paper. Theology, of course, is in a class by itself when it comes to an absence of factual material and an inadequacy in the confrontation of reality. When it comes to religious studies, however, there are big differences between whether one is studying the historical and social aspects of comparative religions, such as a course by someone like Joseph Campbell, or if one is studying the mythology of someone’s bible as if it were actual history complete with an absolute moral code as decreed by God himself and enforced with horrific penalties. The blind belief in those stories, particularly in the Old and New Testaments of the Christian Bible we so cherish as the first, last and only word on the absolute truth, is, without a doubt, one of, if not the greatest failings and sticking points to attaining rational, realistic, logical, critical, and just plan grownup thinking this country has ever suffered. What we have here is a Bronze Age document, written in the words and concepts of the superstitious fears and dreadful unrealities from a primitive time of gross ignorance and blind sacrifice to unseen powers. They did not know the earth was round, so it had four corners with a sun that came and went; they did not know the earth was several billion years old, so it calculates out at about 6,000 years if you rely on historical record as found only in the Bible; they had no concept of the origin and development of the universe, the planet or the life thereon, so it was created by a super being in six days; and they did not know what was “up there,” so they designated it “Heaven,” and they did not know what was “down there,” so they designated it “Hell.” Today we know, for the most part, the reality of these ancient myths, beliefs and misconceptions. We have been “up there,” and we know it is not Heaven, just space and other planets. We have drilled to great depths, and using sophisticated equipment and procedures have otherwise determined what is “down there,” and it is not Hell. Even so these superstitions continue into our present society to the point they infringe on rational thinking, even in high places. In the Bible we have a day the sun stood still; a snake that not only talked but corrupted mankind from that day forward in so doing; several generations of the first men on earth who lived for hundreds of years; a man who lived for a time in the belly of a large fish (usually referred to as a whale); a sea that parted so a fleeing people could conveniently cross; an ark that carried two of all living animals for forty days and forty nights and then some, plus many more such tales of totally unbelievable and impossible happenings. Ultimately we are to believe that in the final chapter everyone who ever lived, died and decayed, will be physically resurrected and judged on the basis of whether or not he or she believed in another man who lived, died and was resurrected, evidently before he rotted. All this we must believe as the literal truth or end up “down there.” At the same time we have no doubt that fairy tales, zombie movies, and other people’s myths (such as the Hopi legends, for instance) are all make believe. If nothing else, I think it incredibly arrogant to believe that only our fanciful myths are real events and everyone else is being childish. We’re talking now about Twenty-first Century people here—two of which are running for President of the United States. First of all—the matter of church and state aside (for the moment)—we have two guys who freely admit they are “imperfect” and have moral failings, but—and it’s a big “but”—they believe in Jesus, therefore they are forgiven and saved. It’s as simple as that. No sweat. McCain: “It means I'm saved and forgiven.” Obama: “As a starting point, it means I believe in -- that Jesus Christ died for my sins, and that I am redeemed through him.” These are two men trying to qualify themselves to a multitude of people of many religions. This is a nation of many religions that are not Christian, and a nation whose Bill of Rights begins with the statement, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” These are two guys, running for President of the United States who seem to believe their Christian beliefs are a necessary qualification for that office. How did that happen? This has never been an issue nor should it ever be. In the words of McCain, “I have attended North Phoenix Baptist Church for many years, and the most important thing is that I'm a Christian." The emphasis is mine. It says a lot. His religion, being Christian, that is, is the most important thing. It means it is a good thing he is not of some other religion or none at all. In other words, despite Article Six of our Constitution, he has declared he has passed a religious test…in his opinion. The way it looked to me—and you can say it was just me—we had a whole program devoted to the passage of a religious test by both presidential candidates. I’m sure no one else, or very few if any, saw it as such. But then, I might wager, very few know Article Six of the Constitution either. And that, again, is one of our great failings as a self-governing people. Then you have to wonder how the Founding Fathers viewed religion, especially when we seem to be advancing the argument that this is and always has been a Christian nation. What exactly were their hopes or even predictions as regards Christianity, belief in the Holy Bible, and religion in general? Here’s a few quotes about the Bible by Thomas Paine: I would not dare to so dishonor my Creator God by attaching His name to that book. And here’s a quote by James Madison, our fourth President, on the clergy: What influence in fact have Christian ecclesiastical establishments had on civil society? In many instances they have been upholding the thrones of political tyranny. In no instance have they been seen as the guardians of the liberties of the people. Rulers who wished to subvert the public liberty have found in the clergy convenient auxiliaries. A just government, instituted to secure and perpetuate liberty, does not need the clergy. On the matter of state-supported chaplains in Congress, he said: Religion and government will both exist in greater purity, the less they are mixed together. And then there was Jefferson, third President and author of the Declaration of Independence, who had a great deal to say: I have ever judged of the religion of others by their lives.... It is in our lives, and not from our words, that our religion must be read. By the same test the world must judge me. But this does not satisfy the priesthood. They must have a positive, a declared assent to all their interested absurdities. My opinion is that there would never have been an infidel, if there had never been a priest. The artificial structures they have built on the purest of all moral systems, for the purpose of deriving from it pence and power, revolt those who think for themselves, and who read in that system only what is really there. On the Bible and its primitive if not childish wording and, most of all, its priesthood: Ridicule is the only weapon which can be used against unintelligible propositions. Ideas must be distinct before reason can act upon them; and no man ever had a distinct idea of the trinity. It is the mere Abracadabra of the mountebanks calling themselves the priests of Jesus. Speaking of ridicule, Bill Maher has had a few things to say about the Bible: "I'm not an atheist. There's a really big difference between an atheist and someone who just doesn't believe in religion. Religion to me is a bureaucracy between man and God that I don't need. But I'm not an atheist, no. I believe there's some force. If you want to call it God... I don't believe God is a single parent who writes books. I think that the people who think God wrote a book called The Bible are just childish. Religion is so childish. What they're fighting about in the Middle East, it's so childish. These myths, these silly little stories that they believe in fundamentally, that they take over this little space in Jerusalem where one guy flew up to heaven…no, no, this guy performed a sacrifice here a thousand million years ago. It's like, ‘Who cares? What does that have to do with spirituality, where you're really trying to get, as a human being and as a soul moving in the universe?’ But I do believe in a God, yes.” Although not an atheist (and I personally understand and appreciate his point of view), he makes it quite clear his objection is the Bible itself, its childish stories of impossible events, and most of all the foolishness of those who believe it literally. One of his favorite lines seems to be about the “talking snake,” a reference to the Book of Genesis and the Garden of Eden when Eve was tempted by a serpent. (It is difficult to say “talking snake” with a straight face, I’ve noticed.) The greater matter is, no doubt, the still existing idea that this particular myth is literal truth and thus invalidates the whole of the theory of evolution. In that one matter alone, the Garden of Eden versus evolution, we have one of the most outstanding and outrageous examples of Twenty-first Century, presumably educated human beings, failing utterly at critical thinking. They have simply abandoned all rational and realistic concepts to perpetuate a Bronze Age fairy tale in the hopes of going “up there” when they die. If there is a God, and if he will pass judgment, I suspect he will say to these true believers, “How fucking stupid can you get?” Then they will stand judged…finally. Tuesday, July 8. 2008Individual Sovereignty and Institutional BignessIndividual Sovereignty and Institutional Bigness I watch the news, pretty much, and do have an idea of what’s going on from day to day. And, like most people, I have opinions and could even work up a commentary on such as who, I believe, is the better candidate for president. But I consider that exercise only one more voice in a cacophony of blathering idiots like all those bellowing and squawking “panels of experts” who harp upon it incessantly, almost as if their righteous opinion, which is rehashed party talking points, actually meant something. It’s not that I don’t have opinions and quite a bit of commentary; it is more an issue of subject matter. I prefer to address conditions and how we created them than nitpick at current events and personalities in the news. I do take some pleasure, from time to time, in pointing out the failing of our present leaders and other elected representatives, but in doing so I also do not miss the opportunity to remind one and all that we put them there…for one reason or another. I cannot buy or excuse the claim that they were “the lesser of two evils,” however. That can only mean one willingly chose what they knew to be an evil in the first place. (Frankly, I would say anyone who runs for public office is suspect.) There was always another choice, including none at all. Personally, I always vote for a sure-not-to-win third party anyway. That way I am not a party to however our glorious new leader leads us farther done the path to ruin and damnation. My greater interest is in how we got where we are and why. Where did it start? What went wrong? What was the noble purpose and intention somewhere in our long lost history that became so obviously altered and distorted? And what, if anything, could possibly be done to remedy the mess we’ve gotten ourselves into? I will admit, however, that correction, whenever attempted, which is almost always the case in all such incidents of rot and corruption, without fail tends to make matters worse. Every solution tends to expand a new set of problems exponentially. I even wonder sometimes that if we were to remove all those splendorous and celebrated solutions, going backward in time, we might actually discover there never was a problem in the first place. When all that went wrong is examined, considering those examiners are honest with themselves, it seems to me that the most basic failing is the lack of a knowledge of history, leading most specifically to a repetition of past mistakes, which can only mean an obvious absence of a well-rounded education, particularly in the social sciences. In fact, the greatest wrong to be examined begins right there in formal education itself. Somewhere along the line we stopped teaching our kids the basics of not only where our way of life came from but how to maintain and put into practice those concepts of equality, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness our founders and forbearers thought they had established. Surveys and statistics, although not the end-all we might believe, do, if nothing else, give us a hint at why things went wrong because of what is missing. Democracy as we would practice it in this republic of ours is a failed institution when all those people who would assert themselves as the all-powerful and righteous majority are innately ignorant of democracy and do not even know what a republic is or that they were meant to live in one. They fail in that knowledge because they do not know the beginnings of those ideals, nor do they seem to care. History bores most people; and the concept of the most people—as in “the majority rules”—is the essential relevance of democracy. Ignorance Without Bliss Getting back to surveys and statistics, it is a point of regret and distress that elementary and high school students’ knowledge of and interest in our government today and the origins and principles upon which it are based is grossly lacking. American history and civics seem to be low on the list of public school successful teaching, but in too many cases simply aren’t on the list at all. Civics is frequently one of the first subjects to get dropped from what should be a well-rounding curriculum. Geography is another sorely lacking bit of knowledge in the average American, not just school children. People who find it okay to make comments about countries in the news, it seems, frequently cannot find that country on a map. Frankly, I don’t find it difficult to believe that people can talk a great deal about things they know little about. Much of it is a matter of parroting some newscaster or commentator, maybe even a commercial. Most people, for instance, cannot define what a calorie is, even though it may be a popular word in their vocabulary; and up until the seventies hardly anyone knew what ecology meant. It has always amused me when relatively obscure (in a popular sense) technical or scientific terms become the latest fad and/or advertising campaign. Ironically this population, which cannot find North Korea, Iraq, Iran or Afghanistan on a map, is regularly surveyed by big corporations and institutions and broadcasters who ask them such questions as whether or not we should be in or even attack these countries they cannot find on a map, and then their answers become a major element of what should have been an educated and factual news report relating to those countries. Worst of all, politicians and other government functionaries then tend to make crucial decisions and even take momentous and perilous actions based on those surveys of opinionated ignorance. It is a fallacy of contemporary journalism that surveys of a basically uninformed public is an exercise in reality, fact and truth and is somehow earnest, reliable and thorough news reporting. It effectively acts as if the opinion of an uninformed and uneducated public has been called upon by the powers-that-be to formulate serious policy and help make grave decisions. We seem to have drifted into a nation of people who believe or are convinced they have been better educated than any other people, complete with good grades, while all the time we have been officially dumbed down and propagandized to obey and serve what could only be called “the greater interests of the greater institutions,” which, of course, is a long way from the individual rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Such rights are necessarily individual rights and must be alive in the soul of each and every person to exist on any scale at all. Such as liberty and the pursuit of happiness can never be the product of an institution. The ultimate goal of any institution, regardless of any stated purpose in its conception, is the self preservation of that institution. Institutions exist for their own sake, with the decisions and actions of that institution a product of dehumanized and institutionalized, unwavering policy. Any other declaration of intention, such as mission statements, came from individuals who preceded the damn institutions. When one of my granddaughters was in high school she told me she had gotten an A in American history. That sounded good, but having learned over a couple of generations how public education had deteriorated into an exercise in awarding grades for student self esteem, not for a student learning the damn subject matter, I asked her, “Who was the second President of the United States?” She said, “John…somebody.” I guess nowadays that is close enough to get an A in American history. Perhaps it is easy to see how some impressive and easily repeatable propaganda can cause otherwise rational people to believe that our invasion of Iraq, a country that had nothing to do with any threat whatsoever to our country, and our continued and extremely long and costly prosecution of a war against what had been a sovereign nation, is being billed as “protecting our freedoms.” What on earth can our continuing and costly assault on the people and property of a nation who never threatened us have to do with “protecting our freedoms”? But that is what we call our reason for being there, and we do so with the same righteous patriotic fervor as if it were another WWII—as if Iraq had bombed Pearl Harbor. If anything, the Patriot Act, which was a part and parcel of this whole hyped-up “war on terror,” did more to relieve us of all those precious freedoms, which began with the Declaration of Independence, then has any act of aggression against our country yet. A few years ago I wrote a series of articles on my site in the section My Political Blog: Part One. It was an attempt at the time to spark at least an interest in our origins as a nation and as an ideal, hopefully in the minds of our grossly neglected younger generation. We were, at one time, an example of the most successful of democratic republics, probably in all of history anywhere in the world. But that was then and now is quite something else. Something went wrong, not over night, but over a couple of hundred years. Even Jefferson lived long enough to not only become disappointed in where we were headed, but to actually express those feelings. He was particularly disappointed in the people’s and their leaders’ disregard for the spirit of the Declaration of Independence. It may have begun very early on in our still glorious history, but it seems to me it has accelerated over the last few generations. Today the spirit of that declaration of personal rights has not only gone out of the hearts of people, but too many of those people do not even know what it is, when it happened, and why. That is, however, where it all began—with the drafting of that document, the Declaration of Independence. It was not only a declaration of national sovereignty but of individual sovereignty as well. That is the part we seemed to have missed. The second paragraph would seem to make that quite clear: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. That, to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed. That, whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such Principles and organizing its Powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.” The wording addresses the rights or individuals who, given like needs and consequently like rights, will form a “People,” in this case a nation. This is where free nations come from—from individuals who agree upon certain inalienable right, such as Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness and who move together to establish those rights. It also states clearly that as a People, necessarily made up of individuals, that when any government becomes destructive to their ends, they have the right, if not duty, to institute new government most likely to affect those desired ends. Of course, we have already done that bit of business—instituted a new government…over a couple hundred years ago. The people of this country threw off one government and instituted a new one, “laying its foundation on such Principles and organizing its Powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.” Well, good for them—that’s them, at that time, not necessarily us at this time, however. Things do change and certainly have. Perhaps the problem lies in the fact that we “instituted” a new government. In other words our government is in effect one big institution; it is one big institution made up of a multitude of smaller, but not small, institutions, all of which is highly influenced, if not controlled, by even more institutions of immense wealth and power called corporations.
It is the establishment of institutions that seems to be the fail-point or break down of ideals and purpose, historically speaking. Institutions have taken the place in society of what used to be the endeavors of community effort, of people with like but various interests who worked together for their individual and collective good. Ultimately the only goal of any institution is to survive and consolidate power within its domain, meaning to exist for its own sake, all ideology, purpose and intent becoming lost along the way, existing only in the hearts and souls of those few individuals who first expressed such goals before it all became institutionalized. In the end institutions will favor and support the huge multinational corporations which tend to share the same single-mindedness of purpose and power inherent in what is best described as “bigness,” always leading to even greater power and wealth and ever-growing bigness. It doesn’t take much to discover that trend toward the support and alliance with big corporations on the part of our highly institutionalized federal government. Bigness and the Personal Philosophy of Frank Lloyd Wright As a set designer much of my life I have always had an interest in architecture. Among those I’ve admired is Frank Lloyd Wright, having read his book entitled My Testament. It is also a statement of his personal philosophy, some of which I will quote. Wright believed in Democracy, of course, but not as some do. For instance, he considered the term “common man” to be derogatory. He believed that the “sovereignty of the individual” was an intrinsic part of Democracy. Conformity was never meant to be synonymous with Democracy. For instance, there were some who believed blond hair, blue eyes, and Volkswagens for everyone would be the optimum. And we all know whose idea that was. To quote Wright from his book My Testament: “By attempts to keep man‑made law alive when by nature it is dead, the spirit in which the law was made is betrayed and so is law. My father taught me that a law is originally made to prevent or cure some timely, manifest evil; the law usually made by ‘experts.’ An expert?” Wright asks. “Generally, a man who has stopped thinking because he knows! So whenever court judgments continue to be based upon ‘the letter of the law’ long after the good intended by the letter goes out of it, judges defy its sense and betray justice. Justice then becomes, not a true servant of the humanities, but mere routine; and so we fail of democracy, robbed of our title to manhood. Again, the calamitous drift toward conformity. Again, fear instead of reverence for life as hoped by our forefathers. Again ‘bigness’ legally engendered, by standardizing human beings into ‘the common man.’’“ Wright’s reference is his way of explaining the consequences of institutionalizing our system of justice. It is an excellent example of where institutions come from and how they lead to the corruption of power and the dehumanization of individuals. Through our failure to educate ourselves and our children of the origins, history and ideals of what we still reference as “our way of life,” we have come to sacrifice that way of life to our own ignorance and the greed and corruption of power structures, from our own government to multinational corporations to the World Bank and all those other monstrous institutions that keep appearing like heads on the Hydra. We're ruled by people who don't grant us minds of our own. All the decisions are theirs to make, and we let them do that for us because we fear the consequences of our own decisions. We say we trust their wisdom, but the truth is we doubt our own. Ironically, when their wisdom fails us, we're still the ones to pay the consequences. But the consequences are only a figure on a piece of paper—a statistic to those we entrusted with it all. It may be a ruined life to someone, but not to the statisticians. They play games with our lives and keep score with our misery—from unemployment to war casualties. It's their game; we’re only the tally. We're ruled by “bigness,” like Wright said. And as such, at the mercy of gargantuan institutions. That rule is the product of law and policy carved a long time back in stone, non-applicable to the subtleties of human nature on an individual level of understanding. Consequently we have big government, big corporations, big churches, big banks, big labor and bigness in every aspect of every enterprise, from entertainment to journalism to the food and energy we consume…big everything. And it is all at the sacrifice of our individual sovereignty…the ability to rule our own lives or even plea to the mercy of own community. It is the loss of our independence as free persons. It is the beginning of a new kind of serfdom, a servitude to unapproachable corporations and cold and indifferent institutions. The sum of our good intentions for the sovereignty of the individual and any hope for its restoration lies in the following words: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. That, to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed. That, whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such Principles and organizing its Powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.” That was borrowed, of course, from the second paragraph of our Declaration of Independence. It was not just a declaration of independence of one government from another, but of individuals from government itself. That is why we formed what was meant to be our government today. It is the duty of that government to honor its reason for being created. That reason is the continued protection of the most natural right of every individual to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It is failing us in its most basic reason to exist and is no longer deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed. It has been taken away from the governed that gave it life, and is now an all-powerful institution existing for its own sake and is in the irrevocable service of big business. The worst of that is that we have been led to believe that that is the American way, the way it is meant to be. Believing that, we are selling out our liberty to corporate serfdom, and all our righteous words and slogans—such as “liberty” itself—are only hollow words. But hey, we’re content and compliant. Maybe someday, maybe if circumstances keep worsening, or if the right people simply get pissed off with the way things went, maybe then we’ll find the spirit to do something about it. But I will still argue it cannot restored if we do not educate ourselves and our children as to where we came from, what we were meant to be, and how it all went down hill. If we get that wrong, any attempt at correction will only make it worse. Friday, May 30. 2008Scott McClellan’s BookScott McClellan’s Book Has anyone noticed that CNN seems to be so highly critical of Scott McClellan’s newly released so-called “tell-all” book that they appear to be driving him to admit some sort of shame and remorse? Regarding the fact that McClellan was defending the Administration while he was press secretary, which everyone should think was his job, and is now revealing the truth, or as otherwise stated, his impressions and opinions, Wolf Blitzer asks: “Are you sorry? Do you want to say you're sorry to the American people? Do you want to apologize?” It is one in a long list of accusatory questions presented only as numbnuts Wolf can manage in what should have been an otherwise enlightening interview about this goddamn Administration that thinking people have come to realize cannot be trusted. It is easy to find critics of the book, and CNN (I’m not sure about other networks, but would bet they are similar) has gone out of their way to dig them all up and have them repeat their condemnations redundantly, which is typical of most news networks. One condemnation is that he is “cashing in” on the position he held by writing the book now. Granted, he must be making some good bucks. So what? I do not find that nearly as offensive as this Administration, and its cronies, who are cashing in on the couple of trillion bucks of our tax dollars spent on a long, seemingly endless, bloody, destructive and meaningless war. How come CNN isn’t questioning that degree of “cashing in”? Nobody goes after anyone in high places anymore, just us poor slobs who don’t advertise on big network news shows. (Have you noticed who sponsors these big news shows on CNN? Coal, oil and natural gas companies, for instance, not to mention Lockheed Martin, Boeing and so on.) The odd thing is that none of McClellan’s critics has yet accused him of lying or deceit in any manner. In other words there’s no denying what he has to say about the President and his henchmen is true. What he has been accused of is betrayal of and disloyalty to an Administration that itself has been deceitful and untruthful with the public. It seems McClellan’s real motivation is discovering, somewhere along the way, that he was being used and that his “loyalty” was being betrayed. But hey, if nothing else, it’s one hell of an advertising campaign for his book. Wednesday, May 7. 2008Money, Banking, and LendingMoney, Banking, and Lending Part One: The Situation We’re In Today I’ve never been a fan of Alexander Hamilton (which I’ll elaborate on some in the next paragraph). In fact on occasion I have had an impulse to start an article, maybe even a story, portraying Aaron Burr as the hero he really was. (Burr did have an impressive background and potential, but I’ll resist that digression at this time.) The point I wanted to make is that we can thank Hamilton for our national debt, the Fed, the non-government issue and control of money despite the Constitution, banks bleeding the public with usury, the ever-growing cost of a standing army, and most forms of federal spending…among other irksome institutions. They were all his idea originally. In fact I’ve seen the HBO series John Adams and am pleased to see they have portrayed In the beginning we actually did that. As Benjamin Franklin put it when asked by the Brits how there could be no poor and no unemployed in the Colonies, he replied: "It is because, in the Colonies, we issue our own paper money. We call it Colonial Script, and we issue only enough to move all goods freely from the producers to the Consumers; and as we create our money, we control the purchasing power of money, and have no interest to pay." Now we have the Federal Reserve, which issues money, sets interest rates, and operates through privately owned banks. Our money is not our money. It is not issued by Congress as the Constitution demands. Today the almighty dollar is becoming worthless. Some call that inflation. I call it losing value. Gold was $35 an ounce at one time (which is a story in itself, which I’ll skip at this point); not long ago oil was going at ten or twelve bucks a barrow. Today oil is about a hundred and twenty bucks, and gold is up around a thousand bucks an ounce. At the pumps gas is $4 a gallon and rising; and asparagus is $4 dollars a pound. The dollar is tanking. Oil producers around the world are beginning to prefer the euro. That didn’t just happen to us by chance. It is the product of greed, corruption in very high places, and just plain ignorance on the part of everyone from the lowliest voter to all those economists and other experts who couldn’t see it coming, and when it did, made all the wrong choices. Wherever you find yourself, it is a matter of choices you made along the way—that includes voting. Of all the bullshit going down in this current political campaign, there was only one candidate who tried to make the right call. Those who supported him were quite earnest while it lasted, but the media and others thought he was foolish. In my opinion his supporters were also a bit more intelligent than your average voter, which may have been his real downfall. This candidate wanted to get rid of the Federal Reserve. That was Ron Paul. Had he accomplished that goal, he would have been in some pretty good company when it comes to wanting to get private banks out of the people’s business of issuing their own money. By that I mean presidents like Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy. There were others along the way too, but those are pretty vivid examples for most people; and the facts of the matter are a matter of history, specifically the “greenback” and the “silver certificate,” respectively. Also they were both assassinated, an unfortunate “coincidence”…if you believe in coincidence. (Don’t be surprised if I mention that a few more times.) First of all there is Jefferson, our third President, who tried to warn us.
“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and the corporations which grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.--Thomas Jefferson Somehow that seems rather timely today, particularly the part about ending up homeless when we have all these big corporate lenders foreclosing on people’s homes all over the country. The big question is, I suppose, where did these lenders come from and how did we allow this situation to happen? The answer is probably disputable, but I do have my own take on it all. It’s a long story, as I see it, with several elements to it, but a big factor is the gross misinterpretation of the Constitution wherein the Supreme Court found in the Fourteenth Amendment “personhood” for corporations, with all the rights of human individuals. I have written considerably on the subject, particularly in Part One of my Blog, most specifically in an article on the interpretation of original intent in the Constitution. I’m not going into detail on that aspect here, but this is a good coverage of its history: http://wm-monje.com/blognew/main.php?file=article14.htm . That much is only one factor in the whole of the problem, however. The element approached in this writing is money itself, how it became a commodity, meaning the product in the business of lending, and how money can create more money, who controls it and how and why. I also hope to review as best I can where it came from and how it developed over time. In that endeavor I’ll also try to work in a bit of American history as it relates to the issuance of money. "I place economy among the first and most important virtues, and public debt as the greatest of dangers. To preserve our independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt." -- Thomas Jefferson There are two major areas of indebtedness: One is our national debt; the other is our own personal and private debt. Unless you have a mortgage to pay, credit cards are probably the nation’s greatest personal indebtedness. Some have both, and most people are making some kind of car payment. Keep in mind I am not talking so much about what may be owed to keep a body alive these days, I am addressing the extremes of the added cost of interest payments…and frequently late payments as well. It is the money people don’t actually count as what they still owe. If you make minimum payments on a thousand bucks, you owe a hell of a lot more than a thousand bucks—you owe thousands, depending on the interest rate. Up until about 1970 we actually had well-written laws against usury. In most cases, being state laws, the limit was ten percent or less. If you go back a few decades, say to the forties or fifties, ten percent would have been outrageous. Interest rates in most states today are virtually unlimited. Getting rid of usury laws was a change in state laws to accommodate credit card companies, an enterprise which the soon-to-be-up-to-their-ass-in-debt-for-life public was eager to embrace. No one objected to the end of usury laws if they could buy now and pay through the nose later. Twenty-six states have no limit at all on what credit card companies can charge in interest. Even if your home state has usury protection laws, only the laws of the state the card issuer is in apply, and they will be doing business in a no-protection state for sure. More recently Congress has bent over for the administration and its cronies and big political campaign contributors by changing bankruptcy laws to protect the big credit card companies, not the citizens who are victims of these vultures. That’s another story too, but you can find it online if it means anything to you. Regarding beginnings, it was in 1970 that the state of It’s easy to see why money lending is biblically immoral. And some people get uptight about homosexuality or masturbation. They should read the Bible again and give the priority of these moral considerations some serious thought. As for the mortgage business, what seems to look like a reasonable interest rate, at present down to six percent or less in some cases, still amounts to one hell of a lot of money every month. The interest on a home loan of $300,000, which is relatively low in present When people fall for an “optional payment plan,” meaning, among other options, they can pay interest only, they are merely giving the lender a lot of money but still owe the same amount. If the plan has a “minimum payment,” meaning less than the interest alone, they are literally going deeper in debt, not paying off a loan, which should be the objective of making payments. If it is an “adjustable interest,” that means the interest rate could go up, which means when the payments go up, even less is coming off the principle. That is the most basic cause of the current mortgage crisis, which is coming back to bite the lenders. They got a low rate to begin with, but it kept going up. At the heart of it all is greed, and mindless greed at that—ignorant, illogical and not thought through because the lenders themselves didn’t seem to realize they would have their own day of reckoning. When a lender breaks a home-loan borrower and has to repossess the house, he is stuck with a property that will probably never get the overvalued price of what he loaned in the first place. The borrower goes bankrupt, then the lender. Everybody loses. Another part of the greater picture, besides the lending institutions themselves going broke, is the whole so-called “money market” ploy. I always figured the term was an advertising gimmick promising sudden and lavish wealth, kind of like fabulous bodies and splendorous romance through “weight-loss programs” or “exercise machines,” but maybe it’s more like plastic surgery. It wasn’t just individuals that were dragged into risky speculations that seemed to promise fabulous returns on their investments. Without getting into all the in and outs of derivatives, junk bonds, interest rate swaps and other investment enticements, there were also, and continue to be, whole municipalities and counties on the verge of bankruptcy because of the whole “money market” hyperbole, which actually started with S and Ls, one of the fed’s (taxpayers) all-time biggest bailouts. To sum things up in the middle of this writing, I would say it all boils down to greed, avarice, materialism, self-indulgence, a kind of financial insatiability, particular with those who have the most to start with, and a total disregard for, if not ignorance of, any and all consequences. It’s almost like someone who looks at the person on the top of a pyramid scheme and convinces himself he can get there too. No one, not even the Fed itself, seems to give a thought to where all that money is going to come from. I would say when you can no longer find enough losers to satisfy all this greed, everyone has lost. It all had to start at some point in history, where, we will probably never know for sure. Historically, however, there is a development there, and there have been warnings from some rather wise individuals. "History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over governments by controlling money and its issuance". -- James Madison, our fourth President. Regarding our present state of affairs, and in particular a president who has trashed the Constitution, which, I believe, is a product of corruption in high places and a general ignorance and uneducated indifference among the voting public: "It is only when the people become ignorant and corrupt, when they degenerate into a populace, that they are incapable of exercising their sovereignty. Usurpation is then an easy attainment, and an usurper soon found. The people themselves become the willing instruments of their own debasement and ruin." James Madison, our fifth President. I don’t pretend to be a historian but I do research that which interests me enough to write about it. There is a history and record of the origins of money and banking. Some of it, as it has been presented by some, may or may not be, at least in part, conspiracy theory, which means some of it may be disputable. There are known facts, however, the problem being what some may make of those facts. It’s a fact, for instance, that The big discussion, not to mention a review of history itself, is whether or not the government should be the entity issuing money, otherwise known as currency or the coin of the realm. In our country it is the government, the Congress of the United States of America, as spelled out clearly in our Constitution, Article One; Section 8, fifth paragraph: “To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures.” In all its simplicity—“To coin Money”—it is, nevertheless, quite distinctive. Only Congress, our government, can create our money. We were never meant to job it out to interests that did not represent the people themselves. So what the hell is the Federal Reserve? It isn’t the government, certainly not Congress. But I’ll get back to that. There is a history of where money came from, and that includes the ongoing discussion of who gets to create and control it. Part Two: Where Money and Banking Came From Anyone ever heard of “tally sticks,” originated by Henry the First, which served as money for seven hundred and twenty-six years? That’s a very long time when you compare it to other historical durations, such as empires or all that has taken place since 1282 or 726 years ago. Chances are you’ve never heard of tally sticks. It's an item the bankers would have us all forget, particularly the Bank of England, but you can still find it online. Check it out. The truth is out there. The historical fact is that the system worked very well for On the other hand, in little over two hundred years the US dollar has had and continues to have a shaky history. Today it not holding up well against either the euro or the yen. .Most of all, it simply doesn’t purchase much anymore. That would seem to indicate it has lost considerable value, although economists don’t really see it that way. There was a period, however, when we did have government-issue money that did, in fact, work quite well. It was state issued script in what were our original colonies. It served the purpose of exchange, with only enough to keep markets fluid. No one was making money on money during that period. Remember, as Benjamin Franklin put it when asked by the Brits how there could be no poor and no unemployed in the Colonies, he replied: "It is because, in the Colonies, we issue our own paper money. We call it Colonial Script, and we issue only enough to move all goods freely from the producers to the Consumers; and as we create our money, we control the purchasing power of money, and have no interest to pay."<< Money as we know it has no real value, only trust. And trust in whom? Bankers. There’s a lot of history involved, but keeping it simple you could say banking started with goldsmiths, mostly just because they had good safes, back around the years 1000 to 1100. Actually, banking more or less dropped into their laps. At one time people used gold and silver, and many people had various amounts of it. But it wasn't really very secure. They did not have the facilities to secure it. So—and it must have seemed like a good idea at the time—they left it with goldsmiths. Why? Goldsmiths had really good safes—that’s all. Of course, when they put precious metal in a goldsmith's safe, the goldsmith would give them a receipt. So, all was well. No problem. But then, because a receipt was good for gold or silver, people, just because all that paper was simply handier than metal, started to use the receipts for exchange—like paper money. Well, it didn't take long for the goldsmiths to discover what their receipts were worth. So, what did they do? They started issuing receipts for gold and silver they did not have in their safes. No one cared. It was as good as gold and silver. And that, essentially, is how bankers came into existence. They printed money, loaned it out at interest, and because of the interest, they had to print more to cover the interest. They issued IOUs, and the whole world spends their markers as if it were gold, quite literally…even if the gold wasn’t really there. If this were a debate board I am sure someone would say, “It is not as simple as that,” at least in reference to banking today, and then give us some doubletalk learned from an economics and/or history professor who couldn’t balance his or her own checkbook, but if someone did present such a debate, I would have to say, “Yeah, it really is as simple as that.” It’s all that doubletalk by experts—and you see it daily on TV or in the newspapers—that keeps us in the dark. God forbid someone make it simple to understand. Money issued with interest by private parties is a racket, and that is why the poor get poorer and the rich get richer. The issuing of money in contemporary times has never been a government enterprise, at least not for long; it has always been privately issued and controlled by bankers. In our country it ended up as the Federal Reserve. Today we have the World Bank internationally calling all the shots; they decide who gets how much and what will it cost them in the long run. That’s whole nations we’re talking about. We have lenders who will end up owning whole nations, or at least whatever collateral they may have, such as natural resources, like oil, rice or water. Water, incidentally is the big target of international corporations, meaning the complete rights to all water in a country, and the right to sell it at their own price, probably as a recommendation and financing from the World Bank. Look out for the World Bank. They aren’t doing anyone any favors. Demanding interest is in fact demanding payment of money that doesn’t yet exist. The Fed has led us to believe that high interest will control inflation, but I will argue it is what created inflation in the first place. The only way to control inflation is by not issuing more than is necessary to support what should be a growing economy. Only the government issuing the money supply, serving the public and commerce only, not for profit in monies that don’t yet exist, is the only way to get a handle on the economy. That would be in the interest of everyone and a product of the work and economy they will generate. Governments would only issue enough to service an expanding commerce. Money, otherwise, is created by charging interest, which is only of benefit to bankers who get to print it like those goldsmiths issued receipts for gold they did not have. Consider this (one more time): People used to keep their gold and silver safe by leaving it with goldsmiths because they had secure safes. They got receipts from the goldsmiths. The receipts were as good as gold but easier to carry around, so they used them for exchange, meaning money. Then the goldsmiths printed receipts for gold they didn't have and loaned it out. They called it “fractional reserve banking,” which sounded good. In fact, it sounded so good, they still practice it. It means they can lend money they don’t have (not to mention none of it is backed up with gold anymore). And it is as simple as that. Award winning economists still write books on what a great idea fractional reserve banking is, despite the obvious lack of logic going in. (I never though logic and economics had much in common.) That means a bank today only needs one tenth in reserve of what they loan out. That’s one tenth in paper money, forget gold or silver. That was set by the Federal Reserve. That means that if they loan money to ten people at ten percent interest, based on reserves, they are making one hundred percent interest on the return of actual reserves because they don't have the nine tenths. That is the same as goldsmiths when they started issuing receipts for gold they never received, which in my book is just plain crooked. What a racket, huh? But who notices? Who cares? It's just the way it is. They don't ask: “Well, where are the other nine tenths of the money they loan out?” The answer is, they just have to print receipts…more money. Once it's in circulation, despite the lack of any reserve of real value, it is, literally, as good as gold…we seem to think. What's more, everybody wants those receipts for reserves that don't exist yet, and will even mortgage their house on a repayment plan of interest only, meaning they aren't paying back a dime of what they borrowed, are not paying down the balance on their house one cent, but are making monthly payments of hundreds, even thousands of dollars, that don't exist and never did so the bankers—Federal Reserve—will I have to print it. Imagine I were a multibillionaire and everyone knew it, if I were to play poker and I lost a pot but owed five thousand dollars because I didn't have it on me, I could take out a notepad and write, “IOU five thousand dollars,” and sign my name. It would, literally, be as good as gold just about anywhere. I might never see that marker again because the whole world doesn't doubt I could redeem it. In fact, I could probably buy anything with an IOU and never have to redeem a dollar of it. Well, that's what the Fed does. A Federal Reserve note is a marker, an IOU. For what? For another IOU, and that's all it's good for. They just keep writing—or printing, as the case may be—IOUs That's all they do.
Part Three: A Bit of American History There were Jefferson and Madison who opposed bankers issuing money and believed only Congress could do so as stated in the Constitution. Then there was Andrew Jackson. “If the people only understood the rank injustice of our money and banking system there would be a revolution before morning.” Andrew Jackson Nicolas Biddle was, no doubt, a genius. He could have graduated from the The Bank lost its federal charter in 1836. Andrew Jackson was president at the time, and was the first, last and only president to every pay off the national debt. Under Biddle’s control, before the vote to renew the charter, the bank withdrew its money supply. The economic crisis that did follow gave In my opinion Biddle probably set the die for bankers in general. It is very doubtful that those getting extremely rich at this time of economic despair in this country give a damn about anyone but themselves. And when their greed catches up with them, they have an administration they put in place to bail them out. The rest of us be damned. There was also an assassination attempt against Then there was Abraham Lincoln. The banking business in Europe was fearful of a prosperous and “united” "Then there was Kennedy. Ever hear of a bill called a “silver certificate”? I personally remember them. It was the intention of Kennedy to strip the Federal Reserve of its ability to loan money to the federal government. He did that by executive order--EO 11110, to be exact. It meant the Treasury backed up a total of four-point-three billion in silver bullion, either with paper silver certificates, which resembled present money, or in actual silver dollar coin. Some people still have a few Kennedy silver dollars in their collection. Immediately after his assassination, the certificates were recalled and destroyed and replaced by “Federal Reserve Notes,” which is simply a marker, an IOU against nothing at all. And once again, we have a crazed, lone gunman who put an end to him and all his endeavors. In 1964, Lynden B. Johnson, then president, said, "Silver has become too valuable to be used as money." You can’t much blame him for going along with the Fed. Then he gave us a war that demanded the printing of more money, which, of course, caused considerable inflation. What a sweetheart. But hey, nobody blew his brains out. He may not have been our wisest president, but he wasn’t stupid. William Monje
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