Sunday, July 18, 2010
I've Been Away
No, lately I've been traveling through life like a Choctaw. The old saying goes that the Choctaw travels through the woods with his eyes and ears open and the European travels Through the woods with his mouth open and his eyes and ears closed. I've sort of been keeping my eyes and ears open and keeping my opinions to myself.
I have been speaking for others by ghostwriting several business blogs, a lawyer, an entertainer and a high-end hairdresser. I somehow found my way back here, I don't know what I want to say, maybe just to say that. I intend to post here some in the future and share some random thoughts about this or that. SO, anyway, I'm back, and it feels good. Dog Out
Monday, October 1, 2007
I Learned Dharma
Last Saturday I visited a friend in a nursing home. He wasn’t there because of age but rather, he had taken drunk and during that drunk fell and broke his leg. The drunk continued for another week and the leg became infected, badly infected, and but for the keen observation and quick response of the owner of the cheap, “No tell motel” that he called home, his alcoholism would have achieved its goal of killing him.
After six weeks in the hospital without insurance or a pot to piss in for that matter, the hospital was more than happy to dump him off at this other facility some two hours away from
As I was leaving the home, walking down the hall to the next building and into the main building, past dozens of rooms full of old people, some there and others not, I suddenly felt sorry that their lives had brought them to this place and this condition. I experienced that life was impermanent. I learned Dharma from that walk.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
A Thought On Casualties
When the war on Iraq began my friend Paul and I spent long hours discussing the situation. Paul, one of the most widely read of my friends, and I shared our ideas and our prognostications about the outcome. Paul has kept up with the death toll. Now this might sound odd to some but the death toll in a war can tell us a great deal about the politics of the ones waging it on our behalf. This is an update for your edification:
TOTAL U.S. ARMED FORCES CASUALTIES (dead + wounded) = 31,645*
TOTAL
BLACKWATER CASUALTIES (dead + wounded) = 12,917i?
GRAND TOTAL U.S. ARMED FORCES & MERCENARY CASUALTIES (dead + wounded) =
*72,870*
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All Coalition Dead:
Other 0129
Total 4058
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As of 07-31-07:
U.S. 118* Died of self-inflicted wounds
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03-19-03 to 09-07-07:
15,291 Wounded returned to duty w/in 72 hrs.
12,476 Wounded not returned to Duty within 72 hours
27,767* TOTAL
As of 07-31-07:
20,849 Diseases/Other - Medical Air Transport Required
28,308?
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BLACKWATER MERCENARY CASUALTIES AS OF c. July 2007 (conservative estimates):
00,917 Dead
12,000 Wounded, applied for benefits
12,917i?
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
The Popeye Point
Until the recent troubles with the mortgage industry, the financial industry and its talking head puppets in the media were crowing about the rising numbers in the stock market. Every time I heard a glowing report on the market translated into a strong economic outlook I found myself saying to the TV “...and the stock market has what to do with the economy”? I know, I know, talking to the TV, or to anyone for that matter who is not there can be consider suspect behavior. All right, I admit that I’m crazy, I have papers that prove it…six pages in the last report.
But as crazy as I am, I thought the people in the Bush administration were crazier. Time has shown me that they are not crazy at all. They are lying, cheating, no good sons-a-bitches and the majority of the American people still buy into the myth.
When Bush took over in 2001, he had predicted a surplus of $516 billion for fiscal year 2006. The 2006 deficit of $248 billion, missed the Deciders projection by a mere $764 billion and change. Bush then went on to say that the numbers are "proof that pro-growth economic policies work" and are "an example of sound fiscal policies here in
Sound fiscal policy? Even conservatives disagree. Brian Riedl of the Heritage Foundation said, "The White House has a track record of projecting budget numbers to be a lot worse than they end up, which therefore helps them defeat the gloomy expectations and declare victory." If Bush does manage to make the tax cuts permanent, it will add more than $3 trillion to the deficit over the next 10 years. The federal budget would be virtually in balance if there had been no tax cuts. Ooops, is Bush stupid or just a liar?
Meanwhile, what we see in the economy as a whole is an immense shift of wealth from the poor and middle class to the very rich. It seems a little painful to have to point this out yet again after six solid years of it, but these strong economy stories are just lies, damn lies based on some sort of statistical masturbation.
While lightening the tax burden for the rich, other parts of the Bush economic program continue to undermine the middle class in this country. As you may recall, in 2005 the credit industry successfully rammed a disgraceful bankruptcy reform bill through Congress. It's working out just the way we expected it to: Middle class families are borrowing more than ever to make ends meet. Most families go under if: (a) they lose a job or (b) they have a health emergency crisis.
An attorney friend of mine sums up the legislation's impact: "It's designed to make life miserable for anybody who owes money. It's a help-the-banks, squish-the-little-guy law."
One of the lessons of history is that we don’t learn anything from history. If the powers that be would read just one book I suggest that if they value their interests they might want to read Das Kapital and the section about what I call the “Popeye Point”. That point occurs when the squishees declare, “I’ve stands all I can stand, I can’t stands no more.” At that point there will be a place along the wall for the ‘haves and the have mores.” It might make a good reality show.
Dog OutWednesday, August 1, 2007
Three Tap Frag
First of all, Army investigators found no sign enemy action as alleged by the members of his squad. Army medical examiners also questioned the head wounds which were the cause of his death. It was clear to the examiners that he was shot three times at close range by an American assault rifle. Ouch, three taps in the head from close range by a member of his squad. Could we have a fragging here?
For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term fragging it refers to the act of soldiers killing their own commanders. The Vietnam conflict was the first I'd heard of it and from all accounts it happened with increased frequency as the combat force became increasingly top-heavy with conscripts and they were lead by green officers right out of ROTC. The offensive officer either got it in the back during a firefight or someone slipped a grenade into his living quarters.
What is interesting about the Tillman case is that despite the lack of evidence of a firefight and despite the close-up and personal taps to the forehead with a good guy assault rifle, his squad members are sticking to their story. Hmmmmm!
Dog Out
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Corporate Piracy: A New Business Model
The monied interests in the
The position of these short money financial pirates is really self destructive if you give it a minutes thought. I mean, what investor in his/her right mind would buy stocks in a company, any company, if they knew that it was ok for the company managers to manipulate the books and steal from them?
See: Stoneridge v Scientific
Monday, June 4, 2007
A Lie is Forever
A Lie is Forever
Based on this concept the President has acted as if the American people were shills at a carnival, to be tricked and fleeced for the personal gain of the show. He lied to us and we fell for it, hook line and sinker. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised that a politician lied to me, I mean that’s what they do. I usually avoid excessive quotations but in the normal course of my weekly reading I continue to come across words that ring loudly and often in my thoughts on this matter. As I engaged in a little light reading to clear my head of such thoughts, Friedrich Nietzsche pulls me back into them when he writes, “I'm not upset that you lied to me, I'm upset that from now on I can't believe you.” For a free thinker who is usually tolerant of the ideas of others, I find myself unable to believe anything this President says. And that’s what I hate the most.
Maybe Oscar Wilde was right when he said, "
Dog Out