Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

BP blocked workers from wearing protective gear

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Progressive Change Campaign Committee

You won’t believe this. BP blocked workers cleaning up the oil disaster in the Gulf from wearing protective respirators.

Keith Olbermann reports that workers are breathing in toxic fumes day after day — and some have already landed in the hospital with nausea, chest pains, and headaches. Yet BP seems more worried about controlling what images the public sees than about the health of workers.

Shame on them. Watch Keith Olbermann’s report on this issue — then join us, Robert F. Kennedy Jr, and others in demanding action from the White House.

Today, we’re launching a huge coalition of local and national activists — including Gulf fishermen, environmentalists, members of Congress like Alan Grayson, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Together, we’re saying that President Obama must stop BP from denying workers the protective gear they need. Obama says “the federal government has been in charge” of the clean-up efforts. Now’s his chance to prove it.

Our new coalition is already driving big headlines. But to really get President Obama’s attention, we need those media reports to show that thousands of Americans heard about this cause and joined it.

Can you add your name?

(Then, please forward this email to others.)

Thanks for being a bold progressive,

– Adam Green, Stephanie Taylor, Julia Rosen, Forrest Brown, and the rest of the PCCC team

Rand Paul reveals capitalism’s agenda

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

I’m sure you’ve heard Rand Paul’s statements about the Civil Rights Act? Rand Paul, the Rep. candidate for Senate in KY, confirmed his long-held views that private business should not be regulated to prevent discrimination, that the rights of private property and capital are supreme. Even to the point that business should not be required to accommodate people with disabilities. Here you go, Ayn Rand-style laissez-faire capitalism at its best.

All of which supports the basic tenet of capitalism, private ownership and operation of business. Which of course works magically for the benefit of everyone because everyone has equal opportunity to enter into the business relationship, to say no. Yep, a business person can say “no” to serve you if you are black, and the black can go shop somewhere else and everyone will be the better for it. Never mind that the black had to shop at places with higher prices because all the white-only businesses had all the capital investment to buy in such bulk to set lower prices with which smaller, black-owned businesses could not compete. Yep, that’s the mutual benefit of all from those “conscious” decisions of the hoarders of private capital.

Paul’s faux pas was more that he openly admitted it, not that he held such views. Most conservatives have exactly the same view but cannot publicly admit it. It’s the strong undercurrent of corporate capitalism, what makes for such astounding profits for the capitalists while the workers get nothing by comparison. And the latter are made to eat the slop they are given and be grateful for it. Yes, Paul only brought to light what conservatives and capitalists have always supported, and it makes them look like the vultures and sharks that they are. And they know it. That’s why they are running from Paul’s statements, not because they disagree with them.

And this is what the likes of some integralites promote with their support of capitalism. Like it or not, THEY are capitalists. I am not.

More in comments.

Integral Global Capitalism

Friday, May 7th, 2010

Edward Berge

As some of you know, I am boycotting the Integral Conference because of I-I’s unabashed promulgation of global capitalism. (See for example our prevous discussion on Integral Capitalism.) In that regard see Daniel Gustav Anderson’s “Sweet science: A proposal for integral macropolitics,” Integral Review, 6:1, March 2010, pp. 10 – 62. An excerpt:

“I will retell Wilber’s ontology…in order to demonstrate the political significance…which coincide with the particular social regime (or in Wilber’s terms, the “telos”) it expresses, integrated global capital (Guattari, 2000). My purpose is not to explicate the flaws in Wilber’s logic or demonstrate his misreadings of particular texts; such exegesis has been taken up elsewhere; it is instead to suggest ways in which Wilber’s holarchy flickers or mechanically reproduces in the field of metaphysics and spiritual aspiration the social and political structures of late capital, which are not integral at all. Further, because Wilber’s holonography reproduces the present political order and forecloses any legitimized means of transforming its problematic terms of exchange, the unevenness of its development (as I will show), one may plausibly claim that it is not a transformative model but a conservative one in the last analysis, where conservatism is understood as an attempt to maintain the status quo for its own sake” (23-4).

See more in comments, including responses by Sean Hargens.

Progressives fight back

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Did you see Bill Maher’s last episode of Real Time and his closing comment on bi-partisanship? He voiced what so many of us progressives are thinking: To hell with the Republicans. You cannot reason with them because they are not reasonable. Why bother to even pretend bi-partisanship when they have no intention of doing so?

I remember a bully from high school, Tom Prepubla. He was a State wrestling champion, largely because he was stupid and was held back two years. Because I was tall and a possible threat to his physical superiority he would punch me in the chest hard ever time we passed in the halls between classes. I was not only tall but thin, not yet having filled out, so not the strongest or most confident of adolescents. So I just took the hits and tried to avoid him in the hallways.

One day I saw him coming and clung to the opposite wall, hoping he wouldn’t see my in passing. But of course he did and went out of his way to hit me. But something in me snapped this time and my arm shot out and counterpunched him back in the chest, as hard as I could. He got so angry that he threw me up against the wall and threatened to beat me to a pulp. But my anger got the better of me so I said in a loud voice something like the following: “Go ahead, beat me up, but you’ll destroy your wrestling scholarship to that college. And if don’t get it you’ll never get in because you’re so stupid. So come on, hit me, fuck up your future so I can laugh at you when I order my fries from you at Burger King.”

He gave me a quizzical look and stormed off. He never hit me after that day. And what I learned is what hopefully Obama and the Democrats have learned: You have to hit the conservatives in the chest and fight back, down and dirty. It’s the only language they understand. You can be nice or civil to them for that is a sign of weakness and will only spur them on. Punch the bastards in the face and threaten to destroy them. And mean it.

The Coffee Party

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

I must have been sensing the zeitgeist with my talk of a latte party. Since posting the below The Coffee Party has taken off and is growing exponentially daily. Check it out at this site and get involved with a local chapter, now forming. Join us for a kick-off party on Saturday, March 13. Visit the site for details.

Progressive Change Campaign Committee

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Since my last post I discovered the above, which is pretty much already doing what I suggested below. So why not join them at this link and motivate them to organize a Latte Party around the country?

The Latte Party

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

How about forming our own grass roots “party” as an antithesis to the tea party? And call it the Latte Party? We progressives are fed up with the Democrat Party because they don’t have the courage of their convictions, letting the Republicans have their way while in the minority. It’s time for true progressives to stand up, organize and start to groom independents for public office, since the two-party system is broken beyond repair. And yes, let’s revel in the fact that we’re educated, smart, conscious and like fancy coffee and arugula, all those things that the idiots in the tea party resent, and rightfully so.

So why not? I know I’m not the only political progressive that feels this way, betrayed by the Democrat Party. I hear all of the progressive media I mentioned in the previous thread voicing the same thing and their audience is large and growing larger by the minute.

So why not start the Latte Party, right here, right now? Obama proved what can be done with internetworking from the grass roots up. Why not organize ourselves for our own progressive agenda to not only put pressure on the Democrats but to even support progressive independent candidates? Why not organize a platform, town hall meetings, even a march on DC?

One thing those tea parties have demonstrated is that the “people” are pissed at what’s going on in DC and through organization real effects are heard out of the mouths of Congress. So why not a progressive agenda? Why not now? Why not start with us? What do you say?

Surely we’re not so self-involved that we won’t invest a little time for change? I mean, we did get involved at least a little for Obama, didn’t we? And Obama isn’t the answer, at least by himself. As he told us himself, we the people are the solution. So let’s get this Party started? Join us in discussing the possibilities in this thread at the Gaia IPS pod.

Framing liberals

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Edward Berge

I’ve often quoted George Lakoff’s work (with Mark Johnson) in The Philosophy of the Flesh. He has a new article at the Huffington Post about returning to democracy after the recent events in the news. Read the entire piece, which is a call to action at this link. Here are some excerpts:

Which would you prefer, consumer choice or freedom? Extended coverage or freedom? Bending the cost curve or freedom?

This is exactly what Frank Luntz advised conservatives to say. They have repeated it and repeated it. Why has it worked to rally conservative populists against their interests? The most effective framing is more than mere language, more than spin or salesmanship. It has worked because conservatives really believe that the issue is freedom. It fits the conservative moral system. It fits how conservatives see the world.

The Democrats have helped the conservatives. Their pathetic attempt to make any deal to get 60 votes convinced even Massachusetts voters that government under the Democrats was corrupt and oppressive, not just inept, but immoral.

All political leaders argue that they are doing the right thing, not the wrong thing, that their policies are moral, not evil.

Conservatives understand this, liberals tend not to. Conservatives know a morality tale when they see it: Greedy Wall Street bankers, who have cost people their homes, their jobs, and their savings get billion-dollar bailouts from the government, while those honest hard-working people get nothing. Corruption. Oppression. A threat to freedom.

The conservatives are winning the framing wars again — by sticking to moral principles as conservatives see them, and communicating their view of morality effectively. In the 2008 election, Barack Obama ran a campaign based on his moral principles and communicated those principles as effectively as any candidate ever has.

But the Obama administration made a 180-degree turn, trading Obama’s 2008 moral principles for the deal-making of Rahm Emanuel and Tim Geithner, assuming it would be “pragmatic” to court corporations and move to the right, in the false hope of bipartisan support. A clear unified moral vision was replaced by long laundry lists of policy options that the public could not understand, and that made ordinary folks feel they were being bamboozled. And in many cases, they were.

Even the language was a disaster. Liberals thought that conservatives would like consumer choice. That’s why they used “public option.” As Harry Reid said, “It’s public and it’s an option — a public option.” But what did a conservative hear in the words “public option?” Say “public” and he hears “government.” “Option” is a policy-wonk term, from the language of bureaucracy. Say “public option” and the conservative hears “government bureaucracy.”

The results of deal-making in the name of pragmatism have been considerably immoral, as documented thoroughly by progressives like Drew Westen, Matt Taibbi, Robert Kuttner, and many others. Advice on what to do instead has not been lacking from other progressives. Advice is all over the blogs. Guy Saperstein is an excellent example.

We progressives are long on factual analysis, critique, suggestion — and ridicule. Rachel Maddow is one of the best, and her popularity is well-deserved. What’s more fun than ridiculing Tea Party-ers, Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, and the like, by showing the factual errors, the flaws in their logic, and the cruelty of their positions.

But we have been dealt a triple blow. A year of failed deal-making by our side, the Tea Party win in Massachusetts, and worst of all, the 5-4 Supreme Court decision to turn our democracy into a corporate plutocracy. This is serious.

Democrats still have the presidency and a majority in the House and Senate, but the momentum is on the conservative side. Their victories in the framing wars have inevitably led to a crucial electoral victory and to a Supreme Court death threat to democracy itself, framed as free speech.

Democrats have electoral power, but progressives have not created an effective movement to take advantage of that power.

Conservatives…don’t believe that government should serve public needs, that instead government should be privatized and shrunk to fit in a bathtub, as if governing would disappear with government. But governing doesn’t disappear when government shrinks; instead corporations come to govern your life — like HMO’s, oil companies, drug companies, agribusiness, and so on, with accountability only to maximizing profit, not to public needs.

The buying of the The Supreme Corp (Court)

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Edward Berge

Corporate capitalism had a huge victory today by buying the Supreme Court (now known as the Supreme Corp, the conservative majority, anyway), who ruled to remove all corporate political financing restrictions. Now corporations are free to literally buy whatever they want with unlimited funding of political ads. But this is how capitalism works, so should we be surprised? I’m really looking forward to seeing the “integral” spin on this one. That is, if they don’t just ignore it as irrelevant, which is more likely.

The argument in favor of this travesty is that corporations are “people” and thus have rights of free speech, which include freedom to contribute money to candidates of their choice. This will make an integral spin especially problematic, since corporations are in the lower quadrants and thus not “dominant monads,” i.e., people with consciousness. Thus the corp should not have the same rights. For those of you with memberships to IL etc. please forward such integral spin here for our consideration.

Fight back at www.savedemocracy.net

Here’s another link to voice your opposition: http://my.barackobama.com/FairElections

This led to further discussion of the Gaia Integral Postmetaphysical Pod in the Integral Capitalism thread. Here are a few excerpts:

Nickeson said:

Edward, do you think Harris in his essay Thoughts towards in integral political economy was in any way influenced by Marx’s Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844? It has been 40 years since I read that little volume, but I recognized some distinct parallels. If I recall correctly he had an idealized semi-utopian vision there which was dedicated toward the humanistic, self-realization of the individual worker and thus the society at large. It was not too much different than the visions of the early anarchist thinkers. The problem that all of them have is the assumption of a highly advanced, fully industrialized, wealthy political economy as their basis. Later it became axiomatic for Marx that the worker’s revolution had to take place in a nation of advanced industrialization or else the sought for redistribution of wealth would just be a redistribution of poverty that would have a “trickle up” effect from the lumpen into the central government.

I said:

Harris is obviously influenced by Marx, and from knowing Ray he is also influenced by those early anacharists. And yet he is integrally informed so he adds to those theories while not being strictly limited to them.

And yes, all of this revolution of the masses does presuppose a relatively ample economic surplus brought on by the industrial revolution. Yet this revolution is not communist but rather democratic. It’s a fight to introduce democracy not only into politics but into business. Capitalism is not a democratic economic system and is not by necessity wed to our democratic political system, although we can see how it is corrupting that political system by such as the recent Supreme Corp ruling. And capitalism is not by necessity wed to the industrial revolution but one could argue it’s a holdover of feudal aristocratic governance applied to the new forms of market economy that emerged with industrialization. As I said in the spiritual commodity thread, using Wilber using Marx, the economic base advanced much more quickly than the societal worldview, with the latter trying to impose its view on the new economic structure.

Perhaps it’s time for the view to catch up to the economic base? We know that democratic businesses, like credit unions for example, are a very competitive and viable alternative to for profit, capitalistic banks. Same with worker-owned businesses. And these alternatives also create surplus that does not have to go to rugged individualistic shareholders as profit but can be redistributed to members and communities for more beneficial social purposes. Harris ideas about distributing such surplus on each level under the prime directive seem integrally apropos here. All of which seems more suitable expressions of democracy wedded to markets than the aristocratic capitalism currently in power.

Integral Capitalism?

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

Edward Berge

There’s a new discussion on the above topic at the IPS pod at Gaia. Here’s an excerpt from the introduction:

This weeks Integral Life audio offering is one of the more interesting ones lately.

The official statement here seems to be: We have to live with the Capitalist system right now, yes we know it has got failures and shortcomings, but if we try hard and meditate daily, we can improve the system into green and beyond. All we need is faith and patience.

But what if this is not true? What if the “small problems” of capitalism are sort of ‘built in’ the system and just won’t go away? What if a green capitalism won’t change a thing about the inequalities and injustice of the world?