Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

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?

Nuremberg Revisited

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Edward Berge

Obama administration files to dismiss case against John Yoo

Jonathan Turley, lawyer and Law Professor, makes a compelling case that the Obama administration is using the same arguments used by lawyers and jurists of the Third Reich on trial at Nuremberg. Arguments that the world, and the US, has heretofore found unacceptable. And all the more ironic since Obama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. So this is the change we can believe in?

Rumsfeld Charged with Torture in French Court

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

I saw this at Common Dreams. Hopefully it will open a discussion on international law and politics.

by Haider Rizvi

NEW YORK – Donald Rumsfeld, the former U.S. secretary of defense, is facing criminal charges in France for ordering the torture of prisoners in Iraq and at the military prison at Guantanamo Bay.

Last week, some of the world’s leading human rights law groups filed a complaint before a French court charging Rumsfeld with authorizing and ordering torture.

The complaint was registered at the office of the prosecutor of the Court of First Instance in Paris when Rumsfeld was in the city for a talk sponsored by Foreign Policy magazine.

“We will not rest until those U.S. officials involved in torture are brought to justice,” said Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a non-profit human rights law firm in the United States.

In filing the complaint against Rumsfeld, Ratner’s group received full support from the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR), the French League for Human Rights, and the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH).

“Rumsfeld must understand that he has no place to hide,” Ratner added in a statement after filing the complaint. “A torturer is an enemy of all humankind.”

The charges against Rumsfeld were brought under the 1984 Convention against Torture, ratified by both the United States and France, which has been used in France in previous torture cases.

The criminal complaint states that because of the failure of authorities in the United States and Iraq to launch any independent investigation, it is the legal obligation of states such as France to take up the case.

Ratner and his colleagues in France’s legal community contend that Rumsfeld and other top U.S. officials are subject to criminal trial because there is sufficient evidence to prove that they had authorized the torture of prisoners held on suspicion of involvement in terrorist acts.

“France is under the obligation to investigate and prosecute Rumsfeld,” said FIDH president Souhayr Belhassen. “It has no choice but to open an investigation.”

Arguing that French courts are obligated under the Convention against Torture to prosecute individuals responsible for torture if they are present on French territory, Belhassen said he hoped the fight against impunity will “not be sacrificed in the name of politics.”

Rumsfeld’s presence on French territory gives French courts jurisdiction to prosecute him for having ordered and authorized torture and cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment of detainees in Guantanamo, the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, and elsewhere, lawyers who filed complaint said.

Rumsfeld, who stepped down from his position a year ago, can no longer claim immunity as a high-level statesman or as a former statesman, they added, because international law does not recognize such immunity in the case of international crimes including torture.

Former U.S. Army Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, who served as commander of Abu Ghraib and other U.S.-run prisons in Iraq, submitted written testimony to the Paris prosecutor for the plaintiffs’ case detailing Rumsfeld’s relationship to the abuse of detainees.

“We want to combat impunity and therefore demand a judicial investigation and a criminal prosecution wherever there is jurisdiction over the torture incidents,” said ECCHR General Secretary Wolfgang Kaleck.

This is the fifth time Rumsfeld has been charged with direct involvement in torture stemming from his role in the Bush administration’s global response to the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York and other parts of the United States.

Two previous criminal complaints were filed in Germany under its universal jurisdiction statute, which allows Germany to prosecute serious international crimes regardless of where they occurred or the nationality of the perpetrators or victims.

The first case was filed in 2004 by CCR, FIDH, and Kaleck, who is an attorney in Berlin. That case was dismissed in February 2005 in response to official pressure from the United States, in particular from the Pentagon, the plaintiffs said.

The second case was filed last fall by the same groups as well as dozens of national and international human rights groups, Nobel Peace Prize winners, and the former UN special rapporteur on torture.

The 2006 complaint was presented on behalf of 12 Iraqi citizens who had been held and abused in Abu Ghraib and one Saudi citizen still held at Guantanamo. That case was dismissed in April, though an appeal is expected this week.

Rumsfeld is also facing similar charges in two other cases filed against him in Argentina and Sweden.

© 2007 One World

American Freedom Agenda Act of 2007

Friday, October 19th, 2007

In “The end of America” thread I mentioned the American Freedom Campaign, which I joined. They recently made me aware of the new legislation above.

On October 15, 2007, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) introduced the American Freedom Agenda Act of 2007 (H.R. 3835). This important piece of legislation would reverse many of the Constitutional abuses that have occurred over the past six years.

In the name of the “war on terror,” the Bush Administration and Congress have repeatedly abandoned Constitutional principles at the expense of civil liberties and human rights. If we allow this to continue, we may end up living in a nation that reflects the worst nightmare of our Founders. They designed the Constitution specifically to protect our rights against a tyrannical government. Even in times of crisis, we must be true to their vision.

That’s why I just visited the American Freedom Campaign and took action by sending an e-mail urging my U.S representative to co-sponsor this legislation. The pre-written e-mail included a short description of the bill, along with a reminder about the fact that all members of Congress take an oath to “support and defend the Constitution.”

Your representative needs to hear from as many constituents as possible about this. Please take a moment and e-mail your representative today. Follow this link to take action. Thanks so much for joining me in this effort.

Integral gender studies

Friday, October 12th, 2007

I want to make some suggestions as to what Integral gender studies might cover.

First, there’s nothing really new. Wilber’s map is often a way to categorise stuff we already know. It might not have anything new to add.

Second, I think Wilber often fails to realise the potential of his system. I am surprised at the conservative interpretation he places on politics. He does it with gender studies by falling back onto conservative stereotypes and a crude polarity of gender types. Yet the current state of gender studies leads to more radical directions.

Third is the problem of pre- versus post-knowledge scenarios. Wilber’s reading of the developmental spectrum sometimes assumes ignorance of recent discoveries. Thus the early stages become newly ignorant of postmodernism and modernism. But once a discovery has been made all levels must reassess their narratives to take account of the new information. A good example is the gay rights movement. Whilst moral conservatives may reject homosexuality, they can’t ignore it. The gay lobby exists. Similarly the feminist movement has happened. Women have the vote. The integral movement therefore has to take account of current knowledge; it can’t pretend a pre-knowledge ignorance exists for the lower levels.

Okay, now to the IT, or UL quadrant. The biological determinants in gender are complex. It is no longer simply a question of XX and XY chromosomes. The genetic picture is complex and allows considerable variation. There are women with high testosterone levels and men with high oestrogen levels (there are even men who can lactate). There are a number of conditions that cause hermaphroditism, or ambiguous genitalia. Until the age of three months the embryo has no distinct gender. The release of hormones will determine if the cells that form the clitoris/penis will create a normal or large clitoris, or a normal or small penis. The cells that form the labia majora become the scrotum in the male. In ambiguous genitalia the examining doctor cannot determine if the child has a large clitoris or small penis, an enlarged, bulbous vulva or a small scrotum. Sometimes the child will have a penis and a vaginal opening, sometimes testicles and ovaries, or one of each.

Outside of ambiguous genitalia the child may grow up with abnormal hormones that may incline a girl to develop masculine traits and a boy feminine traits. Some genes will determine the amount of body hair, giving some girls facial hair and a masculine body some boys a lack of hair and a feminine body.

There is also some evidence to suggest that genes play a part in psychological disposition. Gender Identity Disorder (or gender dysphoria) is now a recognised condition. It causes boys to identify psychologically with being a girl, and a girl with being a boy. It can cause psychological trauma from a very young age. In some extreme cases boys have attempted to castrate themselves. The recognised solution is to allow the child to grow up as the sex they think they are and to have gender reassignment surgery and hormone replacement therapy when they enter puberty.

More research is being done, but we can now say with certainty that nature doesn’t deal with simple polarities.

Okay, now to the WE and ITS quadrants. I deal with these together because they are interlinked. At the level of culture there is also considerable variation. Yes, there are average similarities, but it is the exceptions that are the most interesting. The men of the Wodabe tribe of Niger wear make-up and elaborate costumes that make them look feminine. In Sparta girls were taught to wrestle and box with the boys until the age of seven (when the boys went to a separate academy, the girls however continued in martial arts and gymnastics). Several cultures recognise more than two sexes. In some culture transvestitism and androgyny are tolerated and even accorded a special role.

If Integral theory is to be truly integral, then it must understand that the traditional Judeo-Christian gender polarity is just one of many cultural configurations. It is not normative. It is a mistake to think that the lower developmental levels only accept a crude polarity. Some Native American tribes recognised several sexes, including masculine women and feminine men.

Gender polarisation is not a developmental issue. It is cultural.

In addition tribal societies accepted a wide variety of sexual practices and ways of organising their society. Anthropology recognises patriarchal, matriarchal, patrilineal, matrilineal, patrilocal and matrilocal configurations. Some cultures accepted homosexuality, with the Greeks tolerating pederasty and its lesbian equivalent of Sapphism (particularly on Lesbos and in Sparta). The variations are too numerous to mention, save to say that the Judeo-Christian version is not normative. One example however, might suffice. Aristotle called Spartan society a gynarchy, a place where women ruled. Unlike their Athenian counterparts Spartan women could inherit, own and manage property. They were allowed to speak their minds in meetings and they were given an education, with some achieving note as poets and Pythagorean philosophers. They were allowed to have lovers as there were no adultery laws, they also were free to pursue lesbian affairs and to take young girls as mentors. They were taught to be physically strong and the Athenian men admired them for their beauty. The only woman to win an Olympic medal was a Spartan – she was a noted horsetrainer.

Okay, now for a quick glance at the I or UL quadrant. Here I want to make a special note of the theory of reincarnation and Jungian archetypes. The East accepts that men can reincarnate as women and vice versa. One Buddhist contemplation asks the practitioner to understand that every person was once their mother. The aim of some Tantric practices is to integrate and transcend male and female. The god Shiva is sometimes portrayed as the hermaphrodite Ardhanarishvara. The goddess Kali-Durga has fearsome male warrior attributes (similarly the Greco-Roman pantheon allows for greater gender variety than the Judeo-Christian tradition).

Carl Jung developed the theory of archetypes and proposed a quadrant model of the psyche: self, shadow, anima and animus. Anima and animus are the female and male psychological types. However, Jung was quite clear that anima and animus were independent of biological sex. A woman could have a strong animus and a man a strong anima. Jung also wrote extensively on what he called the ‘mysterious conjunction’ and used alchemical symbology to talk about transcending gender stereotypes as part of the individuation process.

I have only skimmed the surface of this vast topic, but what is clear is that Integral gender studies must recognise gender complexity.

This is why it is so disappointing to read Wilber deal in crude polar stereotypes. He should know a lot better.

I wonder how welcome the GLBT community is made to feel in the Integral movement? Or would a raging queen or butch dyke scare the beejusus out of them? If that is the case how integral are they really? How big is Wilber in the gay community in SF (no snickering darlings)? I mean, I always thought he looked gay :)