Showing posts with label financial institutions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label financial institutions. Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2011

THE REVOLUTION IS KNOCKING -- PT. 1



In my lifetime, I've never seen anything like this.

In fact, as far as I can tell, the present level of radicalization of the masses, in the U.S. and possibly globally, is unprecedented. The knowledge, the awareness, the networking, the activism, the motivation -- all the indexes that indicate radical societal change are going up.

This is key stuff and what "House on Fire" is all about. So I want to devote two or three posts to it. My observations of what's going on at present, what it means, where it might lead, how it will affect us and what WE can do to affect it.

What's the Evidence?

Let's start with the U.S. Even as recently as a decade ago, you didn't hear the "average person" questioning America's major institutions -- and certainly not with the sophisticated level of knowledge that they're exhibiting now.

People are aware of the Wall Street robber barons; the illegality of the U.S. invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere; the fact that we don't have a real democracy; the notion that things really do just go round and round in the same sick way regardless of who gets elected; the knowledge that corporations call the shots; the fact that those corporations can pollute the hell out of the air, water and land and not pay a serious price -- and will probably be granted more licenses to rip and tear for fossil fuels; a stark awareness that not only nuclear weapons but nuclear energy is unsafe and unnecessary. The list goes on.

People are discussing these things. I see it all the time now on Facebook, message boards, Twitter, in the alternative media and, on occasion, the mass media: you name it. The dialogue is thrilling to witness -- and very often it's really smart dialogue.

Activism-based groups have hit the mainstream. While I'm not here to go into deep detail about their individual merits or flaws, movements like Zeitgeist, Anonymous, the Venus Project and resource-based economy groups herald a whole new era. I feel that we have Wikileaks -- in tandem with a pitiful global economy -- to thank for this surge of widespread activism.

Then there are the uprisings around the globe: against oppressive regimes, protesting governments whose policies feed unemployment, and demanding peace and justice and decent-paying jobs. The Middle East alone is awash with protests.

And, of course, cyberspace. The New Frontier. The Establishment just can't keep the lid on it. TV was the one-way propaganda gold mine they relied on. But this Internet thing? What's a WASP to do?

"But how's it going to turn out?"

The question on everyone's lips. But to focus on the question itself is to miss the real point. I believe the real point is that people are actually ASKING this question. When has this ever happened before in modern, Western history vis-a-vis mass societal change? This is a landmark -- it almost feels like a miracle.

But not really: This has been simmering for some time. Of course, you could shorthand an answer and say: "Well, things are so rotten for so many people, we need radical change of some kind so at least the ship has left the dock. We have a shot of making things better." Predicting exactly how it will play out is like trying to predict anything about the future -- and it isn't what's important anyway. We just have to keep working, talking, protesting and shaping the thing as we move forward.

I'm not saying that there isn't quite a way to go; I'm just saying that we've traveled farther than ever before. And now, all things are possible.

Much more to write but I don't want to make these posts too long. Check back and I'll have more for you in a day or two -- and I'd love to hear your thoughts!

Take care,
Adrian

IF YOU FOUND THIS BLOG POST INTERESTING you might like to take a look at AMERICA IS IN DECAY.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

MONEY -- Part 1


Be honest: Don't we all see life this way far more than we should

When I was working for a non-profit some years ago, one of my colleagues, in the course of a mini training, asked me: "Do you believe that money is the root of all evil?"

I don't remember my exact words at the time but I'm sure they were along the lines of what I'd say now: "No, I don't. I believe that people are the root of all evil."

After all, without us, money would be powerless. Money doesn't start wars, run away from the poor, or put on a suit and lobby politicians.

It doesn't take itself on excessive shopping sprees or hedge, bob and weave until it makes financial institutions collapse, ruining countless lives. Human beings do that.

I am concerned with global poverty. But it has its roots in us. All change has to start with the grassroots. The consumers of the Western World. Our own attitudes to money; and our attitudes to "our" institutions.

This first blog post on money is about the former, obviously. I'll look at the latter next time.

For my part, I have resolved to spend less, give more, recycle what I can, and be more thrifty with everything from air-conditioning to gasoline to water to food. I will do everything to avoid giving my dollars to the worst corporations and I will be more of an activist in the realm of poverty and hunger. I've been doing these things to some degree for years; but I can do them better. And I will.




Let me ask you:

-- Do you have more than you really need? Much more?
-- Do you indulge in spending sprees or one-off splurges that are like a sugar high but don't really give more meaning to your life; more peace of mind?
-- Are you wasteful?
-- Have you ever taken the time to look at poverty and wealth distribution information?
-- Do you stretch your budget through over-consumption rather than charity?
-- Do you pester the politicians for more humanitarian tax reforms, welfare reforms, tougher laws on corporations, and increased aid to the poor (be they in the Third World that exists within our shores or beyond them)?
-- Have you ever gone to corporate watchdog sites and learned about the horrendous crimes and lies of the biggest corporations?
-- Have you ever gone to a rally or made some overt action to protest the cruel distribution of wealth on this planet? Protest labor exploitation? Protested anything that would help with any of these sub-issues?
-- When is enough enough?

Coming up with the wrong answers to these questions doesn't necessarily make one a bad person. We've all been negligent. But it does make us culpable. There's no way around it. A big part of the blame is squarely on our shoulders. And to do nothing makes us an integral part of the problem. Without our over-consumption and social apathy these wrongs could not exist. We have the numbers. We should be using them.

I ask this question a lot (of myself as well): How would you feel if it was you?

* If it was you and your family who were hungry and cold?
* If it was you watching your children starve?
* If it was you in desperate need of just a little help to save your health, your life?

Would your attitude to money be different? Be honest. Of course it would!

As resources dwindle and greed thrives, as dumb consumption increases and Third World sweatshops make that possible, and as "globalization" and its tools (NAFTA, GATT, WTO, IMF, World Bank etc.) grip the globe, there is only one logical conclusion: If we don't change our attitudes, our habits, and our level of commitment to others, we'll all go down together.

The planet's resources are finite. And yet there are enough of the basics for everyone, for an indefinite time, if distributed humanely. Still, tens of thousands starve every day. It comes back to us.

The time for change is incredibly overdue. The jaws of consequence are gaping in front of us. Let's fire up the last eco-friendly bus to a sane solution.

Take care,
Adrian

IF YOU FOUND THIS BLOG POST INTERESTING you might like to take a look at CHILD HUNGER -- THE SCOURGE OF THE PLANET

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

READ THIS AND TELL ME WE AREN'T BEING S*REWED!


Petty thieves get prison. Wall Street thieves get mega yachts and homes in the Hamptons.

Remember the bailout of the financial institutions?

I hope you do because it was not only a disgrace, but it encapsulated what's wrong with our economic system.

Well, read this article about how banks actually profited from the whole mess (and YOUR TAXES), and tell me that it isn't even worse than we thought.

I also recommend the DVD documentary narrated by Matt Damon called "Inside Job."

Then, protest loud and long to your government. Choose carefully where you invest, save and spend your money. Look for grassroots and local alternatives. They're out there.

Our faux capitalism is piracy. Pure capitalism won't work for us either. We need a different socio-economic system.

So get informed, get angry, reach out, team up, and make your voice heard.

All will follow if we have the commitment to do these things and persist.

Take care,
Adrian

IF YOU FOUND THIS BLOG POST INTERESTING, you might like to take a look at TAXES: MICHAEL MOORE TELLING IT HOW IT IS.