Occupy Minnesota

This article in MinnPost by Eric Black highlights the fact that more and more Americans are waking up to the devastation of an under-regulated financial industry.

I have discussed often on this blog about the importance of speaking truthfully about reality. Language forms and informs HOW we think. People are beginning to realize this. Take a look at the language on some of the signs reported in the article. Here are what some of the signs read:

“Lower the Maximum Wage”

“The winds of change are blowing”

“This is not a crisis; it’s a slam”

“Capitalism encourages greed”

“Billions of our tax dollars went to bailed out bank bonuses and trickled down to cutting social services”

“Blame Reagan and Bush; Not Obama”

(Or, on the contrary:)

“Bush? Obama? Same policies – Join the Ron Paul Revolution”

“A 4-day 32-hour workweek = more real jobs for Americans”

“Wall St. Econ 101: Privatize the profits; Socialize the losses”

“No slaves; No masters”

“Wake Up America”

“The 99% is too big to fail”

“Eat the Rich”

“Economic Justice means forgive loans, not lawbreaking banks”

“Be Warned: The Nature of your oppression is the aesthetic of our anger”

“Corporate Greed is Killing this country and its future”

“We are still a colony of the British Empire under the jurisdiction of the Magna Charta”

“Health Care is a Right”

“Wall Street Cheats—Stop Naked Shorting”

“Audit the Federal Reserve”

“Corporate America: Join me or face your doom!”

“Money is not Evil; Buying and Selling Congress to protect Wall Street Is”

“I dissent”

“Tax the 1%”

“Can I please get a bailout to pay for college”

“You’ve Got to change the world and use this chance to be heard; your time is now” (This, the sign holder told me, is a lyric from a song called “Butterflies and Hurricanes” by a group called Muse.)

“We ARE the government”

“Jesus: Please rescue the other 99 sheep”

“This is what a global revolution looks like”

“We now have government by the corporations, for the corporations”

“Ministry of Propaganda: Fox News”

“If they are saying ‘Let them eat cake,’ maybe we should say ‘Off with their heads.’”

 

InnerPeace – Walkin’ on Sunshine or Eggshells?

Photo R. Meshar

Remember the song, “I’m Walkin’ on Sunshine”? Most of the time our closest relationships should feel like walking on sunshine. But what if, like me, you’ve had an experience in many family relationships that feels more like walking on eggshells?

Walking on eggshells is a warning flag that something is very wrong. In healthy relationships, even when one of the participants is in a bad mood, tired or irritated, trust still underpins the relationship. Because of the underlying trust, neither one ever feels like they’re walking on eggshells.

Walking on eggshells means you can’t be sure what is coming next. This is because your experience has been that what is coming next could be a “rocket across the bow” to you.

People who live with those caught in addiction frequently describe their relationship with the addict as one of “walking on eggshells.” Similar descriptions will be used for relationships with narcissists, manipulators and other types of self-centered behavior.

Over time, walking on eggshells can create severe stress, may even cause depression or worse. No one deserves this in her or his life.

Stop. Assess. Consult a therapist. Make changes. Your life and health depend on it. Start walkin’ on sunshine.

Photo R. Meshar

You may also like Thinkers Anonymous, Difficult People, and Question the Culture.

Stories About Fighting Back

Shine light in the darkness. People are becoming empowered to fight back.

Check out the Guardian’s Series, “Fighting Back” – “A series of investigative documentaries about poverty, commissioned and editorially controlled by Guardian Films, in association with Christian Aid”

 

You may also like Farmers Pushed Off Their Land By Investors, Life of Water; Water of Life and What Can You and I Do?


Cafe Saturday

In case you were otherwise occupied, look around – autumn has arrived. Last Saturday I went for a walk to enjoy the colors and then stopped by a cafe, sitting in the  sunshine. Here are some pictures of fall color just beginning to emerge.

Photo R. Meshar
Photo R. Meshar
Photo R. Meshar
Photo R. Meshar
Photo R. Meshar

You may also like Another Prairie Walk, August Evening Picnic and Great Lakes Revisited.

Wealth Distribution Thought Problem

Photo A. Meshar

How should wealth be distributed? In an article entitled Wealth Inequality, Dan Ariely at Technology Review.com asked Americans this very question.

“Perform the following thought experiment. Remove yourself for a moment from your present socioeconomic circumstances and imagine that you are to be replaced randomly into society at any class level.

Now, before you know your particular place in society you are told that it is within your powers to redistribute the wealth of that society in any way that you choose.  What distribution would you choose? This famous thought experiment is the basis of political philosopher John Rawls, as outlined in his highly influential 1971 work, “A Theory Of Justice,” in which he argues that the lowest class should be made as well off as possible.” (Bold was added)

What distribution would you choose? Click here to see how those surveyed responded. What do Americans believe is the current wealth distribution in the U.S.? –

“. . . participants rather badly estimated the current state of wealth disparity! Furthermore, they offered an ideal wealth distribution (under a “veil of ignorance”) that was even more different (and more equal) relative to the current state of affairs.

What this tells me is that Americans don’t understand the extent of disparity in the US, and that they (we) desire a more equitable society.”

These results tell me two additional things. First, for all the rhetoric we read in the media against socialism, it turns out that Americans are a lot more socialistic than they would like to believe because they believe in a more equitable society.

Americans frequently forget that we are VERY socialistic about some things. We want just one water supplier or sewer system, for example. The same is true for electricity, natural gas and other utilities. In fact it makes sense here.

Second, Americans believe in a social safety net – what an equitable society requires.

The reality is that all healthy societies, in the past and today, provide a base income or social safety net for everyone before others are allowed to retain great wealth.

Once basic human needs are assured then wealth disparity becomes less problematic because the social problems caused by wealth disparity – shrinking middle class, unemployment, crime, drug abuse, poor health, lack of skills – are minimized or eliminated.

You may also like How Extreme Inequality Destroys the Economy, Surprise! Health Insurance Improves Lives and Does Everyone Have a Voice?