tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-319649742024-02-20T19:42:49.040-05:00RANDOM THOUGHTSMycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.comBlogger394125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-82270327985371836312022-09-09T14:45:00.002-04:002022-09-09T14:46:24.135-04:00Money for Nothing<p> </p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEMCxNmEs1N37a2k0GQRpIQdFXw2x6wGpo3xGgNDLpWqhcfovbIJQW202EkTU42VOKP6xDe-bBTF2xrCEc5hTgurkCyS_oX0eJPGib74371D9d9wpCyenZz5xBfTBW9PIqjsFyoqTWpckSGLbjMmMj8d_kuiVr8bYcBUQDRF5QjxqH96BdNw/s615/Royal%20Family.jpg" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="346" data-original-width="615" height="181" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhEMCxNmEs1N37a2k0GQRpIQdFXw2x6wGpo3xGgNDLpWqhcfovbIJQW202EkTU42VOKP6xDe-bBTF2xrCEc5hTgurkCyS_oX0eJPGib74371D9d9wpCyenZz5xBfTBW9PIqjsFyoqTWpckSGLbjMmMj8d_kuiVr8bYcBUQDRF5QjxqH96BdNw/w320-h181/Royal%20Family.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>The tributes, tears and general outpouring of support for
the royal family over the death of Elizabeth Windsor is absolutely ridiculous.
I won’t even get into the raping of the Caribbean countries and the wealth that
was accumulated on the back of slaves. The very idea that one family is born
better than the rest of the country can only be described as bigotry lesson
number one. If, for some insane reason, you believe that someone is better than
you by birth, then you clearly believe that people are worse than you by matter
of their birth. Whether it be race, religion or creed. In order to complete the
mental gymnastics required to pay homage to a family based on absolutely
nothing, you clearly have to also believe that the opposite view is true. <o:p></o:p><p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">The “Royal Family” has done absolutely nothing to deserve
the billions of dollars that the British people have given that family so that
they can maintain a lifestyle of lavish extravagance. This applies to every
monarchy in the world. I honestly can’t believe that this archaic tradition
survived the 20<sup>th</sup> century. There was a time when countries needed a figurehead
to unite them. Those days are long gone and yet the idea of monarchy remains.
Japan, Sweden, Monaco and others continue this tradition based on the idea that
somehow the country will flounder without this position. The poor commonwealth countries
have to ask the British monarchy for permission to carry out the most basic of
tasks. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">While the US is currently in the grips of a seemingly
growing and endless split, at no point has anyone suggested that it would be
better if we had a monarch (except Donald Trump, who seems to want to be measured
for a crown). Monarchs and monarchies are ideas whose time has come and past.
What is the basis for their places in society? The divine right of kings? Has
God himself proclaimed that these individuals are better than the rest of the
people? How fucking ridiculous is that? Yet people will cry and make great
speeches about how wonderful this massive welfare suck of a person has been.
There were no great steps to help the poor, the downtrodden, those who had to
live under the heels of oppression. Barely a smile and wave was all that was
needed to placate the millions around the world. It’s as if the entire world
has been under some horrible post hypnotic suggestion. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">The Windsors are just another family. They have for some reason
been put on a pedestal and anointed as Gods. I know that this ridiculous
tradition won’t end any time soon, but there are no tears shed by me. I didn’t
know Elizabeth, I never met her and she meant nothing to me. I am very sure
that thousands of people died in England over the past couple of days, but
there was no international outpouring of sadness over them. They only had their
families and loved ones to shed a tear. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">I guess the Windsors would deserve as much attention as the
Kardashians, if they were as entertaining. They are definition of money for
nothing. So to all those out there who are giving this death more than the footnote attention it deserves, ask yourself why you care about someone who did absolutely nothing to deserve their station in life except to be born to it. Do you think that she's better than you? Do you think that she's special in some way? Exceptionally smart? Exceptionally talented? Exceptionally gifted in some other way? Maybe it's just because she's been around so long, but trust me when I say that Betty White was much more deserving of this kind of outpouring of emotion. <o:p></o:p></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">I'll wait for answers. </p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-75230948110686372902021-03-17T09:41:00.001-04:002022-03-02T16:36:19.912-05:00Guilty as Charged<p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgmpUD32A6g7i_9d8w_oGZ0wKGQAzdQ9_cEKetnS0-CIh2kNDbVxSd9rZ-rJe-CR6giulVrVJWb3Xvfwp1CKqJki8kqKMkJ2MMWW-vFlizkB975y0cEzmrKFCnyo_hLeI4zKdJy/s640/Guilty-640w.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="233" data-original-width="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgmpUD32A6g7i_9d8w_oGZ0wKGQAzdQ9_cEKetnS0-CIh2kNDbVxSd9rZ-rJe-CR6giulVrVJWb3Xvfwp1CKqJki8kqKMkJ2MMWW-vFlizkB975y0cEzmrKFCnyo_hLeI4zKdJy/s320/Guilty-640w.jpg" width="320" /></a></div><br /><p></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">The question
is why. Why have I been complicit in the idea that this non-stop attack against
people who look like me does not affect me? The answer is fairly simple. It
does not benefit me to call out the injustice of the world to people who are on
my side. These are people who see me as removed from the issues that face
people of color in this country. That is my fault. It makes those around me
feel better about themselves and allows them the comfort of knowing that at
least I don’t feel the constant crush of racism, oppression and inequality. Of
course, none of that is true. I feel it every minute of every day. <o:p></o:p></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">I wish I
could say that because I have surrounded myself with people who have no
interest or concern with the color of my skin that my life has been untouched
by unavoidable and invasive effect of bigotry. I appreciate and rejoice in the
bubble of people that I have created to shield me from the world.
Unfortunately, we can’t live in that bubble. None of us have the ability to
lock ourselves away and only deal with the people who care about us. Being
treated like a criminal by the police or being passed over for consideration
for promotion because of the color of my skin is just part of my experience. I
have locked those things away and kept my feelings hidden from my friends and
loved ones because I thought it would do them no good to be aware of them. I
was self-censoring my own life and feelings in order to protect those around me
from my truth. <o:p></o:p></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">There have
been times when I’ve tried to have honest conversations about this truth, but
it was usually met with a particular sort of denial. As if realization of the
truth would destroy that persons understanding of the world as they knew it. It
couldn’t possibly be true that there’s a double standard at work in the world.
That would mean everything that I have, and everything that I believe in has
been built on a lie. But if it took me a lifetime to be able to say it, I can
understand the reticence that people have in believing it. <o:p></o:p></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">People have
asked me many times why I never had children. When I was younger, I would say
that I just didn’t have the patience for it. But the truth was then as it is
now that I would never do this to someone else. To be a young black male in
this country and know that you stand a better chance of being incarcerated than
you do of graduating college is mind numbing and soul crushing. That is the
truth that being black in America and frankly all over the world that we have
to live with. That is the truth that is taken for granted and dismissed by so
many who do not happen the share the genetic marker of color. The fact that we
as a society have taken for granted the disenfranchisement and disillusionment
of an entire race of people, will forever be our undying shame. It should not take
the filmed murder of black people for people to realize the issues that face an
entire subset of the population. It should not take the daily protests and
clashes with the authorities to realize what has been the daily suffering of an
entire race of people. <o:p></o:p></span></span></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"><span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">I stand
guilty of having been a part of the charade. Before all of this years’
upheaval, I am very sure you could have taken a survey of my friends and loved
ones and found that very few of them would have said that any of this affected
my day to day life. I fielded multiple calls and emails from friends asking me
what they could do or say to be an ally. Also asking if they had ever done or
said anything to me that was insensitive. I know why they reached out to me.
They reached out to me because I always made it okay and easy to be my friend.
I never brought up the day to day anguish that I felt. I never brought up the hundreds
of ways I’ve been made to feel diminished. I must admit that there are days
when I just feel defeated. There are days that I just want to give up and I
many ways I think I have. I know there’s no change coming. I know there’s no defeating the systematic racism in this country and across the world. I know
that there’s a target forever on my back. I can’t fight it. People just want to know when their lives can
get back to being comfortable, so that they can ignore any issues that might
interrupt their weekend barbeques and football games. It is a distraction to
them. Nothing more and nothing less.<o:p></o:p></span></span></p><p style="text-align: justify;">
<span style="line-height: 107%;"><span style="font-family: arial;">In the end, I accept responsibility for my part
in this charade. I accept that I have given aid and comfort when I perhaps
should have been more truthful. I also accept that fact that I would not have
made any difference. And perhaps giving aid and comfort to those I love and
care for has been worth it. I don’t know, but I’ve reached a point of
exhaustion. I’ve denied these feelings for decades, but there is a psychic toll
to pay. You can put on a happy face or grin and bear it, but you do have to
answer to yourself at some point. I guess I’ve reached that point. It is
sobering to look in the mirror and find yourself lacking. </span></span></p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-63139216114587740152021-01-22T16:31:00.006-05:002021-01-23T00:57:21.827-05:00If I Had A Hammer<p></p><p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaQRf5eN5o0PQzNcCIcAQlublHI4WTmpY2LGe6kybr7hqBlmCBBvqp_MCGx69qjl4MEZ6J2U5v3wDKfOFeOt373Hp2vRdVAWgkOG2Q_25QQ475253tBdwSfEFklindUuZyIGxy/s800/Hank.jpeg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="579" data-original-width="800" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaQRf5eN5o0PQzNcCIcAQlublHI4WTmpY2LGe6kybr7hqBlmCBBvqp_MCGx69qjl4MEZ6J2U5v3wDKfOFeOt373Hp2vRdVAWgkOG2Q_25QQ475253tBdwSfEFklindUuZyIGxy/s320/Hank.jpeg" width="320" /></a></div>Hank Aaron died today and while I have mentioned him in
posts, I’ve never had the opportunity to speak at length about him in this
forum. The easiest thing to say about him is that he was one of the greatest
baseball players who ever lived. That’s easy because the staggering numbers he
compiled will always tell the story of his greatness. However, I believe he reached
his greatest heights as he chased the hallowed home run record of Babe Ruth. He
received an almost unfathomable 3,000 pieces of hate mail a day. He was simply
doing what he was paid to do, but had to endure the most inhumane threats and
insults imaginable. He never once shied away from the spotlight, never once hid
the hate that was coming his way on a daily basis, he never cowered under the
avalanche of death threats. He just went out and did his job. It was a display
of courage and fortitude that few could have matched. The terms hero, icon and
legend are too often thrown around to the undeserving. He was all of those things. He personified the
idea of grace under pressure. He bore an incredible burden and not only
survived but thrived. I unfortunately came along too late to see him play as an active Major Leaguer, but that does not diminish my reverence. My
memories are only of the old black and white movies of him in 57 & 58 World
Series against the Yankees. The old video of the all-star games he took part in
and of course the video of that wonderful night in Atlanta when he finally
broke the home run record and that perfect call by Milo Hamilton, “There’s a
new home run champion of all time and it’s Henry Aaron”. We lost one of the
best of us today and I don’t think that it’s a stretch to say that we may never
see his like again. <o:p></o:p><p></p><br /><p></p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-51514515186986634212020-11-09T16:19:00.003-05:002020-12-27T04:24:58.075-05:0058% and I'm done again. <p> Do you know why I'm done (asked no one in particular), because 58%. That's the white vote percentage for our soon to be deposed leader. 58% after 4 years of a non stop assault on our senses. After 4 years of brazen bigotry, xenophobia, personal attacks, non stop lies and close to 250,000 dead. 58%. I frankly have nothing else to say. Now I'm really done. </p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-43628316803167315472020-09-24T09:18:00.003-04:002020-09-24T09:18:28.011-04:00Done<p> I'm done. </p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-8259900891451034512020-08-25T10:44:00.003-04:002020-11-22T12:27:28.483-05:00Just The Way It Is<p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCK9t3qyFB1Rqd-k2I-z25lfcB41y9CmnIMAwTx1IQK1dQAAuSyQOBGuFsvbFeY5mjxMwqYByZFrQcv7P7Fug99mVRDeTD0LeeuDdNkO5rWqjo59XnFiHcQ2wR5yyxVxOV6tN4/s330/article.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="330" data-original-width="250" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCK9t3qyFB1Rqd-k2I-z25lfcB41y9CmnIMAwTx1IQK1dQAAuSyQOBGuFsvbFeY5mjxMwqYByZFrQcv7P7Fug99mVRDeTD0LeeuDdNkO5rWqjo59XnFiHcQ2wR5yyxVxOV6tN4/w242-h320/article.jpg" width="242" /></a></div> I’m just gonna start by saying that I don’t believe this
current uproar will result in any real change. It’s a very pessimistic view,
but I’ve seen it all before. When the statues come down and the names on the
buildings change and a couple of people get prosecuted, most will head back to
their quiet comfortable lives secure in the knowledge that they have struck a
blow for equality. None of that will change the facts on the ground, however.
This situation is so big that I really can’t tackle it in one post. In fact, I
get so frustrated having to think about this stuff that my writing eventually
deteriorates into ranting. I have tried to tackle issues separately, so that
they make a little more sense. And I’ve tried to be brief so that I don’t end
up going off the rails. I don’t really have any answers. I can’t make people
feel better about themselves or the situation in this country and I’m not going
to try. This is just how I see things. Nothing is going to change until the
powerful are willing to cede some power and control to the powerless. And that my friends, is never going to happen. <p></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><b>Current Situation</b><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Americans elected the most non offensive black person in the
history of politics and felt very good about themselves. They voted for him
twice and their job was done. All past sins and future sins were now washed
away. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">After the depression the American middle class flourished.
Strong unions, government programs and general prosperity led to the
fulfillment of the American dream. You went to work for 30 years at the same place,
retired with a comfortable pension and social security and Medicaid were in
place to make sure that your golden years were comfortable. The problem was and
remains that the prosperity that was enjoyed by white America, was simply not
available to those of color. The net worth of an average white family is 10x
that of an average black family. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The dismantling and vilifying of unions that started under
the Reagan administration and continues to this day has eroded what was once a
robust and growing middle class. The average CEO salary went from 10x that of
an employee to 1,000X that of an employee across a couple of decades because of
consistent legislation designed to push wealth in only one direction. That
brilliant strategy has left behind a middle class fighting over the scraps that
have been left by the absolute greed of those in power. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The genius of the plan however is that those at the top have
been able to convince those left behind in their money grab that the problem
lies not with them, but with the people of color who are coming for everything
they have. They are coming for your jobs, homes, daughters and sisters, your
piece of the American dream is under threat from those who don’t look like you.
And middle America bought this lie hook, line and sinker. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">A program as seemingly harmless as Affimative Action has
been under attack from the beginning, because it might deny someone an
opportunity. They don’t even see the irony in that criticism. If you think we
live in a meritocracy, you are sadly mistaken. If you think the same rules
apply to all then you live in a fantasy land. If you think all people are given
equal opportunity to succeed, then you have chosen to live your life with
blinders on. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Most people are well meaning. I believe that most would be
happy to give a hand up to someone who is down. However that hand up comes with
the understanding that you then don’t intrude upon their comfort zone. As long
as the perceived gains are not at their expense, then all is good. School
busing, which was put in place to try and level the playing field in education,
led to white flight from the inner cities. Blacks move into the neighborhood,
it’s time to start looking somewhere else. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I simply have no hope that this is ever going to change. I
guess I gave up a while ago. My feelings are not event based. I don’t have to
have someone killed on camera by a policeman to realize that our society has
failed to live up to its basic creed and never will.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span>This isn’t a situation where there can be a
few new programs or commissions to study the problem and things will get
better. It’s systemic, it’s human nature. We as humans need to have someone to
point to. We need to have someone to be better than. We only prop ourselves to
stand over someone else. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><b>Education</b><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Education is the first, best and only starting point if
there is going to be any systematic change. It is also the only place where I
am the least bit optimistic that there can be real change. Currently Public
education in grades K-12 is systematically unbalanced. I can’t speak to all
states, but I know that there is usually federal & state money that goes
out equally to all districts based on enrollment and then local money is added
to that from property taxes. You hear people talk about moving so they qualify
for the “good” school districts. This is primary a function of personal wealth.
Everyone knows where the “good” school districts are and if they are
financially able, people will move there. What moving to the “good” school
district represents however, is leaving behind a bad one. And what of those
children whose parents aren’t fortunate enough to have the money to move to
another school district? They get left behind, literally and figuratively.
Public school education is guaranteed to all of our children, but there’s
nothing guaranteed about the quality of the education you will receive. In most
cities you will find schools well stocked with computers with great campuses
and facilities and very manageable student to teacher ratios. In that same city
you will find kids going to school in old buildings in need of repair with
students being forced into closets because of lack of space, with limited
access to computers and facilities. The best teachers, for the most part, chose
to teach in the better school districts, so naturally, those students get a
better education. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Of course there are magnet schools and school vouchers and
the like that now allow kids to travel for school, but along with those
opportunities being limited, the bigger question is why should they have to
travel outside of their district in order to get a decent education? This is
the question that should be answered. Why should children be forced to wake up
at 5am to take a bus across town just to get an education that is guaranteed to
them by the government? Is that fair? Is that equal treatment? We have set up a
system whereby we are choosing which kids get ahead and which kids get left
behind. You have parents who can afford to live on the “good” side of town,
then you get to go to the “good” school. You have parents who can afford to
send you to private school, then you get a great education as well. You have
parents or in some cases, a parent, who can’t afford either of those things,
then you get stuck with the leftover school in your district. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The system of education that we have in this country is
basically set up to provide a permanent underclass. We as its citizens seem
perfectly happy to have a separate and very unequal system of education our
children. We seem content as a country to condemn a portion of our children to
a life without opportunities. We end up sending out a portion of our children
to a gun fight armed with a butter knife and expect them to compete on equal
footing. And then we are so quick to point a finger when they fail. But how
could we expect anything else? The truth is that we don’t expect anything else.
We need a permanent underclass in order for our wonderful system to keep on
humming. I asked this simple question in a post I wrote a few years back and
I’ll repeat it to end this segment, “why, do we as a county, value some
children more than others”. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p><b>Law enforcement</b></p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">We have Paramilitary groups that are charged with keeping
the peace in our communities. They are set up to be insular and excuse the pun,
self-policing. They see themselves as constantly under attack and their only
defense is to create a wall of silence that cannot be penetrated. Instead of
being a part of the community, they see themselves as being above it. Only they
can see the evil in the hearts of men. Only they get to decide whether you are
a law abiding citizen or an evil doer who deserves to be punished. You see with
police, everything is black and white. Good or bad, warning or ticket, arrest
or death. They say ultimate power corrupts absolutely and have to look no
further than your local police officer with a badge and gun and the immunity
that comes with being a member of the last great defense to the downfall of
western society. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Of course, I exaggerate slightly. There are people who join
the police force with the genuine belief that they are going to be helpful to
their communities. Those people are quickly absorbed by the unstoppable and
all-encompassing notion that it’s them against us. People are always quick to
point out that it’s “just a few bad apples” in each department. I am very sure
that every officer in the department knows who those “bad apples” are and yet
they refuse to say anything. Their silence makes them complicit in everything
the “bad apples” do. They also do their best to cover for the bad apples if
someone makes a complaint against them or if they commit some horrendous act in
the line of duty. That makes them all bad apples as far as I’m concerned. I believe
that NWA made the definitive statement about the organization and we can leave
it at that. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The fact that police in this country were originally created
to track down run-away slaves should not be lost on anyone. When the start of
your endeavor is steeped in racism and slavery, it makes a permanent and
indelible mark on all of your activities going forward. The police in the
country have been used to enforce every despicable racist policy that the
government has perpetrated against people of color. They are too numerous to
mention, but just know that the police force has been there to provide their
whole-hearted support and violence to each every one of them. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I honestly don’t see a way out of the current situation with
the police. The police unions and the policemen and policewomen themselves are
unwilling to accept any other role than overseer of a plantation. They stand
above us with their whips waiting to deal out justice should anyone get out of
line. A reduced role for the police would be a start, but that can only go so
far. Give someone a badge and a gun and their worst tendencies will almost
always emerge. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><b>Economic Situation</b><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The average black family has 1/10<sup>th</sup> the
accumulated wealth of the average white family. Try to comprehend what that
means. Basically, after 150 years of freedom in this country, black families
have 1/10<sup>th</sup> the accumulated wealth of white families. That’s not
even the 3/5<sup>th</sup> of a person that black people were counted as when
our founding fathers decided to create this wonderful experiment in democracy.
Can you imagine the long term systematic obstacles that have to be in place in
order to keep an entire race of people from making any economic advancement in
100 years? Well, you don’t have to imagine it because it’s been going on since
the 1860’s and continues to this day. There is no disputing this fact, so
either you believe that an entire race of people are inferior or you understand
that we have decided, as a country, to keep a system in place so despicable
that most can’t even fathom it or acknowledge it.<o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><o:p> </o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"><b>Protest</b><o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The groups or institutions being protested against cannot
dictate the terms of that protest. If protest (regardless of the manner it
takes) makes you uncomfortable, then it’s working. Protest and dissent are what
this country was founded on, but the public only likes it if it’s nice and
quiet and doesn’t interfere with the football game. If everyone joins in and it
becomes the cause of the day, then it’s no longer a protest, it hopefully has
morphed into a movement. The problem with movements is that they are easily
co-opted by those who have motivations that may have nothing to do with the
original protest. When NFL or NBA owners say that they are willing to take a
knee with their players, it has nothing to do with justice for African-Americans.
That has to do with the almighty dollar. They have seen which way the wind is
blowing and they don’t want to get left behind. Their goal is to get back to
being comfortable as quickly as possible. I didn’t see any owners taking a knee
with Colin Kapernick. He was drummed out of the league and the owners couldn’t
separate themselves quickly enough from the controversy. Ratings were down, and
the public was upset, so they stepped in to make sure that the money kept
flowing. I see the images of police at protests taking a knee, but if they
wanted to make a difference, they would just point out the racists in their own
precincts. They know who they are. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">I am never happy when people start looting and burning cars
and buildings. I understand that some are there to take advantage of a
situation, but I also realize that some are so frustrated by their situation
that they don’t see any other alternative. I saw clips of inmates burning their
own stuff in a prison because they couldn’t get proper protection and health
care for the Covid crisis. That’s the kind of frustration that people feel
against a system that is rigged against them and refuses to acknowledge the
problem, much less try to address it. I don’t condone looting, but I don’t
condemn those who participate either. <o:p></o:p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">That’s about all I can say today. There’s so much more but
frankly, I’m tired. And just like everything else I’ve ever done or said, it
ain’t gonna make a damn bit of difference. <o:p></o:p></p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-83440611664967075492020-08-12T14:18:00.000-04:002020-08-12T14:18:23.786-04:00Swing and a Miss<p> Joe,</p><p>You had a chance to make a real statement with your choice of VP. I'm sorry, you did make a statement and that is that you are a company man who's afraid of what the Republicans might say. You picked the safe choice. The person who Republicans can't really tear down because in her previous positions she towed their line of law and order. Poor people kept in prison regardless of guilt or innocence because they can't afford to pay ridiculous bails, your VP doesn't give a shit. Police corruption and violence go unchecked under her oversight because hey, let's not rock the boat. </p><p>Your VP choice is the ultimate house negro. Given a chance to actually help people of color, she instead decided to side with the establishment. You had better choices but they would have caused too much chatter. Instead you choose the person who will always ask, "how WE doing today boss". </p><p>I have no choice but to vote for this ticket in November, but you will leave the Democratic party in the hands of the ultimate "get along, to go along" candidate. I always suspected that you were a company man but this choice has confirmed that opinion. I will never forget the "gays shouldn't be allowed to marry" stance that you and Obama adopted before the election even though you didn't believe that. Political expediency is the place where hopes and dreams go to die.</p><p>I certainly hope the excitement over this pick turns into more votes, but you've abandoned the heart and soul of this party. What do think your VP pick would have done if the current protests had happened on her watch? She would have been calling in the feds and putting people exercising their constitutional rights in jail. She can claim to be a liberal now, but her record says something else.</p><p>You blew it, Joe. But then I guess it's to be expected from someone like you. </p>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-81167387683639817482018-09-28T16:55:00.004-04:002018-09-29T10:01:59.101-04:00Free Fallin'<br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQiONg4G0KrWK-m5znHZZnYRQZIWcp6qq6ONqs_rD5_q-eb1io3aQU0pld3VWqocxYAU0D9trN9GjuC7tMW1qeQNG08zfHYlz0eQ8co0-zS2ix7i7RNBPb8Qdq-EeOT4CFS30n/s1600/640753-bigthumbnail.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="338" data-original-width="450" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiQiONg4G0KrWK-m5znHZZnYRQZIWcp6qq6ONqs_rD5_q-eb1io3aQU0pld3VWqocxYAU0D9trN9GjuC7tMW1qeQNG08zfHYlz0eQ8co0-zS2ix7i7RNBPb8Qdq-EeOT4CFS30n/s320/640753-bigthumbnail.jpg" width="320" /></a>The current furor over the potential appointment of Brett
Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court is a perfect example of why we find ourselves so
polarized as a society. The only voices that are heard are people who have
fixed and immovable positions. He’s a rapist or she’s a liar. That’s basically
it. There are some offshoots of those arguments, but they are basically
anchored in one or the other premise. And herein lies the problem. TRUTH and FACTS
are no longer necessary for us, as a whole, to take intractable positions. <o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
The idea that rational thought is a thing of the past is
horrifying, but I honestly don’t see a way to turn this around. As social media
continues to grow as the de facto news source for the majority of Americans, we
get farther and farther away from the search for TRUTH. The TRUTH, has become
our truth. If I believe it, then it’s true. That’s the new national creed. <o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
It would be interesting to get into an honest and open
conversation about the current situation on Capitol Hill, but what would that
conversation be based on? The only thing we have to go on is the 40 year old
recollection of two people. I believe that Dr. Ford was assaulted and I believe
that she believes that Brett Kavanaugh was the person who assaulted her. I also
believe that Mr. Kavanaugh is not the saint that he paints himself out to be
(who could be?). I believe that he and his friends certainly did things that
crossed many lines (both of decorum and the law). However, when it comes to the
particular incident in question, he has denied any participation or knowledge of
it. <span style="mso-spacerun: yes;"> </span><o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
So where does that leave us in the age of individual truth?
It leaves us in opposite castles using catapults to launch bombs at each other.
We are incapable of discussing the matter without claiming the other side is
absolutely wrong. We reserve just as much anger for those who refuse to take
sides, because in the age of individual truth, you are either with us or an idiot/racist/rapist/communist/liar/abuser.
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
In an age of unfettered access to information, we have managed
to become less informed, less aware, less reasoned and less intelligent. We
have become petty and selfish as a nation. We have become about the battle and
we are no longer about the war. We are shortsighted to a fault. I have no idea
how this Kavanaugh situation will resolve itself and frankly, I don’t care. The
Heritage foundation has a long list of candidates lined up if this nomination
were to fail. They all have similar conservative pedigrees and they will aid in
pushing the court firmly to the right. <o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
There will be those on the left who will be filled with
great joy if this nomination fails. They will feel some sense of
accomplishment. Not because anything was really accomplished in the long run,
but hey, a win is a win. A win for individual truth! <o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify;">
I want to pass along some TRUTH. I wrote this back in July
of 2016 when I heard the wave of indifference that was being pointed in Hillary
Clinton’s direction, <o:p></o:p></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white; font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;"><br /></span></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white; font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;">“<i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"><span style="color: black;">We
can be thoughtful and careful when we decide who to vote for in November.<o:p></o:p></span></i></span></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"><span style="color: white; font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;">OR<o:p></o:p></span></i></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"><span style="color: white; font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;">We can act like
children and decide to take our toys home. I always thought that people who
consider themselves liberal/progressive/socialist had a bigger world view than
their own front door. I always thought that it was the
conservative/republicans/libertarians who would only think of themselves. I
thought they were the ones who could be talked into voting against their own
self-interest. <o:p></o:p></span></i></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white;"><br /></span></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white;"><i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;"><span style="font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;">I can boil this
election down to three words: THE SUPREME COURT. If you don't understand the
ramifications of those three words, then frankly, you shouldn't be voting.”</span></i><span style="font-family: "calibri" , sans-serif; font-size: 11.0pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white;"><br /></span></div>
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; text-align: justify;">
<span style="color: white; font-family: "georgia" , "times new roman" , serif; font-size: large;">I will end this the same way I ended that particular
rant from 2 years ago…And that is all I have to say about that. </span><span style="color: black; font-size: 13.5pt;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-7808777570885727512018-03-07T12:01:00.001-05:002018-03-07T12:01:52.931-05:00Lost in Translation<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnXwz3YmX7xQLjI8QEx2Dl5aiEw_B7YJnNqxme4sDevFdaQTeAbKErW3_V1hs37gIYkLpj5sZIR1CMin7wS1mzxo6A_MpUD93VBX_-NAFKr1RGjxtVK1YYxvzUDs-9wQt7iblw/s1600/Billy-Murray-Lost-in-Translation.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="423" data-original-width="564" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnXwz3YmX7xQLjI8QEx2Dl5aiEw_B7YJnNqxme4sDevFdaQTeAbKErW3_V1hs37gIYkLpj5sZIR1CMin7wS1mzxo6A_MpUD93VBX_-NAFKr1RGjxtVK1YYxvzUDs-9wQt7iblw/s320/Billy-Murray-Lost-in-Translation.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The Academy Awards have come and gone and the ratings continue to be in free fall. They lost approximately 6 million viewers from last year and put up an all-time low in viewership. It is fairly easy to spot the issue, but I’m not sure that the Academy cares. Perhaps when their rights fees are dropped in their next contract, they’ll start to consider a change, because as with most things in Hollywood, money talks and bullshit walks. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
The main issue with the awards show is that Hollywood is no longer concerned with what the general public thinks about their product. They have become experts at self-congratulatory gestures. This years’ list of nominees for best picture contained 2 movies that had crossed the $100 million dollar threshold. The box office totals for the past 7 best picture winners are: $44MM (2011), $136MM (2012), $56MM, $42MM (2013), $45 (2015), $28MM (2016) & $57MM (2017). Outside of a blip in 2011, it’s clear that Hollywood is very happy rewarding movies that very few have seen. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
When the number of possible nominees for best picture were expanded from five to ten in 2009, it was expected that more spots would be available for “popular” movies. The outcry over the fact that the Batman movie, which was incredibly well reviewed but didn’t manage to make the best picture list led to a change. The Academy saw that their ratings were slipping and looked for a way to be more inclusive and to find a bigger audience. However, they have done the exact opposite. They have continued to reward movies that they find interesting, while ignoring what the general public actually goes and sees. The idea of “best” has morphed into small and different. You can actually see movies that are made with the academy award in mind. Movies that meander and have no central narrative are all the rage with the voters these days.<br />
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
2003 seems to be the dividing point of the new Hollywood. The third installment of Lord of Rings, along with being the highest grossing move of the year, won all 11 of the awards that it was nominated for and everyone in the Academy was apparently embarrassed to have agreed with the public about what was the best movie that year. The blowback was immediate and produced the system we now have. Since 2003, no movie that finished in the top 10 in box office has won and only 3 that finished in the top 20 have won. The average box office for nominees in 2003 was $145MM compared to $77MM this year. That does not even take into account adjusted dollars. If you include the adjusted figure for 2003 ($197MM), the difference becomes even more stark. In fact the only year that the average box office surpassed the adjusted gross of 2003, was 2009 and that was skewed by Avatar, which was at that point, the highest grossing domestic movie of all time. </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
There is no rule that says a movie can’t be accessible and artistic. Entertainment and art do not necessarily live in different spaces. Currently the Academy is of the mindset that they do. Perhaps they will swing back the other way or perhaps they will continue along the path of irrelevancy. This is, after all, the same group that once nominated Ghost as best picture. Let that sink in. The Academy decided that Ghost was one of the five best pictures made that year. I realize that the voting members have changed, but they still come from the same place. Would Wonder Woman or Beauty and Beast have made this years’ list worse? They only used 9 of the 10 spots available. Clearly something came in 10th and they decided not to include it. Would anyone have missed The Phantom Thread or Darkest Hour or The Post or Call Me by Your Name? How about a comedy like Girls Trip or a feel good movie like Wonder? Is something that is pleasing to the general public so repugnant to the Academy that they are not even worth consideration? </div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
I picked the title of this piece based on the 2003 movie starring Bill Murray. That was the kind of movie that would be added to best picture list to show that the Academy still cared about small and “interesting” movies. It finished below the top 50 that year in box office and was the only one the list in that position. However, Lost in Translation looks like a blockbuster at $44MM($60MM adjusted) compared to the Hurt Locker which won best picture in 2009 with a total box office gross of $17MM or the$ 28MM gross of Moonlight. Black Panther’s opening weekend was literally 12 times the total gross of Hurt Locker. The public votes with their dollars and their eyes. If they aren’t spending their hard earned money to go to a movie, then they aren’t going to spend their time watching it get an award. They simply don’t care about things they haven’t seen. The Academy has to understand that or they should go back to having a private self congratulatory party with no one watching. If things continue along the current path, soon they won't have a choice.</div>
<div style="text-align: justify;">
<br /></div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-12026828805112236382017-10-19T00:05:00.002-04:002017-12-07T16:18:48.567-05:00I Am Talking to the Men.<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">So. <br />I've been talking with a few friends, filmmakers and artists I've known since college more or less -all of them male- about these exposes in the media on Harvey Weinstein's career-long predation on women. After we were done shrugging over our compared notes and impressions about something that we thought everybody already knew about for years, we started blaming everybody,—in particular ourselves and here's why:</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;"><b>Back in the days</b> when I worked at Film/Video Arts in the mid 1990s, this shit about Harvey Weinstein was a so-called open secret, which is to say it was KNOWN BY EVERYBODY. We had not heard about Harvey Weinstein raping anyone -at least I hadn't, but it was common knowledge that he was lecherous on a crazy fucking scale. In 1995, If you knew any actor who had a meeting, or audition, or sitdown of any kind with anybody at MiraMax, -you let her know what was up: that the Weinsteins were a couple of old-timey era throwbacks who insisted on what agents used to privately call "lay to play" and for the record -I also don't remember anybody making any distinction between the two brothers -except that a male friend of mine, -a formidably sized actor (Chime in on the comments if you want because I know you're reading this -but it's up to you) who nobody would ever fuck with, said Harvey had the potential to get very agitated and physically violent with people who worked for him on a whim (or behaved worse with people who didn't work for him, like waiters and valets), and he admitted to me that he was scared of Harvey because he was one of those big fat rich guys who walked around with that almost maffiaesque sense of entitlement (read: if he got into it with you, and you pushed back and beat his ass, -he would just get several people to come after you later.) All of this was talked about throughout the 90s here in New York amongst small-timers like me who were the location managers, PMs, script supervisors, editors, assistant editors, sound men, ADs, travel captains, line producers, UPMs et al of the no-budget independent film world -only the actors seemed to be in the dark- they were the ones we always had to tell about it.—AND I mean we HAD to tell them about it in "Scared-Straight" style theatrics, because I remember just about all of them saying something to the effect of "I know what to do if something bad happens" and which point you'd explain to them that if "something bad happens" that's too late. I got really good at having this talk by 1998, but I do remember a couple of actors accuse me of trying to be a "nice guy" (-I now know that's been codified as a new archetype pf passive aggressive beta male asshole whose altruism and friendship is all part of manipulation or guilt tripping in pursuit of sex with a girl he pretends to be best friends with. -it's quite an insult when you are literally trying to steer someone from harm.) Again it was the actors who didn't really seem to know and lately I really wonder why the hell that is or was, until I realized, perhaps it was because - it was pretty much the case everywhere: <br /><br /><i><b>"If every DMV office is dirty and grey; why would you think to single out any particular DMV office for being dirty and grey?" </b></i></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;"><i><b><br /></b></i></span>
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">—Every agency that wasn't run by a woman had the reputation in the 80s and 90s of a fucked up frat house - I didn't know of many production companies that were run by women in those days -just a sign of those times. If it was an agency or production company run by a Gay man, especially a closeted Gay man whose preferences were "known" -you had just as big a freak out about all your Gay friends running afoul of these agencies and companies and their resident molesters-in-chief, -and those conversations between a Straight guy and Gay guy always got fucking weird because no one in this world can get themselves into danger faster that a 20-something year old Gay man who thinks he's seen it all because he lives in New York City: Anybody, -any body can get drugged, raped, killed. This is an industry (Entertainment, music, movies, TV) I reminded a male playwright that was older than me, that literally chews up attractive young men (or even nerdy young men): I reason that if you think that's a fair trade, you're conning yourself as much as you think you're hustling your well-connected mark. Rich powerful men in Hollywood and in New York "disappear" people, lovers and friends once they get "inconvenient" and they do it simply because they can. It's curious how many young Gay -writers, -assistants, -producers, -what-have-you disappeared over the 1990s without any explanation or clue. One day you knew somebody, the next month he'd gone west and nobody every heard about him again.—Just like that. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">If you knew an actor who told you she had a "dinner meeting," you let her know what was up, and on two occasions that I can remember I was asked to drop a friend off and pick them up afterward. Both women asked that I make a point of shaking the guy from office A or B's hand firmly. I certainly let them know, by staring into their eyes that there would be consequences if anything weird went off; I let them know that I was watching, that somebody knew where she was, and at what time and who with... In both cases there was nothing but pleasant dinner and a good bye reported...<br />but you know what?—Those women didn't get </span><span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">those jobs either. <br />Selfishly, I remember a lot of us were openly relieved that we didn't have a female friend, a sister, a cousin, or a girlfriend who was an actor or musician.<br />—How fucking cowardly of all of us. </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">In the 1990s it was like open season on women and even some young men as soon as no one was watching.</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">The thing is, -if I had heard this then, -about Weinstein and so many others -doesn't somebody know something now? </span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">What open secrets are endangering lives by obscuring some obvious monster operating with the privilege and impunity of our inaction, the cover of our laziness, the encouragement of our fear?</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "trebuchet ms" , sans-serif;">Why is our response to whisper, gossip, and ultimately uphold the lies that allow crime and violence to continue behind closed doors?<br /> I am talking to the men.<br />-SJ</span>SJhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17181694732531476160noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-92008473750620763702017-08-30T15:22:00.000-04:002018-03-02T15:17:35.058-05:00The Culture of OutrageWe live in a society where the only currency seems to be outrage. Every slight, every misstep, every word out of place is met by a cacophony of voices screaming at the top of their lungs about how they feel wronged. The biggest problem in this new culture is that if everything is outrageous, then nothing is.<br />
<br />
Public outrage used to be reserved for things that really mattered. Let's take our current natural disaster as an example. When Katrina hit and lives where being lost and the response from the White House was tepid at best, there was real cause for outrage. When Harvey hit and the the first lady wore stilettos to visit Texas, the response was immediate outrage from the press and from social media. This is the state that we've devolved to. Our righteous energy is no longer reserved for the things that matter. It is now unleashed on every perceived wrongdoing from every living human being.<br />
<br />
Did somebody famous short a server on a tip? let's persecute them on social media. Did someone wear the wrong color to a funeral? Let's persecute them on social media. Did someone use an inappropriate term when referring to native Americans, or African Americans or Italian Americans or whatever Americans? Let's persecute them on social media. The point is that we have lost the ability to be outraged. What really deserves our energy? The fact that there are statues to dead civil war generals, or the the fact that minorities are being killed in the streets by the people who are supposed to protect them? There is no difference in today's media landscape. It really is all about the next big thing.<br />
<br />
Outrage sells, just like sex does. Everyone is yelling at the top of their lungs and the media just jumps to the person or story that seems like it has the most volume. Chris Rock used to tell a joke about gun ownership, where everyone has the right to own a gun, but it cost thousands of dollars to buy a bullet. Our outrage used to cost something. There were limited outlets to express outrage on a large scale. Now it costs nothing.<br />
<br />
There's really not a whole lot to say about this. I wish I had some grand scheme to fix to the problem, but the cat is already out of the bag and frankly, it's only going to get worse. We, as a society have lost the ability to focus on the big picture. We are now focused on a micro level, looking for our own personal outrage. Sorry, that's not entirely true, we can focus on a real issue, but only for as long as it takes for the next Game of Thrones episode to appear. I bring up Game of Thrones, because there is the potential for an HBO show, from the makers of Game of Thrones, about the history of America if the Confederacy had won the Civil War. The backlash from an outraged citizenry has been swift and deafening.<br />
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Frankly, I'm OUTRAGED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-71032649897401165582017-08-14T11:05:00.002-04:002020-11-17T17:15:19.208-05:00Still Waters Run Deep<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhF8D1nN156xhNdlMkTXbGIuzAWVevr8yZDmORLEiGdnC2Wl4lZM9N0hUOoGqeYu5bYjqYscD4LFqcTgZOAIXrAdX2XAO4zM83LwYedYV-ezr0RIqKBIR7LIJS6yYSMx_Og4ez4/s1600/charlottesville-murder-charg-960x602.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="602" data-original-width="960" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhF8D1nN156xhNdlMkTXbGIuzAWVevr8yZDmORLEiGdnC2Wl4lZM9N0hUOoGqeYu5bYjqYscD4LFqcTgZOAIXrAdX2XAO4zM83LwYedYV-ezr0RIqKBIR7LIJS6yYSMx_Og4ez4/s320/charlottesville-murder-charg-960x602.jpg" width="320" /></a><br />
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The events over the weekend in Virginia have shocked and outraged so many and rightfully so. It was a despicable act of a depraved individual that turned a protest march into a bloodbath. However, we, as a nation, should not be shocked by the lengths that individuals will sink to in order to prove a point. That hatred that fueled the murders in a Charleston church is the same hatred that fueled the attack in Charlottesville. This hatred runs deep and wide across this country. It always has and it always will. </div>
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I've mentioned in a previous post that perhaps the election of Donald Trump would allow those on the left to take off their rose colored glasses and realize what country they are living in. Hopefully we are no longer living under the illusion that we have turned some corner or crested some hill on our way to racial and cultural harmony. We thought that the wounds of our past were beginning to finally heal and that we were ready to face a new reality. </div>
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The election of Barack Obama was seen as the beginning of a new age on enlightenment. We had finally put to rest our ugly history. We were in a post racial society were people were judged by the content of their character, not the color of their skin. The only problem was that none of that was true, but the belief in that new America allowed those on the left to become complacent. Their work was done. We had reached the mountaintop that Dr. King spoke of. We had seen the promised land and it was rose colored and beautiful. In their eyes America would never look back. The big picture was complete and the details would take care of themselves. </div>
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Those filled with the racial and cultural hatred, that is so deeply rooted in this country, did not see an age of enlightenment. They saw the election of an African-American to the highest office in the land as an affront to all they hold sacred. There was no complacency on the part of those who hated what they saw. Hatred doesn't take a day off. Hatred is never satisfied with the status quo. Hatred cannot be satiated. Hatred is a 24/7 job. In the age of Obama, those filled with hate may have been less vocal and less visible, but make no mistake, they were always there. That is what those on the left cannot forget. </div>
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I've said this before but it bears repeating, complacency is the enemy of victory. The fervor on the left is genuine at this point, but will that translate at the polls? That remains to be seen. We can quickly become comfortable with the status quo when our day to day lives seem to be sailing along peacefully. The hatred that people feel based on skin color, religion, nationality, sexual preference, etc. is very real and it's not going anywhere. I would ask those who are not a member of a discriminated class to remember how you felt when you heard about Charlottesville. I would ask those whose skin color does not immediately make them a target for racism, to think about how it feels to wake every day and know that you have a target on your back. </div>
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The hatred in this country isn't going away. It won't be beaten by slogans about love, or light or fairly tales. The battle will continue forever. It is just as easy to teach hate as it is to teach love. Remember that fact, the next time life feels a little too comfortable. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-89581485661161280132017-06-22T16:58:00.000-04:002017-06-22T16:58:33.585-04:00The Dogs of War<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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The current probes into possible ties between Russia and the current administration is currently being bathed in the bright lights of the media. Everyday we are continually deluged with stories and talk of investigation tampering and back room deals and the impending explosion of this administration. The fact of the matter is that this couldn't be going any better for President Trump. I can say almost absolute certainty that this investigation will never lead to the removal of the President. Given the current make up of the House, impeachment is off the table for at least 2 years. And given the make up of the Senate, it would impossible to get a 2/3 majority to vote for his removal. I'm not so sure that even Nixon would have lost a vote in the Senate. </div>
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So what do we have? We have a story that provides cover for almost everything else that's going on in Washington. Every other issue has taken a back seat. The Republican leadership in the Senate works in secret on a health care bill that would gut Medicaid, but the bright lights are pointed elsewhere. The President and his team continue to sign executive orders that are dismantling the Obama legacy as if that were his only goal in life. All the issues that we should care about are being affected from education to the climate, but all we hear about is the Russian investigation. </div>
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I am not saying that this investigation is not important, because it is. We should know exactly what the relationship was between the Trump campaign and Russia. We should know if there are business ties that may lead to compromised decisions. However we should not focus on that one topic to the exclusion of everything else. I understand that some on the left go to sleep at night dreaming of Watergate part 2, but our politics have become so fractured that I can't see our elected leaders agreeing on an issue as contentious as impeachment. The President has very loyal supporters who would pounce on any elected Republican who would turn his back on Trump. The thing that politicians care about the most is their own skin. The folks in the House, who face an election every two years, would never even think about placing their own necks on the line for a matter of principle. </div>
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I always think it's possible that Donald Trump might wake up one day and decide that he just doesn't want to do this anymore. Being President is a hard job and he's not particularly fond of doing this kind of work. I never thought that he actually wanted the job in the first place. It was an exercise in brand building gone wrong. I think the only thing that keeps him doing the job is the fact that his ego gets stroked every second of the day. He is the most powerful man in the world and that keeps him in a constant state of arousal. </div>
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Those on the left need to keep their eyes on what's going on everywhere in this administration and not get sidetracked by the shiny object with all the bright lights. That is not where the important decisions are being made. The President is once again playing the left like a puppet. Keep them dancing on a string shouting "impeachment", and keep doing the dirty work outside of the spotlight. As Shakespeare so appropriately put it, "cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war". </div>
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Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-1891649071471666862017-04-28T10:04:00.003-04:002017-04-28T10:06:29.813-04:00100 Days and Counting<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjl4DkCJSm36yy-zj1_Ls4VHy3P2IsDga57tsa59-o4AonV8-cHSfbNODDN3vNBmyqwztBR_xvjHs0CgtIRhHkmEe8fVgt58Eaxgaz-1JKy81GHtW1HZ6VCbpMY2YsC5-4AUnnl/s1600/the-antichrist.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjl4DkCJSm36yy-zj1_Ls4VHy3P2IsDga57tsa59-o4AonV8-cHSfbNODDN3vNBmyqwztBR_xvjHs0CgtIRhHkmEe8fVgt58Eaxgaz-1JKy81GHtW1HZ6VCbpMY2YsC5-4AUnnl/s320/the-antichrist.jpg" width="320" /></a><br />
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The Trump administration has been in place for almost 100 days now and I thought that I might try to summarize my thoughts. The 100 day marker is really inconsequential in the grand scheme of things. FDR's first 100 days have been mythologized at this point because of what he was able to accomplish in that time frame. The framework for the New Deal had been put in place in those frenetic 100 days of that administration. It is an almost impossible standard for anyone else to meet. FDR came into office riding a massive mandate given by the American people who were in a panic following the crash on Wall St. and mired in the first years of the great depression. The Democratic party had 72% of the House and 63% of the Senate and those numbers would actually increase in the mid-term election. The country had never been so united in the belief that one party had utterly failed them. Great things were indeed accomplished, although at this point most would believe that the country turned around immediately and that we returned to normal employment rates. That is far from the truth, however. We didn't dip under double digit unemployment until we started to ramp up for WWII, a full 8 years later. Segregation remained the law of the land, we didn't get a national health care plan and women's rights were also largely ignored.</div>
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We shouldn't let truth interfere with myth in this post-truth society. FDR saved the world in 100 days and so every President since has had the burden of having to produce a similar miracle, whether one was needed or not. So what have we gotten out the first 100 days of this presidency? Basically it's been a non-stop attempt to undo everything that the previous administration had put in place. Women's rights, immigrants, the environment, health care, sensible gun control are just a few of the things that have come under attack by this administration. Most have been done through executive orders as opposed to legislation but that's mainly because this administration has no real use for Congress. President Trump is used to being a CEO. Things get done with a stroke of his pen, not through an elected board of representatives. He has shown no ability to work with Congress or even to make a good faith effort to work with them. </div>
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To his credit, the President has followed through on some of his campaign promises (the most important of those was to appoint a conservative justice to the supreme court). He therefore enjoys almost across the board support from the republican voters who put him in the White House. Of course the number of things he said he was going to get done on day one is a staggering list, so he hasn't come close to matching the rhetoric of his campaign. He has changed his position on numerous hot button topics like jailing Hillary Clinton, NAFTA, NATO, etc., and most often his change came from very short conversations from people who actually know what they are talking about. </div>
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His staff has been a mess since day one. He has consistently put people in charge of government agencies who have no idea about what they actually do or are openly hostile to the mission of the agency. Climate change denier in charge of the EPA, a hater of public schools in charge of the Education department, someone who wants to eliminate the department in charge of Energy. Not to mention Ben Carson, whose qualifications for the Housing department appears to be that he once lived in public housing as a child. The most head scratching appointment is an unofficial one. His son in law has put in charge of fixing the world. His main qualification seems to be that he married Trump's daughter. </div>
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I guess there's no point in rehashing all the ups and downs of this presidency. I will say that he has approached the job exactly as he said he would. He's an outsider who is trying to run the government like a CEO. If that's what you voted for, then I can understand why you would be satisfied with the job that he has done. For those of us who didn't, it looks like a confused and muddled mess. Maybe it gets better with time, maybe it gets worse. I actually don't know. If I were advising this president, I would propose that he switch his tune on the health care and get a truly universal health care proposal on the table. If he could do that, the Democrats would have to get on board and I believe he could convince enough Republicans to join with them to get something meaningful passed. His base of supporters would have say that he's doing what he promised, so they would have to be on board as well. It would be a political master stroke. The Democrats would be left scrambling having helped this president to secure a signature piece of legislation. The President could then truly say that he did what was right for the people. He would talk about not being beholden to any party. He could talk about a new vision for the country going forward. It would turn the electorate on it's head and would secure the legacy of President Trump. Of course it would take a lot of work and would need the help of more than just his son in law. </div>
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Will it happen? Not very likely because as the President and rest of country have learned in the first hundred days of his presidency, this job is really hard. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-38400047542183724402017-01-16T12:52:00.001-05:002017-01-16T12:57:35.569-05:00The Dream Lives On<div style="text-align: justify;">
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I'm reposting this for the fourth and last time. I don't think that I could ever say this any better, so I'm not going to try. Hopefully you'll all forgive for not coming up with something new, but I think it's more relevant today than it was when I first wrote it.</div>
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"...in the unlikely story that is America, there has never been anything false about hope". Those are the words that Barack Obama used in his now famous speech after the New Hampshire primary and it illustrates perfectly his connection with the man whose birthday we celebrate as a nation today. Hope is the tie that binds Martin Luther King Jr. and Barack Obama. The hope and the belief that America can do and must do better. Obama's speech not only made the point that the destinies of all Americans are intertwined, but that people must have hope in order to make a better world. MLK's most famous speech was all about hope. It spoke of a nation that didn't exist. It spoke of the dreams of an America where someone like Barack Obama can reach the highest position in the land. They share the dream of a better America. Whether it is an America where people are judged by the "content of their character", or an America where we strive to build "a more perfect union", their goals were the same.</div>
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There has been a lot of talk about whether Obama's election is the culmination of MLK's dream. It is clearly a part of what he hoped for, but it is not the end of what he hoped for. Before his death, he was working on organizing another march on Washington. This one was going to be a poverty march. He looked across the country and realized that the underclass had no one to speak for them. He realized that the poor had no voice and no power to change their situation. His dream had expanded to include the poor of all colors. Whites in Appalachia, Hispanics in California, Native Americans in Oklahoma, they all became part of the dream. Injustice will always exist, that is why the dream will never be fulfilled. It is a moving target, as is Barack Obama's dream to build a more perfect union. Obama's words imply that the union can never be perfected, but we must always strive to make it better.</div>
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MLK led the greatest moral campaign that this country has ever known. He led a generation of people who were willing to put their lives on the line to make this country a better place. Tom Brokaw wrote a book about the WWII generation entitled "The Greatest Generation", however I think that designation should go to those who worked and fought and died so that the dream of America could be shared by all Americans. It is somewhat easier to make those sacrifices when the entire country agrees with you, but when you are faced with the opposition of the majority of the citizens of this country, it takes an extraordinary type of intestinal fortitude to persevere. Barack Obama is not the successor to MLK. As President, his moral compass will not be as consistent as MLK's was. His goals will not be as single minded as MLK's were. They can't be. The job of President is much more complicated and Obama is not just the representative of some of us, he is the representative of all of us. Those who have expectations that Obama will lead a moral revolution on the scale of MLK will be disappointed.</div>
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MLK was the leader of a movement that changed this nation forever. Barack Obama is about to become the leader of the country and his election has changed this nation forever. They will always be inexorably linked. The fact that Obama will be inaugurated on the day after this nation celebrates the birthday of MLK would lead many to invoke the term, poetic justice. MLK's dream is alive in Barack Obama as it is in every person who strives to make this world a better place. The Dream and the Perfect Union remain out of reach, but it is in the striving for those things that we tap into the better angels of our nature. It is our willingness to try, regardless of the obstacles in our way, that keeps the Dream alive. MLK would most likely be very proud of Barack Obama, not only because of what he represents, but because Obama is still challenging the nation to be better. Indeed that is ultimately what links them. We can be better, we just need someone to show us the way.</div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-32566819135071879502016-11-18T16:45:00.001-05:002020-11-07T08:33:07.269-05:00Street Fight<div style="text-align: justify;">
What now? That's the question that millions on the left are asking. For some the answer is to take to the streets or organize rallies or talk about the popular vote or try to overturn or undermine the results of a fairly contested election or hide their head in the sand and refuse to admit what happened last week. None of these actions is going to either change the results of the election or help the Democrats in the next presidential election. </div>
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We on the left (and I certainly include myself in that group), along with the media made a critical mistake when dealing with president elect Trump. We got caught up in the cult of personality. We made the mistake of attacking the person with the belief that the majority of Americans would agree with us that he was un-electable. What we didn't realize is that we got in to a knife fight with a samurai warrior. President elect Trump played the media and the left like a concert pianist. Every attack on him only served to give him more exposure and helped spread his message of being an "outsider". The attitude from the left provided the platform for him to turn his campaign into a crusade. A crusade that spoke to the disaffected in the Midwest in just enough numbers to allow him to defeat an under performing Hillary Clinton. </div>
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The problem right now is that the left is currently continuing along that same path. The protests do nothing to change the outcome of the election. The calls to change the rules of the election after it has already been contested just sound like sour grapes. These kinds of acts only confirm the feelings of those who felt that the Left was hypocritical. We continue to be amazed that our idea of America is radically different from reality. We on the left became very smug in the thought that we had moved beyond the point where an appeal to an entirely white audience could carry the day. We were too busy basking in the post racial glow of Barack Obama to realize that outside of the major population centers, this country is awash in a sea of red. The Republicans control the majority of state legislatures, Governors, school boards, judges, sheriffs and dog catchers across the country. In fact outside of the presidency and the coasts, the post racial utopia is a fantasy.</div>
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We still live in the same country that repeatedly sent avowed racists Jesse Helms and Strom Thrumond back to senate, basically until they died. We live in a country where you can get killed for being the wrong color, in the wrong place at the wrong time. We live in a country where state officials would rather go to prison than allow gay people to get married. We live in a country where you get a national following by questioning the birth place of the President. We live in a country where the color of your skin, your gender, your sexual preference can give you an unearned advantage. We all live in the real world and perhaps this election result will finally allow the rose colored glasses to be left behind. </div>
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We on the left became so complacent because of the echo chamber that we limit ourselves to. I remember Carl Rove being flabbergasted that Mitt Romney had lost Ohio and the election because he had been assured by this people that the opposite would be true. The Right and Left have become so insular that they only believe their perceived reality. They have demonized the opposition to the point of being unable to accept that there is merit in any argument on the other side. We have lost the ability to engage in civil discourse to the point that we limit ourselves to one viewpoint. How many facebook friends were lost because of this election? Screaming LIES! RACIST! KILLER! CRIMINAL! SEXIST! ABUSER!, has gotten us nowhere. We are and for the foreseeable future will be, a divided nation. </div>
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So the questions remains, what now? With this election, the Republican message and appeal has been laid bare. There is no longer the ability to claim a lineage to Lincoln. The word compassion is no longer part of their brand. They threw their hat in with their candidate and they are what he says they are. They have finally gone all in on the strategy that presented itself when LBJ pushed the civil rights agenda. They pushed all their chips in and white America responded with an electoral victory. Their path is clear. It's a bright white line that runs through the middle of America. </div>
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The Democrats response should be equally as clear. They can no longer pretend to be based in the center. White America has seen your center and raised you whatever the hell president elect Trump is. The response on the left should be to go all in as well. The secondary causes of the Democratic party need to become their primary causes. Clearly laying out a reality based plan to help those hardest hit by globalization lost out to empty promises of greatness and wealth. The biggest factor in this years election was not a surge in voting from the Right, but a complacency and lack of inspiration from the voters on the Left. </div>
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The Democratic base will naturally grow at a faster rate than it will for the Republicans as we become a less white nation. The pundits talk about Texas and Georgia becoming pink then blue states in the next three presidential cycles. That is all well and good, but I'm fairly sure that the democrats do not want to wait until 2028 to take the White House back. First of all the Left loves diversity, so the era of the dynasties and white males is over. No more Clintons or Kennedys or Cuomos or Roosevelts for that matter. The past is dead and gone. And unfortunately white males just don't inspire the most loyal of democratic voters. Bernie Sanders was great at inspiring the young and the left, but his rallies had the same color spectrum as Donald Trump's did. So to start we need new candidates. The Castro brothers, Corey Booker, Duval Patrick and Kristen Gillibrand are just a few of the faces who should be out front for the party going forward. Sorry, Chuck Schumer, Bernie Sanders, Nancy Pelosi and Elizabeth Warren. Your day has come and gone. You can still help the cause, but not in service of your own ambitions. </div>
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Next step is the platform. Equal pay, abortion, immigration rights, civil rights, gay rights, environmental protection, affordable college tuition/student debt and universal health care should now become the primary calling cards of the democratic party. I do understand that these have always been part of the agenda of the party, but they now should become the rallying cries to inspire it's voters. The economic agenda should remain the same, but apparently talking about it does nothing to get some democrats to come out and vote. We continue to experience an unprecedented period of continued job growth. The unemployment rate has decreased significantly and increasing the minimum wage was a significant part of the 2016 platform. None of these things inspired democrats or moved the needle among right leaning independents or republicans during this election. The resources utilized in trying to attract the white rural middle class was significant and the return was minimal. The democratic party has muted its appeal to its most loyal and consistent voters in the false hope of attracting white republicans. This is fools gold and needs to stop immediately. The middle of the road is where dreams go to die.<br />
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I think this election result makes the third step one which is already underway which I call realistic enthusiasm. Complacency is the enemy of victory. The democrats have to be realistic about what is a winnable state and what is not. They also have to make sure that they spend the resources and time needed to secure a win. And that amount is equal to all the money you have. Ending a campaign with money left over is a waste. Spend it all and get the boots on the ground to help get the vote out. In fact we already know that the republicans are going to get 60 million votes or so in a general election. We know this because that is the number they've gotten in the last three elections. The so called midwest blue wall came crumbling down by a mere 100,000 votes. Time spent wooing anything other than your base is time lost. The democrats have the votes, they just need to be realistic in targeting and messaging to reverse those losses.<br />
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That is the big picture, three step process for the democrats to get back to presidency. Candidate/Platform/Realistic Enthusiasm. So what do we on the Left do for the next two years while we wait for 2018? We fight for what we believe in. We fight President Trump over every policy that doesn't fit our agenda. We fight every political and judicial appointment that doesn't meet our standards. We fight with our words and deeds and votes. We fight with a new understanding of our opposition. We fight knowing what this country is capable of. I'll say it again, complacency is the enemy of victory. I'm going to end with something I wrote a while back.<br />
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We fight because "...<i>in the unlikely story that is <a class="zem_slink" href="http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=38.8833333333,-77.0166666667&spn=10.0,10.0&q=38.8833333333,-77.0166666667%20%28United%20States%29&t=h" rel="geolocation" title="United States">America</a>, there has never been anything false about hope</i>". We fight because <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senior_citizen" rel="wikipedia" title="Senior citizen">senior citizens</a> should have not have to chose between food and medicine. We fight because American Individualism is not an open invitation to <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Darwinism" rel="wikipedia" title="Social Darwinism">social Darwinism</a>. We fight because <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homosexuality" rel="wikipedia" title="Homosexuality">Gay and Lesbian</a> are not dirty words. We fight because we believe that <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_men_are_created_equal" rel="wikipedia" title="All men are created equal">all men are created equal</a>. We fight because we believe that people should be judged by the content of their character. We fight because having tens of thousands of people die each year because of a lack of affordable <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care" rel="wikipedia" title="Health care">health care</a> is morally unacceptable. We fight because having thousands of children go hungry in the richest nation on the planet is morally reprehensible. We fight because every child deserves access to an education that will prepare them to compete in the global economy. We fight because torture committed in our name is still torture. We fight because everyone should have the right to marry who they chose. We fight because we only have one planet. We fight because diversity makes us stronger, not weaker. We fight because the status quo is unacceptable. We fight because a lie repeated often enough must not be permitted to become the truth. We fight because women deserve to paid the same as men. We fight because our veterans deserve to be treated with respect they have earned. We fight because the expenditure for the <a class="zem_slink" href="http://www.wikinvest.com/concept/Iraq_War" rel="wikinvest" title="Iraq War">Iraq war</a> could have paid for health care for every man, woman and child in the country who cannot afford it. We fight because the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. We fight because the forces massed against us never take a day off. We fight because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice. We fight because as <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_D._Roosevelt" rel="wikipedia" title="Franklin D. Roosevelt">FDR</a> put it, at the height of <a class="zem_slink" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression" rel="wikipedia" title="Great Depression">the Depression</a>,<br />
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<i>"The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of the those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little".</i></div>
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Never stop fighting 'til the fight is done. </div>
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Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-79551651770244486772016-11-09T11:37:00.001-05:002020-12-19T23:23:06.644-05:00The Cause Endures<div style="text-align: justify;">
We finally really did it...famous last words from the Planet of the Apes. We as a country have finally decided to elect a game show host as our leader. I have no explanation for the results last night except to paraphrase Patton Oswalt who said, " We are way more sexist than we are racist, and we're pretty fucking racist". </div>
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We will have to live with this result now for the next four years at least and from the fallout from this for maybe a generation. Such is the democratic process. We take a chance every four years and the people decide who they want as a leader. Sometimes we choose hope, sometimes we choose fear, but we always get to choose. That's really the biggest takeaway from last night. I'm not happy with the outcome, but I am satisfied that the democratic process was served last night. </div>
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As I have stated before, we get the leaders that we deserve. That may be a harsh statement, but it's true. Our broken and divided country will be led by someone whose rhetoric smacks of all the hallmarks of a despot. From locking up political opponents to shutting down press access to singling out people based on race or religion, it all sounds very much like so many of the dictators that we have around the globe. </div>
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Our saving grace is that we have a judicial and legislative branch to provide checks and balances. The problem is that they will now be in the hands of the same party. No more gridlock. No more shutting down the government. It's onward and upward with the agenda that we, as a country have voted for. And as hard as that may be to accept, it's the truth. We as a country have voted for the Republican agenda and all that stands for. If you read their platform, it sounds scary. I can only hope that general ineffectiveness of Congress and the in fighting within the party itself will slow the rate of that change. </div>
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We will be stuck with it however. The mid terms are two years away and the chances of changing the balance in the Senate or the House will continue to remain only a faint glimmer in Nancy Pelosi's eyes. Democrats seem to have a problem showing up at midterm elections. Now it seems they have a problem showing up for general elections. Hillary Clinton lost Florida, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania by 1%. Her vote totals are down by about 5 million from 2012. Those 5 million disinterested, disillusioned or disaffected voters are the difference between a landslide and a loss. </div>
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We as liberals, progressives, democrats or whatever we are calling ourselves today, have no one to blame but ourselves. We couldn't help ourselves from piling on the Hillary Clinton hate train. All she has done is give her time and efforts to public service for the last 40 years and all we can do in return is react with faint praise at best. All public servants make mistakes. Hell, even the sainted FDR sent Asian Americans to internment camps and refused integrate the armed services. Hillary has done nothing to deserve the apathy and downright hostility she faced from her own party faithful. That, however, is an argument for another day. </div>
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Four years is not a lifetime and two years will be over before we even realize it. Life as we know it didn't change last night and it will not change the day after Inauguration day. We will be in uncharted waters though. We have no idea what is coming with then next administration. Can you honestly say that you know what our foreign policy will be? or our domestic policy? Education, energy, etc. We will all take the leap of faith together as a country. Those who voted for this administration may take it with their eyes open (instead of tightly shut in sheer terror), but it is still a leap into the unknown. I would ask everyone who is predicting Armageddon to remember that eight years ago, Fox news had entire specials devoted to the nightmare that was about to take place. Our country was supposedly going to be unrecognizable in four years. Our children were going to be sent to camps to be programmed, our guns would be ripped from our cold dead hands and economic disaster would leave the country a wasteland. </div>
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People today are asking what are they supposed to tell their children. You tell them that the democratic process worked the way it was supposed to. That doesn't mean that your candidate or point of view always wins and that the goal of a republic is to work within the system for the betterment of our country. We must strive to make this a successful transition and and a successful presidency. If you are truly a patriot, you don't take your toys and go home just because you didn't get your way. That is too often the way that we react to a losing election. Are we better than our opposition? I certainly hope so. A loss like this definitely stings but as Ted Kennedy famously said after his run for the presidency came to end "<b style="background-color: white; color: #252525; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 14px;"><i>For me, a few hours ago, this campaign came to an end. For all those whose cares have been our concern, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream shall never die". </i></b></div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-58328147257576207292016-11-04T13:55:00.000-04:002016-11-04T13:55:52.505-04:00Let's See What's behind Curtain Number 3<div style="text-align: justify;">
Mercifully, election day is less than a week away now. All presidential election cycles are drudgery, but this one has seemed like a particularly long hot lifetime in hell. I have always said that Donald Trump has a hard ceiling of about 45-46%. I didn't believe that his support had fallen below 40% and don't believe any poll that his him above 46%. The question comes down to the battleground states and whether Hillary Clinton can garner enough support in those states to win. I don't believe that we'll be breaking any new ground on Tuesday. South Carolina, Georgia and Texas will remain solidly in the Red. The only state that provides any real chance for a change is Utah, but even that may remain Red.</div>
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I don't believe that she hits 50%, but I think that a solid three point spread will be enough for her to garner about 300 electoral votes. Not a mandate of any kind, but these days, a win is a win. Now if the unthinkable were to happen and America decides to pick curtain number 3, then it's going to be an interesting 4 years ahead. I won't be moving to Canada (or anywhere else for that matter), but it's going to be a different world. Just like every election, this one will come down to who can turnout their voters.</div>
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Every 4 years I hear that this is the most important election of our lifetimes and the certain Armageddon that will follow if we elect the wrong person. I have somehow managed to survive through all of those doomsday scenarios. I'm fairly sure I'll make it through this one as well. I've had good and bad times under both parties. I have an obvious preference, but my life is basically unaffected in a major way by who occupies the White House. I hope the majority votes the way I will, but if they don't, I'll still have to go to work the next day and my bills will still be due at the end of the month. I won't be getting a check in the mail if Hillary wins and I won't be getting a deportation notice if Trump wins. So let's be civil people. Go out and vote on Tuesday and then get back to your life because it's not going anywhere.</div>
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PS...</div>
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I'm really going to miss President Obama.</div>
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Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-66663551518267842712016-08-29T13:51:00.000-04:002016-08-29T13:51:29.391-04:00Sweet Land of Liberty<div style="text-align: justify;">
The QB of the San Francisco 49'ers decided that he was going to protest on-going inequality and injustice in this country be choosing to sit during the national anthem. He had chosen this form of protest for all three of the pre-season games, but it was not noticed in the previous games because he wasn't dressed to play. His decision has brought a storm of protest. The thoughts range from he's a spoiled millionaire to he's disrespecting the military to he needs to get out of the country. </div>
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First, his money has nothing to do with whether he has to right to voice an opinion. In fact, if he was a truck driver no one would have cared what he did during the national anthem. He does not forfeit the right to protest simply because he's rich. He is using the platform afforded him because of his status to make a point. </div>
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Second, since when did the flag and military become synonymous? I certainly don't think of the military when I see a flag and when this country had won the revolutionary war, one of the first things that was done, was to dissolve the military. What exactly did our flag stand for then? Kaepernick made it pretty clear that he was not thinking of the military when he made his protest. </div>
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I find it almost amusing for people to get so apoplectic about a show of civil disobedience. The irony that this country was founded on the principle of free speech and the right to protest against your government, is seeming lost on those who would denounce his actions. I heard one commentator say that what the basketball players did at the ESPY's was the right way to protest, but this was the wrong way. I guess Kaepernick is now one of the "bad Negroes". I guess the only way to protest is to do something as innocuous as a speech promoting unity. </div>
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When Muhammad Ali refused induction into the armed forces, he took a stand based on principle. He was hugely unpopular because of it. People talked about how much this country had done for him and how ungrateful and unpatriotic he was. Political stands that don't ruffle any feathers and let those in vast stretch of middle America sleep comfortably at night end up doing and meaning nothing. Kaepernick's action will cause a reaction. It may be mostly negative, but it does bring to light the continuing issues in this country. </div>
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The majority of people will continue to ignore the issue and focus on the act and that is the problem. We, as a country, feel so much more comfortable focusing on anything but actual injustice. Maybe it's because we feel powerless to affect any change. Maybe it's because we are afraid to look into the mirror and see who we actually are. I honestly don't know the answer. What I do know is that Kapernick has the right to sit, stand or do whatever the hell he wants during the national anthem and for whatever reason he wants. I also know that people have the right to criticize him, stop watching him, call him unpatriotic or a spoiled brat. They have the same rights. One does not supersede the other. </div>
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There is no law dictating behavior during the anthem. There are suggestions, but you cannot be fined, ticketed or jailed for failing to stand unless you are an active member of the military. I'm pretty sure that kaepernick is not an active member of the military, so he's free to do what he wants. By the way, I'm just as guilty as the rest of the country, since I've spent this entire column talking about the act instead of the issue. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-21805927857899355442016-07-28T10:55:00.001-04:002016-07-30T13:57:59.455-04:00Caution: Children at Play<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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The presidential election is a few months away. We now have time to take an honest look at the candidates and decide which one is best suited to run the country for the next four years. We have time to look at the qualifications of each candidate and try to project how they will govern. We have a chance to listen to their plans for the future. We have a chance to consider how their choices are going to affect us in our everyday lives and the lives of our fellow citizens of the world. We can be thoughtful and careful when we decide who to vote for in November.<br />
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We can act like children and decide to take our toys home. I always thought that people who consider themselves liberal/progressive/socialist had a bigger world view than their own front door. I always thought that it was the conservative/republicans/libertarians who would only think of themselves. I thought they were the ones who could be talked into voting against their own self interest. </div>
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I can boil this election down to three words: THE SUPREME COURT. If you don't understand the ramifications of those three words, then frankly, you shouldn't be voting. </div>
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And this is all I have to say about that. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-7910438858943319452016-07-08T10:48:00.000-04:002016-07-08T11:14:50.735-04:00The Unbearable Cheapening of Life<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; text-align: justify;">Once again re-posting something from the past. This one is from 2008 and again from 2013. Some of the references are a little outdated, but the song remains the same. The same things keep happening over and and over again. We seem hardwired to frame our lives as "US against THEM". The individual parties change but the sentiment remains the same. We always seem to find a way to devalue the lives of THEM. THEY are criminals, poor, rich, stupid, over educated,vicious, passive, racist, tree hugger, egg head, sub-human, ignorant, religious zealots, non-believer, privileged, black, white, brown, northerner, southerner, Jewish, Muslim, Catholic, Protestant, Pro-life, Pro-Choice, republican, democrat. But the truth is that THEY are just people who deserve the right to live their lives, raise their families, have their opinions and do their jobs without the fear of summary execution. THEY, in short, are US. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; text-align: justify;">There are those that will accuse me of being a whiner or playing the victim card or the race card (whatever the f&^K that means), but until you've had to walk a mile in the shoes of someone else, you shouldn't judge them. The question I would ask is how many indignities does someone have to suffer before they have a legitimate right to complain? How many times does a society have to show that it considers you a less valued member before you can cry foul? How many times do have to be made to feel almost sub human before you say enough? How many times do you have to passed by for less qualified people who just happen to be white before you have the right to make some noise? How many times have I have heard people say that the racial problem would go away if people would just stop bringing it up. That always amuses me because it reminds of the attitude of many Southerners during the civil rights era. There are many quotes from people saying that there was no racial problem in the South. It was those agitators from up North that were stirring up the blacks. It's amazingly easy not to question a system that works in your favor. I have lived in NYC for 30 years and you would be amazed at the number of times that a minority has been "accidentally" shot or otherwise abused by the police. The amazing thing is that during all of the time that I've been here, there has never been an "accidental" shooting or incident of brutal violence by NY's finest against anyone who wasn't "of color". I find that an amazing coincidence. And I might have chalked it up to coincidence if I hadn't been subjected to sub-human treatment at the hands of the NYPD myself.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "helvetica neue" , "arial" , "helvetica" , sans-serif; text-align: justify;">There is some notion in the press that this is some kind of transformative event, but even if the improbable happens and Obama were to win, the facts on the ground would remain the same. The richest of us will continue to maintain and grow those fortunes on the backs of the poorest of us. Racists and bigots would continue to be racists and bigots. Who you know is still going to be more important that what you know and the police will continue to "accidentally" shoot and abuse minorities.This piece is probably a little more rambling than I would have liked it to be, but I'm just God damned tired of people trying to tell me what me what my reality is. or why I shouldn't feel the way I do about the police. Or why we don't live in country where the color of your skin can give you an advantage. I don't live in that fantasy land. The real truth is that America can be deadly if you happen to be in the wrong place and are the wrong color. Do you think that we would have heard of either John McCain or George W. Bush if they were born into the same circumstances as Obama? Comedian Chris Rock tells a joke about the fact that there wasn't one white person in his audience who trade places with him in spite of the fact that he was rich. That may have been intended as a joke, but it is also the reality of America.</span>Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-79367732993145023682016-06-15T11:37:00.002-04:002016-06-28T09:32:37.597-04:00Where Lives Might Be Saved Someday, the Answer Is Never "Do Nothing."<div>
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<i>Reposting something written by SJ. Unfortunately, just as relevant today as it was the day it was originally posted 3-1/2 years ago. Do we learn nothing? Isn't doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different outcome the definition of insanity? All or nothing politics makes for very bad policy. How many innocent people have to die before we as a nation can discuss this issue as adults? </i><br />
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Just because we can't or won't solve every aspect of a problem doesn't mean we can't solve any aspect of that problem: Gun violence is what I'm referring to obviously in light of yesterday.</div>
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In this interconnected life we live, in the developed world in which even our most emotionally driven responses can been twittered, texted, or IM’ed across all of our acquaintances familiar and distant, there have been some asinine responses to yesterday’s massacre in New Town. I say asinine because that’s the only word I can think of when people put culture, politics, or personal liberty above their own personal safety and the safety of others.</div>
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I've received messages and seen responses to posts on Facebook like: </div>
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<b>“Gun control laws don’t solve anything!!!”</b></div>
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Statements like this of course reach the heights of stupidity as there are already several regulations and laws regarding gun ownership that nobody would strike from the books (Violent felons released from jail barred from handgun possession, age restrictions and so on) -already governing our lives in different parts of the country. Few would argue their necessity. The one constant refrain I hear over and over again from people so in love with their guns that no massacre can make them rethink anything is this: gun control hasn’t stopped every violent attack, therefore it is useless. –Well can’t the same be said of every single law ever enacted? The answer sadly is yes, -but no sane person would say that homicide laws should be struck because they didn’t prevent a neighbor from being killed, or in the case of Friday’s assault, the mass murder of several children.</div>
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Personally as someone who has no small history with guns (I’ve had them pointed at me in aggression more than once before I even turned 18, and I’ve returned the favor more than once) and as no stranger to firing ranges, I am intimate with them as weapons and tools. In the nineties my familiarity with guns was often a skill, an ability that got me hired often as an AD on independent film sets where I’d be asked to “clear” a weapon before handing it over to an actor or stunt player, then keeping it under lock and key until the production was over. I’ve never questioned the need for regulation and laws in a city where people’s proximity to each other makes for daily conflicts that can turn lethal if the conditions are right.</div>
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My feelings about guns and especially certain accessories is this: laws governing the possession of assault rifles and high capacity magazines are inefficient when they enable any shooter to kill as many people as they want before they can be stopped. Gun control isn’t ONLY about eradicating every single gun on the street, much can be done to ensure that high capacity magazines, assault rifles, armor piercers –in short all the weapons of choice for mass murderers are not as accessible as, say aftermarket exhaust parts, because in the end, the fact that a killer can bring down as many people as he wants because his ammo will never run out, is often the deciding factor in whether Police response will be effective in saving many more lives or many less.</div>
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I’ll say it again, just because we can't or won't solve every aspect of a problem doesn't mean we can't solve any aspect of that problem:<br />
<b>-That problem is weak gun control and a culture that insists any legislation on arms is an affront to liberty no matter how many children get killed.<br />-That problem is America’s Gun Lobby.</b></div>
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Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-89402602437762312372016-06-04T02:38:00.000-04:002016-07-30T13:51:16.177-04:00Too sad for wordsIn honor of my favorite athlete of all time, who passed away yesterday, I'm reprinting something I wrote back in 2006.<br />
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Ali-Frazier III. The Thrilla in Manila. The final meeting of boxing titans. Ali had christened the fight in his then famous "poetry". He said, "It's gonna be a killer, and a chiller and a thrilla when I get the gorilla in Manila." As if the fight needed any more buildup, Ali decided to dub Frazier the gorilla, which did nothing to lessen the already substantial animosity from the Frazier camp. On October 30, 1975 Ali and Frazier would wage the greatest heavyweight fight of all time. The battle was so monumental that neither man would ever be the same again. They left not only their blood and guts in the ring that night, they left whatever was left of their youth as well.<br />
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Ali and Frazier fought for the first time on March 8, 1971. The fight that was billed as the fight of the century and lived up to that billing. It was quite possibly the greatest sports spectacle of the century. It featured the first meeting of undefeated heavyweight champions. Ali was coming back from a three year layoff after having his title stripped and being prohibited from boxing due to his refusal to enter the armed services. Frazier had stepped into the void created by Ali's absence and had won the title in the heavyweight championship tournament. Ali had a couple of tune up fights and declared himself ready to reclaim his rightful place atop the heavyweight division. Ali and Frazier were friendly during Ali's boxing exile, with Frazier even giving Ali money during a particularly rough stretch. Once the contracts were signed however, Ali began to taunt Frazier in public. He called him ugly and an Uncle Tom. He painted Frazier as the "white man's champion". He claimed to be the people's champion. He turned the fight into a battle between the status quo and the voices for change, between the old and young, between black and white, between rich and poor. Frazier didn't want any of it and he grew to hate Ali because of the taunting. The fight itself was an epic battle. Ali dominated the early rounds with his speed and his jab. Frazier, a notoriously slow starter came back in the middle rounds. The fight was fairly even as they entered the last five rounds of the fight. The years away from boxing had robbed Ali of his ability to dance around the ring for 15 rounds. As the latter rounds became more of a flat footed slugfest, the fight swung in Frazier's direction. Frazier knocked Ali to the canvas in the 15th and final round with a thunderous trademark left hook. Ali somehow managed to pull himself up at that count of 4, but the decision was never in doubt. Frazier had defeated him and could now lay rightful claim to the true undisputed heavyweight championship of the world.<br />
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The second fight in the trilogy took place in January of 1974. Neither man was champion at that point. Frazier had been knocked senseless by George Foreman in Jamaica a year earlier and Ali had lost to a previously unknown boxer named Ken Norton. Both were at the crossroads of their careers. The fight was held at Madison Square Garden in New York, which was the same venue as their first fight, it had none of the majesty of that fight however. Ali continued to taunt Frazier and Frazier continued to build animosity toward Ali. They even tussled on Wide World of Sports while doing an interview with Howard Cosell. Ali was probably just acting, but Frazier was dead serious. The fight in the ring was neither as interesting nor as close as their first fight had been. Ali won easily, although Frazier did score with a number of punches. The fight was really the beginning of the end for Frazier. He would fight only four more times before retiring. Ali went on to fight 15 more times after the second Frazier fight.<br />
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The third fight was supposed to be easy for Ali. He had just recently regained the heavyweight title from George Foreman in Zaire and Frazier was perceived to be at the end of the line. Ali didn't train heavily for the fight but Frazier threw everything he had into preparation. He wanted to shut Ali up once and for all. The fight took place at an indoor arena that had no air conditioning. Under the TV lights the temperature soared well above 100 degrees in the ring. The humidity was stifling. The only ventilation in the building was in the form of fans that were ineffective in battling the heat and only served to circulate the already searing air. Ali was confident as he entered the ring. He felt that he would be able to take Joe out in the early rounds. Joe had another thought in mind. The fight started in the familiar pattern of Ali - Frazier fights. Ali dominated the early rounds. He peppered Frazier with jabs and power punches that Frazier seemed unable to stop or dodge. The fight began to turn once again in the middle rounds. Frazier pinned Ali to the ropes and began to pound at Ali's midsection and score left hooks to the head. Ali tried his rope-a-dope technique which had been so successful against Foreman, but Frazier proved too smart an opponent to simply punch himself out. He was much more economical and precise in his attack than the outclassed Foreman had been. As the fight wore on Ali knew that he was in for a battle. In one of the clinches he said, "Joe, they said you were done", "They lied to you champ" was Joe's only response.<br />
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The later rounds saw Ali's punches begin to take a toll on Frazier's face. His head became a misshapen lump of bruises. His eye were swollen and his vision became compromised. Ali seized the advantage. He produced pinpoint power shots to Frazier's head and started to build a lead. Frazier did not stop punching however. He hurt Ali on numerous occasions as the fight wore on. Ali was later quoted as saying that those later rounds were as close to death as he as ever felt. The heat and Frazier's relentless attack pushed him to the brink of quitting. His corner pushed him out for each round and he continued his attack on Frazier's face. A series of shots in the 13th round sent Frazier's mouthpiece flying into the crowd, but he never stopped coming forward, absorbing punishment, but also dishing it out. Frazier's corner wanted to stop the fight after the 13th round but he convinced them to give him one more round. In the 14th round a nearly blinded Frazier absorbed a vicious beating from Ali and his corner did indeed call it quits before the start of the 15th. In the tape from the fight, you can see Frazier arguing with his corner about stopping the fight, but in the end his trainer, Eddie Futch, had the final say. Ali, upon seeing that the fight was being stopped, got off his stool, raised his hand and then collapsed onto the canvas.<br />
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Both men had absorbed a tremendous amount of damage in the fight. And while Frazier's face looked the worse for wear, it was Ali's body that had suffered the most in the fight. Ali always gave up his body in order to protect his face and Frazier exacted an enormous toll during the fight. Ali was under a doctors care for several days after the fight, while Frazier was able to walk away in generally good condition. Joe Frazier would once again lose by knockout to George Foreman in his next fight after which he retired. Frazier had a short lived comeback a few years later in which he fought only once, but basically his career ended that night in Manila. Ali said after the fight that he was going to quit and most people believe that he should have. Of course he wouldn't. He would go on to lose and then win the title one more time and he would suffer ignominious defeat at the hands of Larry Holmes in an ill advised comeback. Ali is now afflicted with Parkinson's Syndrome, which means that although he doesn't have Parkinson's he has all the symptoms of a sufferer of the disease. It's a more scientific term for what used to labeled "punch drunk". His speech has been affected to the point that he doesn't speak in public anymore. His limbs shake uncontrollably and his movement is limited. His continued boxing activity after that night in Manila is probably the main reason for his condition today.<br />
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The thrilla in Manila was an epic struggle between two extraordinary fighters. Both men were past their primes, both had already secured their places in boxing history, both had nothing left to prove, but on that night they showed the world something more than just a championship bout. They were no longer fighting for the heavyweight championship, they were fighting for the championship of each other. They had split the first two fights and the winner of this fight could forever claim victory over the other. Neither of them was willing to give up that fight. They both fought to the edge of death to prove something, not to the world, but to each other. Ali won that night, but paid a heavy cost by continuing his boxing career. The effects of his decision to continue to fight have made him a shadow of the person he used to be. Frazier is still relatively healthy today and while he says that he harbors no ill will toward Ali today, there has to be a lingering thought in his head that perhaps by losing, he was the ultimate victor that October night in Manila. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-26538641199302639612016-03-18T13:49:00.002-04:002018-07-19T15:16:47.531-04:00The Party of Palin<div style="text-align: justify;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEggzoyC1KnB_P8X8HVwOJ4JzTHkIEPXa4iIAHSu_m5Zhj598R2WVgejAdrnQuMR9Q16FcbuAKAFhe9MG0y6m6BwOoHm4XMTf2fKAG7L6-EvluFxd5T8uFSw5zmm3exVdDvTTkXG/s1600/Trump-GOP-Party-Of-Lincoln.png" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="168" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEggzoyC1KnB_P8X8HVwOJ4JzTHkIEPXa4iIAHSu_m5Zhj598R2WVgejAdrnQuMR9Q16FcbuAKAFhe9MG0y6m6BwOoHm4XMTf2fKAG7L6-EvluFxd5T8uFSw5zmm3exVdDvTTkXG/s320/Trump-GOP-Party-Of-Lincoln.png" width="320" /></a>The Trump tidal wave is about to wash the Republican brand out to sea in its wake. The group that is so proud to wrap themselves in the title, "party of Lincoln", is about to become irrelevant. I'm not saying that the party will disappear, but it will no longer be able to make a claim to the lineage of Lincoln. The Party, which so proudly adopted the southern strategy in the 60's and doubled down on that with the Lee Atwater tactics of the 80's, is about to fully reap what it has sown. </div>
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In the last election cycle, I thought that Sarah Palin was the ultimate payoff for what had been done to the Republican brand over the past 40 years. I was incorrect. She was merely the town crier for what would be the ultimate invasion. As the Vice Presidential candidate, her jingoistic, vapid and simplistic slogans electrified the crowds, however she was not the main voice of the Party. The crowds ate it up though. So much so that John McCain became the warm up act for the red meat that the crowd hungered for from Sarah Palin. When a supporter said that Obama was a Muslim, McCain immediately said that he was not. That was clearly not what the crowd was looking for. They wanted blood. Sarah gave it to them, but unfortunately, she was not at the top of the ticket. </div>
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Those of us who fancy ourselves as political observers should have taken more notice of the Sarah phenomenon. For while she and John didn't win the election, it was clear that at the end what the crowd wanted was more of her and less of him. The foreshadowing was clear, we just chose to laugh it off. Sarah Palin became a punchline of sorts because she had no substance to back up her lack of substance. Her family life became fodder for the tabloids, she quit her job in government and tried to become a reality star with terrible results. She even started her own pay TV channel, which apparently no one outside of her family subscribed to. She basically made herself irrelevant, but the blueprint that she left behind was there for someone to pick up and run with. </div>
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So now we have someone who runs on the same sort of empty, jingoistic slogans, but has the semblance of substance behind him. Perhaps not since the days of Huey Long have we seen this type of appeal be this successful. "Make America Great Again" is just an updated version of "A roof over every head and a chicken in every pot". The promises have no basis in fact and there is no way to accomplish them. First of all, just like the people who wanted to take America back, I ask the same question, whom and what do you speak of? Take America back from whom and what time period are we speaking of when we refer to the greatness of America? It must be a rhetorical question because it has no logical answer. </div>
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The problem with the Republican party is that it has courted the angry white voter for some time. It has used the dog whistle call to let them know that they have a home in the Party. They have created or accentuated the idea that "America" is being stolen, watered down and lost to... (pick your minority group) for so long that they don't really know how to do much else. Every election cycle, they pick an issue (integration, abortion, immigration, gay rights, welfare, health care) and frame it as an "us against them" issue. Everything has been black and white, for lack of a better term. They blow their whistle and wait for the angry American to show up at the polls to maintain their position in the pecking order. </div>
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The biggest aid to the call to arms in the last 20 years has been Fox News. Fox News broadcasts propaganda and alarmist rhetoric as fact. According to the Murdoch mouthpiece, real Americans and the American way of life are under attack every day from the forces of evil. Is the President a Muslim? Fox News can't be sure. Will the President open up camps to indoctrinate our young people? Fox News can't be sure. Will the Democrats bring about Armageddon if they control the White House and Congress? Fox News can't be sure. Is there a war against Christians? Fox News is pretty sure there is. Is global warming real? Fox News is very sure that it's just a hoax cooked up by the people trying to ruin this country. That type of nonsense "journalism" broadcast into the homes of millions every night has made America a less intelligent country, and it has also made us an angrier country. </div>
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Until now, the Republican running for president has always been able to maintain the cover of "compassionate conservatism" while still managing to blow the dog whistle call to the minions. Sarah Palin had no such pretense of maintain. Pat Buchannan was not afraid to paint the country as conflict between good and evil, but he lacked the disarming charisma and charm of Palin. His argument came across as scary to too many, even in his own party. Palin never looked scary. She was however spewing the same kind of rhetoric that excited the voter who believes that their way of life is under attack. </div>
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Donald Trump has never claimed to be a compassionate conservative. I take that back. Donald Trump has claimed to be everything under the sun. His opening salvo in his run for the nomination was to claim that Mexicans are rapists and that he was going to build a wall and have Mexico pay for it. Many in the media laughed at the idea that he could be taken seriously. What many, including myself, missed was that the angry voter, that the Republicans had courted for so long, had grown tired with pretense. The rise of the Tea Party after the election of Barack Obama should have been a warning to the Republicans that their voters were growing wary of pretending to be part of system. They didn't want incremental change, they wanted to blow the whole thing up. The Republican party thought that they could control the Tea Party, but as we have seen on numerous occasions, they can't. </div>
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Donald Trump doesn't really stand for anything. That has allowed those angry voters to latch on to his brand of populism. His followers don't want to work within the system, they want to start something new. In poll after poll, the Republican primary voters have spoken about the appeal of an outsider. They are looking for someone who is not a Beltway veteran. They want someone who speaks to their frustrations and who can shake up the system. They are looking for a transformative figure who will lead them to the promised land of relevance. They want to matter. They want their voices to be heard. They don't care about gay rights or immigrant rights or abortion rights or welfare rights, they only care about their right to be heard. They believe that they are losing the war for America. They believe as Fox News has told them over and over that their religion, their guns, their families, their very way of life will be lost if they don't make a stand. </div>
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The saddest part of this story is not that their are so many Americans who believe that they are under constant attack. The saddest part is that they have put their faith in someone who is so unworthy of it. I think the perfect ticket for the GOP in 2016 would Trump/Palin. It makes perfect sense. She opened the door and showed the way and he went barreling through. It would only be fair that he join up with the heart and soul of the new Republican Party, The Party of Palin. God have mercy on us all. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-31964974.post-15201924546060846302016-02-12T10:20:00.000-05:002016-02-12T10:20:03.954-05:00Berning Down the House<div style="text-align: justify;">
I almost never post, but I felt the need to say something about Bernie Sanders. I like Bernie. I think he is a very valuable voice in the political debate. I think it's great that he's inspiring more young people to get involved in the political process. </div>
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He has crossed a line with me. When you start criticizing this president for what he hasn't done, you make an enemy of me. I have criticized this president for the pace of his actions. I have criticized this president for giving up too much. I have criticized this president for not doing everything that I hoped he would be able to do. HOWEVER, I AM NOT RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT AS A MEMBER OF THE SAME PARTY AS THE SITTING PRESIDENT! I also understand that this president has faced unprecedented opposition from the republican party. I also understand that the same people who would stand up to criticize this president for not getting things done are the same people who sat on their hands as the republicans strengthened their hold on the House and regained control of the Senate. </div>
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Bernie is talking about a revolution taking place because of all the people that he has brought into the process. Is he talking about the same people who only get out and vote in presidential elections and then sit around waiting for all their dreams to come true. Is he talking about the same people who refuse to vote in off year elections because they are just too busy to be bothered. </div>
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Go ahead and criticize all you want Bernie, but there are lots of Democratic voters out there who think rather highly of this president. Go ahead and say how things would be different if you were in office. Go ahead and rely on the army of followers to help you change Washington. Go right ahead and drag this president through the mud, but you do it at your own peril. There exists a coalition of voters that got this president into the White House. Young, white voters certainly represent a portion of those, but if that's all you've got, then good luck to you as you go forward. </div>
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I honestly don't care how nuanced or qualified your criticism is, especially when put in the context of how better you would be at the job of uniting the country. If you think that a northeastern, self proclaimed democratic socialist stands a chance of uniting the country, then you are incredibly delusional. As I said at the beginning, I like Bernie. I know that his heart is in the right place. Attacking this president though, is a misstep of major proportion.</div>
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If Bernie does end up as the Democratic nominee for President, I will happily pull the lever for him. I would never vote against my own self interest. Just remember that the last time a democratic nominee tried to distance himself from the outgoing president of his party, he ended up losing by a hanging chad. </div>
Mycue23http://www.blogger.com/profile/07474424588090159340noreply@blogger.com1