Friday, February 26, 2021

Down At The Crossroads (Ain't No Devil Down Here)

 “We need a wealth tax everywhere. We need quality free health and education for everyone, everywhere. We need a green new deal everywhere. There’s no country where this is impossible, and no country where this is not necessary.” Djaffar Shalchi


Remember last month, January 6, were you watching when the Trumpists attempted to disrupt the certification of the Electoral College (an undemocratic process to begin with, but that’s not what motivated the Trumpists) results? Trump’s people wanted to monkeywrench the ritual, not overturn it altogether; they’re after less democracy, not more. It’s a strange country to begin with when the rules say the candidate who receives fewer popular votes than his opponent can yet win the Presidency. This has happened twice since the turn of the millennium -- a warning sign about our limited democracy we’d better not ignore. If a real investigation of the January 6 Insurrection happens, and is invested with proper authority, we may find out just how much advance coordination occurred in the run up to that dark day. This is for sure: it was more than a random mob. 


I’m trying to wean myself from the national news, stop imbibing the stuff two, three times a day, be more selective and discerning about the voices I listen to and whose writing I read. (Like a selective drunk, I suppose. Keep your rotgut, barkeep, give me the good stuff from the top shelf.) Managing any perspective about America is never easy because we’re a confounding nation. There’s too much noise from too many voices that reasonable people should avoid. Grandstanding fools like Ted Cruz and Lindsey Graham, ambitious punks like Josh Hawley, and jackasses like Ron Johnson of Wisconsin. Fuck off miscreants, one and all.


In the days when cities and regions had more specific identities because newspapers were the primary means of mass communication, the papers reflected their readership. Who is reflected on social media? If this were 1905 would QANON publish a newspaper? I’m old enough to miss a good newspaper. All those city and town specific newspapers, who published the local news, the obits, reported on city hall, the police, sports, living, arts -- all the aspects of society that make it possible for us to co-exist. Were we more civil then, more tolerant, more accepting? Of course not. Were we better informed? I don’t know. In the days of newspapers did readers always read below the headlines? My dad always went straight for the Sports page. When we only had television broadcasting -- the three networks -- the dream of marketers and advertising gurus was narrowcasting, honing in on a specific audience at whom to pitch commercials between the programming; now we have the almighty algorithm that will feed you all you want of whatever you want. 


Are we better critical thinkers today than, say, a half century ago? I don’t know. Donald Trump received 10 million more votes in 2020 than he did in 2016; millions of Americans seem incapable of thought, let alone critical thinking. 


My little family finds ourselves nearing a crossroads of sorts. The tiny two-bedroom, one bath unit in a triplex built in the 1950’s that had housed us in enough comfort, but never enough space, for more than twenty years has become untenable. We need a change of provenance. Five years became ten, ten became twenty, the rent was fair and the landlord was mostly reasonable, we were near downtown, the kids’ schools, and my job, squeezed in always, but still able to live in relative comfort. Tiny kitchen, limited cabinet space, severe shortage of usable electrical outlets and countertops, no dishwasher. No ice machine in the refrigerator. We made it work. Four people, one bathroom. Intricate morning dances to get everyone up and out. Old gas wall heater with a thermostat that has often acted balky. Cold in the winter because of old , thin windows, stifling in the summer, especially in the last ten to fifteen years. The hot weather now presents itself from May to November, and every year feels hotter than the last. 


We’ve been here through flood, fire, and now, pandemic. About two miles from the Pacific Ocean. 


In our time here we have accumulated too much stuff. The space below us that functions as a low-ceilinged multipurpose laundry room-storage area-gym was, until last week, crammed with stuff. Boxes, bags, old furniture that never got refurbished, a wooden chest, bins full of artwork produced by my kids, stuffed animals, board games, motor oil and glass cleaner, a bucket of hand tools,  a toolbox, and my fitness gear. Knowing -- because this is Santa Barbara and folks in our working-class income bracket struggle for decent spaces, particularly within the city limits -- we will likely move somewhere with less storage space than we have now prompted a decades overdue frenzy of cleaning, purging, shredding, donating, tossing. “Be ruthless,” I told my wife and daughter when sentiment got in the way of practicality. To set an example I said goodbye to my weight bench, all my free weights, my tractor tire, 8-lb sledgehammer, a few pairs of dumbbells, and lots of stuff I’d hauled from Japan to Honolulu, across the Pacific to Seattle, to Irvine, and then back to Santa Barbara in 1987. In boxes that hadn’t been opened for years I found stained notebooks filled with the scribblings of my twenty-year-old self, photographs, letters (shows you how old I am), journals, schoolwork from my undergraduate days, magazines, newspaper articles, and military service records that I didn’t know I even had. 


It felt liberating to lighten our load, to say goodbye to the stuff of our past, to make a big donation of usable things to the Alpha Resource center, to put good books back in circulation. My sense is of a shifting foundation, a tilted floor with slippery footing. Change is coming and we will need to be agile. For the first time, we’re all in agreement that the time is right. My son lives in Los Angeles, my daughter might be headed off to school somewhere -- if she is accepted and we can pay the fees without going into major debt. I feel a strong need for different space, different angles, maybe a larger kitchen. 


I don’t know what will happen to this country politically, but I foresee more and more madness from the far right, more braying from Trump as he attempts to remain relevant so he can keep his grift going. The minority, by way of the arcane, undemocratic United States Senate, means to hold power by any means necessary. A handful of men from states with small populations compared to New York, California and Illinois, thwart every action with which they disagree, even when what they disagree with would materially benefit the people they purport to represent. The Senate stands for stalemate and obstruction. Why do we have it, what purpose does it serve? 


Texas is what happens when disdain for government and the exaltation of markets becomes a religion. When disaster strikes the wealthy manage fine, they can get away, like Ted Cruz, or stay on the dry high ground in their gated compounds with backup generators and private security patrol. The majority must depend on a collective response, from local, state or the federal government when a major disaster strikes. America has been kidnapped and raped by Capitalism-on-steroids, a beast never to be let off the chain lest it run amok and punish the common people, the working-class and the poor. Punish, abandon, repeat. This cruel system makes the cost of basic necessities like housing, heat, clean running water, food and medical care too expensive, at the same time it keeps wages low and profits high. It’s an arrogant system that doesn’t recognize any limits, not even of our planet itself. How can someone like Jeff Bezos ever be satisfied when there’s always more? He’s got enough money to insulate himself from the problems his business model creates for millions of people all over the world. He’s of the elite. He doesn’t live in the same world most of us common folk do.


The rich start the fire, then convince you no one else has the expertise to put it out. The failed architects of the Iraq Invasion become grey-headed sages on cable news shows; the bankers who broke the economy in 2008-09 are asked for policy advice; men and women speaking on behalf of our government tell boldfaced lies, argue, straight-faced, that what we just witnessed with our own eyes didn’t happen, then counsel the masses about truth and honesty on TV and in print. In America, if you have the right pedigree, the right credentials, you can fuck up royally, cause real hardship to millions of human beings, and pay no penalty. You get second and third chances, a clean slate. 


The red states make the laws, the blue states pay the bills. 


What I’m reading this week: A Swim in a Pond in the Rain by George Saunders, City of Quartz by Mike Davis, Shuggie Bain by Douglas Stuart, and The Devil You Know by Charles M. Blow.  



Thursday, February 18, 2021

Nowhere Else to Go


“It is to be decision not by election but by assertion, made not by the mere numerical majority but by ‘we’ the patriots, the real Americans.” Fintan O’Toole, New York Review of Books


Of course Trump was acquitted by the Senate. Of course that diseased body let Trump off the hook, again. The final tally was 57-43. Seven Republicans repudiated the cult and voted to convict Trump. All seven are, or soon will be, under merciless attack from state political parties, suffering censure and condemnation for their betrayal of Dear Leader Trump. Fidelity to their oath of office, the Constitution, or their constituents is secondary. Perversely, they will be sanctioned for doing their duty. The same fate will befall the ten GOP members of the House who voted to impeach.


Power rallies to itself, that’s how it works. 


After voting to acquit Trump, Mitch McConnell contorted himself in a manner Gumby would admire and declared that Trump was responsible for the Insurrection and should be held to account -- in the courts. Mitch passed the buck then pretended sanctimonious outrage, assuming everyone had already forgotten how in the days after the Insurrection he claimed there wasn’t enough time for the Senate to try Trump. We should never forget McConnell’s blatant, calculating political ploy to have it both ways. He manipulated the Senate to prevent it from holding a trial while Trump was in office -- in essence running out the clock -- then voted to acquit on the grounds that it’s unconstitutional to convict a president who has left office (false). And there he was, standing upright though he has no spine, assuring the nation that Trump is culpable for inciting a deadly mob. Mitch talks out of every orifice. Spare us the sanctimony, you miserable coward. 


If we don’t strengthen our democracy now, while there’s a chance, we will have only ourselves to blame when we find ourselves under autocratic rule. We need immediate consideration and passage of HR1 (The For the People Act) and its companion, SR1. Most state legislatures are controlled by Republicans and many are already scheming to create more obstacles to voting. Because they are a true minority party, the only way Republicans can win elections and retain power is by cheating. To survive they must gerrymander districts and erect barriers to prevent or disqualify large numbers of eligible voters from voting. They’re very adept at it. HR1 and SR1 are needed to balance the scales. 


Keep an eye on anti-democracy fuckery operations in Georgia, Florida and Texas. 


The choice seems clear: either we strengthen our democracy or prepare for permanent minority rule. It’s not certain that we will fully recover from Trump’s frontal assault on our democratic processes. My gut sense is that within a decade we will be effectively finished as a representative democracy. If elections have no legitimacy in the eyes of millions of citizens why respect their outcomes? If there’s no perceived legitimacy, there can be no peaceful transfer of power. I think, as Hunter S. Thompson might say, we are well and truly fucked, especially if Trump and his entourage pay no penalty for their words and deeds. 


And there he was, standing upright though he has no spine, assuring the nation that Trump is culpable for inciting a deadly mob. Mitch talks out of every orifice. Spare us the sanctimony, you miserable coward. 


Our atomized, poisoned media landscape is one problem I don’t think we will solve. How can we resolve differences and solve difficult social problems like racism, climate change and wealth inequality when we cannot come close to agreeing on the facts? When people don’t know what or who to believe they become easy prey for false prophets and demagogues. Being told what to think and believe is easier than thinking for oneself. My 85-year-old mother has had her mind taken over by Fox News; she’s certain that the Biden administration will force every American to get vaccinated against Covid-19. She survives on a small pension and Social Security and decries “socialism” as the worst evil. There’s no way to reason with her. 


When all is said and done it’s about raw power dressed up as the “will of the people”. What a perverse joke. According to polls, the majority of Americans favored Trump’s conviction, but once again the will of the majority was easily ignored or subverted by those elected to represent us. Cynical, craven Republicans still cower before Trump, terrified of being ostracized from the personality cult, attacked on social media, and losing their privilege and power in primary challenges when election season rolls around. The specter of the next iteration of Marjorie Taylor Greene haunts the sleep of most Republicans. 


As I’ve written before, all Joe Biden can do is use his narrow window of opportunity to slow America’s descent, but he cannot stop it. This train is chugging along a route that will soon run out of track. I’d jump off if I could, but like millions of my fellow citizens, I have nowhere else to go. 



Friday, February 12, 2021

One Step Ahead Of The Sheriff

 


“If that happens, if the Democrats cannot prevail over Republican obstructionism and find the political voice to care for working-class Americans, the only question that remains is what these modern-day Hoovervilles will be called: Trumptowns or Bidenvilles?” Dale Maharidge, “How America Chose Homelessness,” in the Nation. 


By all that is righteous, Donald J. Trump should be convicted and barred from holding ANY public office ever again. But the odds of this happening are long because the Senate of the United States is a strange place operated under arcane rules known only to a select few. It’s like something out of the Ministry of Magic from Harry Potter. The senators should wear black robes like Professor Snape. They could be adorned with colorful stripes, corporate emblems, or maybe TRUMP OWNS MY SOUL in gold letters on the back. Lindsey Graham would love that look. Can you see Ted Cruz in a dark robe? Josh Hawley? Marco Rubio? In my youth the United States Senate was referred to as the world’s greatest deliberative body, where men like Daniel Webster, Henry Clay, Lyndon Baines Johnson, Robert F. Kennedy, George McGovern, and George Mitchell argued big questions and made difficult compromises that allowed meaningful legislation to be made. It never was as high brow as that, I know, but nor was it completely gone over to the dark arts like today’s splintered and unhinged GOP. Cruz and Hawley and Ron Johnson and Lindsey Graham could sit through 72 hours of footage of the January 6 Insurrection and still vote to acquit. These men are full of ambition and lust after power, but none have any honor. The same can be said of most of their colleagues.


He was always a very small man playing the very biggest man in the land, a coward pretending to be a fearless and unapologetic Big Boss. 


If Trump is acquitted as many are predicting, it surely proves that an American president cannot be held accountable. If inciting a mob to attack the legislative branch isn’t enough to convict, what is? Trump’s second-string legal team will contort logic like a giraffe trying to mate with a chihuahua when their turn comes. 


The American constitutional system is broken, that’s all there is to it. If the instigators of the January 6 Insurrection go unpunished, I honestly think America is done. There will be a next time. 


Trump’s enforced radio silence has helped millions of people (I am definitely one) settle down and breathe easier. The Orange Menace knows how to rile people up and pit them against each other. It’s a peculiar skill. A social media platform in Trump’s tiny hands is a deadly weapon; it came close to tearing our country apart. Social media spread Trump’s Big Lie faster than Coronavirus in a nursing home. 74 million Americans will disagree with me, but Donald J. Trump is a mentally-ill man, a sociopath with no regard for anyone but himself. He was always a very small man playing the very biggest man in the land, a coward pretending to be a fearless and unapologetic Big Boss. I watched the House managers lay out the evidence, the footage, the graphs, the words spoken by Trump himself over many months, and it’s obvious that Trump knew what some of his most devoted followers were capable of. January 6 was his last shot at monkeywrenching the election outcome. His black soul and white hands are splattered with blood. 


Imagine where we’d be today if GOP senators had placed the country and the Constitution over power and party in 2020 and removed Trump then. How many lives might have been saved if we had entered the pandemic with Trump exiled at Mar-A-Lago? January 6 wouldn’t have happened. Brian Sicknick would still be alive. 


No matter how compelling and conclusive the House case, Trump’s going to skate. It’s not a court of law, it’s the Senate, a place where powerful people, mostly men, make rules that let them evade responsibility and accountability. 


All who vote to step on the Constitution with a bloody boot and allow Trump another pass should suffer the fires of Hell and the ridicule of history. 



Saturday, February 06, 2021

Where Serfs Are Rarely Allowed

 


It’s not the poor who make revolutions.” Chris Hedges, in conversation with Chauncey DeVega


All Joe Biden can do is slow America’s slide, but I don’t expect him to instigate or inspire the true course correction necessary to keep the country from coming apart at the seams. He’s got a narrow two year window in which to operate and a razor thin majority in a completely dysfunctional Congress. Trump drove the GOP insane and now the inmates have seized control of the guard towers and are headed for the armory. Unless we quickly strengthen and reinforce our democratic structure and some of its machinery -- voting rights, eliminating the filibuster, ending gerrymandering -- the republic cannot long survive. 


Accomplishing such reforms would be a major achievement for a functioning Congress. It seems obvious to me that the same political system that landed us in this ditch cannot pull us out. The corruption is too deep in the Senate, for example, for that body to accomplish anything except tax cuts for the rich, corporate handouts, and obscene annual tithes to the Pentagon. For the majority of working-class Americans -- and by this I mean people of all genders, creeds , political persuasions and skin tones who work for and depend on wages -- all we ever get from Congress is indifference and hypocrisy. The US has some of the weakest basic protections for working people in the world, and no organized labor power to speak of. Congress wrings its soft hands, knits its brow, and squeals when the subject on the floor is aiding working-class citizens in the middle of a devastating pandemic. Republicans make one-time $2,000 payments to eligible citizens sound like the worst profligacy imaginable. But they have no qualms about cutting taxes for corporations and the wealthy, handing out millions of dollars in welfare to companies that don’t need it, or drowning the Pentagon in money. No qualms at all, that’s simply business as usual, constituent service.


In a corrupt, upside down system like ours, the needs of working people will always be subordinated to the needs of the wealthy and powerful. Look at the Dow Jones Industrial Average if you need proof. At a time when our economy is limping along and millions are struggling to pay the rent and feed their loved ones, the DJIA is riding above 30,000. One clearly has no relation to the other. Two completely different games are going on here. How can the economy be booming for a few and collapsing on the many? How did we engineer such a perverse system? Why don’t we talk about it? Why don’t we speak in the language of class warfare in America when that is precisely what has been going on for almost half a century? Is it to maintain the meritocratic fantasy that every American is born with equality of opportunity? That every American rises or falls by his or her own effort and talent? Is it to justify the winners and explain the fate of the losers? 


People and companies who benefit from a 30,000 DJIA might reside in the same country with the serfs for whom the DJIA is meaningless, but they travel in fine automobiles on private roads where serfs are rarely allowed. 


As we approach a full year of adapting to the pandemic I’ve been thinking about the role of elders in society. In an article about loneliness, I came across some startling statistics, such as the large percentage of elderly people in America who live alone. My brother, cousin, and mother are in their 60’s, 70’s and 80’s respectively, and all live alone. Extended families living under the same roof are rare. Families scatter now for schooling, work, military service, affordable housing, temperate weather, and many other reasons. Transportation is easier, faster and more efficient than it was a century ago. Upward mobility on the economic ladder might be a thing of the past, but people still pack up and move in search of better lives. The question I’ve been thinking about is: What do we lose when families scatter? The elders, for one thing. Elders are supposed to peer down the road ahead, see how it compares to now, and make a guess, using all their lived experience, about the dangers that might lie ahead. This might have been more immediately relevant to survival in indigenous societies, but I still think elders matter today. Even if the technology of the future is even more mind-boggling than it is now, and it surely will be, we remain human beings with passions, prejudices, fear, and the potential for violence. Wise elders encourage a cooling down, a meaningful pause to consider the consequences of words and actions. That’s the opposite of our lightning fast, digital, social media news feeds, YouTube favorites, and other noise that comes at most of us many hours each day. Without elders wise about the ways of human beings, without stories of people and places, events, times lived through, and threats survived, we lose the everyday wisdom of those who came before, and who can tell us how this or that place used to be.


How many of our elders have died alone due to Covid? How many of those deaths belong to Donald J. Trump?


I’ve also been thinking about China. Despite all his bellicose rhetoric, Donald Trump was easily outplayed by China on the trade front, and before much longer China will take our belt and become the preeminent economic power in the world. As political sclerosis and social unrest and division weaken the US, China will stroll through the double doors Trump left open and dominate technology and trade. Trump sundered America’s traditional alliances, alienated world leaders, made preposterous claims and a mockery of America’s longstanding claim to global leadership. Although America’s dominance was eroding when Trump moved into the White House, his reign was like tossing a Molotov cocktail onto a runway slick with jet fuel. Trump’s grandiosity and stupidity accelerated America’s decline. What does this mean for the millions of Americans who have nearly been forgotten in the half century of America’s disastrous experiment with neoliberalism? If we think those deemed “losers”in our unforgiving meritocracy are angry now, just wait. 


As our economic power wanes so will our military power, and then maintaining a global network of military bases will become untenable. The empire will be forced to fold its tents and limp home. 


When revolution comes to America it will arrive from the political right and it’s symbols will be the flag and the cross. Or the bullet and the Bible. Trump blathered about a fictitious “radical left” but the true danger is from Christian fascists, who for decades have been funded by conservative oligarchs. I found this passage in a book titled The Power Worshippers by Katherine Stewart:


“Addressing gerrymandering, voter suppression, and other abuses of the electoral process that continue to hobble American democracy will be a central aspect of any effort to meet the challenge of Christian nationalism.”


Can I get an Amen on that?