Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label facebook. Show all posts

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Republican Obstructionism

Jim Coons: Republicans: for tax breaks and small businesses, as long as Democrats are against them.

Seriously, what positive reason is there to vote Republican? What ideas do they have, what policies would they enact?

www.nytimes.com
The procedural blockade underscored how determined Republicans are to deny Democrats any further victories.


Cathal Duffy: Why can't Dingy Harry through the Republicans a few amendments?


Cathal Duffy: And by the way... as a small business owner myself, I'm just loving the new health care legislation which now requires that I file a 1099 on every entity I pay more than $600 in a year... I don't need government loans to run my business, I need them to get the hell out of the way.


Rich Cleland: well, Cathal, that was one of the amendments that was being considered before Republicans killed the bill. So you can blame the GOP for that.

Republicans were not being shut out of the debate, they wanted to stop the debate altogether by tacking on amendments that were irrelevant to getting money flowing again to small businesses. Your 1099 reform was sacrificed to keep up the Republican blockade, which is their strategy to keep Congress from doing its job ahead of the 2010 election because they've coldly calculated that scorched earth is a net win for them.

Nuclear loan guarantees? Border security? More welfare for the mega rich? These are contentious issues added to the bill not so they could pass, but so the bill would fail.

Maybe you don't need capital access to keep your own business afloat and hey, why the hell should you care if other small business owners can't keep their doors open and their employees paid. Certainly the megabanks that shut down small business lending and horde the public money they got last year don't care. why should anyone in America give a crap if it doesn't affect them?

Because it does affect all of us. 10% unemployment is not just emotionally and financially devastating to the families without jobs; it keeps those families from spending money in your business which stops your business from spending money in someone else's. That's what makes prosperity contagious.

And if that's not direct enough for you, remember to thank the Republicans when you're filling out all those 1099s next year because they're the ones who wanted to talk about nuclear loan guarantees instead.


Cathal Duffy: Rich, you do raise some good points, even in a harsh tone! I think some republicans are running a "stall everything" campaign, and I disagree very much with this approach. I've always believed you win elections with ideas, not simply by running an "at least I'm not him" campaign. But I also think the Democrats are shutting out any chance of bipartisanship by ruling as a "we won the election so we'll do what we want" type regime. But this issue is much larger than one bill, for example recess appointments according to the President himself and many of his fellow democrats were a usurpation of the constitution merely 2 years ago, now they're just fine... Similarly Judicial appointments deserved an up or down vote according to Mitch and the boys a few years ago and now we can filibuster them as much as we want...
While you do make some good points, some of your other points aren't based in reality in my opinion. Have you ever tried to get assistance from the small business administration who administers the guarantees on these loans? Not exactly the bastion of efficiency... and are you aware that the biggest recipients of the "Bush tax cuts for the wealthy" are small business owners, the same you claim you wish to help, yet they're all facing the highest tax increase in history because of the President's and the Democrats desire to allow them to sunset at the end of this year.... It is my prediction that if these tax cuts are allowed to sunset, 10% unemployment will look desirable compared to what will become the economic reality.
And let me get this straight, I should blame Republicans for not supporting a mega bill because it contained one amendment that would have negated an absolutely absurd requirement on small businesses, that was put in place by Democrats to begin with under the guise of "We don't need to read the healthcare bill, we'll find out what's in there after it's enacted"... Not exactly sound logic if I'm honest.


Andrew Hosek: Here's what you do to eliminate any hassle: eliminate any and all tax credits but lower the base tax rate across the board.


Rich Cleland: I apologize for the tone. It is a reaction to my disbelief that anyone still considers the GOP as a legitimate public entity operating in good faith with the objective to make America great for everybody instead of acting for the express interests of only a small, powerful, and wealthy elite.

For the record, I don't reserve judgment for Republicans alone. Many Democrats have been enthralled in the snare of money and power set by people who don't care who's in Washington as long as they are in power. But, while I can still identify Democrats who are operating against those interests, it's more difficult to find a steadfast people's Republican these days.

I get bipartisanship that tries to find compromises and test out new ideas that will hopefully make everyone succeed, but I'm curious to know how you engage in bipartisanship with someone who's goal is to get you to fail. "Why yes, in the interest of working together, I think i will drink a little of your poison. Just as a show of good faith." That's insane. And it is a false controversy that the Republicans have ginned up to make hay and cover up their true agenda.

Is it your opinion that the GOP really added nuclear loan guarantees and border security to a small business bill because they thought that was good for the bill?

Recess appointments? Blah. I won't get into this except to say that not all are created equal. Making a recess appointment to put a butt a seat that has been vacant for over a year is not the same as making a recess appointment because you can't get enough votes to make a guy who wants to destroy the UN our national representative to that body. And anyway, this has a direct corollary to my point above about the GOP calculation that Republicans win when government fails. Keeping organizations headless is a great way to make sure that happens.

What happens when you spend decades electing people who say the government is the problem? They get into office and prove themselves right. You tell me the SBA is inefficient. Fine. Is the rational response to abolish it? When the car is broken do you throw it away saying, "anyway, cars were a bad idea." ?? Efficiently or inefficiently, it is helping people. And it could have probably helped more if it wasn't for border security.

Taxes. So the story goes, if we don't continue the Bush tax cuts, the economy will fail. That sounds like extortion! The same extortion scam they used to ram through the cuts in the first place. If we don't cut taxes on the wealthy, we won't have any job growth. Well, we cut taxes for the wealthy and job growth was flat for a decade and wages did not keep up with inflation even though workers squeezed out sizable increases in productivity.

Taxpayers making at or under $250K annually will not have their taxes raised. If a "small" business is making more than that, I say, great, they've had a break for 10 years, hope they used it well because the people simply can't continue to subsidize their affluence.

Also, it can be very effective for politicians to use talking points like "the biggest tax increase in history" unburdened from the necessity of context. The current tax rate is lower than when Reagan was in office. Capital gains taxes at their current level are a joke. Hedge fund managers have sweetheart tax deals they bought out of congress. Should we not rectify that disparity? Is restoring balance to the system impossible if it requires actually making things fair?

Banks have a problem. They are still carrying a ton of bad debt on their books. To mitigate the effect of this on their books and limit shareholder outrage, they have invested the huge sums of money the american people lent to them into treasury bonds. Which is great for them because they have a steady return rate and so the holes on the balance sheets are harder to see.

This works out well for everybody...on wall street. Banks are protected, but they don't loan any money to small businesses because they need it to keep their books looking balanced. The American people get a great deal because they are now on the hook to pay interest to the banks on the treasury bonds that were bought with interest-free taxpayer money in the first place.

The SBA may be inefficient, but i don't think it's bank-malicious. It doesn't shock me that the government, in attempting to address this problem, would try to use the tools at it's disposal to accomplish what the private sector is refusing to do for itself...to the detriment of millions of its citizens.

The health care bill was bipartisan. It included a lot of provisions that Republicans have traditionally supported for decades (it has mandatory insurance, tort reform, exchanges, and hey, it's not single-payer). It just doesn't look bipartisan because, when it came time to work together for America, the Republicans went back to their calculators. If you remember, there was no room to fix anything in the bill because of obstruction from business interests (who have influence on both sides, to be sure) who wanted to be allowed to continue their assault on us unincorporated citizens.

I think what guided my tone most sharply was the sense i got from your response that if it doesn't affect you, it's not your problem. These are our problems. Corporations and the individuals who run them want you to keep your eye on your own prise. They cloud the information channels with noise and distraction to keep people from finding out how much they have co-opted the government for their own money trough. They shout "Highest tax increase ever," "death panels," and "un-American President" so that people won't have time to stop and take stock of the situation to see who's running off with the silverware.

The Republican party governs by fear and promotes selfishness. They tell me that if i don't give in and keep subsidizing the wealthy, i may lose my job. Well, people lost their jobs anyway.

You tell me, what have the Republicans done for America in the last decade?


Cathal Duffy: ?"because the people simply can't continue to subsidize their affluence. " A tax cut from 36% to 33% means "the people" subsidize "their" affluence, What exactly do you call the 50% of the population that pays ZERO federal income tax? Who's subsidizing who? You want small businesses to create jobs, yet you want small business owners to pay higher taxes... Good luck with that economic policy.
"Pass my stimulus package or unemployment might go above 8%"... Govern by fear? Extortion?


Rich Cleland: so wait. 50% don't pay any taxes and that's bad, but we should extend the bush tax cuts so they can continue to not pay any taxes which would be good?


Cathal Duffy: I'll take your refusal to answer the question "who's subsidizing who" as an admission of defeat. Good day, I've enjoyed it.


Rich Cleland: Good one. I missed the rules about "no-answer-backs." :)

Actually, I wanted let you clear up that problem in your logic before I continued...though I admit i am defeated.

Look. The government made a deal with you and everybody else who got those tax cuts. The deal was that tax cuts skewed to favor wealthier people would pay for themselves in increased tax revenues from economic growth. We the government fronted the cash for this little social experiment.

Results. The last ten years have not been good for the economy. They have not been good for job growth. They have not been good for wages. And they have not paid the government back for its investment in this scam.

Ok. Ha ha, jokes on me, you took my money. I get it. Good one. Better luck next time and all...

Now, I'm not asking for you give it back, but I think it's ok to ask you to stop taking it.

That 50% is as much people who don't make enough money to pay the government as it is people who make too much to pay the government. And the latter costs us way more.

while you're grousing about the people below you getting too much from you, you can bet your small business bottom dollar that there are big corporations out there, maybe competing with you, that pay less. And they vote Republican, too.

You want to know who subsidizes? It's both of us. We are both paying the system to beat us. If not in taxes or brand name shoes, then in some other way. If not now, then for everyone we will care about until the end of this country.

Take this as my admission of defeat. It is again clear to my why I cannot win. I'll even swear that I would like to see 20 more years of Republican leadership in this country. 20 years of GOP rule would do more for the progressive cause than 200 years at the hands of the Democrats.


Andrew Hosek: Rich, with regards to the "social experiment" of employing the Laffer Curve, there isn't an economist in the world who would agree with you that it doesn't exist. There is some debate as to where the curve lies, but good luck finding anyone that denies it exists.

The last ten years being 'not good for the economy' has little to do with the 'social experiment' that began roughly 30 years ago. It has much more to do with a Federal Reserve that pushed lax monetary policy, creating bubbles all over the map.

You and I can wholeheartedly agree that subsidizations are a problem. You would fight them on the grounds that they "harm the little man". I would fight them on the grounds that they create bubbles... Tax breaks are not subsidies, by the way--in principle nor effect. Eliminate tax credits but lower the base tax rate to a flat percentage and no special interest group can dominate anything, as well as you'd find increased productivity across the board...

Both parties are the problem, Democrats and Republicans alike. I have no allegiance here. The problem we often face is laying blame. We're more defensive of party and some supposedly high principle than we are of any sort of science of economics.

Side note: With regards to the myth of "all the wealthy being Republican", this is utterly false. Take a look on JSTOR in the political science section for studies on this matter. You'll find the commonly perpetuated myth thoroughly quashed by the numbers.


Rich Cleland: As I said, you win. Give us more and heaps of it.

However, I'm sorry for suggesting all rich people are republicans. That was not the point that I was trying to make, nor is the idea you construed from it relevant to my argument.

I am sorry my intent was poorly expressed; though, I think you may have misquoted me there.


Andrew Hosek: ?"...big corporations out there, maybe competing with you, that pay less. And they vote Republican, too."

The implication, given the whole conversation about the half that DON'T pay was that the wealthy/"Corporate America" all vote Republican


Rich Cleland: like i said. i'm sorry i was not clear. When i said that people vote Republican, I mistakenly thought it was understood that I didn't mean all the people, especially considering the inherent weakness of such a patently false argument and the fact that it was not necessary for me to claim it to make my point.

Nevertheless, I understand why you might think i did. I wasn't clear enough, so you misunderstood.

If you want me to explain my actual point further, feel free to message me.

Jim Coons: Wow... I forget to check facebook for a day and shit goes crazy!

My point with this was less the substance of the proposal (though I can't believe there are actually people who think the bill itself was a bad idea), and more the wholly disingenuous political wrangling perpetrated by the GOP here. (I'm repeating Rich's first comment here, but with the point of bringing the conversation back from the economics of it, toward the politics of the vote.) In point of fact, there was a bill up for a vote that contained a number of provisions that Republicans have called for over the past months. It was voted down not because they disagreed with it, but because they weren't allowed to offer irrelevant amendments. I'm choosing my words carefully here, so I mean it when I say: that's a mega-shitty move. Incredibly shitty. Both for the people who needed the benefits provided by this bill, and frankly, on the level of ethics. It's deceitful, cynical, and endlessly shitty.

I'd love to find someone to disagree with me here so I can argue with them. Please?


Jim Coons: PS - on the GOP's aforementioned shittiness, see the post from today about Andrew Weiner's floor speech, when the GOP blocked a vote to provide medical benefits to 9/11 first responders (which really happened - again, try to defend that one, I dare you).

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Discussions on a French bill proposing to ban burkas

Lauren Konopka posted this link.
Tuesday at 3:21pm

Rich Cleland: I don't know how they can act like this and still consider themselves on the side of liberty.
Tuesday at 6:38pm

Lauren Konopka: I agree...
Tuesday at 7:49pm

Chris Clague: probably not quite sober enough to provide a properly lucid response here, but are you saying the veil is a good thing?
23 hours ago

Lauren Konopka: I'm conflicted about veiling, especially from a non-Muslim western woman's perspective. It's certainly not something I'd want to wear, and my first reaction is to find it oppressive and when I see a woman covered in that manner, I have to admit I feel uncomfortable. But I also think it's pretty extreme to ban facial veils in public in this manner. Seems like a violation of civil liberties, and yet another move to further erode relations between Muslims and non-Muslims. What's your take on it? It's a tough one...
23 hours ago

Rich Cleland: I'm inclined to agree with the sentiment that the veils are a device of the patriarchal control infused into the religious doctrine of Islam for a number of reasons, including social control...something endemic in most Western religions from that era.

That said, my concept of liberty includes the freedom to practice your devotions to your god as you see fit (short of extremes like human sacrifice, etc...which, whatever that threshold is, is a long way away from covering your face). If a government says you can't go to church on Sunday or that you must work during Yom Kippur, I don't think that government is invested much in the spirit of liberty.

I agree with Lauren that this bill likely will greatly strain relations between the French and Muslims. Add it to the rules already in place forbidding head covers for school children in France (of course, insuring that Muslim kids stay out of secular schools and go to madrases instead, oops) and the ban on building minarets in Switzerland. It's part of the reactionary response to the changing demographic landscape of Europe (which is necessary because "traditional" Europeans stopped having enough babies to support their economic system).

In France, the cultural problems arise also from two places not directly related to Islam, 1) is a latent suspicion of all religion that is residue of the machinations of the Catholic in France in conjunction with the Monarchy and 2) the desire for comforting homogeneity runs deep. Someone once described to me the French idea of "Liberte" is not the same as the general American sense of the word in that (and i confess i don't really understand how this works, but...) the French take it to mean something like "the freedom to be French."

anyway, that's my $.02.
21 hours ago

Chris Clague: Being something of a wooly liberal (or a dangerous radical in Tea-Party parlance), I'm of the live and let live point of view. I have no objection to people practicing their religion, but I do object when they impose it on others. I don't like the veil from a oppression/control angle, but my beef is also that when worn in Western society it ignores/is insensitive to our customs.

When somebody wears a mask (or a hoodie or whatever) it is perceived (rightly or wrongly) that they either have something to hide or are being in some way deceitful. We place an awful lot of value when communicating on facial recognition/response which is impossible. I guess you could try using skype but where the other party can see you, but you can't see them! It feels like you are at an immediate disadvantage.

I don't know how widely reported it was in the states, but we had a wanted criminal escape the country here as he wore his wife's Burka through passport control and this was allowed, which is patently ridiculous.

The French have made a great effort to separate state from religion (for example, you can't get married in a church!), and I guess this is a logical extension of that process. I think it's a positive thing. Sorry I couldn't be more eloquent in my argument though!
5 hours ago

Rich Cleland: Chris, I entirely agree that it is an unacceptable lapse to allow people through security without making a visual reference check between the identification and individual. It seems impossible to believe that there were not some measures that could be put in place to work with the Islamic practice in airports. But that seems more a rebuke of inept airport security officials rather than an injunction against religious adherences.

As to the competitive advantage to be gained from wearing a burka around people who remain exposed, I'm not sure it is a net advantage in the end. In any event, I try not to view my day-to-day interactions with people in terms of personal advantage or disadvantage because of the negative influence I found that line of thinking has on my well-being. I found it to be a psychological relief to discover that the vast majority of people i will come across in my lifetime do not wish me ill or even feel we are engaged in some sort of competition.

In addition, I'm not afraid for my customs. They are strong, and even so, I look forward to how they evolve and grow from interaction with others.

A free society is not judged by how well it tolerates its people going with the flow, rather it is judged by how it acts when they start to rub. The gain we receive from living in a free society is the opportunity it affords to learn about ourselves and others when our ways are put into contact.

Aside from liberation from fear and opportunity for personal growth, there is the inevitable downside to cultural apartheids. When governments through their citizens systematically disenfranchise a population from their opportunity of equal participation in the public sphere, it can't later be chagrined when those people reject its authority.

Of course people reject tyranny. When there are enough of them, they do something about it, until then, they make plans to do something about it. Ultimately, the only way to receive respect is to give it bravely.

I would further add that walking down the street is hardly a state affair. Denuding this activity of personal religious expression is hardly a matter of a separation for church and state.

The effect of the French bill if it passes will be to engender false security and puff up the ridiculous cultural imperialist mentality through government sanction while stoking the feelings of alienation and fulfilling the dark prophesies of radical extremists who are empowered through government censure.

In the end, great, the offense is removed from the streets! Instead, those women in the burkas sit at home, increasing their isolation with even less opportunity experience our customs and possibly be changed by them too.

I think this is the long view. I think that this is how a free society is supposed to function. I think the answer to ending terrorism is to just stop terrorizing first and then see what happens. And frankly, i'm tired of people, wooly or otherwise, not seeing it my way! :)

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

"Art is the signature of a civilization"

Kate Raudenbush "Art is the signature of a civilization." --Beverly Sills
February 10 at 11:02am · Comment · Like
MrSpaceman LaVigne, Michelle LaVigne and 5 others like this.

Rich Cleland Spelled in the letters of its culture.
February 10 at 11:30am ·

Kate Raudenbush ...or song, or dance, or painting, or sculpture, or theatre, or architecture,
February 10 at 11:35am

Rich Cleland all culture.
February 10 at 11:36am ·

Zoƫ Knight Culture is an art form.
February 10 at 12:18pm

Rich Cleland I think culture is the medium out of which art is comprised. Which is not to suggest that art is limited to composition from a single culture. An artist draws from a tool set of cultural symbols (including cultural attitudes and memes) and applies her technique (or technical skills or techne) to create a new expression.

The aesthetic quality of the resultant artifact may be appreciated for skill in construction, cultural aptness, or both. In this case, I'm not using "aesthetic" to mean a sense of what has beauty, rather to say what has resonance.

This resonance is the manifestation of the artifact's translation into the cultural library of the viewer. For example, a work of art may provoke unequal resonance among an audience. I think, this disparity arises out of the capacities and dispositions of those individual libraries. Some people get Kabuki, others love Noise Pop. One person is disgusted as the sacred is made profane; which may be what another person appreciates most about it.

However, regardless of whether or not its intent is misconstrued, all art is ultimately communication (though, as is evident here, not all communication is ultimately artful:). An artist assembles a message by choosing words, colors or harmonic registers, etc. which necessarily reside (or resonate) in her own cultural library.

It is possible that, through the synthesis of these aspects, some artifacts are so profound that they open the way to infectious, new cultural avenues with definitions of their own, but even the most iconoclastic owes something to the cultural antecedents it seeks to flout.

Therefore, I may agree that culture is an art form, but, in that case, I would then be reluctant to agree that there were any other forms.
February 10 at 2:21pm ·

Rich Cleland By way of explicating my position further, let me say that it is my personal belief that the basic, underlying message most artists seek to convey through their work is, "I'm not alone in this, am I?"
February 10 at 2:25pm ·

Orion Keyser art is so many things, and then there's craft, these things deceptively entertain one another.
February 10 at 3:06pm

Kate Raudenbush Rich, you are quite the elucidator today!
February 10 at 9:14pm

Deborah-Dr Deb- Windham art makes you happy
February 10 at 9:41pm

Rich Cleland I blame it on this Neal Stephenson book i'm reading. He has a tendency to activate my head and get me chatty.

I agree with you Dr. Deb, and sometimes it makes me sad, which makes me happy, too.
February 10 at 9:49pm

Cultural Vibrancy

Chalk one up for the global culture collision. The content is very nearly unbearable, but it indicates something about the vibrancy of this particular cultural meme that its adherents not only tolerate, but seek out and venerate new variations on a theme based on the intrinsic qualities of the content rather than artificial structures such as the nationality, race, geography or cultural purity of its producer.

Identities are like languages, the ones with the best built-in structures promoting adaptation and inclusion of the "foreign" are going to win.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/02/12/beckii-cruel-14-year-old_n_458566.html

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Don't Ask, Don't Kick Them Out

Rich Cleland And here's the real problem right here: [McCain says,] "...We have the best trained, best equipped, and most professional force in the history of our country, and the men and women in uniform are performing heroically in two wars. At a time when our Armed Forces are fighting and sacrificing on the battlefield, now is not the time to abandon the policy."


This statement exposes to two-pronged disconnect between conservative rhetoric and reality:


1) Unless he's just employing baseless platitudes (likely), the "most professional force in history" should be able to do what the (by logical extension of McCain's argument) less professional army did fifty years ago integrating the services during a time of war (sorry, Korean Police Action).


2) (a.k.a., the most morally disgusting part of the conservative argument) Some of the heroic men and women that John McCain so eagerly annexes into his argument are sacrificing in two wars while simultaneously fighting to hide themselves in plain sight and fearing that a discovery in their personal lives might end their professional career.


They're already 'over there.' They're fighting for you. Fight for them.

http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2010/02/gays_military_1

Benjamin Doyle Dont ask dont tell works!
February 5 at 7:56am ·

Rich Cleland For whom? At what cost?
February 5 at 9:01am ·

Kathryn Palmer Because this change in policy would change military operations how? Memo to troops: You can come out of the closet. Oh, shit, they've all gone clubbing--who will fight the war???
February 5 at 9:40am ·

Rich Cleland Well, i'm not saying it would be that easy. I'm not saying it would be easy at all. In fact, i think it will be very hard, but hard is not a valid excuse to not do something that should be done.

I'm also not saying every gay or lesbian needs to be out. I'm saying that, being a discovered homosexual should not be used to drum you out of the service. We lose good personnel that way and maintaining DADT is a powerful institutionalized statement that says, you homosexuals are not full citizens (despite your service to your country) and we will punish you because you are a minority and we can get away with it.
February 5 at 9:51am ·

Kathryn Palmer We agree, Rich. I was just mocking the assumption that it would hurt current military operations.
February 5 at 9:55am ·

Benjamin Doyle Since I have spent all of my adult life in the US Army I can only give my opinion, and my experience. I have served with gay and lesbian soldiers, and have seen both extremes of how a person can carry themselves. I have had the honor of serving with one of the best medic in the army in two comabt tours having recieved a bronze star and purple heart who happens to be gay. He will be the first one one to tell you that Dont ASK Dont tell works for now. He keeps his personal life personal The can of worms this would open is very large. and in my opinion this is not the time.
February 5 at 10:41am ·

Rich Cleland I understand. I was also pointing out that it wont be as easy as some proponents of repeal say it is either. Fortunately we have a good logistical and moral model to follow in the integration of the forces in the 50s. Which, by the way, seems to have turned out ok.
February 5 at 10:53am ·

Rich Cleland In any event, McCain et al. dont get to claim all the heroes in arguing in favor of repressing the civil rights of the minority because some of those heroes are in that minority.

(Ben, I don't know the specifics of your argument for continuing dadt so I'm not saying that this is your opinion on the matter.) I find it extremely typical of people in the conservative movement to despise government invasion into personal lives except when it can be used to enforce their particular moral code.
February 5 at 10:53am ·

Rich Cleland (fb is being weird, sorry for the choppy post).

Ben, I definitely acknowledge your close perspective on this situation. I totally believe that there are gay and lesbian soldiers, sailors, and marines who would not push to repeal DADT. Just like there are heterosexuals in the force too who support repeal.

If not now then when? I ask because it's been 15 years since we enacted this temporary fix and "now's not the time" has been the mantra in the past to justify continued suppression of civil rights. I'm not saying that you are using it this way, i'm mentioning it to point out how minorities process that phrase.
February 5 at 11:12am ·

Rich Cleland I think it will be hard to change minds and, again, i'm not suggesting that everyone be "out." But a policy that boots arabic linguists from the service because of they happen to be gay doesn't seem like a good idea right now either. Why isn't it not the right time to be depleting our force of trained arabic linguists or highly-qualified, decorated medics?
February 5 at 11:12am ·

Rich Cleland I also believe that people will not overcome their prejudgments about minorities if the institutions of government reinforce them. When the government says that a group of people is subhuman deserving of diminished rights, the larger citizenry is inclined to agree. So I guess what i'm saying is that this needs to happen for our society to develop. If that means we have to ask one more hard thing from the men and women serving in the military, then that's just one of the many hard things we ask of them (you), but it's no different than asking them to engage in the experiment of integration so that our society could begin to heal our racial divide.
February 5 at 11:12am ·

Rich Cleland case in point.

http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2010/02/09/Dan_Choi_Back_in_Active_Duty/
11 minutes ago ·

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Modern Malaise

Abhiyan Humane truly sad..

Nadia Smith Is it really sad? "Sad" in a sentimental sense, perhaps, but not in an evolutionary sense, no?
7 hours ago

Nadia Smith Not everything is worth preserving. I think it is OK if some things die out or get lost.
7 hours ago

Abhiyan Humane yes, but sometimes it is our indifference
7 hours ago

Nadia Smith Well, our indifference is mostly a result of information overload. It's not possible to know and care about everything. Modern life is so overwhelming sometimes . Indifference is perfectly justified, in my opinion.
7 hours ago

Rich Cleland I think it's important to draw a distinction between a loss of the information and the loss of experiential connection. The language of Bo is gone. Who cares. If there was only one person left who spoke it, it was already dead from a practical sense anyway.

The lamentable part is the loss of the last person who had a real connection with all the people who came before her and learned that language. It is the end of something that perpetuated for centuries. It might justifiably deserve a single link and expression on facebook among the thousands of doppleganger posts and (urbane)dictionary.com ego tripping.

In my opinion, if I felt jaded into indifference by the information overload of modern life, I might try to reset my priorities to skip the information altogether and appreciate the richness of the connections. Stuff like this isn't the poison, it's the antidote.
6 hours ago ·

Nadia Smith RIch, that's a nice way to put it. I agree with you. My point is just that the link Abhiyan posted is not necessarily sad. I can note it, and I can appreciate the connection and significance of the loss of a language/culture, but I can do all that without having to feel an emotion. In that sense I used the word "indifference". It is simply not possible to *feel* for everything, and short of cheapening the human experience, it it of utmost importance to be able to prioritize.
5 hours ago

Abhiyan Humane I agree with Rich, that is exactly what i meat by "sad", loss of history (oral and ritual), her social artifacts (ex; cooking), etc...
5 hours ago

Abhiyan Humane what we need is better information filtering systems....
5 hours ago

Abhiyan Humane rather efficient and are sensitive...
5 hours ago

Porismita Borah Absolutely agree with Rich. Thanks Abhiyan for sharing.. Prof. Abbi does some great work and is in JNU. I remember meeting her in Delhi.
5 hours ago

Rich Cleland Well, presumably setting aside the fact that Abhiyan may dispense his emotional capital where he wishes on his own page and/or the use of "sad" as a shorthand, categorical marker connoting a type of undesirable occurrence, I think I still might respectfully disagree.

I understand your point. There is a lot of information out there and attaching emotional significance to everything may not be healthy, proper, or even possible. Though, I'm not suggesting that we should rend our clothing or stab out our eyes.

But I think your response may support my statement about the malaise of modernity. You tell me you've intellectually processed the information with cross-references to the connections and significance, filed under language/culture.

Sure you *can* file it away without the emotional context of the event, but then it just becomes one more factoid under a mountain of factoids. Information overload is what happens when you save facts simply from habit or some disconnected rational sense that you are supposed to note things like this.

The emotional context is the reason to save the information in the first place. When you add this layer to fact collecting, it's no longer a burden to maintain. It establishes your place in relation to the data and enriches your own context. And information outside of your emotional connection can be eschewed to reference libraries and google searches.

Modernity doesn't need to be a burden. One beautiful thing doesn't need to be diminished by 999 other beautiful things.
4 hours ago ·

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Rat Patrol in the Buick Electra

Marra B. Gad For one night...and one night only, I will be in Palo Alto on Monday, 1 February! My meeting schedule won't allow for me to get to SF, but I would love it if you and Michelle will come to PA for dinner :) XO!
Yesterday at 7:52am · Comment · Like · See Wall-to-Wall

Rich Cleland sounds like a plan. Michelle doesn't get off work on mondays until 5 so it would have to be around 8 or something for dinner. work?
Yesterday at 9:30am ·

Marra B. Gad That is actually perfect, as I have a 5:30 meeting. SO excited!!
Yesterday at 9:40am ·

Rich Cleland are you here yet? are you here yet? how 'bout now? how 'bout now?
about an hour ago ·

Marra B. Gad If I have to pull the plane over, you're going to be in big trouble young man...
about an hour ago ·

Rich Cleland hehe. I think the last time my dad said that to me, he was driving down highway 169 in our lime green tank of a buick electra from '75 or something. The car was deathly quiet and the road was pitch black and empty. I was in the back leaning over the front bench seat, draping my arms over, filling the gap between my parents.

But really i was streaming across the deserts of North Africa manning the machine gun mount of our jeep from Rat Patrol. Out of nowhere, Jerry came streaking across the dune ahead of us. It was more reflex than intent. I sighted and squeezed the trigger hard in my outstretched hands. My gun responded with a steady roar as I emptied the belt. tckthckt tchcthtk chtkchtkchkchkchtktchchthchthththchthc flowed as my teeth-smacked tongue unleashed its practiced furry into the night, and my dad's sleepy ear.

Startled but uninjured, my father engaged the evasive maneuvers and that lumbering tub swayed away from and then back to our empty lane in the empty night. "What the hell is wrong with you, boy?" he said as I snapped back to physical reality. "Don't make me have to come back there for you!"

I tried to explain about the patrol, my training, and the Jerries, but he told me to just sit back and start counting mile markers. Then after four or five, he added, "Silently, damn it!"

Marra B. Gad Oh my darling....your genius and creativity have long been under- appreciated. Love from Mile Marker 18.....

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Rich Cleland is political malaise.

Rich Cleland is political malaise.
7 hours ago via Facebook for iPhone · Comment · Like

Kathryn Palmer: Lieberman inspired? Nice of him to change his position now when it's been the opposite since the 2000 election up until just three months ago, don't you think? He's like an evil Aaron Sorkin character.
7 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: Partially, but he's a duche so my perpetual low expectations pretty much protect me from him. I think the malaise has settled in as I've realized that Obama is never going to try and convince people that the health care debate is about our obligations to each other not about what we can get for ourselves.

What good is rhetoric if you don't try to use it to persuade people who don't already believe.
6 hours ago · Delete

Kathryn Palmer: Some people cannot be persuaded because they cannot listen to reason. Obama attempts to persuade through logic; the opposition persuades through irrational emotional appeals to breed fear, hysteria, and hate. There's a large part of the populace that falls prey to the latter and cannot be convinced by the former, unfortunately. Obama's difficulty raises the question as to whether it is ethical to employ manipulative rhetoric for an honorable end or to endanger attaining that goal by attempting to use rhetoric honorably.
6 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: I think you are correct that Obama is an intellectual; therefore, logic is persuasive to him. I disagree, however, that he can not make be emotionally appealing. That was a major difference between his victory and Kerry's defeat.

Additionally, i think there is an emotional argument to be made without resorting to sophistry. Republicans talk about Americans' rights. Obama should have made the case for Americans' responsibilities, in particular, to each other. We are our brother's keeper in that when he fails, it spreads to us. That was Kennedy's message to America in the 60s.

I think this "honor" shield is BS. He has not engaged even intellectually on this topic. He learned the wrong lesson from Clinton's failed health care initiative. Rahm told him it was, the president should not get mired in a fight on health care. The real message was, you can have your ass handed to you on health care and still do a ton of stuff, including get elected for a second term.
5 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: The president should have been out front on the moral necessity of real health insurance reform. I thought he was going there with this speech to the joint session (which was a great boost) but he let that harvest whither on the vine.

He didn't want to take ownership of health care because he didn't want to be associated with its potential failure. The irony is that, of course, it will be seen as his failure regardless. what's more, it will also be his failure when the dems get slaughtered in 2010 because the base isn't going to show up.

It's a failure of leadership.
5 hours ago · Delete

Stacy VanDeveer: if there was an 'agree' tab I'd click that...
4 hours ago · Delete

Kathryn Palmer: You're harder on Obama than I am, and I think that's good. I probably could be more critical in some circumstances. But we have to remain supportive to an extent, too (though not blindly so). He's taking fire from all sides and when the left joins in it just emboldens and validates the illogical clams made by the right.

As for rhetoric, it IS frustrating that he's not amping it up (defining rhetoric a positive persuasive force and not "mere"). The emotional appeals he made during the election were made to rally a base beaten down by the Bush years. To bring over wavering conservatives, he wisely lowered the emotion and focused on evidence of McCain's "more of the same" connection to Bush. Different methods for different audiences for different purposes in different contexts.

I don't get his strategy right now, but I suppose it is largely informed by the rules of the political game he has to play by necessity if anything is to get done. We need to keep him honest, yes, but when it comes to political posturing, blame the game, not the player--provided that player is intelligent and has our best interests in mind. And how many viable alternatives do we have that fit that bill *other* than Obama?

Good debate.
4 hours ago · Delete

Michelle LaVigne: I was going to chime in, but you all seem to have done a pretty good job. I only wanted to add that Obama is too careful. He made a great health care speech in September, but didn't follow it up with any meaningful leadership.
4 hours ago · Delete

Hans WegmuellerNoticed Lieberman came up - a co-worker of mine recently blogged some thoughts about him: http://www.livinglakecountry.com/blogs/communityblogs/lake_country_liberal.html
3 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: Things like the "rules of the game" and "conventional wisdom" are the problem. Sacrificing principles to "get something done" is the cover that perpetuates the corrupt system.

If you want to break the mafia's hold on a community, you can start by convincing everyone to stop paying for "protection." This might weaken the mafia, but it will definitely gets some heads cracked among the shopkeepers. So they don't buck the system and the mafia takes their share.

It's the problem of Havel's green grocer and the success of King's freedom walkers. If you really want to change something fundamental, you have to be willing to fail spectacularly and uncompromisingly on principle...and then do it again...and again if necessary.

It is a much longer, harder road, but in the end, the goal isn't to get something called reform passed, the goal should be to convince citizens that they need to contemplate something larger than themselves because that's the only quality that engenders success for a whole society.

Every day for a president who wants to "fix" washington, should be an opportunity to make that statement, no matter what the issue. Accomplish that to the extent that others with their agendas have created the American individualist, and the rest will follow naturally.
3 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: i agree, good debate.
3 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: (or deliberation)
3 hours ago · Delete

Kathryn Palmer: The idealist in me totally agrees with everything you said. The realist in me, however, admits that some things are important and some things are immediate and prioritizing sometimes involves undesirable decisions to be made.

All this fixing the system at large that needs to happen is slow, painful, and incremental--as all meaningful change is. Problem is, we have too many immediate problems under the current system to practically begin the important task of reforming it. If we're putting our house in order, it's rather pointless unless we put out the fires first.

Once the economy, foreign policy, and health care brouhahas even out a bit, I'll adopt your stance more strongly. But not now.

I must go do my work now. This debate is important, but writing my dissertation is a more immediate task. ;)
2 hours ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: The pesky thing about principles is that they are at their most important when they are at their least convenient.

For the record, I don't believe that everything in politics involves a principle that needs to either be held or compromised. And their needs to be room for give and take when determining what the actual civil policies are going to be. And also, it is a serious challenge to figure out how to walk that line.

However, the realists are telling me that they know the car has a flat, but we should drive it just a little bit further and hope there's someplace open down the line where we can fix it. Of course, if we do find this unknown place where that can happen, we'll also need to pony up for a rim by then.

The mechanism of government in this country has more than just a flat tire, it has major systemic failures. Whatever we make with it will only compound our problems further because the ends are preexistent in the means. For example, we tried to use it to fix health care and we ended up giving away billions to insurance companies.

You tell me that we have too much important stuff to stop now? I say the stuff we have to do is too important not to stop now and fix the machine before we move forward.
2 hours ago · Delete

Michelle LaVigne: revolution anyone?
54 minutes ago · Delete

Rich Cleland: nah, I'm malaise.
2 seconds ago · Delete

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

The Facebooking Policeman

Here's is a conversation between myself and my cousin that happened on facebook.

Cameron C. Cleland is tired and wishing I was out of uniform enjoying the beautiful weather.

Holly Yardley Cleland at 8:18pm May 16
Me too!! Sorry honey, I love you and thank you for all the work you do! At the same time we miss you! :)

Rich Cleland at 11:04pm May 16
wait. are you facebooking at work?

Holly Yardley Cleland at 5:11am May 17
Yea he has one of those fancy new fang-dangled Iphones, so he can facebook all day!

Cameron C. Cleland at 4:13pm May 18
Rich I only do it during my authorized breaks... I think!

Rich Cleland at 4:28pm May 18
Wait. I'm confused about what you say you're doing on your authorized breaks. Is that when you facebook? or think?
:P

Holly Yardley Cleland at 5:18am May 19
Thats awesome!