Tagged: shift in consciousness

watch this insightful interview with Jim Douglass on the trial surrounding the U.S. gov’t’s role in the assassination of Dr. MLK: “When we have a terrorist threat out there, don’t think Saddam Hussein. Don’t think North Korea. Don’t think Algeria. Think CIA – number one and then go down from there. Certainly there are other terrorist threats besides the government of the United States, but the primary terrorist group in the world today is the same government that assassinated Martin Luther King, Malcolm X and John and Robert Kennedy.”

“The plainest truth is that, as a country, we have let conditions of life in America deteriorate across a broad front and are headed straight to a place we would not want for our children and grandchildren.”

The plainest truth is that, as a country, we have let conditions of life in America deteriorate across a broad front and are headed straight to a place we would not want for our children and grandchildren. There is another future, an enormously attractive one, that is still within our power to build, but our country to chart a course to this better place.

That task begins with knowing where we are today. So let’s look at the present, and at a group of advanced democracies, specifically the major countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) — twenty in all, including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the Nordics, Japan, Canada, and others. They can be thought of as our peer countries. What we see when we look at these countries is that compared with them, the United States now ranks at or very near the bottom in a host of important areas. America now has:

  • the highest poverty rate, both generally and for children;
  • the greatest inequality of incomes;
  • the lowest government spending as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) on social programs for the disadvantaged;
  • the lowest score on the United Nations’ index of “material well-being of children”;
  • the worst score on the UN’s gender inequality index;
  • the lowest social mobility;
  • the highest public and private expenditure on health care as a percentage of the GDP, and yet the highest infant mortality rate, prevalence of mental health problems, obesity rate, percentage of people going without health care due to cost concerns, and consumption of antidepressants per capita, along with the shortest life expectancy at birth;
  • the third lowest scores for student performance in math and middling scores in science and reading;
  • the second highest high school dropout rate;
  • the highest homicide rate;
  • the largest prison population, both absolutely and per capita; –
  • the highest water consumption per capita and the second highest carbon dioxide emissions per capita;
  • the lowest score on the Yale-World Economic Forum’s Environmental Performance Index, and the second-largest Ecological Footprint per capita;
  • the highest rate of failing to ratify international agreements;
  • the third-lowest spending on international development and humanitarian assistance as a percentage of GDP; and
  • the largest international arms sales.

International comparisons are only one way to examine what’s gone wrong. As I will discuss in Part I, these comparisons miss many of our most worrying challenges.

It is not for lack of knowledge, technology, or thoughtful policy proposals that we face this overwhelming, colliding collection of problems. One can easily identify a set of intelligent policy responses to almost all of these challenges. Groups advocating them pound constantly on Washington’s doors. Extraordinary technological opportunities remain untapped. Nor did these deplorable consequences simply happen as the result of larger economic and geopolitical forces over which we have no control.

When big problems emerge across the entire spectrum of national life, it cannot be for small reasons. We have encompassing problems because of fundamental flaws in our economic and political system. The many problems listed here and others discussed in Part I are the product of that system, compounded by conscious political decisions made over several decades by both Democrats and Republicans who have had priorities other than strengthening the well-being of American society and our environment. Many countries, obviously, took a different path, one that was open to us as well.

Source: James Gustave Speth. America the Possible: Manifesto For A New Economy, pg. 1-3. 2012.

we are witnessing the self-destruction of Amerikkka. is corruption within our government the cause?

In thinking about the prevention of corruption in their new nation, the Framers considered ancient as well as modern histories of failure. As with eighteenth-century British intellectuals, the Framers’ political thought and discussions were infused by the recently published (in 1776) The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Thus, references to the Roman and Greek corruption are scattered throughout the convention and ratification debates. “Can we copy from Greece and Rome?” Charles Pinckney asked. The Framers constantly compared the British government to the end of Rome–where a well-designed government was eventually internally corrupted and, therefore, self-destructed.

Look at what’s happening in Greece and Spain! And we (which includes our banking institutions, the auto industry, etc.) are not “too big to fail.” Printing imaginary money won’t fix our problems. Lying to ourselves won’t either. Neither President is going to “create jobs” or improve our economy long-term because the system is broken. Why? Because it’s inherently corrupt. I could insert the history of how the Christian Europeans “discovered” this land (and other countries around the world that were already inhabited), but I don’t have the time.  As the saying goes, what goes around, comes around and finally, in 2012, we are about to witness the fall of both the European and American empire. It was definitely preventable — for a lot of our problems have always been malleable. However, the biggest threat to good government has always been corruption and those in power (majority White) typically display this behavior. It’s imperative that we develop a new system.

Check out Zeitgeist: Moving Forward. It demonstrates that a better world and society is truly obtainable, and its closer to becoming actualized than we might think. Expand your mind.

Source: Zephyr Teachout, The Anti-Corruption Principle, 94 Cornell L Review 341, pg. 350 (2009).