Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Security?

It is truly amusing, in a black humor kind of way, to see the investment companies all over my TV talking about the need for a 'secure retirement'.

Funny, I thought that's what we had in our country until they came along and persuaded legislators and business leaders to destroy it in favor of their plans.

And for all of those who say we don't need unions anymore, that they accomplished their goals, so now we can move on, this is a good example of why that's wrong.

Yes, unions did improve the conditions for working people - and those who bad mouth them should remember that - but the battle is NEVER over.

Just like the battle for civil rights or for the environment. When one side wins, the other side doesn't just give up and go away. They are still their fighting for their goals just as strongly.

Between complacency and the belief in the ugly propaganda and yes, some misdeeds by some people in some unions, the other side has managed to start chipping away at the gains unions fought so hard for and some people died for not very long ago.

What will it take to change the attitude back? I don't know.

People are starting to wake up to how lopsided things have gotten in this country in the last few decades, but if the vote in Tennessee is any indicator, they are still not making the connection between unions and a solution.

That simply must be done, because the only way the common people are going to be able to take on the big boys is by banding together. That is uniting, that is unionizing.

Any day now, people.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Beyond Bridgegate

Now that Gov. Christie is back to his job at the Republican Governors Group, he is REALLY giving us reasons not to vote for him.
So he says Americans want income opportunity, not income equality and tries to make you think fairness is mediocrity.
But what he doesn't tell you - none of them do - is that the same people who are working against equality are working against opportunity, including him.
That opportunity song and dance is something they have been pulling, pretty successfully, for decades. They get away with it because people want to believe it. They want to believe that those who 'made it' are for everyone making it. Or at least they believe that those at the top make the rules to favor those at the top and when you make it, you can take advantage of those rules too.
What people don't figure on is that those at the top don't want you to make it, and in fact are working hard to make sure you don't.
Governor Christie talks about opportunity, but he doesn't tell you how hard he works against education funding. Where is the opportunity in that?
I know it can be hard to face, but the fact is, most of the rich don't want anyone else to join them. Hell, if they could, they would kick most of their fellows out too. See the fewer of them there are, the fewer they have to share their obscene wealth with. That is their ultimate goal.
Further, Christie equates greatness with wealth. Not achievement, not peace, not happiness, but wealth. Like others of his ideology, to him, the rich are superior beings. If you are not wealthy, you don't measure up. If wealth is not your goal, you are probably mentally ill, and certainly un-American. Listen to him, that is how he defines America - the place where everyone strives for his version of greatness. The place where the dollar rules supreme.
This is a perversion of what America means - and if they can't get that right, how can we trust them with anything else?
How can we trust them in office?

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Bad topology

'Climbing the corporate ladder' is a common phrase that is totally wrong.
There is no ladder, there is a pyramid.
I am not sure if the ladder image was ever consciously devised, but it is definitely deceptive.
It gives us more hope than is warranted that workers can move up.
The true shape of organizations, that of a pyramid, shows us the hard truth.
Each 'rung' is smaller than the lower one, meaning fewer and fewer are able to reach it.
Conservatives talk about people getting better jobs when they are opposing raising the minimum wage without admitting that many will not be able to do that due to the organizational structure.
They also keep hidden their underlying belief that those who don't move up deserve to live a lesser life. They so admire those at the top that they deeply believe that they are superior beings, deserving of the lavish lives they squeeze out of our lopsided economy.
I see them as more just different, with different strengths and weaknesses, than superior, but even if I were to grant them such exalted status, I would still believe that ALL workers deserve a decent, comfortable life.
After all, no matter how skilled they may be, none of these corporate bigwigs could run the company alone. We MUST keep pushing the belief that workers are valuable and deserve recognition commensurate with that value.
We can start by acknowledging the true facts about institutional shapes.

odds and ends

The odd is the reaction to a beautiful ad by Coke. I would go into that, but I think Colbert covered it pretty well, so I will refer you to his site.
The end is PSH.
This was more than a shock. This was the first time in many years that a death of someone I didn't know felt as unreal as that of a relative.
At first I was angry at him. How could he not respect his amazing gift more? How could he take this gift away from all of us?
Then I learned about the heroin mixture that is killing many people in the northeast. As if this drug wasn't deadly enough, someone is mixing it with something that makes it worse. So we don't know how many amazing people we have lost.
Next I was surprised to learn how much I didn't know about him. The man was an actor, not a celebrity. Celebrities get their every move publicized, but with actors, we really only know what we see on the stage. I knew nothing about his struggles over the years, and we still don't know what drew him back into this horrible habit.
Now I just feel sad and lost. I am 15 years older than he was. He should have outlived me. I should never have had to see this day.
I see I am still confusing brilliance with good sense and emotional control.
I was foolish and I feel robbed.