Monday, May 30, 2011

The NRCC 2011 Survey Project

Warning! Political Rant Below. Enter at your own risk.

Dawn just received a survey from the National Republican Congressional Committee, which of course is a fund raising plea in reality. No surprise there, as that's a common practice for everyone from neo-cons to tree huggers. My problem wasn't that this was a purported survey, it's that the survey is so incredibly biased and inaccurate. No illusion of information gathering, it's all about repeating the fear-and-anger based dogma at every turn.

The Pubs have taken a page from Huxley's vision of control through media, but have replaced the banal pap that produced happy little Betas with a firestorm of negative rhetoric aimed at stirring up the masses and controlling the fear-infused plebes to their own ends. Let's call them BULBs, Bugabooed Unhappy Little Betas. The potential satirical tangents are staggering, running from planting bulbs to dim bulbs and everything in between. This whole topic warrants its own entry, so enough said at this point.

But back to the survey. So what kind of manure do you use to feed your BULBs? Well, apparently the kind that keeps them bugabooed and unhappy. To wit:

Question #1: Do you believe House Republicans must cut spending as the best way to eliminate the huge Obama-Pelosi deficits? - Well, yes we do need to cut spending (like interest payments on our National Debt, unnecessary wars, no-bid contracts to Halliburton and more), but labeling these as Obama-Pelosi deficits is like blaming the holocaust on Karl Donitz (Hitler's successor as named in his Last Will and Testament).

George Bush got us into two wars (Iraq and Afghanistan) that were supposed to be low cost, or better yet, pay for themselves. Dick Cheney stated on Meet the Press one week before the Iraq War began that both wars, including recovery, should cost about $100M. The cost to date is $704 billion and the Congressional Budget Office estimates that by 2017 (by which time the wars are done and the tab been paid), the cost (including the financing cost for fighting the wars and paying with debt - money we didn't have) will be $2.4T ($1.9T in Iraq and $0.5T in Afghanistan). A slight difference of 2,399,900% (thank goodness he was our VP and not our accountant, AND that he's a fiscal conservative).

And Bush's war games cost America far more than that - its reputation tarnished (invading another country against the UN position based on trumped-up and known false intelligence is only the tip of the iceberg) was one thing, but the blatant disregard for any domestic issue whatsoever ("Heck of a job, Brownie!), especially the economy. The ensuing meltdown of the financial system required massive bailouts of....wait....wait.....Poor people who lost their homes...no.....Um, local businesses closed due to economic impact.....no....Oh yeah, the same privateers that almost sank the ship in the first place. Although it is repeatedly referred to by political savant Michelle Bachmann as the Obama bailout, the simplest question to a high school senior (or actually reading a book) would reveal to Michelle that the financial bailout was passed before Obama took office. Note from George to Obama: "Sorry about the flaming financial turd I left on your doorstep. Good Luck!"

Question #2: Do you agree with House Republicans who say the last thing we should do in this economy is raise taxes? - Well, yes I do actually. But just a bit of a realignment in our current system. The current top rate is 35%, less than 1/2 of the rate in the '80s. Brackets are also based on antiquated levels given inflation as well. So increase the ceiling for the current highest level to $500K married-filing-jointly (most of us should be able to scrape by on that), and introduce a 45% rate for those over $500K m-f-j. And limit tax breaks for the highest category as well. The economy is driven by the middle and upper-middle class, not the very rich. And tie the increased revenue to debt reduction. Only allow $1 of additional spending from the revenue increase for every $2.50 used to retire U.S. debt. That will work toward relieving the crushing financial burden on future generations and keep us from becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of China.

Question #3: To create more private sector jobs, are you in favor of cutting tax rates on business earnings in the U.S. which are now the highest in the world? - Well, yes I do. And our corporate income tax rates are highest in the world:


But again, I think redistribution is in order. Reduce income tax rates for small to medium businesses by a significant amount and larger businesses by a lesser amount. But increase the rate for companies who are outsourcing jobs outside of the U.S. rather than subsidize them at the taxpayers expense.

Question #4: Do you believe the government has gone too far in supporting or bailing out certain companies, and that we should get back to free enterprise by allowing everyone to compete equally, knowing that some companies will fail? - Again, I agree in principle, but the devil is in the details. The "free enterprise" spoken of has never really been free. Government policy (taxes, import fees, subsidies, et. al.) has always played a role in maintaining the balance of international trade, discouraging monopolies that stifle competition, incubating emerging industries until they can stand alone, and supporting industries critical to the nation's economic health. The supporting of mature industries, however, has become an expectation in many industries. Agricultural price supports (for sugar, peanuts, cotton, dairy) are so engrained that they're viewed as birthright, and they seem sane compared to the "pay to not grow programs". Even worse is the subsidies to essential industries that are economically robust. The U.S. government gave $2B to the oil industry in subsidies at the same time they had record 1st quarter profits of $35B. Unfortunately, I don't think this is the support the Pubs are looking to cut, however, as they received 75% of the political donations made by the oil industry.

Question #5: Republicans in the House of Representatives passed a bill to repeal the "ObamaCare" government-run health care law, but the bill has stalled in the Senate. Do you support repealing the unconstitutional "ObamaCare" law? - No I don't. I think it's far from perfect. But it is not unconstitutional (last time I saw my civics book, that kind of thing was decided by the courts, not the political spinmeisters). And it is at least something. The amount of money spent by the medical, pharmaceutical and insurance industries to stop or overturn this is staggering, and points out who has the most to lose by getting health care in the U.S. Not the citizens, but the profit centers.

The propaganda line was "We have the greatest health system in the world", "The government will only fuck it up". Well, we don't. We have the greatest health system in the world for dealing with some types of injuries or illnesses, but that's it. Our doctors make roughly 50% more than the next highest country among industrialized nations, and we spend over 13% of our GDP on health care (and that's before ObamaCare) while we covered only 40% of our citizens (among all other industrialized nations, most covered 100% while the other 5 nations covering less than 100% of their citizens ranged from 77-99%. Highest infant mortality rate, #10 in life expectancy, and the most recent World Health Organization ranking of countries by health performance (covering quality, performance, cost, etc.) has the U.S. in 72nd place (I hear the chants now, "We're Number 72! We're number 72"), safely behind such international health powers as Jamaica, Turkey, Algeria, Tunisia and more.

Bottom line, the health system in this country is far too expensive for too little in return, and the problems are deeply engrained and varied.

  • Doctors salaries
  • Drugs that cost more here, in the country they're made, than in other countries (bus to Canada, anyone?)
  • Significantly higher administrative costs (due to our varied and overly complicated health insurance) than other countries
  • More widespread use of high-tech, high-cost medical equipment and procedures
  • A lack of affordable preventive medicine loads our system with higher cost recovery medicine
  • Our tort system (wow, another system run by self-governed "professionals" that make their own rules...what a coincidence) encourages defensive medicine (extra tests and procedures to protect against malpractice rather than for clinical value)
In summation, our health system sucks. We've got to do better than ObamaCare, not less.

Question #6: Should Congress make border security a top priority? - No. Many other things discussed here are far more important. Not to mention that virtually every approach they've tried up to this point has been outsmarted by Mexican peasants almost immediately.

Question #7: Should we stop President Obama's Environmental Protection Agency from imposing unprecendented, job-crushing regulations on greenhouse gas emission? - This is an old canard dressed up in hyperbole. The cost to this country for preventing ecological damage is not only right to incur, it is far cheaper than the cost of the damage done by continuing to ignore science (global warming and the impact of humans on the environment has been recognized and agreed to by 18 scientific associations and hundreds of scientists in the environmental field). But then again, this is the same party that supports teaching creationism alongside evolution in many states. And job-crushing as a description should be saved for Wall Street riverboat gamblers that take their bonuses even as they sink thousands of small businesses and empty millions of retirement funds. That's job crushing.

 Question #8: Are you in favor of education policies that empower parents and local school boards to make decisions instead of federal bureaucrats in Washington? - Carefully worded and extremely ripe for manipulation. Does this mean "let's have vouchers" (so rich people can let public education go all the way to hell)? Does this mean "Let's teach Intelligent Design instead of evolution? Does this mean we've learned our lesson from George Bush's disastrous (now there's a phrase I've had to use far to often) No Child Left Behind program (I doubt it)? All I know is that education is the single biggest reason why this country is falling behind so much of the world. I cynically believe that the decline is an intentional act by our politicians...stupid people are easier to control. They're also easier to distract with reality TV, NASCAR and video games, so they don't ask all those pesky questions like "Why do you get lifelong health care, but I get none?"

This country needs to address the decline in education with the same vision and passion that they had for the space race. Our children and our future deserve no less.

Question #9: Should House Republicans ensure that terrorists are prosecuted in military tribunals instead of civilian courts? - Probably. But I worry about how that gets used going forward.

Question #10: Do you oppose public funding of elective abortions? - Not if every Republican would pledge to raise at least 3 abandoned crack babies. Otherwise, I've got to fund hundreds of thousands of unwanted kids throughout a life of poverty, crime and incarceration. It's funny how many people will scream that every life is sacred, but only an infinitessimally small fraction of them would consider showing up at an orphanage and taking home a child of color (unless there really small, you know, when they're cute). The hypocrisy is staggering.

Question #11: Should House Republcans investigate potential mismanagement in the Obama White House - especially concerning illegal use of the $800 billion in stimulus money? - Well, this "potential" misuse was already debunked long ago. But the Pubs never miss a chance to repeat a lie, rumor or innuendo if there's political capital to be gained. Where were these vigilant public servants while Halliburton was scoring giant no-bid contracts from their former exec Dick "Luke, I am your Father" Cheney? Oh, probably the same place Newt Gingrich was while railing against Clinton for infidelity (i.e. getting blown in his car by his mistress).

Question #12: Will you return your completed We The People Survey along with one urgent financial gift to the National Republican Congressional Committee to help House Republicans who want to stand up against President Obama, stop the out-of-control spending, and return our government to the people? - No. I spent most of my life remaining staunchly independent. I voted for the person, not the party. And I have always had great respect for some past Republican presidents and their positions - Lincoln and his commitment to ending slavery, Roosevelt and his commitment to preserving the environment. Both those Republicans seem to have belonged to a different party, however. A party of principle, not pandering. Of forward thinking, not fear mongering. The political strategies laid forth by Newt Gingrich put winning at all costs into the political landscape - lying to confuse, smearing and then retracting, swift boating, all were justified by the Pubs. I certainly don't love the Democrats one and all. But this continued need to lie and dissemble at every turn (see Michelle Bachmann) makes it impossible to support this institutionalized manipulation of the public. I fear the Pubs have sold their soul to the Religious Right, and there is little I fear more than the righteous, as they have no need to question or to think.

I hope they come to their senses some day, to take strong and reasoned positions, to speak their case plainly and honestly and accept the will of the people. To become a party of the conservative people again, not the money brokers, right-wing special interest groups and single-issue sects. To become Republicans, again.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Need for Speed

All work and some play

My father Raymond passed away 15 years ago, but he still lives on in my brother and I. My brother chose a traditional set of life choices and succeeded handsomely...nice house, children and grandchildren, disposable income, all the things my father strove for (and all of which he achieved, sans the disposable income part - that slipped through his fingers based on a few bad choices). I was slightly less conventional...never planned, just took what came my way, liked to work but hated the politics required to climb the ladder, married late and had no kids. Very different from my brother and father, but happy and full nonetheless. But one thing we all share is an insanely unhealthy work ethic. It has brought me satisfaction, accomplishments, reasonably good income, and a not always healthy lifestyle.

Last week was another insanely busy week, because in addition to the usual flurry of sales and delivery related tasks that flow endlessly through my life as a Partner in a moderately small consulting firm, we had to produce a Proof-of-Concept script for the latest release of Microsoft's Project Server. With a Thursday morning departure to Fargo for the POC, I delivered the final version of the script to Kinko's for printing and binding at 4:15 am...another all-nighter that was sooooo much easier at 26 than 56. Anyway, it all went well, and after some additional meetings in Fargo on Friday, Dave (our Pres & CEO) and I headed to Brainerd.

A need for speed

Now Dawn, my wife, will claim that I collect speeding tickets at an alarming rate. And although I do drive fast, the vast majority of my tickets have been obtained out-of-state, a hazard of being a traveling consultant (5 hours or less and we drive to client sites) going through neighboring states in a BMW. That almost screams "Too busy to come back, they'll just pay the fine". Too true, and with the sharing of computer data between states it just leads to a less than pretty automotive "rap sheet". Anyway, we were headed to Brainerd for something not likely to get me ticketed - a Performance Driving School at Brainerd International Speedway sponsored by the Northstar Chapter of BMW CCA.

Totally, absolutely, unbelievably fun. We took Brandon and Dave's cars (an M3-346 and a 545), with Brandon & Dave sharing the M3 and Dave graciously letting me drive his 545. Amazing weekend top to bottom (except for being thrown out of the group bunk bed room to the "isolation chamber" of the king-size bed due to my deviated septum snurfling & snoring). The class was so-so, but the hands-on instruction was amazing. I hit the jackpot and was assigned to Duane Thompson, a long-time driver/instructor and past president of the club. We totally connected and his directions and coaching were phenomenal. I don't have a lot of fears around driving cars (another skill my father passed down to my brother and I), especially fast, so I started out pretty confident right out of the gate (though I was cognizant that I was driving my partner/friend/boss' car). Anyway, the speeds got higher, the lines got tighter and it just kept getting better and better.

Until my second run on Sunday....Bing...and the BMW display shone with an exclamation point in a triangle. Seeing as it's a bad idea to check your owner's manual at 130+ mph, I pulled into pit row and checked the car out. Everything looked great, and a guy from BMW Minnetonka checked the maintenance log and found it was just a maintenance notification. It seems that BMW has an algorithm built into the software that compresses the service interval if you're driving is aggressive. Apparently they consider 140 in the straightaway and 110 in the curves aggressive (Who knew?).

Anyway, we were cleared to go out for the next session and I was totally on my game. Duane said he'd just be quiet and tell me when I did something wrong and he barely made a peep (on my third lap I took Turn 4 a tiny bit early, but I told him I knew that before he could get it out of his mouth). So great to be having a blast, improving your skills and learning all at the same time. Unfortunately, Turn 5 on the next lap brought another Bing and a more alarming warning...Brake pads are below the minimum. No ifs on this one, so off the track again. A check by some of the instructors confirmed that the pad was thinner than the backing, so no more 545 on the track! Bummed but exhilirated by the weekend so far, I watched Dave drive in the last two sessions (he was seriously dominating out there) and got us packed for the inevitable end to the party. I should not have been surprised to go through the brakes I suppose, because Brandon had to go get a set of replacement pads by EOD Saturday. But the M3 was doing double duty (with Brandon running the B sets and Dave running the D sets), so I thought the 545 wouldn't wear them down so fast.



Either way, it doesn't matter. I had an absolutely incredible time and can't wait to do it again.Pics are available at BMW CCA Northstar Chapter Performance Driving School pics (I'm in car D3, the 545 and Dave/Brandon are in car B15/D15, the M3) . My mind hasn't been still all week with everything we've got going on, but when it does have an unoccupied moment, it's right back there, diving into Turn 1 at 110+, headed for the pebble line on the asphalt apron. 

Monday, May 10, 2010

Men May Become Robots

Where are we headed? That's what I'm chewing on at the moment.

My early morning starts with dog feeding, tea brewing, email and mental gymnastics. The USA Puzzle Page's "Don't Quote Me" revealed Erich Fromm's quote "The danger of the past was that men became slaves. The danger of the future is that men may become robots." It doesn't seem so far fetched when I look around me: people chasing dreams they've been programmed for by the media....the car, the house, the watch. Robots do what they are programmed to do. So do consumers, even if the programs come in 30 or 60 seconds imprints spaced strategically throughout electronic stimulation therapy.

But it's not just consumerism programming that's turning us all into robots. There's the political divisiveness programs designed to keep us at odds with each other, safely avoiding the ongoing abuse of power imbedded into our electoral system. Left-wing, Right-wing, each an epithet and smear all at once. Meant to divide, oppose, and distract. Keeping us from looking at the ongoing inequities around us. A Legislature with lifetime health benefits paid for by the general populace screaming that guaranteed health benefits is Socialism. They can't be that obtuse, so it must be intentional. And all part of the programming to ensure we remain lined up against one another, preoccupied as the power brokers skim the cream off of the top.

Even pop culture programs our behavior. When people spend endless time discussing who'll get voted off American Idol, but can't spend 5 minutes discussing how to improve our educational system without their eyes glazing over. Where Britney's mental health, or Anna Nicole's drug overdose, or Jesse's infidelities with tattoo-laden pinup girls are all more compelling and endlessly examined than discussions of term limits or the impact of lobbyists writing legislation. The programming continues.

Fromm's fear that men may become robots may already be a fear realized. The only difference between Neo's awakening to the realities of his world and what I see around me is the tools and trappings used. The Matrix fed off of our life force and calmed us with illusions, whereas in our world....hmmm, maybe I'll need a few days to see the difference.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

And on the 20,725th day, there was light

Genesis of a Blog

Having blown past the milestone of my 20,000th day on this planet with no self-reflection or self-assessment, I figure it's about time to vent my curious thoughts publicly. Some light should be shed on the synaptic tap dance that passes for ideas in my head; hence this blog.

Some of these ideas are creative (or maybe they're only creative in the way ideas seemed creative in college after getting a good buzz on), some are political (surely there must be some way out of this ridiculously absurd state we are currently in), some are personal (reflections on the commonalities of life), and some are cultural (i.e. railing against the vapidity of reality TV, or the cost to our souls of the celebrity obsession that has infected the masses), and some are just personal grievances (like the one that gave me the impetus to start this blog - Why is it that more action is taken in response to pain than in pursuit of happiness or enlightenment?).


FTD.COM - The jokes our memories play on us, and a corporate world that exploits those memories

I grew up in the 50's, and the magical image of Mercury/Hermes delivering your flowers with god-like speed and dependability was reassuring. Now that FTD has moved to the web (where all things are better, faster and shinier, right?), they must be even better.

I ordered flowers a week in advance of Mother's Day for my 91 year old sweetheart of a Mother. I'm not always the most consistent rememberer of holidays and birthdays, but this year I nailed it...even got the card off so it arrived by Saturday.


Well, FTD.com's site happily reassured me that my order would be delivered this weekend - on Mother's Day or the day before.... but that never happened. They even sent an email mid-week (that, of course, ended up in my Junk Mail - how appropriate), that they were having trouble finding a florist to fill the order. That's odd, since Ocala has a population of well over 300,000 and tons of florists (many FTD-affiliated). Anyway, the email said the order would still be filled, but delivered by UPS or Fedex rather than a florist. All lies; or computer-generated fallaciousness, whichever you prefer. 2+ hours on the phone with customer service (including supervisors that promised to call back within an hour, but NEVER did, and being put on hold for 20+ minutes and then disconnected) got me nowhere and Mother's still sitting in Ocala with no flowers.

A little digging through their site (Investor Relations often has revealing info for the curious) and I find that FTD.com bears little if any resemblance to their original form. They are just another cog in the wheel of United Online, a web order-taker that handles FTD.com, Classmates, Juno, blah blah blah. In other words, they don't know crap about florists or flowers or anything else. They're a customer service organization that doesn't provide customer service, a perfect metaphor for 21st century business. My guess is that they've done what many companies have done, buy an image that people trust and than tarnish it until it's worthless. This is done regularly with brand names for appliances, clothing, etc. So next time you get the warm fuzzies over a brand name you haven't seen in years, dig a little deeper, or you're bound to have those sweet memories slimed by the realities of corporate practices.

BTW: The reviews on FTD.com at Yahoo's shopping site are horrendous: Yahoo Shopping FTD.com Feedback.

My bad for not checking them out first (and don't bother switching to Teleflora in hopes of a better, more modern service; they're run by the same clowns).


Next time I'll look directly for a local florist when I send flowers long-distance. And I'll make sure that they're not FTD related.