Monday, August 18, 2014

What he say.


When in despair over war in the middle east, racial tension in the Midwest, corruption in politics, I take a deep breath, relax my anger and look for humor amid chaos. My mentor in doing so is my old friend Paul Krassner. Check out this interview with him: wp.me/p2DHGh-hC 

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Repuglicrats

"A perilous and unspoken accord in American politics has grown up while no one was looking, which unites the liberal left and the authoritarian right. They agree in their unquestioning support of a government without checks or oversight; and it is the Obama presidency that has cemented the agreement. The state apparatus which supports wars and the weapons industry for Republicans yields welfare and expanded entitlements for Democrats. The Democrats take to the wars indifferently but are willing to accept them for what they get in return. The Republicans hate the entitlements and all that goes by the name of welfare, but they cannot escape the charge of hypocrisy when they vote for ever-enlarging military entitlements."
 — David Bromwich, The World’s Most Important Spectator, London Review of Books

Curse them or mock them; it doesn't stop them. The war must go on.

Saturday, June 7, 2014

Stupid Intelligence

The cartoonist is Tuomas Koivurinne, a tattoo artist from Finland. http://tuomaskoivurinne.deviantart.com/

Event

I'll be reading from "Comedy of Terror" at Gallery Bookshop in Mendocino on Friday, June 27th at 6:30 p.m. Hope to see you there.

Freedom is an Illusion

Freedom is an illusion. Ask Bill Binney who created the NSA’s mass surveillance program for digital information. According to Binney, we are in the process of becoming a totalitarian state, and virtually every other nation is on the same path.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Religion and Capitalism



Life often gets in the way of the best intentions.

Religion and Capitalism are the pillars of society. They are both built on a foundation of lies.
Capitalism functions in exactly the same way as any other faith position. It is only our belief in money that makes money viable as a system.

By Nimue Brown, April 09, 2014

The answer to the question of capitalism's success depends on what you imagine capitalism was supposed to deliver in the first place. If you're part of the 1 percent holding most of the world's wealth, then I imagine capitalism looks like a raging success. If you are going hungry, homeless, seeing your landscape poisoned by fracking, or trapped in a war zone, capitalism is definitely not helping you in the slightest.
The alleged ideal of capitalism was something along the lines of "a chicken in every pot and a car on every drive"—good stuff for all, by whatever your current measure of good stuff is. The idea we were sold was that greater wealth would improve everyone's lot, and trickledown economics would raise us up so that even the poorest have a sufficiency of all things.


It just isn't happening. It never could. Capitalism by its very nature could never deliver the things we have believed it would. Capitalism is about making profit, and to make a profit you have to create a difference between the value of a thing—in terms of labor costs, production costs, and raw materials—and the price you sell it at. It is that difference that gets us into trouble, not least because the profit so often ends up in the hands of someone who did not do the work. Furthermore, when someone stockpiles money, as the super-rich do, they effectively take energy and resources out of the system, reducing what is available for everyone else. Money is just a token for barter. If we move those tokens around, we move goods, services, and opportunities around at the same time. If we put them in a big pile and lock the door, those tokens are of no use. Much of the world's wealth is locked behind the doors of the very few right now. No wonder the rest of us are struggling!
Capitalism functions in exactly the same way as any other faith position. It is only our belief in money that makes money viable as a system. It is our belief in the value of the things and our belief in the price tag that makes it work. Stocks and shares are basically about buying and selling belief and how much we are prepared to believe in the future worth of a commodity.
Modern economics (I gather from reading professor of economics Molly Scott Cato) were dreamed up before we'd figured out a lot of basic physics. Modern economics has its origins in a time when we didn't understand finite energy systems. This is why none of it works the way it is supposed to—it is based on beliefs that are largely wrong.
Anyone who spends a lot of time thinking about religion will have run up against the issue of belief. The further removed a belief is from discernible reality, the more problematic it becomes, and the more dysfunctional it is likely to be. One of the things I like about Paganism is that you can do it with very little belief at all. The seasons change, the earth goes round the sun, creating an impression of rising and setting. We live, we die. I do not need to believe anything much to engage with this. All I need is to find life valuable.
I do not believe in capitalism. I do not believe in banks. I do not believe in stocks and shares or in international currency markets. I do not believe in GDP. I do not believe in neoliberal economics.
Now dare to imagine what would happen if we all stopped believing in capitalism and, like the questioning pioneers in so many other fields of human endeavor, started asking some serious questions about how the economy works.

Nimue Brown is a Druid, comics creator, and author whose recent publications include Druidry and Meditation and a poetry collection entitled Lost Bards and Dreamers. Her further writings on Druidry can be found at her blog Druid Life and her webcomic (illustrated by her husband Tom) is hosted at Hopeless Maine.com. Nimue also writes the Patheos premium blog Pagan Leadership, providing group leaders and facilitators with practical leadership resources.