"When you're a criminal state, It doesn't matter" Noam Chomsky

The rule of law means just that. Why is the law on vacation?


Friday, February 25, 2011

The attack on working people intensifies

Right after Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker made a complete ass of himself, and revealed that he never had any intention to bargain in good faith (a distinct violation of federal labor law), the Wisconsin General Assembly voted to strip public sector employees of their collective bargaining rights.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41774032/ns/us_news

 

The Ohio School Facilities Commission voted NOT to pay prevailing union rates on school construction. They said they won’t even entertain a bid that includes prevailing wages. If they’re getting any federal funding, they’re violating the Davis-Bacon Act.

http://content.usatoday.net/dist/custom/gci/InsidePage.aspx?cId=cincinnati&sParam=35878585.story

 

What ever happened to the rule of law? Not to mention common decency?

Noam Chomsky said it best the other day, in an interview with Amy Goodman On Democracy Now!

“When you’re a criminal state, it doesn’t matter”.

In the mean time, I’m heading to the gym to burn off some anger. Then I’m working on trying to set up a website to keep tabs on breaking labor issues around the country. I’ve never set one up before, so this should be fun. I’ll post a picture after I pull all of my hair out. Later.

Oh, BTW, the domain I’ve registered is www.americangeneralstrike.com

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Cold Equations, the No-Win Scenario, and the United States

 

 

I borrowed this post from my friend Demeter, in the Stock Market Watch Thread at DU. She’s one of the smart people over there. Some very concise comments below. A prime example of the “Ignorant, arrogant, exceptionalist type” is Rep. Joe Barton (R-Moron), with his pandering apology to BP for having the audacity to inconvenience them in their middle of their destruction of the Gulf of Mexico. Don’t even get me started on Inhofe.

 

 

"The Cold Equations" is a science fiction short story by Tom Godwin, first published in Astounding Magazine in 1954. In 1970, the Science Fiction Writers of America selected it as one of the best science fiction short stories published before 1965, and it was therefore included in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume One, 1929-1964.
Summary
The story takes place entirely aboard an Emergency Dispatch Ship (EDS) headed for the frontier planet Woden with a load of desperately needed medical supplies. The pilot, Barton, discovers a stowaway: an eighteen-year-old girl. By law, all EDS stowaways are to be jettisoned because EDS vessels carry no more fuel than is absolutely necessary to land safely at their destination. The girl, Marilyn, merely wants to see her brother, Gerry, and is not aware of the law. When boarding the EDS, Marilyn sees the "UNAUTHORIZED PERSONNEL KEEP OUT!" sign, but thinks she will simply have to pay a fine if she is caught. Barton explains that her presence dooms the mission and will result in the deaths of the colonists. After exhausting all other options (such as calling the mothership, The Stardust), he is forced to eject her into space.
The story, first published in the August 1954 issue of Astounding, has been widely anthologized and even dramatized. It is in the form of a cautionary tale, which commonly has three parts. First, a cautionary tale presents a restraint or restriction, in which something is said to be taboo, dangerous, or forbidden. The story's fifth paragraph sets up the first part by including a quotation from "Paragraph L, Section 8, of Interstellar Regulations: Any stowaway discovered in an EDS shall be jettisoned immediately following discovery." Second, the story introduces a hero figure who disregards—wittingly or unwittingly—the restriction. Readers of "The Cold Equations" learn that Marilyn has not seen her beloved brother for ten years, and because she has not traveled before, she is unaware that "the laws of the space frontier must, of necessity, be as hard and relentless as the environment that gave them birth." The third part of a cautionary tale consists of the transgressor coming to a tragic end. In "The Cold Equations," Marilyn realizes that nothing can be done to save her. She accepts her fate and is ejected into space.
Critic Gary Westfahl has said that because the premise depends upon systems that were built without enough margin for error, the story is good physics, but lousy engineering. Writer Don Sakers's short story "The Cold Solution"(Analog, 1991), which debunks the premise, received the 1992 Analog Analytical Laboratory award as the readers' favorite Analog short story of 1991.
However, the context in which the story was published bears on its premise. Science fiction was still a fairly young field, and was still working free from its roots in pulp fiction. In the story, the girl addresses the distinction, contrasting the frontier she had imagined, which was "a lot of fun; an exciting adventure, like in the three-D shows" and the frontier she discovered, where the danger was real and proved fatal. The story recognized that if space travel ever did come about, then sometimes there would be little margin of error, and fatalities would happen.
Another trend to which "The Cold Equations" is a reaction is the science fiction sub-genre of the puzzle story, where impending disaster is prevented when one of the characters works out an ingenious application of scientific principles, thereby saving the day. Though pleasing to fans, these stories were seen by those outside science fiction as evidence that the genre was all about escapism. By echoing the conventions of the puzzle story, but focusing on the fates of characters trapped by the puzzle instead of the machinations of solving the puzzle, the story showed critics that science fiction would not always be about "lesser" subjects than other literature.
The story was shaped by Astounding editor John W. Campbell, who sent "Cold Equations" back to Godwin three times before he got the version he wanted, because "Godwin kept coming up with ingenious ways to save the girl!"

---http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cold_Equations

 

This is the reality that engineers, parents, and those true statesmen preach to so little effect--sometimes you push the limits of possibility so far, there is no way out. Someone must pay for an unfixable error.
This is the "No-Win Scenario” beloved of Star Trek, and rejected by that ultimate hero, James T. Kirk, who usually found an ingenious escape clause to save the day...
But in real life, you'd have to be pretty sheltered not to have faced a no-win scenario of your own. Whether it's an incurable illness, collapse of a marriage, a family, a community, a job, a business, an industry, or even a country, no-win scenarios put an end to people's stability, comfort, or life every day. If one is an unlucky person, the situation developed through no fault of the victim. If he is an ignorant, arrogant, "exceptionalist" type, he probably caused the catastrophe by himself, by ignoring the "keep out" signs and the economics and physics of the course of action, the counsel of wiser heads, etc., and more likely than not, that exceptionalist also inflicted that no-win scenario on a whole lot of unlucky nearest and dearest.
As Spock in “Star Trek” says, it is how we deal with the no-win scenario that determines our character and our ultimate success or failure in life.
Too many people on this planet, too many of them in this nation, are trapped in denial, which if maintained long enough, guarantees that a challenging situation becomes a no-win situation.
The purpose of society itself is to maintain a database of history and technology used to evaluate and ameliorate problems, to avoid or at least mitigate "no-win" scenarios for the people in the community. Before there was any useful history or technology, there was religion, a poor substitute for real solutions.
Those who would destroy society destroy its historical database first, then its technological database (infrastructure), gut it for resources, and then abandon it. We must fight these pirates, whenever and wherever they arise: Egypt, Israel, China, the United States, anywhere. And we must avoid the Religion Trap, thinking that we are powerless, that it is God's will, that we are being punished for something besides ignorance, stupidity and laziness....and that PRAYER will save us, if we only pray long enough, hard enough, and purely enough...

Sunday, February 13, 2011

It’s time for the working class to organize or die.

 

The handwriting is on the wall. If all the good citizens of this country don’t get together and force our dysfunctional government to start acting in our interests, instead of the Oligarchy’s, we can kiss our collective asses good-bye.

Working people, especially organized labor, teachers, and government workers are under an unprecedented assault. Senior citizens, who haven’t seen an increase in Social Security in two years are facing cuts. The longest unemployed are starting to lose their benefits. States and cities faced with budget cuts are laying off workers. There are heartless cuts to Medicaid. Cuts to Medicare are coming down the line, as well as childrens services. States and cities, as well as private corporations are trying to screw employees out of their pensions.

In at least three states that I know of right now, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Florida, they are trying to take away public employees rights to bargain. That Great Hero of the Working Class, our “Democratic” President, Mubarack Obama has already ordered a two year freeze on federal employees salaries.

Their strategy has been brilliant so far. Demonize “lazy” public sector employees. Talk continually about how overpaid they are compared to the private sector (they’re not). Talk about the lottery jackpot they’ll get when they retire with all of those “cadillac healthcare plans”.

Turn charlatans and frauds like Michelle Rhee and Arne Duncan loose  to demonize teachers. Eliminate tenure. Privatize public education. Save us from those overpaid and incompetent teachers unions. That was just the prequel for the rest of the public sector.

In 2009, during a recess in the fraudulent healthcare debate, billionaires like the Koch Brothers, and Rick Scott funded tea party rallies all across the country. The idea was to get people scared and mobilized for the 2010 mid-terms, when turn out would be low, and it wouldn’t take much to swing a lot of elections. Couple that with the Citizens United decision and the crazy side of the two corporate parties won.

In Ohio, one of the first ideas to come out of the new Governors mouth was to lease the Ohio Turnpike to a sovereign wealth fund for 75 years. As was expected, when Indiana did it, tolls skyrocketed. With all of the profits going to the Saudi’s, Kuwaiti’s, and any other emirate with too much money on their hands. If that asswipe Kasich wasn’t already owned by Wall Street, maybe he could have raised tolls modestly and put the money into the states general fund. But, it’s not just Republicans. “Democrat” Ed Rendell proposed the same thing in Pa, but the legislature narrowly shot it down. There’s always next year.

Late last year, Dear Leader Obama, Hairy Reed, and the rest of the Democrats pre-emptively saved the country from smaller deficits by extending the “temporary” Bush tax cuts for the Kochs, the Scotts, the Trumps, the Gates, and the Paris Hiltons of world. And now, after a drunken New Years Eve, swilling Ayn Rand Kool-Aid, they’ve got out the machete’s to come after everything but the military. And Homeland Security, and oil subsidies, and coal, and ethanol.

It’s time to start over again. The Executive Branch is full of Wall Street con men, and various corporate whores. The only agencies that function are downright evil, such as the DEA. We can really believe gulf seafood is safe, says the EPA. After all they assured us that the air at ground zero was perfectly safe, didn’t they?

The House is full of absolute loons. I think most of them got turned loose back in the ‘80s when Reagan closed down the nut houses.

The Senate is so dysfunctional, I can’t think of an example ludicrous enough to do them justice. They remind me of a guy I knew back in the ‘70s, who liked to drink and play with guns. He shot himself in the leg, TWICE in two days. At my house! A place where all the cows in Montana (they don’t have as many people) have as much say so as all the people in California. It might have worked back in the late 1700’s. Not so much today.

The Supreme Court? ROTFLMAO. Clarence Thomas gets a lifetime appointment? And remember, Democrats had a majority when both he and Scalia were appointed.

Are we 50 separate states, or are we one country? Again, a relic of the 1700’s. And in this case a bunch of neo-Confederates in the south are blocking any move to the future. They’re winning this Civil War.

It’s time to start over.

We either start organizing as working people, or we turn into serfs and die.

 

 

I’ll be updating this blog a lot more in the future. I’m really fucking pissed.