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Monday, June 1, 2009

Life

I don’t know if it’s the yoga, brain wave vibrations, or this time of year, but I just can’t seem to summon a tizzy. I watched all the punditry back-to-back on Sunday as usual, but I’d already had three hours or so of digging in the dirt by then. While all hell is near breaking lose with Kim Jung Ill testing nuclear devices every other day, swine flu spreading locally and the global economic meltdown steadily claiming more jobs and lives, I’m dizzygiddy like Poppy in Happy Go Lucky. Yes, I realize that gloom looms and disaster’s near, but I’m more concerned with whether the Ajugas are going to get enough or too much sun there?

GM filed for bankruptcy as anticipated--

GM said Monday that it will shutter 17 factories and parts centers by the end of 2011, including seven factories in Michigan and plants in Ohio, Indiana and Tennessee, and cut an additional 5,000 salaried jobs. The closures will reduce GM's U.S. facilities to 33 from 47 by 2012. Between 18,000 and 20,000 workers will be affected by the shutdowns, Tim Lee, GM's vice president of North America Manufacturing, said during a conference call Monday. Employment reduction will be done according to terms in the UAW agreement And interestingly, the Feds are not taking over GM’s pension plans; but, aside from that, I cannot wait to have the scent of lavender wafting through my bedroom window; will it really form a nice hedge?

I used to question the logic of those simultaneously pro-life (against abortion) and yet pro-death (i.e., the death penalty). Maybe a similar question could be posed regarding being an “abortionist” and also being an usher at church; or, being anti-abortion, but pro-murdering doctors at church.

A few years ago, on a flight back home, the airplane circled over BWI, waiting for the calm after the storm in order to land. I chose to be dazzled by nature’s fireworks displayed through the window; a better than birds-eye view of lightning bolt extravaganzas in the near distance. My pumpkin was scared. I hoped he’d be calmed by my lack of fear and tried to get him to share in my fascination. It was a tall order for a 12 year old.
But YOU know, right? All we’ve got is THIS, right here, right now. You gotta make the most of it, because who knows what comes next, or whether anything will.

Rest in Peace Dr. Tiller, passengers and crew of Air France flight 447.

The Veteran
Dorothy Parker
When I was young and bold and strong,
Oh, right was right, and wrong was wrong!
My plume on high, my flag unfurled,
I rode away to right the world.
"Come out, you dogs, and fight!" said I,
And wept there was but once to die.

But I am old; and good and bad
Are woven in a crazy plaid.
I sit and say, "The world is so;
And he is wise who lets it go.
A battle lost, a battle won-
The difference is small, my son."

Inertia rides and riddles me;
The which is called Philosophy.

MtnGrl
AWOP Contributor
Author of MtnGrl Musing Blog

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Friday, May 29, 2009

Sweet Meat

I've struggled with meat for years. So much so that I was a vegetarian eater for several years and even a vegan for a short period of time. Initially, it was due to my concern over the standard of living of food animals as well as environmental factors. When I got married, I discovered that it was difficult to cook separate meals and I greatly relaxed my meatless dining habits only to be told in the early 2000s that I could no longer give blood due to potential exposure to variant Creutzfeld-Jacob Disease (vCJD) (aka Mad Cow Disease). Guidelines state that you may not give blood if:
You were a member of the of the U.S. military, a civilian military employee, or a dependent of a member of the U.S. military who spent a total time of 6 months on or associated with a military base in any of the following areas during the specified time frames

* From 1980 through 1990 - Belgium, the Netherlands (Holland), or Germany

You spent (visited or lived) a cumulative time of 5 years or more from January 1, 1980, to present, in any combination of country(ies) in Europe, including

* in the UK from 1980 through 1996 as listed in above
* on or associated with military bases as described above, and
* in other countries in Europe as listed below:

o Germany

-American Red Cross
I lived in Germany from 1981 to 1992, guess I got the message, I can not give blood because I may have eaten some bad meat. Not only did this news irritate me but once again I was repulsed by meat. After more investigation though I became more disgusted with the practices that allowed a disease like vCJD to spread. You see, large production farms, always looking to save a buck, decided to grind up the waste bits of farm animals and use it as food to feed other farm animals such as cows. That this was not banned at the outset is absolutely disgusting. What freaking moron thought of this practice, probably the same stupid fat f*ck who decided to grain cattle to "fatten" them up so that they can be ready for slaughter faster and make more fat f*cks. What's wrong with feeding an animal their natural diet? We could save ourselves so much by just feeding our feed animals the things that they are naturally made to eat. For cows, it's this green stuff that grows out of the ground. Stuff like grass, alfalfa, hay...Stuff that makes naturally lean beef.

Graining cattle is appalling and it's taken me years to get that through my spouses cranium but guess what, one taste of our own naturally fed beef and he's hooked. Graining cattle is force-feeding so that a cow can fatten up for slaughter in six months as opposed to the 2-4 years of normal growth to slaughter size. Corn-fed beef is also bad for you and I.

After the news that I could not give blood I absolutely refused to purchase beef from our local grocery stores, instead opting to travel to the nearest Whole Foods Market, about an hour away, to ensure that I could get grass-fed, hormone free beef for my family. Now, I'm practically spoiled, my beef is in my backyard, eating what they like to eat and generally looking pretty damn happy.


That's Honeymoon above, she's the boss (maybe it's the horns! or that she's bigger than our little Gelbvieh girls, Black Betty and Black Berry). You should see them running to us when we come up to the fence with a treat, yesterday it was dandelions that I pulled up from the yard. They are social animals and have not only provided my family with safe meat but are fun to be near and help us teach our child about responsibility.

So, what brought all of this on today?

The recall of 96,000 pounds of ground beef due to E. coli 0157:H7 contamination last night. The product was packaged on March 10th and the first illness was reported on May 13th, resulting in the recall on May 21st. E. coli is naturally found in intestines, so in the most basic sense, the beef in question is contaminated with fecal matter which is not exactly unusual in meat processing plants. That's why they want you to cook your meat to a certain temperature, and especially be wary of ground meat, because any contamination has been mixed into the meat instead of just resting on the outside.

View the recalled products here. You'll note that the products in question are USDA inspected but keep in mind only a small percentage is ever actually inspected. Read all about meat processing and inspection at Sustainable Table.

Bottom line, if you do eat meat please think about where your meat comes from, it could save your life. If you live nearby, I'll serve you naturally fed Scottish Highland beef and you won't even be able to stomach mass-produced beef again!

Sidhe, The Wandering Elf
AWOP Contributor
Author of Musings of a Wandering Elf Blog

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Friday, May 22, 2009

BlogBlast For Peace: How A Movement Began

It's been called everything from a cyberspace revolution to organic to a waste of time. To some it is a phenomenon. To many, a bloggers day to connect and represent. To others just an ordinary spot on the calendar. But to all who blogged for peace - it is a voice for change.

To me it is a passion.

In October 2006, I wrote an article on my blog semi-venting about the state of our world and pondering how I could do anything about it. North Korea's testing of nuclear weapons caught the attention of the world and on the same day a small plane flew into a New York apartment building stirring memories of terror. The news was unsettling. Frightful. Sobering. So I threw out a challenge to my handful of readers that perhaps, if we all wrote our names across our world and loudly, oh so loudly, proclaimed "Dona nobis pacem" (translated from the Latin "Grant Us Peace") that maybe, just maybe, we could see change, at least in our own little spheres. I asked that we post it on the same day with the same title in a display of unity. In less than sixty days, hundreds of bloggers had done just that. Before I could wrap my brain around it, little blue peace globes began spinning out of control across the blogosphere. I found them everywhere. It was amazing! From cat bloggers, dog bloggers, gerbils, birds, moms, dads, rockers, preachers, soldiers, mothers, gay, straight, liberal and conservative. The Peace Globe Movement aka BlogBlast For Peace began.
Our sixth launch takes flight
November 5, 2009.
Will you be there?
Today there are forty-six countries participating and thousands of blog posts about the movement and its influence. Wait a minute. Movement? Me? You? We? We started a movement? How? And more importantly, why? People wrote to me, "I never thought I had a voice until now."
I kept hearing that over and over. And this -
"There is a roof over my head, food in my
refrigerator- and in my belly... For me, life is good, and full of fun and
games. For some people, none of life is fun and games.....On November 5th a call for peace will rise from the blogosphere. I plan to show my gratitude for my
life and privileges I deem common place, by asking that those privileges become
common place the world over." (Quilldancer)
Luxor The Cat purred, “I always picture us linked together by our individual globes, our heartfelt wishes spreading out over the blogosphere in a wave of love and light and hope for the future."
Ambitiously naive? Hardly.
Not even for a cat.

I began to read, one at a time, the carefully crafted posts, marveling at the creativity and individuality sprawled on the simple blue graphic - the pithy and the poignant - humbled by the pure intent behind the words. A wish for peace. I was so moved I found myself weeping at my computer. From Zimbabwe, Scotland, United Arab Emirates, Spain, Bolivia, South Africa, California.....they all had something to say about peace; what it meant to them personally, what it means in their part of the globe, and what it means to us collectively.


Suddenly my blog neighbor half a world away moved into my neighborhood. Blog communities globally melded. We were a sight to behold. For one day our hearts bled passionate words of hope - all over the world.

Our language and circumstance strikingly different, our yearning for peace the same.

Indeed. A movement began. It is my privilege to represent the peace bloggers.

One blogger in Canada wrote, “.....if social connections exist and what we write has power, why can’t a group of people posting a similar graphic calling for peace - whatever the word peace means to you - wield similar power?"

I no longer doubt it. Voices of peace can't war. We launched, quite literally, a revolution of words. Stealth. Steady. Marking our world with a promise.
And oh.so.loud.

I have changed since the beginning of Dona Nobis Pacem in the blogosphere. I am changing still. Revolution? Of the kindest kind. It is a turning. An attitude shift. A metamorphosis. An evolution – one in which the power of our words manifests intrinsic change and expands our compassion for and understanding of people everywhere, dictates a respect for diversity, and calls me – and my neighbors – to a place of peace.

This is the hope I have for myself. It is my hope for you.

The voices of our time matter.
Won't you add yours to the growing number of peace bloggers?


Mimi Lenox
AWOP Contributor
Author of Mimi Writes Blog


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Friday, May 15, 2009

Change? Reform? Where?

Like many other Americans who either supported Barack Obama's campaign last year or who care deeply about our nation's dire need for health care / insurance reform, I received an email from the White House on the subject.

Here's a little snippet from the message:
"The Vice President and I just met with leaders from the House of Representatives and received their commitment to pass a comprehensive health care reform bill by July 31.

We also have an unprecedented commitment from health care industry leaders, many of whom opposed health reform in the past. Monday, I met with some of these health care stakeholders, and they pledged to do their part to reduce the health care spending growth rate, saving more than two trillion dollars over the next ten years -- around $2,500 for each American family. Then on Tuesday, leaders from some of America's top companies came to the White House to showcase innovative ways to reduce health care costs by improving the health of their workers.

Now the House and Senate are beginning a critical debate that will determine the health of our nation's economy and its families. This process should be transparent and inclusive and its product must drive down costs, assure quality and affordable health care for everyone, and guarantee all of us a choice of doctors and plans.

Health care reform can't come soon enough. We spend more on health care than any country, but families continue to struggle with skyrocketing premiums and nearly 46 million are without insurance entirely. It is a priority for the American people and a pillar of the new foundation we are seeking to build for our economy."
...
Is this the same person who as a candidate so eloquently advocated for something akin to a single payer plan?

Did they get him in the Oval Office and force feed the Kool-Aid to him?

The insurance industry is scared shitless of the growing popular appetite for a single payer national health plan. So afraid that earlier this week they met with Mr. Obama at the White House and essentially tried to sue for peace.

According to the President's message above, the two trillion dollars that the bloodsuckers, er uh, insurance executives pledged in reduced costs over ten years will amount to $2,500 per family.

So let me get this straight, Blue Cross, Humana, et al. are going to trim the fat from their operations in a way that will save my family roughly $250 per year, probably by laying off some low level clerical workers and replacing them with part-timers and temps.

When I had health insurance for my family (Blue Cross) through my last employer, the monthly premiums that I paid came to almost $450 per month, and I still had deductibles so high that I could only afford to use the plan for the most hellish nightmare scenario.

HOW THE HELL IS SAVING ME LESS THAN ONE MONTHLY PREMIUM PER YEAR ANY SORT OF REFORM?

Mr. Obama, if this is the change we were all lead to believe in, your late mother is rolling in her grave. Stop cowering before the corporate status quo and show us something we can honestly believe in.

Bipartisanship will only get us the same old thing: plenty at the top and another full ration of pain at the bottom.

http://www.HealthReform.gov

Thurman
AWOP Contributor
Author of Random Abstractions Blog

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Sweet Snarky Serenity


Did you know that the United States has a Commission on International Religious Freedom?

Apparently it was created out of the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 and the panel issues a report of the worst international oppressors of religious freedom annually. When a country is identified in the report as CPC (countries of particular concern) our Secretary of State has some policy options available to address these concerns, including sanctions.

You can view the CPCs here. Now my sweet, snarky, and yes, even twisty mind is wondering why the US isn't on that list.

Okay, okay, the countries on that list are unarguably more religiously oppressive than our own (and I am certainly not making light of the oppression present in those countries but bringing to your attention a little bit of apparent hypocrisy) but, I will argue that there are those among us who are pretty darn limited in their view of who "religious freedom" applies to. Since 9/11 there has been a surge of anti-Islam sentiment in our nation. I even received anti-Islam propaganda from military co-workers, I guess they forgot that there are American Muslims fighting the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq right along side Christian, and even Pagan, military personnel.

We should remember that this country was colonized by Europeans seeking religious freedom. It would be a shame to dishonor their progress by resorting to the oppression of our countrymen.

When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying the cross.

-Sinclair Lewis (1935, It Can't Happen Here...allegedly, I've purchased the book just now and will let you know as soon as I have a chance to personally verify, if you have a copy and can check real quick-like that'd be great too!)

Sidhe The Wandering Elf
AWOP Contributor
Author of Musings of a Wandering Elf Blog

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Friday, April 24, 2009

Local Spotlight...Locomotivity...Asheville North Carolina

Greetings All,

What? Could this actually be a post from the long lost Publisher of this little Zine?

Why Yes...it is.

I have been spending most of my time reading and scheduling all of the great posts you have been enjoying on AWOP TeamZine and today seemed like a good day to say hello and thanks to all our subscribers and Twitter followers alike.

It's been a long winter at altitude and now that spring has come to our part of Appalachia my partner and I find ourselves very close to moving back to the city. If you happen to live in Asheville or have ever visited you may have noticed it is a bit shall we say..."quirky"...yes the bumper stickers that say "Keep Asheville Weird" are not kidding. Why is it weird? Well... weird is a subjective word and when I use it I mean "quirky". I am from Texas and the closest thing there might be Austin but even Austin is not this quirky.

OK...I will try not to use that word again for the rest of this post.

I am beginning a new feature inspired by this beautiful day and a really great business idea. Great ideas made real deserve a little PR and I wish I had thought of this one!

If you are ever in Asheville and you need a place to hang and work online be sure and check out Locomotivity:

Locomotivity – The Power of Changing Place

Get out of your bedroom office! Move beyond Starbucks and Mountain Java! Locomotivity is the place where you can go to have a solid afternoon cranking out code, hammering away at a blog post, designing a new logo, surfing the web, or writing that next article.

Locomotivity is a collaborative, creative, fun and professional shared work space for freelancers and small/micro business owners in and around Asheville, NC. At Locomotivity you’ll find an energizing place to work where you are surrounded by other like-minded creatives and professionals. We bring people together who otherwise would be stuck in a basement office at home or at the local coffee shop.
This place is awesome and I highly recommend you check them out! Turns out Lance, the owner, is from a small town near the small town I lived in outside Dallas! Small world. They have a daily rate of 15.00 for all the coffee you can drink and blazing...RELIABLE internet! Need a space on a regular basis? Check out their various membership levels to meet anyones needs.

Stop in and see the cool space Lance has created in a great old Asheville period home at 224 Broadway...just a few blocks from downtown.

Hope you guys are having a great spring, so far!

Stay tuned for more local flavor from beautiful Asheville North Carolina!

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

A Challenge To Rush Limbaugh

There are some things I don't blog about because I'm so appalled by them, that I don't know what to say.

I know. Imagine that.

The fact that America tortures, is one of those things. There are so many more gifted and knowledgeable people out there that can write brutally and elegantly and deeply about this subject, that I don't know what I can add. But I realized today, that there are a few things that I don't see, so I thought I'd better write them down.

First of all, there's that fat fuck Rush Limbaugh. Sorry to insult all people of weight. But his large-ass figures prominently into what I'm going to say.

I'd like to challenge Rush Limbaugh to go through SERE training. (That's the school where they put you through all the torture techniques that were approved by BushCo for the non-white, bearded different people who wear turbans sometimes and actually fucking kneel down once a day to pray - can you imagine? - and who are still in our custody illegally, unless of course they mysteriously died or have gone insane.) I'm just appalled that that motherfucker Limbaugh is actually slapping his blubbery face on the radio to show people how stupid we are to be upset about torturing people.

Limbaugh is a classic bully. The kind that ridicules and threatens people from the safety of his fucking recording studio, but doesn't have the teabagging balls to engage mano a mano. Because he's a... Fucking Pussy.

Once I was in this group therapy class and one of the women was describing her uncle who had molested her and who now was molesting her daughter. She was terrified and didn't know what to do. The therapist was this famous guy who was a protégé of Carl Yung, and in that Germanic-Swissy not-very-sissy accent he said, "Your uncle is a classic bully. That means he is more afraid of you, than you are of him. I want you to go back home tonight, get a male friend or relative, and take your uncle aside and tell him this: If you touch my daughter again, I'm going to get a shotgun and blow your balls off. Your penis will be scattered across the room in tiny little bloody bits. Understand me? UNDERSTAND ME?"

You know, I could say that to her uncle right now and mean it. Even if I didn't have a shotgun, his balls would be mincemeat.

But, back to Rush. And his balls. Or lack thereof.

First, he'd have to suffer through cold turkey to get off that OxyContin. Because you know he didn't stop taking that shit. Hell, he's being paid by the RNC in tablet form (or maybe they crush it into powder for him to get rid of the time-release aspect so Rush can get his Rush faster), just so he can continue to mouth off about the feminazis pain-free. Fucking drug addict.

We don't want that pasty-white chicken shit to avoid the pain of torture by using recreational rich-boy drugs. No, we don't.

Next, he'll need to be deprived of cheetos and twinkies, his favorite foods when he was couch surfing on welfare while his wife worked. Fucking deadbeat.

Maybe he'll have the svelt look when he comes out of training, along with that crazy look that comes from having your worst fears shoved into the tiny box that somebody decided they'd put you in for, oh, well, who knows how long. And what day is it? And is it daytime, or nighttime? Who am I anyway? Don't you know who I am? I was famous, I think. Once. Can I have some food now? Could you turn down that rap music? I hate black people. They're all drug addicts and deadbeats.

Ahem.

I repeat. If that motherfucker can make light of torture from the comfort of his radio studio, then he can go take the torture class. We'll see how long he lasts. I hate to say this Rush, but Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Abu Zubaydah have way bigger balls than you do. Way. Bigger.

Politics After 50

AWOP Contributor

(Image stolen from PoliticalHumor. Let me know if that pisses anyone off and I'll take it down. The image. Not PoliticalHumor. I really don't own a shotgun. Really.)

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Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Conservatives Make Fools Of Themselves Once Again

This is maybe the most disgusting display of conservative mental illness and anti-Americanism I've seen to date. What's funny, though, is that almost every clip in this video was being taped or going to air at the very time that U.S. Navy SEALs were executing this mission.

America is rightly sickened by these disaster porn perverts.



Mark Bruno
AWOP Contributor
Author of Left Of Center Blog

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Friday, April 3, 2009

My Waiver

I thought that I would share this Waiver that I came across in my journal this morning. A few years ago, well over four apparently, judging by the date on this Waiver, a good friend and colleague of mine presented me with this and I dutifully read and signed such waiver and it resides in my journal to remind me to Live Life Fully. It is from Melody Beattie's book, The Language of Letting Go.

Read the following waiver carefully. Fill in the blanks, and be aware of what you're signing. Take responsibility for what you do.

Waiver

I understand that during the course of my life I will be required to make many decisions, such as where I want to live, whom I want to live with, where I work, how much fun I have, and how I spend my money and time, including how much time I spend waiting for things to get better and people to change, and whom I choose to love.

I understand that many events that occur will be out of my hands and that there are inherent dangers and risks in all decisions I make. Life and people have no obligation whatsoever to live up to my expectations; I have no obligation to live up to the expectations of anybody else. Life is a high-risk sport, and I may become injured along the way.

I agree that all the decisions I make are mine and mine alone, including how I choose to handle the events that are beyond my control. I hereby forfeit my right to recourse as a victim, including my rights to blame, complain, and whine or hold someone else responsible for the path I choose to take. I am responsible for my participation--or lack of it--in life. And I take complete responsibility for the outcomes and consequences of all decisions I make, understanding that ultimately it is my choice whether I become happy, joyous, and free or stay miserable and trapped.

Although people may voluntarily nurture and love me, I and I alone am responsible for taking care of and loving myself.

Signed: _________________________

Date: ______________________

I love it (that's why I'm sharing it today). I copied the text into a Word document and pasted a flower into the background, then printed it out to keep in my journal with all the other junk in there (seriously, I will likely be sharing stuff out of my journal in the months to come and I hope it intrigues you and also gives you some fun ideas for your journal).

Sidhe
AWOP Contributor
Author of The Wandering Elf Blog

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Sunday, March 29, 2009

The Case Against Usary


"Christ drives the Usurers out of the Temple"
woodcut by Lucas Cranach the Elder

What do Queens Mary and Elizabeth, Charlemagne, Hammurabi, Plato, and Dante have in common? They all condemned, outlawed or regulated usury, the charging of exorbitant interest on money lending.

In the Old Testament the Prophet Ezekiel included usury in a list of “abominable things,” along with rape, murder, robbery and idolatry. Ezekiel 18:19-13.

The Quran 2:275-276 states: "...those you take usury will arise on the Day of Resurrection like someone tormented by Satan's touch. That is because they say 'Trade and usury are the same,' But God has allowed trade and forbidden usury. Whoever, on receiving God's warning, stops taking usury make keep his past gains -- God will be his judge -- but whoever goes back to usury will be an inhabitant of the Fire, therein to remain."

The Code of Hammurabi regulated the interest that could be charged on a loan.

Plato and Aristotle believed usury was immoral and unjust. In ancient Athens the Greeks first regulated interest rates, and then deregulated it. After deregulation, there was so much debt that citizens were sold into slavery and threatened revolt.

In eleventh century England, the charging of any loan interest at all was punishable by confiscation of the usurer’s land and chattels.

In his work “The Inferno,” Dante placed usurers at the lowest ledge in the seventh circle of hell – lower even than murderers.

During the reign of Queen Mary, the English Parliament again disallowed the collection of interest.
...

Recently, Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! interviewed Chicago based lawyer and author, Thomas Geoghegan. The main topic of their discussion was Mr. Geoghegan's recent Harper’s Magazine cover story, “Infinite Debt: How Unlimited Interest Rates Destroyed the Economy."

While I have not had the opportunity to read the Harper's article personally, I did listen with much interest to Amy Goodman's interview with the author, a transcript of which can be found here.

According to Mr. Geoghegan, we in the US have not focused enough on the role that usury has played in the making of our current economic predicament.

Prior to about 1978 or so, loan interest rates in this country were capped around eight or nine percent, and most were controlled by individual state usury laws, but in the 1970s, we began to deregulate this industry.

In the 1978 case of Marquette Nat. Bank of Minneapolis v. First of Omaha Service Corp., a unanimous Supreme Court decision held that state anti-usury laws regulating interest rates cannot be enforced against nationally-chartered banks based in other states.

According to Thomas Geoghegan, that was "the big deregulation that precedes all other deregulations," and it effectively blasted open the ceiling that had existed on the interest rates that banks could get from their clients. Marquette v. First of Omaha essentially opened the door for national banks to offer high interest credit cards to anyone in the U.S. that they deemed qualified.

Said Mr. Geoghegan during the Democracy Now interview, "The effect of this was that the big national banks were not subject to any state usury law, because the Banking Act of 1864 had no interest rate cap on it, not contemplating the kind of situation that we’re in today. And in effect, this sealed what had been a trend throughout the country, which is lifting these interest rate caps for banks and giving consumers easy credit on the premise that they would just pay tons and tons of interest so that the banks were protected if the loan weren’t repaid. In fact, the banks had incentive to hand out credit cards and hope that the loans would not be repaid, because the interest rates on these credit cards were so high."

During the following ten years, many states began repealing or loosening their anti-usury laws, with the intention of allowing local, in-state banks to compete more equally with the big national banks. This resulted in greater and greater usage of credit cards and the subsequent accumulation of huge personal debt by most consumers, much to the long term detriment of the US economy.

Prior to the rise of the easy credit culture that usury deregulation ushered in, moral character was important in qualifying for any type of financial lending. If a local bank could only get a seven or eight percent return on a loan, they wanted to be as certain as possible that the loan would be repaid according to their terms.

After deregulation, these same banks had to compete in a much larger pool of lenders who could charge immorally high interest rates of 20, 25, or 30 percent and the smaller lenders had to follow suit and charge similar rates to remain viable. Moral character and other similar factors in determining creditworthiness became irrelevant simply because it was much more profitable to load consumers with debt and accumulate the interest. The financial sector was suddenly generating extremely high rates of return in comparison to what investors were getting from manufacturing and other productive investments.

Back in 1776, Adam Smith, often heralded as the original free market economist, warned of how important it is to maintain sensible interest rate ceilings on money lending to prevent too much of the available capital from flooding into the financial sector and starving manufacturing and the other productive elements of an economy. This is exactly what we have witnessed over the past few decades in the US and most of the world.

According to Geoghegan, in abandoning our long global heritage of laws against usury we have created an environment flush with incentives for investment into risky speculation and derivatives.

Why would an investor put his or her money into industries which offer a return of three to five percent, or less from service and manufacturing when they can get a return of twenty or thirty percent investing in the financial sector?

Thomas Geoghegan suggests that we should re-establish usury laws in the US in the form of an interest cap of about fifteen or sixteen percent on all lending. I tend to agree, although I would suggest lowering the bar even further to around ten or twelve percent or less, given the huge profits many in finance have reaped in the recent past.

Tom Geoghegan also suggests the formation of some form of state-run banks to make low interest loans to consumers as an alternative to the current predatory payday lending system that often preys upon the poorest of the poor.

Geoghegan further recommends that we restructure our banking entities to ensure that they behave more like guardians of the public trust than generators of private wealth, and force them to do what banks ought to be doing: channelling financial resources into the globally competitive, productive parts of our economy and accepting lower rates of return in the short term. That's an idea that would definitely require drastic changes to the internal corporate structure of banks, but at this point in history it certainly seems necessary.

Finally, Mr. Geoghegan states that the Obama administration, and government in general, needs to begin encouraging future oriented thinking within the financial community, a notion I have advocated for a long while now. Investors, bankers, and the heads of all corporate entities should, by legislative force if necessary, be made to see beyond the end of their current profit and loss statement, to look beyond even the next few fiscal years. I would envision something along the lines of the old Native American admonition for leaders to examine the effect all decisions will have on seven generations into the future, after all, that which equals a huge profit today may lead to certain destruction a little further down the road.

Thurman
AWOP Contributor
Author of Random Abstractions Blog

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Friday, March 27, 2009

A Country Run By Spoiled Children

When I got my first jobs in corporate America, I was pretty much in awe of the Men Who Run Things. Their shiny suits and shiny cars, their serious tones, their incredible air of importance and superiority. They had advanced degrees, even. If I got really, really lucky, I might get a nod from one of them, get called on in a meeting by one of them, maybe even fuck one of them, if I was really, really lucky.

Then, I began to see what really went on inside those styled and blown-dry heads, behind those mahogany doors, inside the hallowed halls of industry. And it definitely wasn't good sex. These Harvard-educated heavyweights were making a ton of terrible decisions. Left and right. These guys ranged from the wildly erratic entrepreneurial A-types to the handsome but clueless ass-kisser-of-the-president types, and their decisions reflected their personalities.

As they slashed and burned through days, months and quarterly results, their minions tried desperately to keep up with, or to wipe up after, their huge messes. That old myth about the secretaries being the ones that really could run the company? Spot on.

For a dose of sanity, after practicing eye rolls with the secretaries, I usually made my way to the engineering department. Nerds are so... normal. They're brainy, but not very shiny. If they get laid, they're amazed, and then grateful. They stick by their women and have cute little kids. They drive practical cars. They tell intellectual jokes. On their days off, they go spelunking. They are so happy to show their pictures to you on Monday morning.

I am of the opinion that nerds, and women, should run the world.

So now, as I read the news about AIG and Wall Street crashing, I have to laugh, actually. Nothing at all surprises me. There they go again, those well-healed, over-paid Captains of Industry. Making decisions based on the following (and this is as true today as it was for me 20 years ago):
  • Focus on short term gain.
  • Focus on this quarter, not on this year, or the next five years.
  • Copy the competitors, instead of innovate.
  • Rules that are made to control the commoners don't have to be obeyed by the elite.
  • You can do anything you want, if you have expensive lawyers.
  • Beating the system is an art.
  • Customers are annoying. Can't they just buy and then go away?
  • Employees are expendable. Pay them the least you can get away with, and work them to death.
And I'm not just talking about corporate America. I'm talking about our illustrious elected officials. (Of course, we all know now that corporate America runs the government, but that's another story.) Look at how they're all behaving now! The Republicans are a complete and total fucking mess. They're acting like spoiled children - obstructing, whining, making shit up, stirring up shit, taking their balls (if they have any) and going home. Some of the Democrats are just as bad.

And it's not just the men, either. There are a few women who are acting just like men - like that goofball Michelle Bachman saying Obama is going to abandon the US dollar as America's currency. Jesus Christ! What planet is she from? It only took all the EU countries 20 plus years to switch from their local currency to the Euro. If Obama can accomplish that during his 4-year term, he really is the messiah. As if, Michelle darling, the dollar wasn't fucking destroyed by BushCo long before Obama was elected. Ask me. I know. I live in France.

Don't be fooled by the titles (CEO, Senator, Congressman, etc.). Don't be fooled by the shiny suits. Or even the gray hair. Industry, and our government, is largely being run by hyperego'd run-amoks and slimy little ass-kissers.

If you're looking up to the Captains of Industry, patiently waiting for their polished-shoed solutions to today's critical financial and world crises, don't be so shocked when you find out that this island is actually run by Gilligan.

Lisa Wines
AWOP Contributor
Author of Politics After 50 Blog
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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Compost - The Ultimate Gift From the Garden

Compost and organic soil is the lifeblood of organic growing...

Don't feed the plants, feed the soil - The plants will look after themselves. The composting process will be more effective if you follow these suggestions.

  • To get started, make a layer of leaves or other brown vegetation. Then add a layer of green plant material.
  • Add kitchen waste as it accumulates.
  • Dig this into the pile or cover with a thin layer of soil.
  • Continue adding material, alternating layers of brown material, green yard waste and kitchen waste. Brown yard waste is generally high in carbon.
  • Kitchen scraps and fresh yard waste are high in nitrogen.Both carbon and nitrogen are needed to build a balanced compost pile. Fine materials such as grass clippings should be added in thin layers so that they do not compact.Keep the material as moist as a wrung-out sponge.
  • Covering the pile with a plastic sheet may help to retain moisture.
  • Water the pile occasionally if it becomes too dry.
  • Turn the pile every few weeks or whenever it becomes compacted, too wet, or develops an odour. A garden fork, rake or pitchfork can be used to turn the pile properly and keep it aerated. Mix the material from the edges of the pile into the middle for more even decomposition.
Karen Sloan
AWOP Gardening Contributor
Author of Wall Flower Studio Seeds and Garden

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How to make yourself a 3 Bin Composter - -(U of Kentucky, College of Ag.) http://www.ca.uky.edu/ENRI/PUBS/enri310rev.pdf

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Container Gardening: A Solution for Small Spaces

A World Of Progress TeamZine is proud to announce our newest contributor, Karen Sloan, of Wall Flower Studio Seeds Etc..

Karen will be bringing AWOP readers her expertise on how to bring the wonderful world of organic gardening into your life.

Her debut post here at AWOP is the perfect beginning to a new season. It's spring y'all and it's time to grow something good! Please be sure and check out Karen's blog Wall Flower Studio Seeds and check out the organic seeds available to purchase directly from her.

Container Gardening: A Solution for Small Spaces

Garden enthusiast’s who lack space for gardening aspirations shouldn't fret, because Canada’s favourite pastime is not necessarily out of range for them.

Smaller spaces, balconies, decks, and even windowsills, will accept a container garden. This can bring great pleasure and allow even apartment dwellers to have a little piece of paradise.

Choice of containers is limited only by your imagination, dwelling space, and the size of your wallet.

Clay pots, wooden barrels, hanging baskets, and urns, are all excellent examples.

Just imagine, all this without the aggravation of maintaining a lawn or weeding flowerbeds!

Personally, I am happy to mow the lawn and weed the garden, but this mean's that I may be an exception to the rule!

As with conventional gardening, containers require suitable preparation. Space, light, access to water, and weather, must be taken into account.

Restricted root space may put added constraints on your plant preferences since some are prolific in producing these over the course of a growing season.

Containers may have to be stored in a protected area to keep from freezing, and tender plants may not over-winter due to exposure of colder temperatures and wind.

Knowing your hardiness zone will help you identify suitable plants for your new oasis.

You can plant bulbs, seeds, annuals, perennials, or even herbs & veggies in your containers. Just think of the fresh basil and tomatoes that can be grown in a very small space!

Something I do in my front yard, where I have two large wooden containers is to layer bulbs beneath other plants. This offers year-round interest, and I experiment with different plant combinations. This is half the fun, and it's a strategy will helps me get the most show from my containers.

Consider planting bulbs for spring blossoms, veggies for food, herbs for scent, and hardy mums for fall to winter flowers.

Evergreen boughs can be rammed into the soil with dogwood branches before the frost hardens the soil, which can be left in the containers all winter for a festive look.

Nearly any plant can be grown in a container, (size being the main limitation), so get out and experiment!

Potting soil works better than gardening soil, which is too heavy for most containers, and fertilizing is require more often than in a standard garden because annuals and vegetables diminish the nutrients rather quickly. Drainage is also a consideration. I have used Styrofoam peanuts for drainage, which is great because it keeps them out of our landfill sites.

Not sure what to plant in your containers or how to attend to them? There are ample resources available. Books, magazines, websites, and local garden centres are all great places to start, and volunteering at a local garden club is another link to meet garden enthusiasts who are usually happy to share their knowledge.

Happily, container gardening is rather inexpensive. There are initial expenses with containers, soil, and a periodic investment in plants, but with such ranges in size and material, there is something available for every budget and taste.Start experimenting and experience the pleasure developing your container garden, and in the meantime look for my next article about butterfly gardening!

Karen Sloan
AWOP Gardening Contributing Editor
Author of Wall Flower Studio Seeds Blog

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Thursday, March 19, 2009

Olbermann Busts The Trusts

After all the commentary of my own and others, this is the best I have heard to date.
The unvarnished and unadulterated truth of it.



Enough.

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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Shame on you, AIG!

I don't have much to add on this topic that hasn't been said or written about already (namely, that this is really fucked up and totally wrong on so many levels); however, I am left wondering if auto workers with union contracts can be put out on the street and have their contracts voided, why can't the AIG contracts be voided as well? Legal agreements like these get voided ALL THE TIME when layoffs occur or when companies close their doors. What gets me is that the U.S. government owns 80% of AIG, and if not for the bailouts the company would not exist and these bonuses would not be paid out.

This is a big test for the Obama administration, I think, as well as our new Congress. They have to put their money where their mouth is on these bonuses and make something happen. Even I thought poor Geithner looked like a school boy next to Obama the other day, who sounded like he was saying that Geithner's homework was far from being done. But using "every single legal avenue" to stop these bonuses is not enough, I'm afraid. Unfortunately, there is no precedent for this situation, but I think Congress should order the contracts void and suspend payments of the bonuses. What is AIG going to do, take the U.S. government to court? And so what if they do? A.) they have no money for lawyers fees, B.) they are on the wrong end of the PR card here and C.) the bonuses will NOT get paid for months.

It simply goes without saying that giving bonuses to the people who brought down AIG is a perversion of justice. Officials at the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Dept. should have put terms into the original bailout agreement that prevented this. They didn't. It was a chaotic time, and legitimate worries about a global financial collapse obviously clouded thoughts about rules to prevent rapacious traders from holding the government hostage. If it's any consolation, the $165 million bonus pool is relatively small.

Still, it grates because this country has a serious problem with executive entitlement and I think it's outrageous. I think this country could stand a redistribution of wealth and not to Wall Street sharks or corporate execs.

Mark Bruno
AWOP Contributor
Author of Left Of Center Blog

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Sunday, March 15, 2009

Dreams

Today we have a guest post from Thurman of Random Abstractions Blog. He has a fun and interesting challenge for AWOP readers.

Dreams

Last night I dreamt I was somehow back in school, sitting for an exam in a composition class. I've had numerous dreams over the years like this, stemming I think from the fact that I never finished college. I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life at the time, so I majored in having a good time. Only later did I discover that the job market for that specialization is small, limited to the young and unattached, and the retirement plan pretty much sucks.

When this particular dream began I was at work, doing the job I've done for the better part of the last twenty years - marking underground utilities - but somehow I ended up inside a large classroom full of rowdy, undisciplined college students.

Oddly enough, my wife, who I didn't meet until many years after my own college experience, was sitting a few desks behind me, also waiting for the examination to begin. I recall at one point being extremely frustrated by the fact that so many of the other students there weren't serious about the class. Most of them were clustered around the windows and in corners, talking loudly about anything but the subject at hand.

I also remember speaking to a very uppity woman who may have been the instructor. I recall hearing her make a derogatory generalization about the literacy of the entire class, to which I responded in my usual smart ass way, pushing her buttons and getting myself into trouble - some things never change.

The prompt was then posted: sheriff closed

The sheriff closed in on my position, panting heavily from the long foot pursuit. He was a portly, balding fellow in his late forties who looked like he'd spent the better part of his life occupying a stool at the local coffee bar every morning, swilling java and consuming baked goods until time for lunch. His face was the color of a ripe tomato and he was sweating so profusely that he looked like he'd been running through a torrential rain instead of a cool, dry autumn morning.

When I woke up I began picking out two or three word phrases at random and trying to make up interesting context to put them into, and after a few minutes of this I had an idea: Why not ask my blog readers to submit short prompts for me to work up short compositions of a few hundred words every week or two? It might result in fiction, non-fiction, or simply my twisted opinion. It would be an interesting exercise that would not only help me to improve my writing skills but I might also be able to produce some entertaining content for this space.

So dear readers, where ever you might be out there in the world, throw me an idea. It could be a single world or a short phrase. The only promise I'll make is that I will consider each one and if I use the one you send me, I'll email you when I post the resultant composition. If you want to participate, there is an email link in my profile. Please put the words 'writing prompt' in the subject line, and be patient.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Science Finally Returns To America

The day has finally arrived. President Obama will be keeping one of his campaign promises by issuing an executive order that overturns the ban on using federal funds for stem cell research issued by his predecessor.

From The New York Times:
While lifting the Bush administration’s restrictions on federally financed human embryonic stem cell research, President Obama intends to avoid the thorniest question in the debate: whether taxpayer dollars should be used to experiment on embryos themselves, two senior administration officials said Sunday/

The officials, who provided details of the announcement Mr. Obama will make Monday at the White House, said the president would leave it to Congress to determine whether the long-standing legislative ban on federal financing for human embryo experiments should also be overturned.
President Obama's move is not a half-hearted one. He has no power to overturn a law passed by Congress; that repeal is up to the Congress, which, heartened by the new executive order, will hopefully deal with the issue this session. In the mean time, Obama has directed that appropriate ethical guidelines be drafted with respect to stem cell research receiving federal funding. Once those are in place, congressional supporters of this absolutely vital research will have the kind of political cover necessary to overcome those on the far right who are already screaming about the change in policy:

Can you believe that one Republican lawmaker, Representative Christopher H. Smith of New Jersey, is calling Obama “the abortion president,” and is planning his own event today to protest the President's new stem cell policy?

The Pro-life crowd still claims that "most Americans" will oppose opening up stem cell research, casting the issue as using embryos as guinea pigs. Clearly, Representative Smith has difficulty in counting. Hopefully he will have that same difficulty in rebutting the arguments in favor of scientific research guided by carefully crafted ethical guidelines.

There is still work to be done, but now the arena shifts to Congress. Representative Diana DeGette (D-CO), an advocate for stem cell research, hopes to take the issue out of dueling executive orders by pushing a bill through Congress which codifies Obama's order. She also believes that now may be the time to overturn Dickey-Wicker and is already trying to garner support.

It's about friggin' time.

Mark Bruno
Left Of Center
AWOP Contributor

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Thursday, March 5, 2009

The last 8 Years Were A Dictatorship

Greetings All,

Today we have a post from AWOP Contributor Mark Bruno of Left Of Center.

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Amidst all of the news about the collapsing economy, Obama's Department of Justice yesterday released nine documents that contained Bush administration decrees with regard to government power.

Go ahead...read them.

Over the last eight years, we had a system in place where the American people believed that our laws were governed by the Constitution, and enacted by Congress. The truth, however, was that the Bush administration secretly vested itself with the power to ignore those public laws, to declare them invalid. The above memos, which were active until October 2008 (and in a few cases early January of this year), set forth a series of secret laws that vested absolute power in the President.

The right to deploy military against targets within the United States? Check.

Even if those targets are known to be U.S. citizens? Check.

The Fourth Amendment (guarding against unreasonable searches and seizures)? Here's a direct quite from one of the memos ("Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activities Within the U.S."): "The Fourth Amendment does not apply to domestic military operations designed to deter and prevent terrorist attacks."

The First Amendment (freedom of speech, and of the press)? Same memo, another quote: "First Amendment speech and press rights may be subordinated to the need to wage war successfully."

There's more, and it's chilling. The Constitution was effectively suspended from late 2001 until January of this year -- and this is just the stuff that they've released to the public. These memos formed the official policy of the American government -- and this policy was kept secret from Congress (who were denied access to these very memos), and from the American people. We were governed by secret laws, people.

Back when this stuff was happening, those of us who were shouting to the rafters about the Bush power-grab were dismissed as "tin-foil-hat conspiracy theorists,","Left-wing loonies," and "the Blame America First crowd." Now, we're being told that the only people who want the crimes investigated, exposed and prosecuted are nothing more than vengeful liberals looking to settle scores. Even Obama is saying that we "need to look forward, not backward."

Bullshit. We had a dictatorship in this country for the better part of a decade! There needs to be accountability for this, otherwise it will happen again.

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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Mayor Grose Resigns Over "Watermelon" E-Mail

Another racist in denial or really just that incredibly socially inept?

Or just plain too much of a coward to admit he is one?

I really can't tell you why Dean Grose, the Mayor of Los Alamitos, Orange County California would send this picture with the caption " No Easter Egg Hunt This Year" to a local businesswoman and city volunteer who is black but according to him it isn't because he is a racist.

Keyanus Price on Mayor Grose's sense of humor:
"I have had plenty of my share of chicken and watermelon and all those kinds of jokes," Price told The Associated Press. "I honestly don't even understand where he was coming from, sending this to me. As a black person receiving something like this from the city-freakin'-mayor - come on."

Grose confirmed to the AP that he sent the e-mail to Price and said he didn't mean to offend her. He said he was unaware of the racial stereotype that black people like watermelons.

yeah...right...sure you didn't. Racist and to cowardly to admit it when someone calls you out. Man, that is really pathetic. I believe I have heard that lame excuse claiming no knowledge of commonly known stereotypes before from someone else in California, Diane Fedele, regarding her totally not racist newsletter Obama Bucks in which she managed to not miss many of them from fried chicken to, yes, watermelon...the kool-aid was a new one on me there, though.

He said he and Price are friends and serve together on a community youth board.

"Bottom line is, we laugh at things and I didn't see this in the same light that she did," Grose told the AP. "I'm sorry. It wasn't sent to offend her personally - or anyone - from the standpoint of the African-American race."

I guess racism is only funny if you are a racist. Too bad they never can seem to figure out why people who are not raciist don't find their humor amusing.

Grose, who became mayor in December, said he sent an apology e-mail to Price and her boss and also left her a voicemail apology.

Regardless, Price said it will be difficult for the two to work together.

"Now I am like - wow, is this really how he feels?" Price said.

Well, Ms. Price, it sure looks that way to me.

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UPDATE:

Mayor who sent watermelon e-mail says he'll resign

LOS ALAMITOS, Calif. (AP) — The mayor of a small Southern California city says he will resign after being criticized for sharing an e-mail picture depicting the White House lawn planted with watermelons under the title "No Easter egg hunt this year."

Los Alamitos Mayor Dean Grose issued a statement Thursday saying he is sorry and will step down as mayor at Monday's City Council meeting.

Grose came under fire for sending the picture to what he called "a small group of friends." One of the recipients, a local businesswoman and city volunteer, publicly scolded the mayor for his actions.

Grose says he accepts that the e-mail was in poor taste and has affected his ability to lead the city. Grose said he didn't mean to offend anyone and claimed he was unaware of the racial stereotype linking black people with eating watermelons.

Located in Orange County, Los Alamitos is a 2 1/4-square-mile city of around 12,000 people.

And he still says he was not aware of the racial stereotype linking blacks with watermelon.

Dude...nobody, and I mean nobody believes that shit.

If you can't come clean Mr. Grose, then good riddence.


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Monday, February 23, 2009

Kiss My Ass Chase and Advanta

Warning:
There will be some foul language in the following post. I just can't do it without it.

Remember back in the good old days when you actually had to do something to default on your credit card account like be late on a payment or miss a payment to get your rate jacked through the roof? Back in the good old days a Chase or Advanta might even refund your late charges if you overlooked a payment date and it was not something you made a habit of. After all, "with Chase the right relationship is everything", or so they say.

But that is not the case with my credit card accounts this week.

Today our relationship officially became estranged on its way to inevitable divorce.

Yeah...like many people I carry more consumer debt than I really wish I had. We all have our excuses and mine are probably very similar to a lot of other folks. My partner had some rough times this past year and we used my credit to try and stave off damage to her credit rating but we came up a couple months short of her finally getting the job she needed to cover her debt payments. Oh well, I guess we could have just defaulted on her debt right of the bat and saved ourselves some money but we don't roll like that. So, we sucked it up and moved on with meeting our obligations on my debt and paying catch up on her debts that we fell behind on.

I have always held that when the Bankruptcy laws were changed, The Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, a few years ago it was the beginning of the great consumer credit set up and the fun was just starting for people who found themselves cashing those credit card convenience checks that came in the mail every other day.
The details of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 reveal it to be a bill crafted as a Republican paean to MBNA, the largest single contributor to the Republican party.
Every time I received them I wondered how many people would those checks find in dire straights that particular day and how many of those people would actually feel it was their only option and use them. I am not talking about the fool that bought a wide screen HD TV with it. I am talking about the woman who needed a 400.00 part to fix her car so she could get to work and had no other way to pay for it. I am talking about the man whose paycheck did not go up in proportion to 4.75 gas. There was that little convenience check in the mail that day and it even offered a 3% fixed APR for the life of balance. Did you think they really meant it when they said they just wanted to help you out? And you were going to pay on it diligently until you paid it off, right? Think again.

This week I received letters from my Chase and Advanta Cards letting me know they had raised my interest rate and lowered my credit limits. I didn't even have to be late on a payment much less miss one to get this nice little gift of a 30% interest rate from Advanta. Chase was ever so much kinder, weighing in at only an 8% increase in my interest rate. You sorry ass Fuckers.

So, you might ask, how is it they can just decide to do such a thing after I never defaulted on my payments?

It is all about my credit rating. Which is affected each and every time I am extended credit from the same said credit card companies. Regardless of my having not asked for it or whether or not I actually used it. Sound like a scam? You are damned right it is.

I guess all that bailout money was just a little appetizer. Our asses are the main course.

Of course, I immediately called up Advanta to protest. Jennifer the very pleasant young woman who took my call informed me that there was really nothing they could do. My point that I had held up my end of our deal was apparently quiet insignificant. I told her I wanted to close my account as I could no longer do business with such a unscrupulous company. I also wished Jennifer well in her future with Advanta as I was sure many of their other customers would be taking the same route to the door I was. She kindly informed me that I could actually keep my current rate if I would write them a letter to close my account the before March 16. They jack my interest and I have to write them a letter. It is almost like they are trying to get rid of me.
Is it because they have way too many conscientious, never late, paying customers? Bastages.

So, in conclusion.

Six months ago I could have all the credit I needed and some I didn't even want or use.
And today Chase and Advanta dealt from the bottom of the deck the Republican party gave them back in 2005. I am lucky in one respect anyway, if I can hold out until my house sells (stop laughing) and I pay these blood sucking vampires off they will never, ever see another cent of interest from me. Sorry, Jennifer, if I were you I would be looking for a new job with a company with a future. I don't see much of one for Advanta if this is how they intend to do business.

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Sunday, February 22, 2009

That Old Time Religion

Today we have a great post from AWOP Contributor Thurman of Random Abstractions.

That Old Time Religion

Last night I read the transcript of a talk given last Friday in San Francisco by Dmitry Orlov. The title of Mr. Orlov's speech was Social Collapse Best Practices. There were a lot of thought provoking ideas tossed out to the audience at this talk, but what struck me most was the contrast between the differences in how well prepared to handle economic turmoil the old Soviet Union was in comparison to how American society is to likely to bear a similar challenge.

Dmitry Orlov is in a good position to make this comparison, having spent the first twelve years of his life living in the USSR, before immigrating to the US. He has traveled back many times since, and thus has a unique perspective from which to observe both societies. I don't know of anyone who could honestly defend Soviet style dictatorship, but it is very interesting, even disturbing to note that due to the inherent social structure of the USSR, the people there were much better prepared to survive the collapse of their economy after the Communists fell, than we in the US are now.

For instance, Orlov points out that because food shortages were relatively commonplace in the Soviet Union, most people maintained kitchen gardens to supplement their diets. These gardens were usually planted just outside the cities and citizens commuted back and forth via public transportation. Soviet cities were built to house very dense populations, in part because such designs required shorter runs of pipe and cable to build the support infrastructure, thus reducing costs of construction and maintenance.

Compare this to the way most modern American cities have been designed and built over the last century. Ours is a very car-centric society, with large sprawling urban and suburban populations spread out over what used to be our best farm land. Most US cities do have some form of public transit systems inside their metropolitan areas, but they are generally limited to service within the metro areas only.

Another way the Soviets were better prepared when the economic rug was pulled out from under them regards housing. Under communism, every citizen was entitled to a place to live as long as they continued to breathe. That doesn't mean there weren't shortages of housing or that everyone got to live where they wanted. In fact, many times families were housed three generations deep, meaning that adult children, their parents, and grandparents often occupied the same tiny quarters.

While this may sound a bit cramped to most Americans, there were a few positive aspects to the situation. Childcare was almost always available and was usually provided by family members rather than underpaid strangers. Additionally, with so many members of the same family living under one roof, there was almost always someone at home to keep an eye on things. This became especially important when crime rates began to rise following the end of the old Soviet system.

Compare that to what we now face in America. When a person loses their job and can't readily find another, the odds of that person and his or her family losing their home increase dramatically. Even in good economic times, we in the US have a significant homeless population. Economic recessions generally increase the size of that group and a prolonged depression or systemic collapse would be absolutely devastating. Consider how such a situation would increase crimes of desperation, not to mention how increased homelessness could raise the potential for the spread of infectious disease. Those two factors alone could overwhelm public safety and health care systems nationwide.

All of these thoughts, brought to mind by Mr. Orlov's speech left me thinking about something else he mentioned that I've run across occasionally over the years. The idea of a biblical style Jubilee.

I don't pretend to be especially well educated in religious matters, particularly in the realm of Jewish history, but I have seen references to a practice among the ancient Israelites where debts were forgiven, lands redistributed, and slaves freed during the Jubilee, which took place every fifty years.

A quick bit of research led me to a reference at Wikipedia indicating that the tradition may have actually come from the ancient Babylonian kings, "(who)
occasionally issued decrees for the cancellation of debts and/or the return of the people to the lands they had sold. Such "clean slate" decrees were intended to redress the tendency of debtors, in ancient societies, to become hopelessly in debt to their creditors, thus accumulating most of the arable land into the control of a wealthy few. The decrees were issued sporadically. Economist Michael Hudson has maintained that the Biblical legislation of the Jubilee and Sabbatical years addressed the same problems encountered by these Babylonian kings, but the Biblical formulation of the laws presented a significant advance in justice and the rights of the people. This was due to the "clean slates" now being codified into law, rather than relying on the whim of the king. Furthermore, the regular rhythm of the Sabbatical and Jubilee years meant that everyone would know when the next release was due, thereby giving fairness and equity to both creditor and debtor."
Maybe what is needed now in the US is something akin to the Jubilee. Our economic system has certainly concentrated much of the wealth of this nation into the hands of an elite few, and a great many people today are quite simply buried under mountains of debt they have almost no realistic hope of ever repaying - making them, for all intents and purposes, slaves to their creditors.

There's a lot more wrong with the world economic system that needs to be addressed beyond simple debt forgiveness. If other issues such as environmental degradation and resource shortages (peak oil), for instance, aren't also addressed, very little would change and in a short time, we'd all be right back in the same sinking boat, with a few more holes in it, but I see no reason why so many people must be raped and abused under the weight of exorbitant financial burdens and placed into virtual indentured servitude so that a small, elite percentage of the population can amass enormous fortunes.

There has got to be a better way for all of us to live and if we don't figure it out soon, I fear many of us may cease to live at all.

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