January 16, 2010

Turning It Off and Walking Away

Filed under: Other,Politics — PolitiCalypso @ 5:41 pm

In the media, the ratio of bad news to good is, needless to say, very high. This should come as no surprise to anyone when you consider both the business model of the news industry and the simple facts of life on Earth. The news media—especially the TV media—depend on people to stay hooked on their channel. TV, a real-time medium, is visceral and emotional; what is broadcast over the tube needs to have an emotional hook in order to keep you there. Bad news definitely qualifies because it invokes the fear instinct. This may well be the most primal instinct we have. Hundreds of thousands of years ago, our ancestors, lacking physical reflexes to match those of animals that would prey on them as well as effective weaponry, relied on this instinct to protect themselves from predators. That twitch of horror you feel upon hearing about a child who was kidnapped and murdered? That’s an instinctive reaction left over from when we feared being the meal of a carnivorous animal. Knowing what the reaction is may tend to help alleviate the visceral horror that we feel upon hearing such things; at least it does for some of us.

But every once in a while, a news story will appear that is so awful that I don’t even want to know about it. The earthquake in Haiti is a perfect example. And before you immediately think, “This person is a sociopath just like Rush Limbaugh,” let me explain. I have been avoiding this story. The imagery that I have seen (it’s almost impossible to completely avoid the news in the information age) reminds me all too well of the images of human misery that came out of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina. However, for all that this was part of my reason for not staying up-to-date with this one, that is not the primary reason I have been avoiding the story.

For all my life, I have been a “can-do” type of person. I am a Type A personality, an INTP (sometimes INTJ) on the Myers-Briggs, and an Enneagram personality type of “Achiever.” My ambition has taken different directions, and unfortunately it has sometimes had to struggle against stress or illness, but it has always had an object. It’s very difficult for a person like me to say, “I can do nothing about this.” Middle-class life in a first world country, high intelligence (it’s not boasting if it’s the truth), decent health, and they ultimately mean nothing for some situations. But that is the conclusion I have been forced to draw about the situation in Haiti. I had to draw the same conclusion about the devastating cyclone in Burma and the earthquake in China a few years ago. I had to turn the TV off and walk away because there was nothing I could do, and because staring at such images with no intention of doing anything about it seemed to be little more than disaster voyeurism. I don’t have a high opinion of deliberately stoking that primal fear instinct for the adrenaline thrill.

Many people are going to Haiti for cleanup efforts. The U.S. military is sending troops into the Caribbean to assist with relief, and from what I have heard, those soldiers are pretty much universally proud and happy to be part of the effort. They should be; what they are doing is making a difference. They do have the power to help, as do the churches and charitable groups that are sending people. Unfortunately, though, most people just can’t go. I would not suppose this to be the case for myself, but some people undoubtedly have very precarious employment situations, and it would quite literally be a choice of keeping their job or helping an earthquake victim in another country. For my part, I would just have to take unpaid leave, lacking that much vacation time, but money is still a strong consideration in a harsh economy. We live in a society that places an extremely high value on work. A consequence of this is that most people are tied to work and cannot do other things if it is a choice between work and these other activities.

I suppose I could donate some paltry amount of money to the relief efforts. The Red Cross has raised millions, certainly, and that undoubtedly helps. But the simple fact is that even if I emptied out my savings account and donated 100% of it to this, that is pocket change compared to what needs to be done. Again, I’ve witnessed this firsthand as a resident of a state struck by Hurricane Katrina. Even in the year that will be the fifth anniversary of the strike, there is still work that needs to be done and work that needs to be done but won’t. There was that much damage.

This is no doubt going to come across as a heartless, soulless thing to say, but unless an individual is independently wealthy and donates a very large sum of money to charitable relief, no individual donation is going to amount to much, and moreover, having an impact was not even the primary purpose of the donation. Unless we have a personal stake in a cause (such as a widow giving to the American Cancer Society after the early death of her husband from cancer), the act of giving is something we do to make ourselves feel better. It’s a placebo effect. It gives us the feeling that we do have power to change the situation. Certainly if enough individuals make donations, that amounts to something, and I would not dare try to dissuade anyone from making a charitable contribution if that is what they want to do. But for me, I would look at the amount of money I would be able to give, and it would just reinforce my sense of powerlessness.

It’s not at all about wanting acclaim or recognition for anything. I am simply unable to feel that my efforts even matter for the cause at hand if they only have value after being combined with 100,000 other people’s efforts. 10 dollars more or less—what’s the difference when we are talking about tens of millions? It’s why I left political activism. It did not empower me; it made me feel like a single molecule in one grain of sand on the beach. “Hardcore” activist types (a term I’ve made up to describe those activists who are extremely eager to judge those not like themselves) condemn those with personalities like this, believing that we only are in anything for ourselves. It’s not true; we are simply people who want to see concrete evidence that we have made a difference. I’m not a hypocrite about it either. I have complained over the years about various aspects of the Hurricane Katrina recovery effort, but they were always directed at those who had the ability to act but chose not to, such as FEMA, members of Congress, the media, and members of the Bush administration. I do not harbor one iota of resentment toward any “regular person” who did not do anything for Katrina victims.

In comparison with what happened in my (relative) backyard four and a half years ago, the current governmental American efforts seem to be doing extremely well. It really should tell us something that it is easier for us to do disaster relief in other countries than in our own, but I blame the Homeland Security bureaucratic rules (and Bush-era incompetence) for that. I’m glad that there are people in existence who do have the ability and means to do something about this, and I’m glad that this time, there are people in place who will act and act effectively. However, for myself, I have to turn off the TV.

October 28, 2008

Regulation Is GOOD for the Free Market

Filed under: Politics — PolitiCalypso @ 3:39 pm

If you listen to John McCain and a huge number of right-wing “free marketeers” lately, you might walk away with the idea that a capitalistic free market cannot exist with regulation of business practices. They think–or want “regular” people to think–that if you have agencies of the law telling business what it may and may not do, it is tantamount to communism at worst, and destroys the liberty of the free market at best. “The consumer will punish businesses that do bad things!” these right-wing types proclaim. “There’s no need for government to get involved!”

Besides being, all too often, entirely untrue, this is a fundamental misunderstanding of what a free market is really supposed to be.

The architects of the U.S. established that the people ought to have the ability to choose what they wanted, both in government and in commerce. They felt that if people were given the opportunity to make choices based on what political ideologies, candidates, parties, or–on the economic side–products were most valuable to them, this was the best system. I would agree. A representative democracy has worked for us for over 200 years, and a free market has allowed innovation and competition to flourish. But, just like our government is not “free” in the extreme sense of “anything goes,” because that would cause anarchy and then a totalitarian takeover, the system of commerce does not need to operate under “anything goes” either–and for the same reason. (Read more…)

October 16, 2008

The Illusion of the “Netroots Movement”

Filed under: Politics — PolitiCalypso @ 5:21 pm

There are some very good reasons why I have never chosen to identify with the “netroots” movement or the politics thereof. One such reason is the “movement”‘s eagerness to take credit for anything good that happens to the Democratic Party in elections, when the simple truth of the matter is that outside circumstances shape elections. If I were superstitious, I’d worry that the onset of crowing about the apparent coming Obama win would jinx it. However, that would be the ultimate in assigning undeserved responsibility to these characters.

The political pendulum swings back and forth. As a liberal, I think that the more liberal party should be the natural governing party of the U.S., because we need to move forward continuously. However, there is a place for a more conservative party, a loyal opposition, that keeps the metaphorical feet of the liberal party firmly on the ground, and sometimes gets rewarded with power when the liberal party becomes corrupt or goes off on some kind of crazy utopian scheme. A big reason why politics in the U.S. have been so messed up is because the party charged with keeping everyone’s feet planted on the ground was emphatically not the “conservative” party. It was the “conservatives” who had pie-in-the-sky visions of using force to instill democracy in people and being thrown flowers for it. It was the “conservatives” who believed that the sheer beneficent nature of the rich would lead to a pretty unicorn world of unregulated markets promoting widespread wealth. The “hard realist” party, the one attempting to put the brakes on these kinds of ideas, was the Democratic Party. Traditionally, liberals were supposed to have optimistic ideas of human nature and conservatives were supposed to be more pessimistic and cynical, but, despite the slogan of the Obama campaign, that has been reversed. Liberalism is traditionally, and classically, not supposed to be the check on conservatism run wild, but that’s what has happened now.

What we are seeing right now in the U.S. is that natural cycle, albeit in an upside-down world. (Read more…)

August 3, 2006

The Purpose of the Constitution

Filed under: Politics — PolitiCalypso @ 8:05 pm

“Judicial Activism,” Strict Constructionism, and Dominionism

I’ve been reading a great deal lately about the “Dominionist” sect of the Religious Right. For the uninitiated, this term refers to those people who wish to occupy seats of power within the American government so that they can enforce Biblical law upon the United States. Establishing “the Lord’s Dominion,” if you will.

This group, of course, has been leading the charge on social “issues” geared to arouse emotions and get out votes from “family values” religious conservatives. They are the first to cry “activist judges!” when a verdict is issued in favor of pro-science education, abortion rights, gay rights, or whatever their wedge issue du jour might be.

However, regardless of anyone’s opinion on any of these issues is, there’s a point that must be made about them. These issues are about extending rights beyond those explicitly declared in the Constitution. Even the Dominionists don’t argue with it; their websites are peppered with references to “special rights” and such. They will argue, as current Attorney General Gonzales has argued, that the Constitution contains no right to privacy and that is part of why their draconian notions of spying are supposedly legal. They don’t hide that their agenda is about denying rights to people.

Interestingly, these are the same people, in many cases, who called themselves “strict constructionists” in the 1990s. Remember that term? The people, almost exclusively right-wing, who opposed any court verdict that established a legal right that was not explicitly granted in the Constitution–if it was what they viewed as a “liberal” right.

The Dominionist movement does not support an interpretation of the Constitution that extends the rights of the people. But what do they support?

They support a Constitutional interpretation that extends the rights of the government to interfere where it has no business.Consider Justice Scalia’s infamous opinion on the the Lawrence v. Texas sodomy case:

State laws against bigamy, same-sex marriage, adult incest, prostitution, masturbation, adultery, fornication, bestiality, and obscenity are likewise sustainable only in light of Bowers’ validation of laws based on moral choices. Every single one of these laws is called into question by today’s decision; the Court makes no effort to cabin the scope of its decision to exclude them from its holding.

Reading past the legalese, one can conclude with confidence that Scalia supports the use of the government to legislate people’s private lives–to use it as a tool to support moral standards that have no impact on anyone beyond the persons in question and perhaps their immediate circle. Certainly not national security or even that nebulous concept called “the people’s interest.”

This is just one example of many. The Dominionist philosophy supports the establishment of a “Christian” theocratic government, operating through that which was established by the American Constitution, all the while spitting on it and perverting its original purpose.

What do you think the Founders intended for the Constitution and Bill of Rights to be? A document spelling out the rights of the American people, with absolutely nothing granted beyond what is explicitly written there? Or a document limiting the rights of the government with respect to passing laws that are unrelated or opposed to these aims:

“…[E]stablish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity…” (Emphasis added.)

Well, the writers of the Bill of Rights actually addressed that very point in a little thing called the Ninth Amendment. In case the “strict constructionists” have forgotten about this part of the original Constitution, here it is:

The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

Zing.

It point-blank says that the Constitution isn’t meant to limit the people’s rights to those that are spelled out, and that others not mentioned are retained.

Case closed.

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