Sunday, May 31, 2020

Intellectual & Moral Dishonesty Has Allowed America’s Addiction to Racism to Persist For Far Too Long

There are riots going on right now all across the country, largely in response to the death of George Floyd shortly after a Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin, was filmed and photographed with his knee laying on the back of Floyd’s neck. Floyd kept trying to say that he could not breathe, but Chauvin and the other three police officers made no attempt to let up. Eventually, Floyd passed out and became non-responsive. Later on, he died.              

Chauvin has now been arrested and is being charged with third degree murder. But it took a while. One wonders if a black man who would have done the same thing to a white man would have been able to go home after such an incident, or if he would have been arrested and taken into police custody right away. Of course, it is never a good idea for anyone, but especially an officer of the law, to put his knee on the neck of anyone during an arrest like this, but at the very least, once it has happened and the situation is under control, he could have let up once he realized that the guy could not breathe. But he did not, and the man lost consciousness, and then died shortly after that. I have heard that the official autopsy was that the cause of death was because of a pre-existing condition (a uniquely American term with bad connotations, frankly), and that it was an issue with his heart condition. Perhaps. But here’s a question for anyone who latches onto that: would George Floyd be dead right now if he had not been treated in the inhumane, brutal manner that those police officers treater him?              

Anyway, this seems like another defining racial incident of our era. There have been so many of them in this country, just in my own memory, and I was not even around to see the race riots of the 1960’s, or the similar tensions and brutal incidents seen during the Civil Right movement, and documented in the Eyes on the Prize documentary that we have all seen over the years.  

Indeed, race is always an issue in America. It always seems to be front and center, at almost every point in our history. Right from the very founding of the Americas, Christopher Columbus mentioned how the Native Americans that he came across would make good slaves. Indeed, racial slavery was instituted, as Africans were brought on slave ships, and then auctioned off as property to the highest bidder. Slavery remained the backbone of the Southern economy, and it took the brutal Civil War for it to finally end. Even then, racial laws were introduced in the Jim Crow South to preserve white supremacy, and this would continue until the mid-1960’s. Hardly ancient history. Meanwhile, the genocide of the Native Americans continued from the earliest days, and was pursued during the westward expansion, or the so-called “Manifest Destiny.”  

Since then, we keep seeing racist incidents and/or race riots. There were race riots in the late 1960’s in numerous cities. There were race riots again in Los Angeles following the acquittal of the officers who beat Rodney King. There were race riots in Florida a few years later, and in Cincinnati, Oakland, and Anaheim in between that and the big race riots in Ferguson, Missouri, and in Baltimore, Maryland, in 2014 and 2015. There were riots in Milwaukee and Charlotte in 2016, following shootings there, as well. And now, of course, Minneapolis for the past few days. And those protests have spread, particularly in Atlanta.  

It seems to me that Americans collectively never really came to term with the reality of this racist past, like people in other countries have. Germans were forced to come to terms with what happened during the Hitler years, particularly during the Holocaust in World War II. South Africans were forced to come to terms with what happened during the apartheid years. In both cases, racial tensions may still exist, but there were some enormous successes, as well. Former colonizing powers, particularly Britain and France, have seen large influxes of immigrants from their nations that formerly belonged to their empires. Again, tensions exist in each. But by and large, it seems that those countries seem to be able to avoid the blatantly racist shootings that we see here seemingly every few months at most, and the riots that often follow in their wake.  

Not that those countries have no problems with racism. They do, of course. But it does not feel like those countries are quite as defined by their racial tensions the way that the United States seemingly is. Since we never forced racist whites to come to terms with the criminality of their actions – neither after the Civil War, nor after the Civil Rights movement and the Civil Rights legislation that formally ended official Jim Crow segregation – it then seems to have hovered ever over the country ever since. It was not always blatantly obvious, the extent of the problem, and that perhaps helped it persist as long and as strongly as it has. By and large, for the first three decades following the official end of Jim Crow segregation, it seemed that southern Africa was the focal point of the world regarding blatant racism and unfair, racist policies. Yet even there, just under the surface, there could be seen some uncomfortable issues. After all, Reagan had swept into power, sometimes at rallies where the Confederate battle flag was proudly being displayed by some in attendance, and he had a policy of “constructive engagement” with the white minority apartheid regime in South Africa. He was opposed to boycotts, and provided the regime some much-needed financial aid. A Democratic Congress was nevertheless able to reimpose sanctions on South Africa, but it remained an issue throughout the Reagan years and into the first Bush presidency. It was during those years, also, that the L.A. Riots of 1992 came about.              

The 1990’s were relatively sedate in terms of huge events like that, with the possible exception of the O.J. Simpson trial, which kind of ignited the flames of racial tensions again. But race would play a prominent role once again during the second Bush years. This was particularly true when his response to Hurricane Katrina was deemed so inadequate as to be regarded as racist, as it mostly impacted impoverished, mostly non-white communities. There were huge disparities between how whites felt Bush responded, versus blacks, with whites generally approving of his response, and blacks largely feeling that he did not do nearly enough.              

The rise of Barack Obama to the White House gave some the illusion that we had moved past racial tensions of the past. There were two coworkers, both older white men who had served in Vietnam, who claimed at the time that you could no longer label the United States a racist country. It seemed a bit naïve to me at the time, yet the media also talked about a “post-racial society,” seemingly wanting to put the demons of our collective past behind us. That clearly seemed premature as there were racist portrayals and criticisms of President Obama, which focused not so much on substantive policy or political differences of opinions, but which instead had a decidedly racist bent to it. Then, there were incidents, such as Trayvon Martin, and a number of other young black men being shot, which seemed to serve as a powder keg for the country and it’s racial tension. The police seemed to be shooting young, unarmed black men far too often to be mere coincidence. Already, all talk of this “post-racial society” seemed to end abruptly.  Then came the rise of Donald Trump, a man with a racist history, and with the enthusiastic endorsement of the Ku Klux Klan and white supremacists across the land. Native Americans protesting the building of an oil pipeline that seemed to stall a little bit during the end of the Obama presidency were now basically forcibly moved out, while the pipeline was built. The police were advised to knock some people around during arrests, and the racist shootings seemed to be just a typical part of the reality of life in the United States.              

Lately, it seems to be front and center more than ever. Trump still seems to harbor racist sentiments. His response to what is happening, dismissing all on the streets in Minneapolis as “thugs,” has not helped. We find ourselves, yet again, being polarized beyond anything that we have seen in recent decades, at the very least.              

We have many problems in this country. Many, many problems, and it goes beyond the racism, either blatant racism or more hidden forms, which seem to stubbornly persist year after year, decade after decade, and now, even century after century.  But racism always seems to be one of the running themes throughout American history. It is a problem, and the first thing to overcoming a major, debilitating problem is to admit that you have one.              

Until we collectively acknowledge that in this country, we will continue to witness massive outbreaks of violent protest, like what we are seeing right now. 

Saturday, May 30, 2020

Jello Biafra & the Guantanamo School of Medicine New Album: More Details Emerging


Just  a few days ago, I mentioned how Jello Biafra, the former frontman for the legendary Dead Kennedys, had announced that he and his latest band, the Guantanamo School of Medicine, will be working on a brand new album. It will be the band’s first album release since 2013, when they released “White People and the Damage Done.”

They made the announcement on a Punk Rock Bowling video, which it seemed appropriate to share here, in case anyone wants to see it.
    
Well, there are new details emerging. At the time, the dates for the album release were yet to be announced. And while no specific dates have been announced just yet, we now know that we may hear the first tracks as soon as July, and that the album is slated to be released sometime in the autumn. The new album will likely be called “Tea Party Revenge Porn”.              


Still, this is exciting news for any Jello fans out there. So let’s all stay tuned for further details!     
         




From the Alternative Tentacles website (operated by Jello Biafra): 

Jello Biafra and Jason Willer of Guantanamo School of Medicine with sound wizard, Kurt Schlegel

UPDATE!! On Saturday, May 23rd as part of Punk Rock Bowling’s “Locked In & Stripped Down Sessions”, JELLO BIAFRA & THE GUANTANAMO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE announced that they are in the middle of recording a new album titled “TEA PARTY REVENGE PORN” that will be out on Alternative Tentacles Records this Fall on LP, CD, Digital, and limited edition Cylinder.  The band says to expect to hear some tracks as soon as July!!!  The band’s last release was WHITE PEOPLE AND THE DAMAGE DONE in 2013.  See the video below:







Here is a link to this story below, even though it is kind of short on details:    

Jello Biafra and GSM recording new album by John Gentile,  May 24, 2020:

          





Also, I thought it might be good to add a link to another article about Jello Biafra dating back a few years ago, to just a couple of months following the election win of Donald Trump ino the White House in 2016, but a few weeks before he was about to officially take the oath to become the active president. This article expands on Jello’s ideas on how to resist Trump and his loyal legion of buffoons, as well as punk’s relevance (he clearly believes punk is still relevant, or at least that it can still be relevant):


Jello Biafra on How to Stand Up to Trump, Why Punk Still Matters by Steve Knopper, January 3, 2017:  
“What we’re looking at here is Jim Crow 2.0,” ex–Dead Kennedys frontman says of coming presidency


Jello Biafra and Jason Willer of Guantanamo School of Medicine with sound wizard, Kurt Schlegel


UPDATE!! On Saturday, May 23rd as part of Punk Rock Bowling’s “Locked In & Stripped Down Sessions”, JELLO BIAFRA & THE GUANTANAMO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE announced that they are in the middle of recording a new album titled “TEA PARTY REVENGE PORN” that will be out on Alternative Tentacles Records this Fall on LP, CD, Digital, and limited edition Cylinder.  The band says to expect to hear some tracks as soon as July!!!  The band’s last release was WHITE PEOPLE AND THE DAMAGE DONE in 2013.  See the video below:


https://alternativetentacles.com/2020/05/25/jello-biafra-the-guantanamo-school-of-medicine-announce-new-album/?fbclid=IwAR09ycpMGefTZG_CxlEmHT3LuyjH0d6-xvUSAC4Ioe4eVl8vCHV1_BMuDDw

Friday, May 29, 2020

The Borowitz Report Again Blasts Whiny Melting Snowflake Trump

Earlier this week, for the first time. Twitter fact-checked one of President Trump's tweets.

As you can imagine from the thin orange skin that Trump has proven to have time and time again, he went ballistic, and threatened to shut down Twitter and Facebook and other social media sites. He is actually trying to pursue this, reasoning that he is protecting free speech.

Really? By shutting down speech on social media sites?

What a ridiculous farce this man and his pathetic excuse for a presidency is. Frankly, it sometimes all feels like a joke, albeit a very bad one.

In any case, as ridiculous and virtually comical as this clown act presidency has been (were it not actually quite tragic by virtue of it being real, and actually hurting people in this country and in the world more generally), he apparently not joking.

Well, Andy Borowitz is a comedian who has just been on top of his game throughout this Trump presidency, because Trump gives comedians so much - frankly, far too much - material to work with. He has been writing his "Borowitz Report" for some time now, and usually, they are quite humorous and clever. He kind of hit it out of the park with this one, where he imitates (like the Onion) an actual news story, in which Trump is livid after being spellchecked in one of his tweets, and claiming that he is being treated most unfairly.

It is funny, because it is not all that much of an exaggeration, frankly. We have never seen such a privileged, pampered, spoiled rotten adult human being ever in history, I think. And what is worse, he complains more than anyone that I have ever heard of about how unfairly he is being treated! Really, it is so ridiculous. He is like a bratty frat boy, and sometimes, he actually does remind me of one of those decadent Roman emperors that contributed so much towards the decline of Rome. Trump is definitely a marker of the turn of fortune of the United States, from a great and respected leading world power, to the butt end of jokes around the world.

Again, it is not entirely funny. Frankly, it is sad. But what are you going to do? You have to laugh, otherwise, you might just cry for the country, and for all that we have lost with such mediocrity in our highest office. 




Below is the link to the recent humor piece by Borowitz:

Satire from The Borowitz Report Trump Lashes Out at Spell-Check for Treating Him Unfairly  By Andy Borowitz:

https://www.newyorker.com/humor/borowitz-report/trump-lashes-out-at-spell-check-for-treating-him-unfairly?utm_source=facebook&fbclid=IwAR1z-4ETUfkg6TYT-XOsqoP_HBYrV2FZamBgWTP93bfnUas8ROO4rWnM_2M

Thursday, May 28, 2020

Hiking With My Son on May 27th, 2020




So yesterday, my son and I went for a hike in the nearby woods. Specifically, we most frequently hike at Norvin Green in the woods of the Weis Ecology Center. It gives us some fresh air, reconnects us to the natural world, and provides a decent bit of exercise. One of our favorite spots is the waterfall, and it is a decent, but not overly strenuous, hoke of about twenty minutes there, and then twenty minutes back. And the waterfall is beautiful, and at this time of the year, everything looks and feels lush. 

What a privilege to be able to share such times with my son!

At one point, I decided to go ahead and free my feet of my socks and shoes, and dipped them in the running water. It was a bit cold, but not nearly as bad as you might think, given how unseasonably cool it has been these past couple of months or so. It actually felt nice and refreshing. Also, it added to that sense of peace and connection with the more natural world, away from the distractions of everyday life.

We did one thing a bit unusual this time. We were so close to finishing the book that we have been reading - Indiana Jones and the Peril at Delphi Novel by Rob MacGregor - that it seemed like a good idea to sit and take in some fresh air and natural beauty, and finish the book. The waterfalls were too busy and noisy, and he told me that he would likely be distracted. So, we found a quieter spot near the stream that feeds the waterfall, sat on a flat rock, and finished the last pages of the book.

It was a good day that we had together again, for which I feel blessed. These are the times when you really have to focus on the blessings of life, are they not?

Or, as the late great Kurt Vonnegut used to say: if this isn't nice, I don't know what is.








Racism in America is Still Very Much Alive & Well

Two very recent incidents in very different areas of America have underscored the brutal reality that racism is still very much alive and well in the United States today.              

The first and most serious occurred in Minnesota. There, four police officers have been fired after a video showed several police officers effectively brutalizing George Floyd, a black man whom they had just arrested. This includes the damning image of one police officer, who had just placed Floyd under arrest and had him lying on the ground face down, literally kneeling with his knee on the man’s neck. Floyd later died.              

The video also reveals an argument against the police officers by bystanders, who were warning that the man could not breathe and had passed out. They urged the police officers to check for his pulse. Eventually, someone did, although with seemingly no alarm or sense of urgency, but rather casually.              
Later, there was a wave of outrage and protest once the video became public. The four officers were fired, but there were mass protests yesterday, in the aftermath of the image.                

One similar incident that many now seem to be comparing this to, likely because of the similarities, was the death of Eric Garner. Garner, as most people probably remember, was a black man who was essentially assaulted by police. One of them held him tightly from behind around his neck, effectively choking him. Garner, like Floyd, could be heard telling the police officers that he could not breathe, yet they did not let up, much like the Minnesota officers did not ever let up with Floyd, even though Floyd actually told them repeated – even more than Garner – that he could not breathe.              

A number of people online are demanding for the police officers themselves to be placed under arrest, and then tried for murder. In fact, Mr. Floyd’s family members were on CNN on Tuesday night, and suggested that the officers should be charged with murder.   

“They treated him worse than they treat animals,” said Philonise Floyd, Mr. Floyd’s brother. “They took a life — they deserve life.”   

Some have pointed that how these kinds of incidents continually happening would clearly suggest institutional racism is the reality in America.

Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis said:

“It’s the kind of thing where you don’t hide from the truth, you lean into it, because our city is going to be better off for it, no matter how ugly, awful it is,. If it points out the institutional racism that we are still working through right now, well, good — it means that we’ve got a lot of work to go.”

He responded quickly and condemned the incident, saying in a video released that “Being black in America should not be a death sentence.”         

There was a backlash among many national figures, as well. That included Representative lhan Omar  from Minnesota, who wrote a letter on Tuesday asking the U.S. attorney for Minnesota and the Hennepin County attorney to investigate the officers’ actions.  She also added on Twitter:

“Police brutality must end. We must pursue justice and get answers to this unjust killing.”

Former Vice President Joseph Biden, who is also the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, spoke out in the issue via Twitter. Here is what he said:

“George Floyd deserved better and his family deserves justice. His life mattered.”

Indeed, the outrage following this fatal incident has, once again, put excessive use of force by police officers back under the microscope. It also follows an incident in Georgia where a black man was shot to death by a couple of white men who were suspicious of him, even though those men were not police officers. Still, those men went free for some time, until video of that particular incident also sparked outrage. Now, finally, those men are being charged with a crime, even though nothing had changed, other than the release of that video to the public.              

Racist incidents like this seem to be occurring in recent years with alarming regularity. They are not always fatal, like this story from Minnesota wound up being. One of those non-lethal incidents happened in recent days as well.              

The second incident occurred in New York City, which many people believed to be just about the most liberal city in the world. Yet, racial incidents are not uncommon there, and this latest one has also sparked outrage. It took place in Central Park, specifically.              

There, a white woman named Amy Cooper was told by a black man named Christian Cooper – a birdwatcher – to put a leash on her dog. She refused, and the situation escalated in a hurry from there. Before long, the woman began to warn that she would place a call to police, and to tell them that she felt threatened by an “African American man”. As she is on the phone with them, her tone grows more and more frantic, as if she actually feels threatened, even though the video taken by Mr. Cooper show evidence to the contrary. He, in fact, does not move any closer to her, and remains calm throughout.              
The woman is now being referred to as “Central Park Karen”, going with the online trend of “Karen” being a euphemism for frankly bitchy white women living sheltered lives and with a false sense of entitlement, more often complaining and exaggerating things, and being generally very close-minded. While admittedly, I know nothing about this woman in particular, the label seems justified in this case, based on how she reacted. After all, she had her dog running free, not on a leash, and she got mad when someone requested for her to put a leash on the dog. It escalated, most likely because of her, even though she claims that Mr. Cooper was screaming at her. But she also lied to the police about being threatened by an African-American man, sounding increasingly hysterical while just trying to maintain control of her dog.              

She said that she was sorry later, after the video was released, and stated that she was wrong. Yet, she still hung onto some kind of a defense, claiming that the man had been screaming at her earlier (before there is any video). So, by qualifying her apology, it feels like it basically negates it.              

There are reports that she was fired from her job. And indeed, I believe she is rightly being referred to as a “Karen” following this incident.              

Speaking of which, I should mention that while I am not entirely certain why Karen became synonymous with the consummate female “Ugly American”, and kind of feel that it is unfair. After all, there are plenty of women out there named Karen, and they are not all bad. I have known some Karens myself, and they were not especially bad people, or anything. The first time that I personally saw these memes or Facebook posts was probably a few years ago, and it was just a regular housecat scared of what appears to be a mountain lion. The cat is supposed to be asking Karen where her damn water bottle is now. Little by little, there were more such internet sensations that included the name Karen. It seems that it was earlier this year that it suddenly took on a life fully of it’s own, and became synonymous with the stereotype of the figuratively ugly and spoiled white woman.








Here are the links to the two articles I used in writing this particular blog entry about these two separate incidents that nonetheless both clearly point to the fact that racism is still a very prominent problem in the United States today, two decades into the 21st century:

‘I Can’t Breathe’: 4 Minneapolis Officers Fired After Black Man Dies in Custody by Christine Hauser, Derrick Bryson Taylor and Neil Vigdor, with Alan Yuhas contributing in this reporting, May 26, 2020:






Central Park Confrontation Goes Viral, as White Woman Calls Cops on Black Man Over Dog Leash by Brian Price, Checkey Beckford and Kiki Intarasuwan • Published May 25, 2020:  

A viral video shows a white woman calling police on a black man and frantically claiming he was threatening her after a disagreement over leashing her dog

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Jello Biafra & the Guantanamo School of Medicine Working on New Album

Just days ago, former frontman for the Dead Kennedys, a legendary punk band, announced that he and his new band, the Guantanamo School of Medicine, are working on a brand new album. It will be the band’s first album release since 2013, when they released “White People and the Damage Done.”                           

They made the announcement in a recent video released by Punk rock Bowling recently. The new album will likely be called “Tea Party Revenge Porn”.              


The date and details of the upcoming album have yet to be determined as of right now.             


Still, this is exciting news for any Jello fans out there. So let’s all stay tuned for further details!     
         



Here is a link to this story below, even though it is kind of short on details:    



Jello Biafra and GSM recording new album by John Gentile,  May 24, 2020:

          





Also, I thought it might be good to add a link to another article about Jello Biafra dating back a few years ago, to just a couple of months following the election win of Donald Trump ino the White House in 2016, but a few weeks before he was about to officially take the oath to become the active president. This article expands on Jello’s ideas on how to resist Trump and his loyal legion of buffoons, as well as punk’s relevance (he clearly believes punk is still relevant, or at least that it can still be relevant):


Jello Biafra on How to Stand Up to Trump, Why Punk Still Matters by Steve Knopper, January 3, 2017:  
“What we’re looking at here is Jim Crow 2.0,” ex–Dead Kennedys frontman says of coming presidency

Coronavirus Update for May 27, 2020

Well, the United States has officially become the first nation in the world to reach the 100,000 death mark due to the coronavirus officially recently. It has over 100,500 deaths, and still climbing, and there have been a total of over 1,725,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 to date. Many experts are worried that the recent swell of people going to public places, and often not wearing masks and not following social distancing protocols, will lead to a new spike of infected. This was particularly true in places like Ozark Lake in Michigan and Daytona Beach in Florida, where huge masses of people had gathered in tight places, and again, with very few people shown in pictures were actually wearing masks in either place.              

Of course, the United States is not the only country with Covid-19 problems, although it is still, far and away, the country with the most confirmed cases and deaths.              


In South America, two countries in particular are experiencing very serious crises: Brazil and Peru. Brazil shot up to the second highest number of total confirmed cases in the world, and now has over 394,000, with over 24,000 deaths from Covid-19. Neighboring Peru, which has a fraction of the overall population of Brazil, has over 129,000 total cases, and has seen officially over 3,700 deaths, although there is speculation that those official numbers might be lower than the real total.              


Europe obviously also remains a hot spot for Covid-19. Russia has the third most total confirmed cases, with over 362,000, although it has officially reported only 3,800 deaths to date. Spain has the next most amount of confirmed cases, with over 283,000, and has suffered over 27,000 deaths. The United Kingdom is next, with over 265,000 confirmed cases, the fifth most of any country in the world, although it has officially had the second most confirmed deaths from the coronavirus, with over 37,000. Italy remains a hotspot as well, with over 230,000 total cases, and well over 32,000 deaths. France and Germany both have over 180,000 confirmed cases, although France has lost over 28,000 people, while Germany has seen only over 8,000 dead. Overall, Europe – particularly western Europe – has been hit especially hard. There have been well over one million confirmed cases in the six combined largest European nations (the ones already mentioned here), with over 136,000 total deaths. There are other smaller countries, particularly Belgium and the Netherlands, that have also been hit very hard proportionally, with over 100,000 confirmed cases and more than 13,000 deaths combined between the two countries, both of which have populaitons well under twenty million. Belarus, Portugal, and Sweden all also have well over 30,000 confirmed cases.              


Otherwise, India continues to see the severity of the Covid-19 crisis rise, with now well over 150,000 total cases, and over 4,000 deaths. It will likely overtake Turkey in terms of both total overall cases and total deaths in the near future.

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Many Problems in the United States May Begin (& End) With Our Food

There are many problems in this world, but it seems that those problems are magnified both in terms of volume as well as with severity right here in the United States. No country has it right or is problem-free, of course. Nobody in this world has it all figured out. It would be the height of naivete, or possibly arrogance (or both) to believe that anyone does.  

However, the United States has been going through some particularly pressing problems in recent decades. There are a number of reasons for this, not least of which is that Americans have been a bit pampered for too long with an elite status as the world’s leading superpower. For many years, the nation enjoyed the highest standard of living in the world, and it still enjoys a fairly high standard of living.  

That prestigious status has been slipping noticeably, however. A number of other countries have passed the United States in terms of standard of living, including neighboring Canada, Australia, Japan, and numerous northern European nations. Furthermore, there are areas in which pretty much every other industrialized nation seems to have surpassed us. This seems true in healthcare, where we remain the only developed nation that fails to provide citizens with universal, affordable healthcare. We are also the only nation that seems to elect science-skeptical leaders with such an alarming degree of consistency. Not surprisingly, also, our education system has slipped considerably, so that in some subjects, we outright rank near the bottom among industrialized nations.  

In addition, we here in the country many Americans proudly boast as the “land of the free” have more people behind prison bars than any other country in the world. That is what happens when you have a de facto “for profit” prison system, of course. The “for profit” label is also the reason why our healthcare system is the most expensive in the world, even though there are tens of millions of Americans who cannot afford healthcare, or are underinsured. Only a “for profit” healthcare system could have come up with the concept of “pre-existing conditions”, after all. 

Indeed, the profit motive seems to be at the center of all sorts of other problems, as well, including our collective hostility towards science, the increasing levels of pollution (particularly under Trump), and why we have the most serious problem with obesity of any nation in the world.  

Indeed, we seem to have all manner of health concerns. There are mental health issues, with levels of depression and anxiety that are through the roof. Cancer rates are alarmingly high, and often, it seems that we do not even know where our collective susceptibility to cancer is coming from. For me, it seems that there are so many potential possibilities, that it becomes difficult to narrow it down. Admittedly, this is highly unscientific, but it seems to me that some of these health problems, and particularly the high cancer rates, could be coming from any number of possible factors. There could certainly be natural factors, such as excessive exposure to the sun, although many people seem to make a point of lying in the sunshine in order to get good tans. Perhaps they assume that the sunscreen or other items that advertise as protection will actually work. Which brings me to beauty products, because many of these are not natural, and we do not know what these chemicals that we voluntarily put on our own bodies might actually be doing to us. Was it not true, at least some years ago, that hair dye for darker hair increased the possibility of cancer?  

Also, it is not just these products that we often slather on ourselves, and on our skin. What about all of those pills that so many of us pop? Perhaps they are subscription pills from our doctors in our “for profit” healthcare system, or perhaps it is even those more regularly available medicinal items, including aspirin and such for our myriad aches and pains, which are causing far more problems than we even know about. Or perhaps it is more hidden. The wires and electricity within the walls of our own comfortable homes, maybe, or the proximity to electric towers, or possibly cell towers these days, may be a strong factor. Perhaps also those cell phones that we carry with us nowadays at all times could explain it in part, or other electronic devices that so many of us have come to rely on. Perhaps pollution plays a serious factor.  

Yet, one area that many Americans in particular seem either not to think about, or not to dwell upon seriously, would be our food. Many Americans seem to get annoyed and/or offended when other nations (particularly but not exclusively European nations) reject American foods, such as beef, for having too many artificial additives that they deem a health threat. Still, the bottom line is that those nations are trying to protect their citizens, and are only too aware of how costly – both literally and figuratively - the health problems will be down the road. That is not so much a problem here in the United States, with our “for profit” healthcare system, where health problems seem almost like a desirable outcome to keep generating profits.  

Perhaps that accounts for why we seem to accept so many additives in our foods. I mean, seriously! I consider myself a fairly well-educated, intellectually capable guy, for the most part. Not a genius, perhaps, but not dumb, and probably smarter than average. However, pronouncing some of the ingredients in commonly consumed foods is often beyond me. Now, instead of greater transparency for health awareness, our government, again most likely driven by the profit motive, has made it more difficult to find out what exactly is in the food that we consume. Perhaps that accounts for our problems with obesity, with cancer, and with other diseases.  

How and when did all of this start? What are the roots of all of this? And when, exactly, did things really begin to get bad? 

Recently, the New York Review of Books published a piece by author Michael Pollan (see link below). It in, Pollan describes how the very roots of this growing problem were actually attached to our idea of abundance as a virtue, during the salad days (not trying to be ironic with that expression) of this country's history in the post-war years through at least until the Kennedy assassination, the era that most Americans recognize as the Golden Age of Americana, and how this altered much more recently:

The very system that made possible the bounty of the American supermarket—its vaunted efficiency and ability to “pile it high and sell it cheap”—suddenly seems questionable, if not misguided. But the problems the novel coronavirus has revealed are not limited to the way we produce and distribute food. They also show up on our plates, since the diet on offer at the end of the industrial food chain is linked to precisely the types of chronic disease that render us more vulnerable to Covid-19.     

The story begins early in the Reagan administration, when the Justice Department rewrote the rules of antitrust enforcement: if a proposed merger promised to lead to greater marketplace “efficiency”—the watchword—and wouldn’t harm the consumer, i.e., didn’t raise prices, it would be approved. (It’s worth noting that the word “consumer” appears nowhere in the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, passed in 1890. The law sought to protect producers—including farmers—and our politics from undue concentrations of corporate power.)1 The new policy, which subsequent administrations have left in place, propelled a wave of mergers and acquisitions in the food industry. As the industry has grown steadily more concentrated since the 1980s, it has also grown much more specialized, with a tiny number of large corporations dominating each link in the supply chain. One chicken farmer interviewed recently in Washington Monthly, who sells millions of eggs into the liquified egg market, destined for omelets in school cafeterias, lacks the grading equipment and packaging (not to mention the contacts or contracts) to sell his eggs in the retail marketplace.2 That chicken farmer had no choice but to euthanize thousands of hens at a time when eggs are in short supply in many supermarkets.

Indeed, the food that we collectively consume in this country is problematic. We hear many people condemning the choices that far too many Americans opt for, from sweets and junk food to all of those fast food chains that seem to dominate the culinary options in most American towns from coast to coast. It is only when we hear about something that sounds so horrific that there is any kind of a backlash against it. This was the case when McDonald’s was discovered to use what it referred to as “pink slime” in burgers. Clearly, the idea of excessive and unnatural sounding processing of these meat products alarmed almost everyone who heard about it.  

Still, it seems to me that there is not enough serious thinking about the impact that our choices regarding the food that we consume have on us. It should be pointed out that I am not only talking about individuals who opt to eat fast food and/or junk food regularly, and create their own personal health problems, which clearly can escalate quickly the older we get. No, the problems also are with us as Americans, collectively. After all, we elect these representatives who made more transparency with the ingredients within our food labels far more difficult. That clearly does not serve the public interest, and is yet another classic example of putting profits before people, which seems to be the root cause of almost all of our problems here in this country, and in more ways than one (in terms of both the politicians and the food industry that they are, pardon the pun, catering to).  

As with so many of our problems here in the United States, it seems that the roots of this problem begin (and stubbornly persist) because of that excessive pride and sense of being exceptional, of somehow being exempt from the rules that govern over (and thus limit) the rest of the world.  

The aforementioned Pollan piece which examines the problems with the American food industry (and it is an industry). It is a fascinating – and frankly, alarming – revelation of the multiple levels of problems that our collective choice to create what we now know as the American food industry has caused us. That includes problems that we are all aware of these days, including the sicknesses, perhaps most visibly the obesity issue. But there are other health issues that stem from it, and not just with humans. Also, Pollan warns that there may be some impending food shortages that may prove comparable to the system of Communism in the Soviet-bloc countries that we specifically designed our economic system to best in every way.  

Yes, we are facing an impending food crisis in this country. Typically, it has everything to do with a system that once seemed a blessing, producing an abundance of food at affordable prices, but which seemingly spun out of control and became a monster. Pollan calls this the "industrial food complex", a term that calls to mind Eisenhower's dire warnings of a "military industrial complex" that had grown so much as to become a monstrous threat to the country. Here is Pollan, once again explaining a little more on how and why everything went bad with our processed food production:

It’s long been understood that an industrial food system built upon a foundation of commodity crops like corn and soybeans leads to a diet dominated by meat and highly processed food. Most of what we grow in this country is not food exactly, but rather feed for animals and the building blocks from which fast food, snacks, soda, and all the other wonders of food processing, such as high-fructose corn syrup, are manufactured. While some sectors of agriculture are struggling during the pandemic, we can expect the corn and soybean crop to escape more or less unscathed. That’s because it takes remarkably little labor—typically a single farmer on a tractor, working alone—to plant and harvest thousands of acres of these crops. So processed foods should be the last kind to disappear from supermarket shelves.     

Unfortunately, a diet dominated by such foods (as well as lots of meat and little in the way of vegetables or fruit—the so-called Western diet) predisposes us to obesity and chronic diseases such as hypertension and type-2 diabetes. These “underlying conditions” happen to be among the strongest predictors that an individual infected with Covid-19 will end up in the hospital with a severe case of the disease; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have reported that 49 percent of the people hospitalized for Covid-19 had preexisting hypertension, 48 percent were obese, and 28 percent had diabetes.

I urge you to click on the link and read Pollan's piece. It is not a comfortable read, but it is an important one, and perhaps even a necessary one. Truly an eye-opener, even though it is alarming and, frankly, depressing, as it illustrates why we Americans, specifically, are facing yet another impending crisis, largely based on our choices, political and otherwise, without having given much thought (if indeed any) to the possible long-term consequences of these actions. And it is the reason why so many things seem to be going so wrong in this country, and all at once. 

Please take a look at it, because it is an important read. Below is the link:


The Sickness in Our Food Supply by Michael Pollan, June 11, 2020 ISSUE: 


Monday, May 25, 2020

America’s Economy Still Resembles Robin Hood in Reverse

The coronavirus crisis has now lasted well over two months here in the United States, and it has proven quite deadly, much like it obviously is in the rest of the world. As of right now, without having taken a look at the official numbers, the estimated deaths here in the United States now number over 95,000, with over one and a half million confirmed Covid-19 cases. 

As for millions of others, it has had a bad impact, as well. Many have lost their jobs, numbering in the tens of millions. We now seem to be facing the most serious economic crisis since the Great Depression. These are scary times.

Social distancing was necessary. Obviously, though, not everyone was on board. Many question the need for it, and are pining for the country to reopen. I can understand the millions who want the country to reopen because they are hurting financially. Obviously, going a long time without working (and without the paychecks that come with working) puts an obvious strain on our finances. I have a little bit less sympathy, though, for people who want the country to reopen for superficial reasons, such as to get a haircut, or maybe have their nails done. Such fluffiness and whining about relatively minor inconveniences! 

Still, the economic realities for many, and indeed most, Americans, has turned decidedly grim in these recent months. More people are struggling. If many - a majority, by most counts - were already living paycheck to paycheck before this pandemic, then even more seem to have joined those numbers. The struggles are real.

Not everyone is suffering, however. Right now, we have this ridiculous economic system that we are living under here in the United States, which seems to be failing us now as a matter of course. Hell, we hardly even raise an eyebrow when we hear shocking headline news revealing the extent to which it is failing us anymore. So, is it surprising that the wealthiest Americans have gotten still far wealthier during this crisis? 

Well, they did. Big time. And of course, we the taxpayers are the ones paying for it, literally and figuratively. 

Here is a recent tweet by Robert Reich that pretty much sums it up:



Robert Reich @RBReich 

How many Americans lost their jobs in just 2 months Rightwards arrow 40,000,000  

Billionaire wealth increase in same 2 months Rightwards arrow $434,000,000,000  

The system is rigged, folks. 

5:30 PM · May 21, 2020·Twitter Web App 12.8K  Retweets 30.1K  Likes

https://twitter.com/RBReich/status/1263582931190079493

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Coronovirus Update for Sunday, May 24, 2020

Okay, so still more changes with the Covid-19 crisis since the last update here on the Charbor Chronicles.

The most obvious change is Brazil, which shot up to the second most amount of confirmed cases of Covid-19, with well over 350,000, surpassing multiple European nations. Only the United States, with over 1,676,000 confirmed cases, has more. The United States still has suffered far more deaths from the coronavirus than any other nation in the world, with what will very soon be 100,000 deaths from confirmed coronavirus cases.

There are multiple European nations with severe coronavirus problems, as well. Britian has the second most confirmed deaths of any nation in the world, with over 36,000, while Italy ranks third, with over 32,000. Spain and France are next, both with over 28,000 deaths, while Brazil now would be next, with over 22,000. Those, so far, are the only nations with over 20,000 deaths from Covid-19 to date.

India now has the tenth most confirmed cases, with over 138,000 confirmed cases, although the death count remains low compared to other nations with that number of cases, as they have only seen just over 4,000 deaths from confirmed coronavirus cases to this point.

Worldwide, there have been over 5,464,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19, and over 345,000 deaths, although more than 2,287,000 have recovered from it thus far.

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Our Recent Trip to Skylands Botanical Gardens on May 22nd (With Pictures)






On Friday, May 22nd, my son and I went to Skylands Botanical Gardens in Ringwood, New Jersey. We just wanted to go somewhere nice for a decent walk, as well as to take in some fresh air and enjoy the beauty.

The first thing that we did was walk the loop, which if memory serves correctly, is roughly over a mile, perhaps closing in on a mile and a half. It is a healthy walk, but nothing overly strenuous. But we enjoyed being surrounded by the surrounding greenery of the trees, and listening to the frogs calling out at the pond in the middle of the walk. 

There is one area of the loop that I have always particularly enjoyed. It is an area where the road is literally lined with trees, and right next to it is a field with some old farming equipment on it, likely dating back to the 19th century or, at latest, the very early 20th century. It almost looks like some Civil War battlefield, and so I always feel tempted to take some pictures, which I did yesterday.

After that, we walked around the actual gardens, although there were not nearly as many flowers as I had expected to see. Still, it is always pleasant at the gardens. The pictures here, as well as those which I shared here in the past, can confirm that.

We relaxed by reading together in the heart of the garden, which seemed like a nice way to wind our trip down. 

Below are some of the pictures from our enjoyable day. The first picture is actually a separate one from Tuesday, when I stopped at a pond or lake not too far from my son's home. It shows some spring colors, which really are still out in northwestern New Jersey, which is unusually late in the season. Still, it was nice, and seemed worth sharing.

After that are the pictures from our visit to Ringwood's Skylands Botanical Gardens yesterday:






























Friday, May 22, 2020

Some News Items in Asia

Two major news stories today.

First of all, India and Bangladesh will be experiencing the most severe storm in their history later today and into the weekend. Already, millions of people have been evacuated.

Let us hope that they come out of this relatively intact.

Also, the ruling Chinese Communist government is about to pass a measure that will significantly increase the presence and pressure of the Chinese government in Hong Kong. This will likely end the "two systems one nation" policy that has been in place there since British rule there ended in 1997.

Mass protests are expected in response.

I am writing this from my Kindle device, which is not as comfortable or easy for me as the laptop. So this will be a short one, at least for today.

Hope that everyone is doing well and staying safe out there!

Thursday, May 21, 2020

Still More on the Controversy Generated by "Planet of the Humans"





Yes, another blog entry about "Planet of the Humans."

Maybe it is excessive. But you must understand that I have identified as an enthusiastic environmentalist for decades, having joined the environmental club at my high school in the early nineties, and then joined the environmental club at my college later on, eventually working my way to becoming president. I believed all of this time, so seeing a grimmer reality, and seeing that green energy was not all that it is advertised as being, was very troubling to me.

That movie kind of produced a mini crisis within me.

You see, up to this point, I would definitely have considered myself a strong supporter of environmentalism.

But now, even though I still would obviously support a clean environment, it would be a lie to suggest that my faith in what was known to be the popular environmental movement was not shaken. Admittedly, my faith in Al Gore was questionable for some time now. But Bill McKinnon? Robert F. Kennedy? I had believed in them, and they both proved to be very disappointing. And the whole alternative energy movement itself, also, is something that, at the very least, feels like it will need to scrutinized and questioned intensely from here on in.

Oh, I know, they retorted that Moore's new movie is outdated, and either exaggerates, or is misleading. Seriously, though, if they are guilty of misleading the public like that, and have been proven to flip flop on environmental stances before, to waffle on key issues, then why should we believe them now? After all, what else are they going to say in their defense, other than to try and discredit Moore and the others involved in this movie?

The truth of the matter feels closer to what Moore was arguing. That the environmental movement is not what it is cracked up to be. That modern industrialism, which really helped get us into the problems we are now facing to begin with, will not save us.

Also, that the real problem that we are facing, and which they never seem to address, because their is no profit in it for them, is overpopulation. That indeed feels much closer to the truth, and that, to borrow Gore's own words, is very inconvenient for them. Because they cannot make billions. Nor can they come up with seemingly easy and quick solutions for all of us to believe in.

Yes, I got sucked into believing that these "clean" alternative energies could truly help us preserve,m at least mostly, our current way of life. But it is deceptive, because our way of life is the problem to begin with, of course.

Part of me still wanted some more positive answer than that. Part of me still wants to believe that some of these figures recognized as environmental leaders truly do have the best of intentions, and are not merely posing as concerned leaders in the field. However, the main argument that Moore and Jeff Gibbs made, that the human population explosion had stressed this limited planet beyond the breaking point already, and that we humans need to get ourselves under control first and foremost, rings true. As I mentioned in yesterday's blog entry, this theme echoes what Daniel Quinn, one of my favorite authors, argued for decades. We are growing much too fast, and human mass is replacing other kind of biomass, all over the world. That includes other animal species, as well as forests. Everything else has to make room for us, for our wants, and not just our needs. That is the core problem, and it is not some myth of clean green energy that is going to save us from a dire fate if we fail to control ourselves, and find some way to reign in the population explosion.

Still, it was interesting to read and watch what others were saying. Some scoffed at the very notion that this movie could have an impact on the environmental movie, and basically suggested that anyone who would fall for the tricks and what they claimed to be pseudo-science by Moore and Gibbs simply cannot be all that intelligent. In other words, these were the high-minded liberal elites looking down their noses at peasants, who could never be nearly as sophisticated as them.

The thing is, I think of myself as fairly intelligent. And while I am not the most scientifically informed person in the word, it again astounds me that none of these people ever seem to actually look at the population explosion and view it with any serious trepidation or seeming alarm. Green technology seems to be their cure all. But my own intuition, and the simple mathematical logic of just how seriously the human population explosion has completely transformed this world and put it on the brink of real extinction, feels much closer to the truth. People criticized Daniel Quinn when he made these arguments, and they are criticizing Michael Moore and Jeff Gibbs now. They claimed that Quinn was playing God, and are claiming that Moore is putting his own professional reputation over an environmental movement that, to my understanding, he has always been a vocal supporter of.

Besides, the critics all repeated the same theme. Michael Moore is uninformed, that he is punching downward, trying to make a splash and reinforce a reputation for being edgy. They all blasted the science, claiming that it was seriously outdated, and that much has changed, as if this movie had been made decades ago. In fact, the plants mentioned that are labeled as part of this "green energy" movement are still active and still burning biomass, or the failed Ivanpah Solar Array in the Mojave desert, which is hardly ancient history. I remember driving by that in 2016 while on vacation with my son, and feeling excited about this ultra-modern clean energy plant, unaware of how much damage to the environment it had actually caused, or how much of a failure it would shortly be regarded as, despite having opened only a couple of years earlier. The Earth Day celebration in Washington that was to promote green energy was from 2015, which again, is hardly ancient history. Also, they took exception to how these environmental leaders were portrayed as transparently greedy.

Yet, none of them seemed to concede that maybe the movie made a point in exposing the hypocrisy and professed ignorance of self-proclaimed leaders in the environmental movement. They seemed fine with Al Gore's contradictory actions, and his hunger to make more and more money. They seemed comfortable with the involvement of huge corporations with a well-known reputation for being big polluters. They failed to answer some of the core questions, such as whether machines made by industrial civilization could save us from industrial civilization. And most importantly, time and time again, they failed to even mention the main argument about overpopulation, which the few critics who did mention it seemed to dismiss as silly or irrelevant. One of them dared to suggest that Moore was being an elitist, that the poor would not do environmental damage, really, but that the wealthy are the one who cause the most damage, as if Moore had in any way been defending that, or that a growing number of people in formerly strictly poor nations like China and India - both of which have enormous populations that are still growing - is somehow not a major problem facing us. It's not like the smog in the major cities in those countries do not exist, or are impossible to see. Instead, they merely dismissed the movie as shallow and a virtual disinformation campaign.

So, I looked for what actual scientists would say about the movie, how they might react. But what I got were a bunch of self-proclaimed environmentalists, who recited facts that the movie already had addressed, such as the closing of coal plants, and how renewable energy plants were replacing them increasingly in the United States. However, the movie already pulled the curtain of what those “renewable” energy plants really were. And let’s face it: biomass is still burning at those plants today, even though they are still labeled as clean and renewable energy.           

And again, nowhere did it seem like the overpopulation explosion was taken seriously. They kept repeating the same concern: that Michael Moore was effectively just a troublemaker, trying to enhance his own reputation as some kind of a rebel. That this film will derail the green energy movement. None of these reviews expressed concern at all at what Moore’s movie actually reveals: that green energy relies heavily on fossil fuels, and that it finds itself in bed with big corporate polluters. That wood is a renewable energy source, and forests are being cut down all over the world – in North America, in the Amazon in South America, in rainforests in Africa and Indonesia – and being used as energy, or exported to be used as energy. Germany’s wind energy miracle is also exposed, as it is revealed that, in fact, Germany is the European nation that uses the most coal.           

Again and again and again, green energy is exposed as an illusion.           

As I mentioned yesterday, there are many who want this movie pulled from Youtube. Because, you know, censorship always works in important debates. If this movie were so easily discredited, then these people would not view it as such a threat. After all, let's state the obvious: those who do not believe in science, much less environmentalism, are not likely to watch this movie, much less give it serious consideration. Yet, critics of the movie seem to lump the likely viewing audience in with ignorant Trump supporters, and that just seems like elitist self-interest. Many of these people champion freedom of speech and of the press, yet demand that a movie like this gets pulled as soon as it questions their beliefs and actions? Seriously?

If they are in the right, then state your case. If you are worried that environmental leaders are made to look foolish or greedy (or both), then let them defend themselves and their actions. If the science in this movie is so flawed, then definitively contradict them with scientists. If the real problem is not overpopulation, then explain why overpopulation should not be a concern. If the problems and questions raised in this movie are not legitimate, then answer them with compelling arguments. In short, take the challenge at it's face value, and defend your beliefs and actions. If not, if they claim that this is  just so ridiculous and just not worthy of their attention, they are reinforcing their intellectually dishonest approach. After all, Bill McKibbens hardly comes across as either responsible or informed in this movie. Frankly, his Rolling Stone article fails to take full ownership of these kinds of contradictions and flip flops. Al Gore also looks bad in this movie, and his actions increasingly look transparently self-serving. Robert Kennedy, Jr., also betrays his own faith, speaking privately to corporate interests in a much different manner than he does publicly. If these glaringly obvious issues are not taken seriously be the environmental movement after such a huge movie has exposed them, then how can anyone else take the environmental movement itself seriously?