Author Topic: I can't believe I have to say this  (Read 7167 times)

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Offline Nuclear1

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I can't believe I have to say this
For the past few months, it's been no secret the riled-up mobs of the right-wing have been disrupting town hall discussions on healthcare reform, shouting down Congressmen, concerned citizens, and even victims of the bastardization of a healthcare system without mercy.  While I don't appreciate their tactics, their shameful methodology an American citizen once could not have thought imaginable, I do feel their pain now.

No, not their astroturfed fear the United States is on some self-destructive path to Communism.  No, not their media-inspired rage against some phantom progressive agenda to wear down their country one step at a time.  And of course, not their vastly inappropriate, blatantly racist swipes at the President. 

Something is happening to this country--has already happened--will still keep happening.  I agree with the rightwing mob--the Republic is dying.  The United States as we once knew it is even more rapidly descending on the path to irrevocable perversion not seen since the rise of imperialism in Rome, and if something extraordinarily drastic and dynamic isn't done in the next few years, a collapse comparable to the resultant Empire.

I could go into the countless examples I've screamed for the past few months--the enslavement of Capitol Hill by special interests, whose ability to sign checks has far outweighed the average American's ability to sign petitions; the resulting betrayal of the vulnerable, terrified American people by the most power-hungry of politicians so afraid of angering their corporate supporters they sell out their own consciences;  the pathological lying and perversion of the truth by members of Congress to sell hate-filled, greedy agendas--but it would do no good.  Far more influential and far more numerous Americans have tried to get this message across before I, and still to no avail.

Instead, I'll join with the rightwing mob in going after their focus of ire and fear--albeit for different reasons.  That's right--President Obama, members of the Democratic Party--this is for you.

Your collective betrayal of any real progressive agenda in this country regarding overhauling this nightmare of a healthcare system has resulted in a perverted bill that actually makes the system worse--if anyone could fathom it getting worse--by refusing to establish a strong alternative to the corporate death panel that is the private insurance industry whose quest for profit will kill forty-four thousand Americans in 2010 and every subsequent year, you have failed to cause any real health reform or control of the inhumane insurance industry.  Yet, the bill still mandates Americans to buy in--not into a strong public alternative, but into the private industry.  In short, you have sentenced millions of Americans to poverty at the hands of hiked premiums and neglect under the system.

Your betrayal of the pursuit of peace and human rights here and abroad will make us a continued mockery around the world for years to come.  Mr President, you can visit as many countries as you like, and deliver as many heartfelt speeches in as many capitals as you can visit, but it will mean nothing when we're still overseeing two wars and indeed escalating one of them.  As one of the few sensible members of Congress recently said, sometimes there's no just war, and it is just war. 

On top of all this, the betrayal of our belief in human and legal rights and our collective, passive surrender to the wishes of the extremists who seek to destroy our nation--yes, the still-operational detention center at Guantanamo Bay--remains a blight on our national conscience.  Your promise to shut down the detention center and commitment to put key criminals on trial in New York is admirable--but far overshadowed by this is your refusal to prosecute the torture-justifying criminals in the previous administration, the transfer of still-possibly-maybe-innocent detainees to a maximum security prison in Illinois, and even more unimaginable than this, your mindless continuance of the previous administration's crimes--the revival of the Patriot Act, and the continued issuing of National Security Letters that wantonly disregard the Fourth Amendment and violate our rights as freedom-loving Americans in the name of "security" and "safety".

Worse yet, and this may indeed be the greatest harm and damage you could have possibly done to this country, your betrayal of our trust and our hope for change.  You Congressional Democrats who ran in 2006 on a platform of opposing the Bush Administration's anti-American policies sat around and did nothing for two years as Guantanamo remained opened, the Iraq War escalated, and the economy collapsed.  And in 2008, Mr President, you ran entirely on the hope for change and making a difference in Washington--stopping the betrayal of our values and beliefs through torture and the wars, providing reliable health insurance for millions of desperate and uninsured Americans--and have thus far, failed to deliver.

It's harder and harder to believe it will get better, or that it even might stop declining.  If the progressive party in America with a clear majority in both houses of Congress and one of the most popularly-elected presidents in recent memory can't even manage an ounce of change, what must be done?

I terrified myself tonight.  After piecing together all of the above individual betrayals into one big picture, I temporarily lost my mind.  I threw a duffel bag into the back of my truck, and turned on the engine.  I was in the middle of entering an address into my GPS when I started to realize what I was doing.  As if I had blacked out in the previous ten minutes, I took a look into the bag in the back--and pulled out a Remington 870 and boxes of ammunition.  Then I looked at the GPS--I had plotted a course from Omaha, Nebraska to DC. 

That bag is still in my truck.  The GPS is still there, programmed.  But I'm not.  I nearly became one of them tonight.  What scared me the most is that I actually thought it would work, that peaceful demonstration and action through Congress has been all-but fruitless in the past several years, and only the ones who advocate violence and who suffer a guilty pleasure through anarchy and chaos have a strong, influential voice in this country. 

My service contract with the USAF runs out on July 17, 2013.  After that--I'll be looking into the real estate market in Canada.
Spoon - I stand in awe by your flawless fredding. Truely, never before have I witnessed such magnificant display of beamz.
Axem -  I don't know what I'll do with my life now. Maybe I'll become a Nun, or take up Macrame. But where ever I go... I will remember you!
Axem - Sorry to post again when I said I was leaving for good, but something was nagging me. I don't want to say it in a way that shames the campaign but I think we can all agree it is actually.. incomplete. It is missing... Voice Acting.
Quanto - I for one would love to lend my beautiful singing voice into this wholesome project.
Nuclear1 - I want a duet.
AndrewofDoom - Make it a trio!

 

Offline MR_T3D

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
wow.
 :eek2:
yeah, from here in Canada, America looks pretty damn messed up, and its unfortunate to see the health care bill been ****ING MURDERED, I was hoping for the sake of the common good, I see no real faults in your logic, and I will say welcome to Canada some 2013. if i think about what could happen to your country, it can be pretty damn scary, it looks like steam is building up, and it will be a true test for whoever is in charge when it blows.

 

Offline Scotty

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Washington is ****ed up.  Been there, done that before.  I think we had a war going on then too (also not favorable).  Stuff will get better.  Although, I am curious as to how the President is supposed to pass a bill through Congress.  Truthfully, barring XOs, he can't do much besides travel and make speeches while he waits for Congress to get its **** together.  I don't have an answer for the escalation.

You have a full three years and then half of another one.  If America is as far down the crapper then as you think it will be, go ahead.  I suggest, however, waiting to see what happens before committing to a course of action you might in any way regret after this **** blows over.

 

Offline Nuclear1

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
He can lead.  I can't even name the head of the DNC right now--but Obama has been the de facto center of the party for the last year and a half.  He has a responsibility in this position to tell his own party to grow a pair of balls and work for the good of the American people, to tell the Benedict Arnolds of the party to straighten up and fly right, and to tell the Republicans to stop being sore, whiny losers and **** their politics for the sake of the suffering American people.

Instead, he's bent over and taken it from moderate Democrats in the name of unifying the party, and from Republicans in the name of bipartisanship.  As a result, healthcare reform is dead. 
Spoon - I stand in awe by your flawless fredding. Truely, never before have I witnessed such magnificant display of beamz.
Axem -  I don't know what I'll do with my life now. Maybe I'll become a Nun, or take up Macrame. But where ever I go... I will remember you!
Axem - Sorry to post again when I said I was leaving for good, but something was nagging me. I don't want to say it in a way that shames the campaign but I think we can all agree it is actually.. incomplete. It is missing... Voice Acting.
Quanto - I for one would love to lend my beautiful singing voice into this wholesome project.
Nuclear1 - I want a duet.
AndrewofDoom - Make it a trio!

 
Re: I can't believe I have to say this
One thing Nuclear, its one step from realizing politicians are total self-serving scumbags who will ass-**** the little guy at any chance they get to realizing the only way to prevent them from ass-****ing Average Joe is through a Constitution that strictly limits their ability to ass-**** him.  Keep this up distaste of politicians and the federal government and you may become a conservative.
17:37:02   Quanto: I want to have sexual intercourse with every space elf in existence
17:37:11   SpardaSon21: even the males?
17:37:22   Quanto: its not gay if its an elf

[21:51] <@Droid803> I now realize
[21:51] <@Droid803> this will be SLIIIIIGHTLY awkward
[21:51] <@Droid803> as this rich psychic girl will now be tsundere for a loli.
[21:51] <@Droid803> OH WELLL.

See what you're missing in #WoD and #Fsquest?

[07:57:32] <Caiaphas> inspired by HerraTohtori i built a supermaneuverable plane in ksp
[07:57:43] <Caiaphas> i just killed my pilots with a high-g maneuver
[07:58:19] <Caiaphas> apparently people can't take 20 gees for 5 continuous seconds
[08:00:11] <Caiaphas> the plane however performed admirably, and only crashed because it no longer had any guidance systems

 

Offline General Battuta

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Funny, conservatism in the past while has been defined by its love of politicians and the federal government (even social conservatism wants to use the federal government to restrict individual liberty, which is a bit odd.)

But, anyway, just to clear something up - the President is not actually particularly powerful. People always elect presidents expecting change, but really, the 'most powerful man on Earth' can't do that much.

The system will work itself out, I think. We seem to be doing better than we did in the past.

 

Offline Nuclear1

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Quote
One thing Nuclear, its one step from realizing politicians are total self-serving scumbags who will ass-**** the little guy at any chance they get to realizing the only way to prevent them from ass-****ing Average Joe is through a Constitution that strictly limits their ability to ass-**** him.  Keep this up distaste of politicians and the federal government and you may become a conservative.
No, it's by keeping corporate hands off of him.  Constitutional limits have nothing to do with it.  The problem is our politicians are bought and sold by just about every influential industry out there--defense, pharma, insurance, tobacco--and they're so afraid to make votes against them and lose their funding for re-election campaigns that they refuse to serve the American people.

Distrusting politicians doesn't make someone a conservative.  Maintaining a perverted status quo that kills Americans seems to be the definition of American conservatism these days.  Conservatism is an outdated philosophy that refuses to join the 21st century.
Spoon - I stand in awe by your flawless fredding. Truely, never before have I witnessed such magnificant display of beamz.
Axem -  I don't know what I'll do with my life now. Maybe I'll become a Nun, or take up Macrame. But where ever I go... I will remember you!
Axem - Sorry to post again when I said I was leaving for good, but something was nagging me. I don't want to say it in a way that shames the campaign but I think we can all agree it is actually.. incomplete. It is missing... Voice Acting.
Quanto - I for one would love to lend my beautiful singing voice into this wholesome project.
Nuclear1 - I want a duet.
AndrewofDoom - Make it a trio!

 

Offline Scotty

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Constitutional limits have everything to do with it.  A politician can't really ass-**** Average Joe if the highest law of the land prevents it.  Same goes for whatever corporation you care to name.  If you really think that Politician Bob has sold his votes to someone other than his constituents, vote him out of office, dammit.

Maintaining a perverted status quo that kills Americans is not the definition of conservatism.  That's the definition of political bull****, and it doesn't matter what 'side' it is.

 

Offline Leeko

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Amen, brother. I came to most of the same conclusions over the past month or so. In the end, 21st century politicians in this country are all rich guys who owe their souls to lobbyists. And really, ever since Regan the government has served corporations before its constituents. So ultimately, republican or democrat, there's no difference.

Having recently had my grandfather stay in the hospital, I found out something startling about our healthcare system that no one I've spoken to since seems to know. In that hospital there are 5 wings, each with 20-25 rooms on every floor and 2 patients to a room. Now, for each floor on a wing there are a pair of discharge coordinators. Every day they condense the daily checkups of the hospital's patients into a one-page report to be faxed to their insurance companies, who decide when they should be discharged. That's their entire job. The hospital must have at least 25 or 30 of them. It's bureaucratic waste at the highest level, I can imagine it's part of what's driving up hospital bills (all those extra salaries), and it's quite frankly sickening how directly a business that profits from releasing people from hospitals can affect when that happens. It's lives we're talking about here.

My fear is that nothing short of the large-scale protest we saw in response to Vietnam will get any real kind of change. It shouldn't have to come to that, but I don't see anything short of massive dissent persuading the legislators to do something progressive. Honestly, I think of them like little kids who realized that when mom's not home they can get away with taking from the cookie jar. Only then they start to do it when she's not looking, and pretty soon he just eats cookies all day and the dog dies from starvation because he didn't feed it. Okay, that was a weird metaphor, but my point is that they'll act like spoiled children unless there's some kind of slap on their collective wrists. A real threat. Of course, I'm not saying societal unrest is in any way a good thing, I can't believe I have to say this either... but really, we've gotten to the point where none of the common citizenry are pleased with anything the government is doing. Or at least no one informed... It's amazing we let it get this far. They can ass**** us because we've been acting powerless, and now even the ones that promise not to - yes, the Obama administration - can't be trusted to act on our behalf. This has been demonstrated clearly, and Nuclear1 has stated the evidence. Also see my links on copyright legislation.
« Last Edit: December 16, 2009, 11:16:54 pm by Leeko »

 

Offline Kosh

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Quote
you have failed to cause any real health reform or control of the inhumane insurance industry.


This is one thing that truely amazed me about the democratic party. They have a SUPERMAJORITY in the senate and yet for months and months they couldn't get the healthcare reform bill out of the senate finance committee. These people couldn't sell space heaters to eskimos.

Quote
If you really think that Politician Bob has sold his votes to someone other than his constituents, vote him out of office, dammit.

Part of the problem is so many people are so brainwashed into voting for someone and ragging on a few select points, so that it doesn't matter that politician bob has worked against their constituents partly because they are able to convince their constituents that what they did was "good" for them. Lobbysts have a real stranglehold on our political system. Huge numbers of incombunts in the house and to a lesser degree the senate were voted out, and what do we have? more of the same.

Bush had a near historic low approval rating when he second term ended, yet McCain's platform was pretty much keep doing what Bush was doing. With that in mind, McCain still got 45% of the popular vote.

EDIT: I'll add some more:

Quote
providing reliable health insurance for millions of desperate and uninsured Americans--and have thus far, failed to deliver.

It's also an open question as to how many of those americans actually want it. A fair number of poor uninsured people would still not want a "hand out" because they have been so brainwashed with propaganda of "self sufficiency". Read "Deer Hunting with Jesus" if you have the chance.

I also ran across some interesting numbers about our current debt levels:

Public debt, federal, local, freddie and fannie: ~140% of GDP (only 3 countries have debts this high in relation to their GDPs, Japan, Lebanon, Zimbabwe)
Private household debt: 99% of GDP
Private corperate debt: 317% of GDP
Now adding in collossal future liabilities in medicare and social currency: We're ****ed
(source:http://www.mcalvany.com/podcast/?p=108, at about 30:00 to 33:00 this problem is discussed)

How the hell did we let this happen? But more importantly, what are the ramifications for all of this? Where is this going?
« Last Edit: December 16, 2009, 11:22:11 pm by Kosh »
"The reason for this is that the original Fortran got so convoluted and extensive (10's of millions of lines of code) that no-one can actually figure out how it works, there's a massive project going on to decode the original Fortran and write a more modern system, but until then, the UK communication network is actually relying heavily on 35 year old Fortran that nobody understands." - Flipside

Brain I/O error
Replace and press any key

 

Offline Leeko

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Political parties are petty divisions IMO, and bipartisanship has become a tool of lobbies, like the quagmire healthcare reform has turned into. They do a very good job of making it look like they have different goals.
Sorry for the alliteration.

 

Offline Nuclear1

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
Maintaining a perverted status quo that kills Americans is not the definition of conservatism.  That's the definition of political bull****, and it doesn't matter what 'side' it is.

You're kidding, right?

So it's only coincidence the main political party for conservatives in America recently unleashed a purity test for its members, one they have to agree with if they want funding from the party for re-election campaigns, and that list happens to include opposing healthcare reform?

The most influential conservatives of the day include:
The obstructionist assholes who form the minority in the Congress and yet still somehow manage to derail any progress we could have possibly made by now,

A dumb, beat-with-the-stupid-hammer, opportunistic, greedy ***** who quits everything she does except the things she really should, like pathologically lying and well, breathing, and sells out her shame to dangle her infant son with Down Syndrome on the national stage to propagate lies about the healthcare bill

Another stupid ***** with a McCarthy fetish who seriously believes Obama is establishing a food police and FEMA internment camps, and who is so terrified of the media and their damn investigating of her insane political positions that she's convinced they're stalking her

The male version of the above, except instead of a Congressional seat, an extremely popular primetime commentary show.

A variety of racist, five-time draft deferred chickenhawk, violence-inciting, homophobes who hate Obama more than they love the United States.

It might not be what conservatism is supposed to be, but it's what conservatism in the United States has become:  a bunch of nationalistic, Cold War-addicted homophobic racists whose idea of fiscal conservatism is to cut back on education, healthcare, and welfare programs while spending billions of dollars in defense and law enforcement to provide a temporary bandage the problems funding education, healthcare, and welfare programs could've solved in the first place.  

Note: I'm not angry with you Scotty, since I know you're a smart conservative, but I've just had it with both parties, the Republicans most of all.
Spoon - I stand in awe by your flawless fredding. Truely, never before have I witnessed such magnificant display of beamz.
Axem -  I don't know what I'll do with my life now. Maybe I'll become a Nun, or take up Macrame. But where ever I go... I will remember you!
Axem - Sorry to post again when I said I was leaving for good, but something was nagging me. I don't want to say it in a way that shames the campaign but I think we can all agree it is actually.. incomplete. It is missing... Voice Acting.
Quanto - I for one would love to lend my beautiful singing voice into this wholesome project.
Nuclear1 - I want a duet.
AndrewofDoom - Make it a trio!

 

Offline Turambar

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this

I terrified myself tonight.  After piecing together all of the above individual betrayals into one big picture, I temporarily lost my mind.  I threw a duffel bag into the back of my truck, and turned on the engine.  I was in the middle of entering an address into my GPS when I started to realize what I was doing.  As if I had blacked out in the previous ten minutes, I took a look into the bag in the back--and pulled out a Remington 870 and boxes of ammunition.  Then I looked at the GPS--I had plotted a course from Omaha, Nebraska to DC. 


murder every lobbyist.  threaten to murder every one that takes their places.  for freedom, and america.
10:55:48   TurambarBlade: i've been selecting my generals based on how much i like their hats
10:55:55   HerraTohtori: me too!
10:56:01   HerraTohtori: :D

 

Offline Rick James

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
To a dark place this line of thought takes us--yet it raises an important question. How long will it be until the average working-class citizen in America begins taking more aggressive action rather than signing petitions that are becoming more and more meaningless?

Boystrous 19 year old temp at work slapped me in the face with an envelope and laughed it off as playful. So I shoved him over a desk and laughed it off as playful. It's on camera so I can plead reasonable force.  Temp is now passive.

 

Offline Turambar

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
To a dark place this line of thought takes us--yet it raises an important question. How long will it be until the average working-class citizen in America begins taking more aggressive action rather than signing petitions that are becoming more and more meaningless?

once we get hungry
10:55:48   TurambarBlade: i've been selecting my generals based on how much i like their hats
10:55:55   HerraTohtori: me too!
10:56:01   HerraTohtori: :D

 

Offline General Battuta

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
To a dark place this line of thought takes us--yet it raises an important question. How long will it be until the average working-class citizen in America begins taking more aggressive action rather than signing petitions that are becoming more and more meaningless?

It won't, at least not more than it has in the past. This degree of rage has been more or less constant throughout American history. We did manage to have a civil war once, but that was at a time when it was "The United States are" rather than "The United States is."

American politics have calmed down a lot over the past 100 years.

 

Offline achtung

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
I hate how right Machiavelli is sometimes.  =/
FreeSpaceMods.net | FatHax | ??????
In the wise words of Charles de Gaulle, "China is a big country, inhabited by many Chinese."

Formerly known as Swantz

  

Offline Woolie Wool

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
The worst part about this sort of thing is that America has reached a state of technological and military prowess where a popular revolution is impossible. Literally impossible. It won't happen. The only possibility for any significant change in the United States' fundamental government is through a coup d'etat imposed by the military. which will likely end the way most military coups end (tyrannical oligarchy by a junta). All the guns and IEDs in the world won't help a "revolution" where the United States' governing authorities (both public and robber-baron) already controls everything--the media, the infrastructure, commerce, supply of food and other essentials. The foundation of American representative democracy--government by the consent of the governed--is a thing of the past. The government can govern us even if nobody consents. The government could probably manipulate sufficient people into consenting to things against their own interests to do whatever it wants. Hell, it already demonstrates this power on a smaller scale.

I used to be a Republican, manipulated into believing in things that went against my own interests--brazen endorsement of a religion I have no part in by all levels of government, insurance death panels, "wars" on drugs and terror and this and that which will not and cannot be won. It's amazing how easily the people can be led against themselves. I predict that within 20 years the American economy will completely disintegrate and the American government will use the military to enforce order. Whether or not the military obeys orders or deposes the federal government imposes its own kind of order on the country, I don't know, but I think I ought to be somewhere else when it happens.

Good job, federal government of the United States of America. You have betrayed your founding principles (not that they ever meant much; things like Jim Crow, Comstock Laws, and the War on Terror the price we pay for having a constitution written as poetry rather than a legal document), set the American economy on a path to self-destruction in the name of "prosperity" and "growth", and are now pissing away America's superpower status with soaring deficits and the use of boorish power plays and "do as I say, not as I do".
16:46   Quanto   ****, a mosquito somehow managed to bite the side of my palm
16:46   Quanto   it itches like hell
16:46   Woolie   !8ball does Quanto have malaria
16:46   BotenAnna   Woolie: The outlook is good.
16:47   Quanto   D:

"did they use anesthetic when they removed your sense of humor or did you have to weep and struggle like a tiny baby"
--General Battuta

 

Offline Galemp

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
That's an interesting question to pose to certain parties... do they hate Obama more than they love America... I'd like to hear their answers.

And yes, Obama really does need to grow a pair and actually get things done. I remembered, right after the inauguration, when he said he was going to close Guantanamo Bay. I thought "Wow! Well I know we elected this smart, driven, progressive guy to the highest office in the country, but I never actually expected him to have POWER!"

Turns out, he doesn't. Not when he wants to do things right; not when he wants to be bipartisan and act legally and morally. You put someone like Bush in office, he does whatever the hell he wants whether it's legal or not, whether it's popular or not, whether it's a good idea or not, and flushes this country down the toilet, domestic policy and foreign.

Obama won't go to the kinds of lengths that Bush did to further his agenda. The good guys lose because the bad guys cheat.
« Last Edit: December 17, 2009, 01:01:10 am by Galemp »
"Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work he's supposed to be doing at that moment." -- Robert Benchley

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Offline Mr. Vega

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Re: I can't believe I have to say this
The reason that no real progress has been made by the Democrats is that the institutions that finance (aka control) them have no interest in any change of the status quo. The vast majority of the American populace has no say whatsoever the the policies of the government. We control the election itself (allegations of voter fraud not withstanding) but we have no power at all over the nomination of candidates. I mean, we do nominate other parties besides the Dems and Republicans, but there is massive propaganda by the American media (which are owned by the economic powers that be) to convince us that a) only these two (really one) pro-corporate parties have any legitimacy, and b) that there are large differences of opinion between the two parties when there aren't at all.

This whole angry "debate" on healthcare is in reality between a party that wants you to think that any attempt to reform a system that benefits only HMOs and Pharmaceuticals is somehow an evil socialist plot, and a party that pretends that reform is a great idea but in will reality either sit on their ass and do nothing, or pass a bill that pretends to accomplish reform but in reality makes sure that all the benefits go to the institutions that already thrive under the status quo. The two parties' actual intent is exactly the same. This whole debate is nothing but theatre designed to convince the average American that this country has something resembling a lively, functioning democracy.

You were right about one thing. Ignore what the parties say, and look at what they do. Do that and you'll quickly realize that there is no serious organized opposition to our government's current policies anywhere, and that the newspapers and television media have done an extraordinary job of hiding this fact. Or maybe it's not that extraordinary; when you're the only game in town providing (mis)information to the entire populace, it's hard to disregard what you say regardless of how bad you are at deception.

But I will say this Nuclear, run and you're a coward. If you're a real patriot, then you stay and fight. Find people who see what you see; they do exist actually, just look at all half a million protesters who showed up in New York to protest the opening of the Iraq War. Remember that it took years into the war and bombings before Vietnam protests began; now they take place before the war even starts. Things aren't as hopeless as you think they are. Not quite. So find like minded people. Talk in person or over that wonderful tool, the internet. Join human rights organizations. Go help out the advocacy organizations, the religious missions, that provide services to the working classes and the homeless. Right now we may be an atomized society with little cohesion in regards to making our desires known, but there's another way of saying that: we're also an organizers' paradise.

But don't run. Get back here and fight, you coward. Leave and you'll find that the rest of the world isn't as rosy as it looks from here. You think universal male suffrage, women suffrage, the end of segregation, and direct election of Senators was a gift from elites? The founding fathers didn't want us to have any of those things; one of them referred to us as the "great beast". Yet we have all these things, because we fought for them and won. And sooner or later, we'll destroy the one-party system; the media can't keep the visage up forever, and it's starting to crack already if you look closely. The only question is whether you'll be there to see it.

So get back here, coward, and do something for your fellow American instead of focusing on saving your own ass.
Words ought to be a little wild, for they are the assaults of thoughts on the unthinking.
-John Maynard Keynes