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Cops Kill Eric Garner Whose "Crime" Was Selling Cigarettes

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Pallbearers carry the casket of Eric Garner at Bethel Baptist Church following his funeral service, Wednesday, July 23, 2014, in the Brooklyn borough of New York. 

"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/08/bad-black-people-why-bill-oreilly-is.html

Michael Brown's and Eric Garner's death were not isolated cases. This society has denied people of color the opportunities of whites for generations. There were plenty of factors other than Garner's skin that led to his death, but focusing on any one of them in particular ignores the largest and most important. The New York Times.

The police made no effort to help Garner. As he lay dying on the sidewalk, they ignored his distress, eventually manhandling him onto a gurney. His life might have been saved in those few minutes. New York Daily News.

The officer told the grand jury he did not realize Garner was in danger. Pantaleo narrated the videos in front of the grand jury, explaining his thoughts and actions. He said that when he heard Garner saying, "I can't breathe," he tried to let go, but couldn't do so fast enough. Goodman and Michael Wilson in The New York Times.


Protesters in New York voiced their frustration peacefully. "Daniel Skelton, 40, ripped cigarettes from a pack of Newports, flung them to the ground and stomped on them. 'Black lives,' he shouted." Vivian Yee in The New York Times.

The Department of Justice is opening a civil-rights probe. Legal experts suggested that because of the video evidence, the case could be easier for federal prosecutors than either the Michael Brown or the Trayvon Martin cases, neither of which are expected to result in federal charges. Timothy M. Phelps in the Los Angeles Times.


In The Eric 


 Opinion writer December 3, 2014
I can’t breathe.
Those were Eric Garner’s last words, and today they apply to me. The decision by a Staten Island grand jury to not indict the police officer who killed him takes my breath away.
This time, there were literally millions of eyewitnesses. Somebody tell me, just theoretically, how many does it take? Is there any number that would suffice? Or is this whole “equal justice before the law” thing just a cruel joke? In the depressing reality series that should be called “No Country for Black Men,” this sick plot twist was shocking beyond belief. There should have been an indictment in the Ferguson case, in my view, but at least the events that led to Michael Brown’s killing were in dispute. Garner’s homicide was captured on video. We saw him being choked, heard him plead of his distress, watched as no attempt was made to revive him and his life slipped away.
‘I honestly don’t know what to say’; Jon Stewart gets serious on Eric Garner

‘I honestly don’t know what to say’; Jon Stewart gets serious on Eric Garner

"I Honestly Don't Know What To Say" 
Jon Stewart Gets Serious On Eric Garner
African American men are being taught a lesson about how this society values, or devalues, our lives. I’ve always said the notion that racism is a thing of the past was absurd — and that those who espoused the “post-racial” myth were either naïve or disingenuous. Now, tragically, you see why.

Garner, 43, was an African American man. On July 17, he allegedly committed the heinous crime of selling individual cigarettes on the street. A group of New York City police officers approached and surrounded him. As seen in cell phone video footage recorded by an onlooker, Garner was puzzled that the officers seemed to be taking him into custody for such a piddling offense. He was a big man, but at no point did he strike out at the officers or show them disrespect.
But he wasn’t assuming a submissive posture as quickly as the cops wanted. Officer Daniel Pantaleo placed him in a chokehold, compressing his windpipe – a maneuver that the New York Police Department outlawed two decades ago. Garner complained repeatedly that he was having trouble breathing. The officers wrestled him to the sidewalk, where he died. An emergency medical crew was summoned but officers made no immediate attempt to resuscitate him.
The coroner ruled Garner’s death a homicide. He suffered from asthma, and Pantaleo’s chokehold killed him.
The Staten Island prosecutor presented evidence against Pantaleo to a grand jury; the other officers involved in the incident were given immunity in exchange for their testimony. On Wednesday, it was announced that the grand jury had declined to indict Pantaleo on any charge.
This travesty — there’s no other word for it — came just nine days after a St. Louis County grand jury declined to indict Officer Darren Wilson for Brown’s death. Demonstrators took to the streets across Manhattan. What else was there to do but protest? Set aside the signs that say “Hands Up, Don’t Shoot.” Bring out the signs that say “I Can’t Breathe.”
There are two big issues here. One involves the excessive license we now give to police — permission, essentially, to do whatever they must in order to guarantee safe streets. The pendulum has clearly swung too far in the law-and-order direction, at the expense of liberty and justice.

"There Has Never Been A Safer Time For Cops Nor A More Dangerous Time For Criminal"

"Murder Rate On Track To Be Lowest In A Century"
As I wrote Tuesday, we are so inured to fatal shootings by police officers that we do not even make a serious effort to count them; the Michael Brown case illustrated this numbness to the use of deadly force. Garner’s death is part of a different trend: The “broken windows" theory of policing, which holds that cracking down on minor, nuisance offenses — such as selling loose cigarettes — is key to reducing serious crime.
Protests erupted after a grand jury cleared a white police officer Wednesday in the videotaped chokehold death of unarmed black man Eric Garner. Garner had been stopped for selling loose, untaxed cigarettes. (AP)
Police officers, whose brave work I honor and respect, are supposed to serve communities, not rule them.
The other big issue, inescapably, is race. The greatest injury of the Brown and Garner cases is that grand juries examined the evidence and decided there was no probable cause — a very low standard — to believe the officers did anything wrong. I find it impossible to believe this would be the result if the victims were white.
Garner didn’t even fit into the “young black male” category that defines this nation’s most feared and loathed citizens. He was an overweight, middle-aged, asthmatic man. Now we’re told that the man who killed him did nothing wrong.
Eric Garner was engaged in an activity that warranted no more than a warning to move along. But I recognize that he also committed a capital offense: He was the wrong color.
Read more from Eugene Robinson’s archivefollow him on Twitter orsubscribe to his updates on Facebook. You can also join him Tuesdays at 1 p.m. for a live Q&A.

Study: Cops Not Wearing Body Cameras Twice As Likely To Use Force

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If the purpose of President Obama's request for $75 million to help local police departments buy body cameras is to make it easier to prosecute officers who use excessive force against civilians, then the grand jury's decision not to indict an officer in the death of Eric Garner on Wednesday suggests that the proposal might not achieve that goal.

Video recorded on Staten Island in July shows Officer Daniel Pantaleo executing an apparent chokehold on Garner. Pantaleo told the grand jury that he did not intend to harm Garner.

Ever since a jury acquitted the policemen who killed Rodney King in 1991 in spite footage of officers beating him to death, it's been clear that even video evidence isn't necessarily proof beyond a reasonable doubt in a criminal proceeding against an officer. They can't always show what officers are thinking and feeling, the Supreme Court has ruled that juries must generally respect police officers' judgment about when force is necessary to protect themselves and the public. Body cameras wouldn't change that.

That said, if the goal is not simply to prosecute officers, but to help them do their job better and to improve their relationships with civilians, then cameras just might help.

The preliminary evidence is promising, if still incomplete. One study in Rialto, Calif. found that officers who did not wear body cameras were twice as likely to use force as those who were. Initial results from another study in Mesa, Ariz., suggest that 65 percent fewer complaints were filed against officers who wore cameras.

There are still real questions about how body cameras should be used and what to do with all of the data they generate. The hardware won't remove the decades of mistrust that have accumulated between the police and the people they're sworn to protect. Also, the cameras are unaffordable for many local police departments.

Yet $75 million is a rounding error in the federal budget. If police chiefs are interested in purchasing cameras, it would be the least Congress could do to chip in.



U.S. Healthcare Spending Increase In 2013 Lowest Since 1960

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Number of the day: $2.9 trillion. That's how much Americans spent on health care in 2013 -- almost the same amount as the previous year. Spending increased by only 3.6 percent, the smallest increase since 1960. The question is whether that leveling off is due to the weak economy or more efficient treatment. Jason Millman in The Washington Post.




"Violent Crime In New York City Is Becoming Rare," New York Times

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City officials announced another decline in crime statistics on Wednesday. Only 290 people have been killed in New York so far this year, which would have been unthinkable twenty years ago. The decline in crime has continued as the police department has moved away from marijuana arrests and stop and frisks. The city is also beginning a pilot program to equip some officers with body cameras. Goodman in The New York Times.

Measles Is Coming To A Town Near You. Is Obligatory Vaccination Next?

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"The Death Of Epistemology: Anti-Vaccine Expert (And Playboy Model) Jenny McCarthy"


Measles is coming to a town near you. Parents' refusal to vaccinate their children raises the question of whether vaccines should be required for everyone, regardless of religious or personal objections. 
Haider Javed Warraich in The Wall Street Journal.


"Ohio Amish Begin Vaccinations Amid Largest Measles Outbreak In US History"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.it/2014/06/ohio-amish-begin-vaccinations-amid.html



The Thinking Housewife's Deluded Belief That "Black Violence Has Gotten Worse"

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Michael Brown's body lying on a Ferguson, Missouri street,
 50 yards - half a football field - from Officer Darren Wilson's car.
Michael Brown's body lay on this street for three hours.
You know. 
Just like white bodies.

"White People Think They Suffer More Discrimination Than Black People"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/11/white-people-think-they-suffer-more.html

Dear Fred,

The Thinking Housewife's "Ferguson Riots" asserts that "black violence has gotten worse under the reign of judicial leniency and concepts of racist injustice." http://www.thinkinghousewife.com/wp/2014/11/ferguson-riots/

This is not true - except in the mind of anyone whose belief system feels existentially threatened and therefore compelled to trump demonstrable fact with faith-based fiction.



Facts:


Black violence spiked under Ronald Reagan; plummeted under Bill Clinton; and despite The Great Recession has remained low under Barack Obama.

Since the mid-nineties, violent crime in the United States has fallen by half - and more! 

"Violent Crime In New York City Becoming Rare," New York Times

Indeed, violent crime rates under Barack HUSSEIN Obama's socialist-Muslim-job-destroying, anti-freedom regime remain half what they were after spiking sharply under Republican Hero/Saint, Ronald Reagan, America's only divorced-and-remarried president, whose adulterous wife, Nancy, (at least as Jesus defines adultery in The Gospel of Markscheduled Ronnie's Oval Office appointments according to counsel from the Reagan family astrologer. 

The Party of Family Values and Christian Tradition!



Indeed.

"The Thinking Housewife" And The Normalization Of America's Only Divorced President

"Mormonism Is Not A Christian Religion. Founding Prophet Joseph Smith Was A Sex Pervert"

New York Times: It's Official. Mormon Founder, Joseph Smith, Had Up To 40 Wives

Polygamy Is Legal In Utah Again


Furthermore, America's steeply declining violent crime rate applies to blacks and whites alike.

Note that American whites commit murder at five-to-ten times the rate of nearly every west European country. (Finland is a notable exception.) 



This discrepancy between white Americans' fondness for killing and their European counterparts is the same statistical difference between black American homicide rates and white American homicide rates. 

If Laura wishes to condemn American blacks for their relative homicidal excess, it is similarly reasonable to apply equal ardor to the condemnation of white American murderousness relative to Europe's deadly mayhem.

With this relativity in mind, it is not even necessary to recall the zealous carnage perpetrated by white American foreign policy makers whose most notable achievement has been perpetual -- and perpetually stupid -- war-making, resulting in a world manifestly less secure the very moment Dubyah's ignorance and egocentrism conjoined to kick "the hornet's nest." 

The wrong hornet's nest!


References:

Homicide Trends In The United States, 1980 - 2008. Homicide Trends By Race. See page 11: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/htus8008.pdf  Statistics from U.S. Department of Justice:


In related vein, see the collapsing rate of abortion. "Abortion Is Now As Rare As It Was When Roe v. Wade Was Decided" http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/12/abortion-is-now-as-rare-as-when-roe-v.html

***

The following "comment thread" from The Thinking Housewife's "Ferguson" post is doubly notable: 1.) For the lunatic 2nd Amendment Evangelists attracted by her seemingly "soft" version of White Supremacy, and 2.) her admirably prudent observation that American police (or at least those in Ferguson) should "be trained" to avoid hasty resort to deadly force. 



Once Wilson had been assaulted he should have staid in his car, calling for backup, not chasing Michael Brown fifty yards down the street. 




Although the parallel is inexact, it is nonetheless notable that many U.S. police jurisdictions have "standing orders" that officers not pursue suspected (or known) criminals escaping in high-speed automobiles. 




Or how about the simple expedient of taking a photograph, yet another reason police should wear body cameras.

"Restrictive Pursuit Policies" - Why High-Speed Police Chases Are Going Away

http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/news/vintage-speed/why-high-speed-police-chases-are-going-away-15532838


"Study: Cops Not Wearing Body Cameras Are Twice As Likely To Use Deadly Force"


"The Question Is Not Whether Darren Wilson Behaved Legally. He Did. The Question..."

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-question-is-not-whether-darren.html

Perfesser Plum writes:
So many lessons to live by.
1.  Paraphrasing Doren, “If you live by the Skittle, you die by the Skittle.”
2.  When out for your evening constitutional, don’t walk in the street like some kind of Hoosier.  Use the sidewalk…..like a normal person. (Alan: Not many people are aware that Michael Brown's original infraction was jaywalking. Here's a Truthful Headline: "Unarmed Black Jaywalker, 17, Shot Dead By White Arresting Officer.")
3.  When a cop aims a .40 caliber at your head, say, “Oh, Hi!”  and charge the other way.
4.  If you just robbed a man of cigars, don’t be waving them around like a two year old with an all-day sucker. Or a Hoosier.  Put them in your pocket.
5.  The short kid always gets away.  Try to be that short kid.
6.  If a cop has his door open, just leave it that way.  If he wants it shut, he’ll do it himself.
7.  If you bully your way into the cop car, don’t immediately punch the cop in the face.  No one likes a rude guest.
8.  Don’t make a cop shoot you 10 times.  Ammunition doesn’t grow on trees.  Instead, say, “Okie dokie, Smokey,” as you gently lower yourself to the ground.

Alan: Note the rhetorical genius of "Ammunition doesn't grow on trees." Okie dokie!


"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right

"Gun Cartoons and Gun Violence Bibliography"

Nov. 27, 2014
Laura writes:
In thinking about Wilson’s testimony, I find it difficult to understand why an armed officer could not better deal with an aggressive, unarmed 18-year-old than Wilson did that day. I understand that Michael Brown was out of control, but aren’t policemen trained to deal with that kind of thing?
Yes, Michael Brown was charging toward him. But he was already shot. It’s hard to believe he could have killed Wilson in that condition. After the encounter in the car, why didn’t Wilson wait for backup and not try to then arrest Brown alone?
By questioning this, I am not saying that the riots were justified.

Paul writes:
The reason the officer kept firing is he was in a sudden emergency, a legal defense in probably all but a few states.  You can’t expect a human being to respond dispassionately while in a life or death situation/emergency.  I would have emptied one of my pistols on this charging monster.
I was surprised to hear the caliber was 0.40.  For many years, the stupid police forces used the 9 mm (about 0.35 caliber) Glocks because of the large number of rounds in the clip: supposed firepower, a key to combat.  But they had no stopping power.  I knew they needed a 0.357 magnum or a 0.45 APC.  I have both.  Either would have dropped Brown with one round, two at most.  A 357 will penetrate an engine block.  The Model 1911 APC 45 round (taking its name from the year) will penetrate a four-by-four piece of lumber, which I have verified and which the American military used for decades and which I got from my Marine father who fought across the Pacific hand to hand.  Maybe professionals would dispute me about effectiveness in police situations.  The reliable 45 semi-auto was invented by the brilliant John Browning, who invented a number of famous reliable hand weapons. See About Face by Colonel David Hackworth, who extolled the BAR, the Browning Automatic Rifle, a precursor to the assault rifle, invented by the Germans in WWII with Hitler’s close support.
Too little too late for Hitler, thank God. It was the Sturmgewehr.
"Ferguson Riots," The Thinking Housewife

Einstein With "Classmates"

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Back row L-R: A Piccard, E Henriot, P Ehrenfest, Ed Herzen, Th. De Donder, E Schroedinger, E Verschaffelt, W Pauli, W Heisenberg, R. H Fowler, L Brillouin
Middle row L-R: P Debye, M Knudsen, W. L Bragg, H. A Kramers. P. A. M Dirac, A. H Compton, L. V. De Broglie, M Born, N Bohr
Front row: L-R: Angmeir, M Planck, M Curie, H. A Lorentz, A Einstein, P Langevin, Ch. E Guye, C. T. R Wilson, O. W Richardson

"#CrimingWhileWhite" Tweets Provide Window Into White Privilege

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"#CrimingWhileWhite" Tweets Provide Window Into White Privilege










"White Privilege Explained In One, Simple Sentence"
http://everydayfeminism.com/2014/09/white-privilege-explained/






FBI Statistic: The South Accounts for 41% Of All U.S. Violent Crime

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"Red State Moocher Links"

"Bank On It: The South Is Always Wrong"

"Why The Bible Belt Is Its Own Worst Enemy"
  1. http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/10/why-bible-belt-is-christianitys-enemy.html

"A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"

"People Who Watch Only Fox News 
Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

"Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Bitch, Whine?"

"American Conservatives And Oppositional-Defiant Disorder"

"Are Republicans Insane?"

"The Republican Party Is A Satanic Cult"

Jindal Criticizes The Stupid Party: "Simply protects the rich so they get to keep their toys"

"The Reign of Morons Is Here," Charles P. Pierce, The Atlantic

"A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"

"People Who Watch Only Fox News 
Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

"Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Bitch, Whine?"

Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die

Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die


Department Of Justice Cites Cleveland Police For Multiple Violence Offenses

Ten Ways The System Is Rigged To Protect Cops Who Kill

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Daniel Pantaleo 
The NYC Cop Who Killed Eric Garner

Ten Ways The System Is Rigged To Protect Cops Who Kill
Obstacles to accountability exist at every stage of seeking justice.


Remember Ebola? The Flood Of Immigrant Children? Benghazi? Ukraine? ISIS?

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Not coming to a clinic near you.

Alan: When Ebola, Benghazi, Immigrant Children, Ukraine and ISIS were new stories, they were represented as "the end of the world!"

Now... a few months later...

Not so much.

More like yesterday's papers. 

Don't miss:


Bill Maher: The Zombie Life Cycle Of Republican Lies. They Never - Ever - Die

***

"Ebola Represents A Trivial Threat To Americans' Health"
(This post was written in the full blush of American hysteria.)
"Self-Terrorization Is The National Pastime"

"Conservatives Scare More Easily Than Liberals"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/07/conservatives-scare-more-easily-than.html

"Faulty Risk Assessment And The Epidemic Spread Of Self-Terrorization
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/02/faulty-risk-assessment-and-epidemic.html

"Shark Attacks Rise Worldwide: Risk Assessment and Aquinas' Criteria For Sin"




Jon Stewart Imagines Fox News Of The 1960s: “Relax: Selma Isn’t Slavery!"

Tom Toles Cartoon: All Choked Up

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Choke point
America! 
Land of the Free!
With liberty and justice for all!

Just the thought chokes me up...


The Beginning Of The End For Killer-Cop Privilege: "#CrimingWhileWhite"

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  Dear Fred,

The refusal of New York City's Grand Jury to indict Eric Garner's killer may be "the straw that breaks the camel's back."

"Cops Kill Eric Garner For Selling Cigarettes"


While an event is unfolding, it is "impossible" to say if its eventual impact will be trivial or epochal. 

This much we know: "#CrimingWhileWhite" does a stellar job subverting white privilege.

"#CrimingWhileWhite" Tweets Provide Window Into White Privilege

Here is my personal contribution to CrimingWhileWhite:

"After Getting Mugged In 1971, The Police Pressured Me To Give False Testimony Against A Black Man"


Conservative fondness for falsehood -- and rhetorical flourishes stitched together from shards of shattered context -- are more laughable by the day.

"Caucasians Think Discrimination AgainstWhites Is A Bigger Problem Than Bias Against Blacks"

"U.S. Murder Rate On Track To Be Lowest In A Century"

"There's Never Been A Safer Time For Cops Nor A More Dangerous Time For Criminals"

"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right

Pax tecum

Alan

 






"The New Class Conflict," By Joel Kotkin. Are Geeks The New Oppressors?

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"The New Class Conflict"
Financial Times Review

George Will spotlights Kotkin's book in "Government For The Strongest"

Alan: Personally I am favor of radical wealth re-distribution that focuses entrepreneurial acumen, targeted instruction for high-demand skill-sets (like speciality welding and plastic molding machine operation) and a new "Small Business Administration" based on best-practice micro-lending programs that have fostered self-sufficiency among dirt-poor people world-wide. 

Historically, it is useful to recall that the economic booms of the 1950s and 1990s occurred long after The New Deal was implemented. 

The problem is not wealth redistribution.

The solution is wealth redistribution.

Don't expect wealth redistribution to be discussed in the mainstream media which epitomizes the self-aggrandizement of wealth concentration.

Kiva Microlending
http://www.cnet.com/news/kiva-humanizes-microlending-to-third-world-entrepreneurs/

Small Business Administration's current Microloan Program

The downside of micro-lending: 


Social Media, Shallowness, Proportionality The Glacial Pace Of Progress

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Dear Fred,

I am painfully aware that much social media is informed by dimwittedness.

That said, entire societies are "closer to ground" than the high-falutin' aspirations of top-heavy "progressivism" or traditional conservatism for that matter.

Consciousness evolves slowly.

Against this backdrop of "developing awareness," the popularization of "beneficial ideals" is a good thing no matter how shallowly-rooted those ideals in a given individual.

Consider "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth." 

When this moral standard first dawned on human consciousness it represented an epochal advance over the extant moral code which had justified (and even obliged "for the sake of restoring honor") unbridled retribution and totally-destructive retaliation. 

Did a young buck deflower your daughter?

Kill the sonofabitch!

And while you're at it, kill your daughter!

"Worst Bible Passages?"

Like you, I am appalled by the epistemological catastrophe embedded in Rule #1: "If someone says so on the Internet it must be true."

BTW...

Rule #3 is two-fold: "Previously thoughtless people have begun to ponder ideas set forth by a spectrum of folk they would not otherwise have encountered."


It is true that social media is highly self-selecting and creates the horror of "mutual admiration societies." 

But social media "bubbles" are sufficiently permeable that millions of Americans who - in the past - could not have conjured the "idea" of police brutality (or systematic injustice to dark-hued people) are slowly "becoming conscious" despite their innate political inclinations.

Clearly, there is much to be done. 

But in the glacial meantime, it is wise - indispensable even - to revere "proportion" and "imperfection," two oddly inter-related phenomena.

"Shark Attacks Rise Worldwide: Risk Assessment and Aquinas' Criteria For Sin"


Things are rarely as bad as they seem. (My Dad used to say: "90% of what the wisest men think will happen never happen.") 

Whereas imperfection is often a prelude to progress, uncompromising perfectionism is a curse on the land.

"The terrible thing about our time is precisely the ease with which theories can be put into practice.  The more perfect, the more idealistic the theories, the more dreadful is their realization.  We are at last beginning to rediscover what perhaps men knew better in very ancient times, in primitive times before utopias were thought of: that liberty is bound up with imperfection, and that limitations, imperfections, errors are not only unavoidable but also salutary. The best is not the ideal.  Where what is theoretically best is imposed on everyone as the norm, then there is no longer any room even to be good.  The best, imposed as a norm, becomes evil.”  
"Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander,” by Trappist monk, FatherThomas Merton

http://davincidilemma.com/2012/06/how-your-perfectionism-affects-others/

Pax tecum

Alan

PS How much rain did SoCal get? And does it "feel" like the drought might end?

On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 10:05 PM, Fred Owens <froghospital911@gmail.com> wrote:

Regarding the Garner homicide....... this is revolution by twitter and by text, obviously a joke ...... people are talking about this on FACEBOK and they expect to be taken seriously..
if you want to be truly subversive, make a phone call and talk to somebody, make a dozen phone calls, go to the coffee shop and talk to people.... otherwise you're just making money for mark zuckerburg and who ever owns google.
Phone trees were an old method... they were genuine and personal... a good way to spread the message......
email has its place, like this one
but social media is the problem, not the answer.
here are the two rules of social media
1. if someone says so on the Internet it must be true.
2. if someone did not shoot a video with their cell phone, then it did not happen
3. there might be a third rule, what is it?
--
Fred Owens
cell: 360-739-0214

My gardening blog is  Fred Owens
My writing blog is Frog Hospital

send mail to:

Fred Owens
35 West Main St Suite B #391
Ventura CA 93001

World's Largest (and Least-Creatively Named) Telescope Approved For Construction

John Cleese: Genetic Reductionism

Lawrence Summers: America Has Lost Faith In Government And Industry

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"Faith, Hope, Charity And Divine Desperation"

"Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Bitch, Whine?"

Disillusioned With The Future, People have lost faith with companies and governments

 December 7, 2014




Lawrence Summers is a professor at and past president of Harvard University. He was treasury secretary from 1999 to 2001 and economic adviser to President Obama from 2009 through 2010.
Walk from the US Airways shuttle at New York’s LaGuardia Airport to ground transportation. For months, there has been a sign saying “New escalator coming in Spring 2015.” The Charles River at a key point separating Boston and Cambridge is little more than 100 yards wide. Yet traffic has been diverted for over two years because of the repair of a major bridge and work is expected to continue into 2016.
The world is said to progress, but things that would once have seemed easy now seem hard. The Rhine is much wider than the Charles, yet Gen. George S. Patton needed just a day to create bridges that permitted squadrons of tanks to get across it. It will take almost half as long to fix that escalator in LaGuardia as it took to build the Empire State Building 85 years ago.
Is it any wonder that the American people have lost faith in the future and in institutions of all kinds? If rudimentary tasks like keeping escalators going and bridges repaired are too much for us to handle, it is little wonder that disillusionment and cynicism flourish.
Social Security? Medicare? State Universities? Roads and Highways? Sewers? Water Supplies?  National Parks? National Guard? Coast Guard?
"Future Generations Will Despise Ronald Reagan. Here's Why"
Political debates are often framed in terms of the respective roles of the public and private sectors, with progressives stressing private market failure and conservatives stressing the dysfunctionality of the public sector. The sad truth is that there is merit in both perspectives.
The escalator that will take five months to repair is privately owned. Although it is in an airport, failure cannot be blamed on public authorities. Necessary maintenance had been delayed for years — with the escalator in question even being stripped for spare parts to support other escalators. Now, the new owner has many priorities; the replacement of the escalator system is only one.
On the other hand, repair of the bridge across the Charles is the responsibility of local governments. A combination of budgetary short-sightedness, excessively rigid labor practices and a failure to take account of the costs of traffic delays appears to account for the project’s remarkably long gestation.
While much political debate takes place on a macro level, focusing on large-scale changes in spending, tax or regulatory policies, I suspect that much of what frustrates the public happens on a more micro scale. A government that has to install nets under bridges to catch falling debris will not inspire confidence when it aspires to rebuild other nations. When major companies cannibalize their machinery for spare parts, it is hardly surprising that they are not trusted to embark on voluntary long-run programs to control greenhouse gases, promote diversity or develop technologies.
What is to be done? First, the focus of infrastructure discussions needs to shift from major new projects whose initiation and completion can be the occasion for grand celebration to more prosaic issues of upkeep, maintenance and project implementation. For example, before anyone contemplates spiffy new high-speed rail systems, consideration should be given to repairing existing lines and stations.
Second, accountants in the public and private sectors need to develop methodologies for capturing the cost of deferred maintenance and show this in financial accounts for what it is — borrowing from the future. What is counted counts. If maintenance deferrals were made transparent, they would become much more expensive for decision makers.
Third, the public, and the media on its behalf, need to be much less accepting of institutional failure. It has been said that we do not want to know all to which we can become accustomed. A vicious cycle in which governments perform poorly, and so are starved of resources, and so perform worse is a serious threat to healthy democracy. Something similar can happen to business. If owners distrust management, they will insist on taking cash out rather than permitting its use for long-term investment. The only answer is prompt and aggressive responses to failure that ensure that it is short-lived.
More important than any specific remedy, there is a reason beyond the media and the public’s own economic problems that there is so much disillusionment with so many institutions. They do not seem to perform as well as they once did. We see it every day. Fixing escalators and building bridges may seem like small stuff at a time of economic crisis and geopolitical instability. But it is time we recognize the importance of what may seem small to what is ultimately important — the faith of citizens in their collective future.
Alan: Ronald Reagan gave birth to the cynicism that lies at the heart of American politics.

"Future Generations Will Despise Ronald Reagan. Here's Why"
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