.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

While We Still Have Time

In spite of the grimness of the times in which we live, there is still hope. If you feel, like I do, that the usual discourse about matters of critical concern tends to be superficial, misguided, and false, then you might find some solace and inspiration here. I will try to offer insight and a holistic perspective on events and issues, and hopefully serve as a catalyst for raising the level of dialogue on this planet.

My Photo
Name:
Location: Madison, Wisconsin, United States

I was born in 1945, shortly before atom bombs were dropped on Japan. I served in the U.S. Army from 1968 to 1971. I earned master's degrees in Economics and Educational Psychology, and certificates in Web Page Design and as a Teacher of English as a Second Language. I followed an Indian guru for eight years, which immersed me in meditative practices and an attitude of reaching a higher level of being. A blog post listing the meditative practices I have pursued can be seen here.

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Some Scenes From The June 14 No Kings Rally In Madison, Wisconsin





_________________________________________
Some pictures from the State Capitol part  of the rally. More from Reddit. From the Daily Cardinal. The Badger Herald. And as many as you want from many sources.

Here's a short PBS story of the rallies nationwide.

Here's a song. Bob Marley. Another from Bob Marley. Tracy Chapman. Marvin GayeEasterhouse. Creedence. 4 Non Blondes. Steppenwolf. Jefferson Airplane. The Beatles. The Rolling Stones. The Grateful Dead. Sly and the Family Stone. Stevie Wonder. The Dropkick Murphys. Here's a news story about the Hands Off rally in Boston April 5. A blast from Madison's past, with a founding member of the Dropkick Murphys, Mike McColgan. A rare gem from Bobby Darin. Rendering others to ashes will eventually bring the rendering home, in a reaping we now find unimaginable. Even Donald Trump has to serve somebody. Guess who.

Here's something new.

Some revolutionary quotes from Ernesto "Che" Guevara. My favorite is this: "At the risk of seeming ridiculous, let me say that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. It is impossible to think of a genuine revolutionary lacking this quality […] We must strive every day so that this love of living humanity will be transformed into actual deeds, into acts that serve as examples, as a moving force."

Great quotes from Nelson Mandela.
______________________________________

R.I.P. Sylvester Stewart. I saw  Sly and the Family Stone once, in 1974. It was a great concert. They were on time, in time, and Sly started the show by imploring people standing in front of people in wheelchairs in the first row to move out of the way. No one moved. He picked out one guy, pointed directly at him and  said "I'm talkin' to you,  dude!" They all scattered. Here's some of their performance at Woodstock. Here's some more.
_______________________________________

Update, July 3: Even Trump insiders are wondering about his physical and mental health. To which I respond: Duh! What were you wondering in, say, 2016? Or earlier? And, with doubts, especially about his mental health, will any of these "insiders" do anything with their doubts? Not likely. They will save their own skins before saving the country. Maybe this is what is meant by white supremacy: skin before country. I wonder if they have any doubts about various members of Trump's administration, such as Pete Hegseth. One way to test Hegseth's functionality is to have a truckload of whiskey delivered to the Pentagon, addressed to "SECDEF."

Saturday, June 07, 2025

Duh

A simple way to solve the debt crisis, or at least the Big Beautiful Bill crisis: Progressive taxation.

I remember when I was young that Nelson Rockefeller was described as being in the "90% tax bracket," meaning that he paid 90% of his incremental income in Federal tax. Without complaint. A rich guy, from a robber baron family.

It seems unthinkable now, but reducing taxes on the rich to near zero is what got us into this mess. There will be a lot of demagoguery to overcome, but it can be done. Just as the Republicans have their Grover Norquist Pledge, Democrats can have a pledge of their own. They could call it the AOC Pledge, or the Bernie Sanders Pledge. Or the Save our Civilization Pledge.

There are sufficient economic reasons for taxing the rich: saving the system from insolvency, increasing general welfare through redistribution of  income and wealth, reducing inefficiency, and making the system more stable. I have another argument. It is morally and ethically evil for anyone to have a desire for unlimited amounts of money in its various forms and  in material possessions. 

It is a perversion of human existence to want to have it all, knowing full-well that having it all means nothing for everyone else. Our current examples of endless greed - Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg -  are also examples of humans of the most repugnant kind, all more notable in their repulsivity than their vast fortunes. Who among us would want to be Donald Trump? Or Elon Musk? Or Bezos, with his grotesque wedding in Venice? 

For the economic theory inclined, I can do marginalism. In Neoclassical Economics lore there is such a thing as marginal utility. It is the incremental increase in usefulness of goods, services or money. The increase in happiness, or utility, of an additional dollar in income declines as the amount of dollars you already have increases. An additional dollar to the coffers of Jeff Bezos, for example, would be infinitesimally smaller than to a homeless person, axiomatically.

In our next civilization an upward limit on income and wealth will be necessary. That is, if we have a next civilization. We are so zealously pursuing our own extinction that the likelihood of any civilization at all is less by the day.