NYT: American Senior Statesmen Call For An End To Nuclear Weapons

Monday, June 30th, 2008

Bush’s nuclear hypocrisy exposed.

For almost eight years, the Bush administration has condemned other nations for pursuing a nuclear weapons arsenal, while at the same time maintaining its own storehouse of WMD. Moreover, Bush has – like other American leaderts – turned a blind eye to the actions of the most powerful nuclear-armed nation in the Middle East, Israel.

Now we see a strong argument being made that is diametrically opposed to the  Bush administration’s views…and a radical departure from American political and miltary policy.

According to Today’s Nrw York Times

"A who’s who of the (American) national security establishment — George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, William Perry and Sam Nunn — is calling on the United States to lead a global campaign to devalue and eventually rid the world of nuclear weapons.

None of these men (two former secretaries of state, a former secretary of defense and a former chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee) is given to casual utopianism — or anything casual. They are trying to shock sensibilities"

The fact that this cadre of dyed-in-the-wool warmongering conservative establishment elite is calling for a global ban on nuclear weapons is a good sign.

The question is this: will the leaders of the world listen…or is it already too late?

Read more here in the New York Times.

The Beautiful Game, again

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

By Lord Anthony

Just a guy thing?

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George Carlin: A Real Christian Man Dead At 71

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

The older he got, the smarter he got. Georgecarlin2

He also became more and more radical in his thinking according to many commentators.

But my question is this: did he become more radical – or did he just become more realistic.

Carlin had American politics figured out and at the core of his analysis, there’s a lesson for Canadians when it comes to assessing our own political system. George said he gave up on the process, because no matter who you voted for in America…people with the same mentality got into power anyway.

 He said the last vote he cast in a presidential race was for
George McGovern in 1972 and went on to point out that he stopped criticising politicians…and then gave his reasons.

"Now, there’s one thing you might have noticed I don’t complain about:
politicians…everybody complains about politicians. Everybody
says they suck. Well, where do people think these politicians come from? They
don’t fall out of the sky. They don’t pass through a membrane from another
reality. They come from American parents and American families, American homes,
American schools, American churches, American businesses and American
universities, and they are elected by American citizens. This is the best we can
do folks. This is what we have to offer. It’s what our system produces: Garbage
in, garbage out. If you have selfish, ignorant citizens, you’re going to get
selfish, ignorant leaders. Term limits ain’t going to do any good; you’re just
going to end up with a brand new bunch of selfish, ignorant Americans. So,
maybe, maybe, maybe, it’s not the politicians who suck. Maybe something else
sucks around here… like, the public. Yeah, the public sucks. There’s a nice
campaign slogan for somebody: ‘The Public Sucks."

So the lesson is – Canadians need to think even more carefully than usual about who we are going to vote for.

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Why do I say that George Carlin was a real Christian guy? Even though he hated organized religion? Well a quote from one of his last interviews explains why I say that.

"…government is supposed to be here to redress the inequities of the marketplace…that’s one of its functions. Not just to protect the nation, secure our security and all that shit. And not
just to take care of great problems that are trans-state problems, that are
national, but also to make sure that the inequalities of the marketplace are
redressed by the acts of government. That’s what welfare was about. There are
people who really just don’t have the tools, for whatever reason. Yes, there are
lazy people. Yes, there are slackers. Yes, there’s all of that. But there are
also people who can’t cut it, for any given reason, whether it’s racism, or an
educational opportunity, or poverty, or a fuckin’ horrible home life, or a
history of a horrible family life going back three generations, or whatever it
is. They’re crippled and they can’t make it, and they deserve to rest at the
commonweal. That’s where my fuckin’ passion lies."

It may not be the kind of language Jesus would have used, but it’s the identical philosophy.

The U.S. magazine Nation has a thoughtful piece about Carlin by John Nichols, who has done several interviews with the comedian. You can read the article here.

Jim Reed’s Bad Day- George Carlin Is DEAD!

Tuesday, June 24th, 2008

Georgecarlin_2
Yesterday was a bad day for me because the first thing I heard after waking up was that a beautiful man – a great intellect – George Carlin had died.

My son introduced me to Mr. Carlin several years ago. I had never heard of him before. When I saw him…I thought wow! My son’s favorite comic is a year older than me.

I immediately understood why my son loved George. He was intelligent, independent and very funny. He didn’t go with the mainstream and he resisted conventional thinking.

One of the things I remember most fondly about George Carlin was his assessment of North Americans…especially U.S. North American governments and corporations – with respect to education.

Carlin: "They want you to be just smart enough to run the machines…but too dumb to think for yourself".

I think that about sums it up.

This is a sample of his work.

The Beautiful Game

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

by Lord Anthony

Soccer1_6
The vast majority of USA and Canada haven’t a clue why the Europe-centred world is in delirious excitement. Those who consider they "keep up with the news" may be aware of the Euro 2008 soccer fiesta going on, held every four years.

But without having lived in a soccer-mad county it’s impossible to grasp the depth of the passion. A North-American may point to the Stanley Cup, Grey Cup or the laughably-named World Series in US baseball but for the rest of the world the interest-needle doesn’t even twitch.

I confess to being a helpless addict to the game. I sometimes think of it as
ballet to a ballet-nut, except when do you get half a million delirious ballet-fans filling the streets of Moscow?
This followed their underdog champions dumping the mighty and star-studded Netherland side by three goals to one for which their Dutch-born coach was offered honorary citizenship, joking about being a traitor to his native land.

If he was an American he’d be flayed alive!
Soccer2_2But that’s how soccer-fans respond to reaching even a semifinal. Or Turkey, the most incredible come-from-behind team with a pool of only seventeen players, playing with brilliance and tenacity to a semifinal berth this week against the mighty Germany. 

This last-sixteen excitement doesn’t even address the qualifying rounds in which countless nations are eliminated. When this happens their supporters usually take on a proxy-fan role from an astronomic array of choices. Perhaps the nationality of their mum, dad or best friend or the team which has their favourite club player, or just the nice colour of the shirts.

I suspect this changed loyalty most often goes to any team playing against the one which dumped their own country.
When it’s all over, the passion is spent, the grumbling  and celebrating subside. The big wheel turns and faces the World Cup Finals held in South Africa in 2010.
Turkey
There is curious paradox here. Two years back I was in Lincoln Ne. just prior to the last World Cup. The University of Nebraska  hosted a 5-a-side tournament with an amazing collection of ethnicities involved.

I had the chance to talk with the polite lads from USA who ran away with the prize with their hard, fast and beautiful soccer, reinforcing my belief that it’s only a matter of a few years until USA reaches the highest levels of the game. Several Americans are already playing in the UK Premier League, as tough as it gets.
Yet mainstream USA resists and pooh-poohs this colossal pantheon of human genius and interaction, just one of the countless reasons the world doesn’t really understand them, deepening their isolation.
Even before the current horrible administration started its dirty work.