The soul has greater need of the ideal than the real for it is by the real that we exist, it is by the ideal that we live

Monday, October 13, 2008

Hypocrites are so predictable

The Catholic Diocese in Fresno Ca. has suspended Father Geoffrey Farrow. I'd be shocked if I didn't know they were going to do it all along.

The hypocrisy of that organization knows no bounds, never has. The power they've obtained has been through intimidation and the ability to amass large sums of money with which one can always manipulate the will of others.


It's truly a shame that someone who attempts to be a voice for the civil rights for all is silenced by such a shameless bunch of charlatans.

The Catholic Church has long professed love for all human beings while at the same time smiting them for failing to be anything other than what they are...human.

The mighty always fall, these dissemblers will as well, and when they least expect it.

Another strike for organized religion, what a sham.

We're so delusional

I know I'm delusional, and narcissistic, but most Americans could give me lessons. I'm amazed at the capacity of people to delude themselves. That anyone would actually consider voting for John McCain in the next few weeks is astounding to me.

George W. Bush, whom McCain models himself after cause he has no original ideas of his own, didn't just destroy the economy of the United States, he destroyed the economies of the entire world! That's how big a fuck up he is!

I thought this piece from Newsweek was interesting, and made the points much better than I ever could:

In Britain as in the United States, the vision was about more than owning a home. It was about being a better person. With a home came traditional values, an appreciation of hard work, prudent living, civic-mindedness, patriotism and ultimately a more stable society. Or so the rhetoric went.

But eventually, it all went sour. By the turn of the century, the proliferation of easy credit and universal stock ownership combined to create anything but a conservative society of thrift. Average household debt levels are now higher in Britain than in any other major country in the developed world. In the United States, the shift away from corporate pensions to 401(k) retirement accounts plunged millions more into the equity markets and loosened the traditional connection between companies and workers, which was one element of that 1950s dream that conservatives like Bush conveniently forgot. The ownership society of the 1950s was anchored by a labor movement that made sure that workers received something resembling their share—remember Truman's Fair Deal? The deal for the past eight years has been fair to merchants of capital, and then some. But to the tens of millions on the receiving rather than originating end of those mortgages, fairness has been in short supply.

No, this can't be reduced to a swindle. We all bear some burden for the current morass. You can't peddle what people don't want to buy, and for a while it seemed a decent trade-off: Wall Street got rich, and Main Street got homes. The easy terms—and that is putting it lightly—of mortgages gave many a chance to own a home who never would have qualified for a mortgage in years past. But it also gave others the option to buy, sell and flip. Every speculator a home? That wasn't supposed to be part of the equation.

The irony is that more homeownership and stock ownership has actually weakened traditional bonds. For the past decade, as homeownership went up, marriages continued to fail. As a percentage of the population, fewer people are getting married now than 10 years ago. Single-parent homes are on the rise. So is unemployment, which has increased to 6.1 percent, up from 4.5 percent in 2000. With foreclosures now running at more than 300,000 a month, and stock portfolios and retirement savings shrinking with the global-equity sell-off, there has been a notable increase in demand for mental-health services—which is a problem, given that many health-care plans, the ones left to the private sector, cover only a few visits. Studies have also shown a link between difficult economic straits and declining health and higher mortality. And as the editor and writer Tina Brown, a sharp tracker of social trends, recently said at NEWSWEEK's Women & Leadership conference, "I think the financial crisis is going to put a lot of marriages under great stress. There really isn't enough to go around, and there are choices to be made. When men lose their job they frequently feel a great loss of manly self-confidence, and that has great impact on a marriage."

The final referendum on the ownership society will be the November election. The rhetoric of both parties and candidates for president suggests that regardless of who wins, the vision of the past eight years is being rejected in favor of hunkering down, paying off debt, regulating the anarchic world of credit and derivatives, and unraveling systemic knots that have assumed Gordian complexity. As Barack Obama recently said, "in Washington they call this the ownership society, but what it really means is, you're on your own."

This crisis will pass, eventually, and on the other side there will still be global electronic exchanges and computer-enhanced models; there will still be mortgages; and there will still be a deep cultural yearning for a place of one's own. There may be less froth and more discipline in the coming years—combined with reduced circumstances and less money. Lean times are their own source of hopes and desires, and drive people to find new ways to satisfy old yearnings. There may be more prudent ways to create a world where families are stable and living in their own homes. But the gap between that dream and messy reality isn't likely to close any time soon. Let's hope that we have learned something about how much we can have and how quickly. For Americans in particular, that would be a real revolution.

Karabell is president of RiverTwice Research and senior adviser for Business for Social Responsibility.

© 2008