Category Archive : Politics

Analyzing America’s Dysfunction

Analyzing America's Dysfunction

I believe the United States is suffering right now from nothing so much as lies and distortions of truth coupled with a polarization caused by neither side listening to the other. I want to make it clear that I do not identify my political convictions exclusively with the Left or the Right. A plague on the houses of the extremists in both camps.

Some of the points in both camps are valid and deserve to be listened to. I believe we need to repair the structure of civil society by being civil to each other. If you think the other side is composed only of biased morons, then think again. If you think the other side are all devils, then you will feel justified in wiping them all out, and we will have civil war. Yet it is still possible to make valid objective judgments based on Truth.

I saw a statement in the last few days by a former Secretary of Defense. He said that without Truth there is no Trust, and without Trust there is no society. That’s our situation today in the United States. The President of the United States has so poisoned his supporters’ minds with lies about the election, despite all the evidence to the contrary, and the media and social media is so full of fake news, that people are either extremely polarized or don’t know what to believe. We can’t hold society together on this basis, and so it is falling apart. People have no basis for trusting each other in this situation.

The only way we are going to turn this around, short of an extreme situation like civil war, is by talking to each other respectfully. That means suspending judgment about the falsity of the positions of those in other camps. It means trying to understand why they believe what they believe. I’m not one of these relativists who believes there is no such thing as objective truth. I’m just saying we need to examine the evidence and follow it where it leads in a spirit of unbiased inquiry.

A big part of the mental disease we are facing in the United States, is fear of acknowledging reality. I’ve looked at this pattern of denial in the United States for decades. What we are seeing playing out now on a grand stage did not start recently. It has been brewing in the Unconscious for decades – most of my lifetime.

It starts with a pattern that has been with us as a species for no one knows how long. I mean the desire to seek pleasure and avoid pain. It appears to go far back into our animal ancestors. It is a necessary mechanism and instinct that facilitates survival.

Human beings, however, have a frontal cortex that is, at least, potentially capable of overriding these instincts, but it is not easy. We need those instincts to be there and to be strong. We cannot get rid of them. We have to struggle with them, and that struggle defines what it means to be fully human.

Most of us tend to deny and seek to blunt awareness of events and circumstances that threaten us and make us uncomfortable. We would rather redefine reality than deal with it head on. We would rather not come into contact with the hard edges that prick our tenuous grasp of reality.

Yet, it is only by overriding our tendency toward comfort that we develop character. An existence without challenges and hard edges would breed a population of weaklings and liars – spoiled children whose development was arrested and having no moral substance.

So, I’m afraid Americans have had life too easy. Most of them have taken the easy way out and have failed to grapple with the real problems of human existence.

So, I’m saying today: “Look at what our country has come to. Don’t blame the other camps and justify yourself. We are all in this together. We are all collectively responsible for what we have created. For my part, I have been quiet and intimidated far far too long. I haven’t wanted to deal with the inevitable opposition that speaking my truth would entail. I’m determined to change that now.

I look at the politicians who have been unwilling to call out the abuses and lies of our President for far too long. Yet, I can’t villify them because I see the same cowardice in myself that motivated them to keep quiet even when some of them knew there was no substance to the President’s claims.

If you disagree, then show me the evidence of voter fraud. I haven’t seen any yet. The courts and judges appointed by Trump or other Republicans, have thrown out almost all of his lawsuits summarily because they contained no evidence of widespread voter fraud or had no legal merit. Even Trump’s own Communications Director (recently resigned) said that they all knew that the claims of voting fraud were all stunts and had not truth to them. Yet Republican politicians were, until the egregious events of last week, unwilling to call it out for what it was because they didn’t want to alienate Trump’s base.

That’s what I mean about placing comfort, convenience, and supposed advantage over Truth. Not telling the Truth has consequences just as telling it has consequences. Some of the consequences are going to be painful either way and no matter what. I think the sooner we realize that we don’t get to avoid paying a price for our existence and what we do or don’t do, the sooner we will get in touch with reality and choose to live a moral and responsible life. If a substantial number of us decided on that course, it would transform society in a very good direction in my opinion.

If you are one of the many people who have as one of their top three values that you need everybody, or at least the vast majority of other people, to like you, then you will lose yourself. That is the price you will pay! You will end up having no idea what you stand for. You will easily be blown around by every collective and psychic wind that blows. You will have no center! You will be completely at the mercy of other peoples’ opinions. You will be a chameleon that always “adjusts” yourself to whomever you are with. You will be full of unconscious resentment because you went along with things that you didn’t really like. Other people will manipulate you and take advantage of you to further their own ends. You will have no moral compass. For you the Good will be the same as the Expedient.

Don’t underestimate your susceptibility to being drawn into a mob. I believe that many of the people who were in that crowd that stormed the US Capitol were people in this condition who were just wholly taken over by mob psychology and did things so they would feel somehow completed by being part of a crowd. BEWARE!

If you think it’s too dangerous to stand out and go against the crowd, then consider all the negative consequences that flow from going along to get along!

Contemporary so-called society, is mass psychology. It is no accident that so many people “adjust” themselves to their surroundings to an extreme degree. Public education, since the Industrial Revolution, has systematically inculcated a spirit of conformity and the lose of the ability to think critically.

Consider that, in order centrally to organize large companies, government bureaucracies, indeed any human system under centralized control that grows beyond a certain size, conformity and sameness is needed in order to make the system predictable and controllable. You can’t have individuals making decisions and acting independently and without coordination. The system just would not function.

So, it appears that the powers-that-be in society created the very mass psychology that came back and bit them during the storming of the US Capitol. They created this monster themselves. I am not without sympathy for conservatives who feel that change is spiraling out of control. I just don’t believe that tearing down the system precipitously is going to do anything except create more chaos and bloodshed. Instead, we need to understand how we got here and set about addressing the root causes of the phenomena. It needs very careful analysis and dialog not violence leading to chaos. Just as you don’t quit your job until you have a way to replace your income, you don’t tear down a dysfunctional system until you understand it thoroughly, where the levers are that allow it to change for the better, or you first create an alternative. When building a new bridge, you don’t tear down the old bridge until the new one is functional.

So, I’m inviting serious dialogue about how we can go about either reforming our present systems of government or replacing them in a way that does not send us into chaos.

The Chaos in the United States Could be Peacefully Quelled

Law enforcement departments need to show soliarity with protestors protesting the senseless death of George Floyd at the hands of a police officer. It’s natural that people should be angry about the racism and policy brutality that has been an ongoing problem in the United States. It’s ,however, not inevitable that property be destroyed.
I have seen two articles about law enforcement leaders who went out and talked to the protestors in a friendly way and joined them. One was a sheriff in Michigan. Another was the police chief police chief of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. These officials did the right thing. They showed solidarity with the protestors defusing tense situations that could have turned violent.

Right now, protestors are justifiably angry about police brutality. It is up to police to demonstrate that they are on the people’s side – not against them. The initiative for peace needs to come from the police. That’s what we are seeing in the acts of these two law enforcement leaders. The sheriff in Michigan told protestors, “these cops love you!”
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I would like to see police everywhere in the United States rise up and declare that they understand and sympathize with the anger of protestors and want to make sure things like George Floyd’s murder don’t occur again. It needs to become a nationwide movement. Anger hatred, and violence never cure anger, hatred, and violence. They only make it worse. Using force to put down the riots is not the answer. The division and conflict between police and the people needs to be healed.

To me, it’s an encouraging sign to see law enforcement leaders stepping up and doing the right thing. What’s needed is people who can get beyond the oppositions and polarization and see that both sides in the conflict have valid points and deserve to be heard. The sheriff in Michigan told the protestors that he understood that they wanted to be heard. When people are truly heard, their anger dissipates. Just notice how the sheriff in Michigan defused all the tension in one to two minutes.

Yes, there’s a big problem in the United States with racism. It’s not just a problem in the United States. It’s just perhaps more obvious in the United States because of the difference of color. I have seen it in Turkey as well where a lot of Turkish people hate Kurds, Arabs, and perhaps Greeks. Racism still exists in Germany with skinheads and Neo-Nazi’s.

The essence of racism is the belief that my race is good and other races are bad. I identify with my race and I project all the evil onto other races. It’s a case of collective projection. I believe that my race is all-good and other races are all-bad. Unfortunately, a large number of people are completely caught up in this sort of polarization and projection.

I think it is unhelpful to point at others and condemn their racism without looking into myself to see where I am racist. Collective healing isn’t going to take place through external action. It can come only through each person looking into themselves and owning their own demons. Yes, I’m talking to you! Other people and the external world are never the real problem. All the ills of the world are in our minds first and then they become externalized. So we have to address them from the root.

Trump and the story of Hydroxychloroquine

hydroxychloroquine

Updated at 2:40 a.m EST

US President Donald Trump revealed Monday that he had been taking for the past 10 days – as a preventative measure – the anti-malarial drug, Hydroxychloroquine, which has divided the medical community about its efficacy in fighting the emerging coronavirus, and renewed his criticism of the World Health Organization’s handling of the pandemic.

Trump added that he had no Covid-19, and he had no symptoms of the disease, and he told reporters at the White House, “I have been taking it for about a week and a half, I am taking a pill every day. At some point I will stop taking this medicine.”

The US and Canadian health authorities warned at the end of last April about the danger of using hydroxychloroquine to prevent infection with the emerging coronavirus or to treat people with this virus, if it was not used as part of controlled clinical trials.

But the US President told reporters that taking this hydroxychloroquine “will not cause harm”, stressing that this drug “has been used for forty years (…) by many doctors taking it.”

Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are drugs that have been used for many years to treat malaria and some autoimmune diseases, such as lupus and rheumatoid arthritis.

A study published about ten days ago in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that taking hydroxychloroquine did not lead to any significant improvement or significant deterioration in the condition of Covid-19 patients with serious symptoms.

 

Trump and “World Health”


Concerning the World Health Organization, Trump said Monday that he will issue a statement about the World Health Organization in the near future, adding that its approach to the Corona virus was “very unfortunate.”

Trump said during a White House event that he would make a decision about US funding for the World Health Organization soon, and that he was considering cutting it to forty million dollars, but some felt it was too much.

The American Fox News Channel revealed that the Trump administration will resume part of the funding for the World Health Organization, and said it had received a five-page message, stating that the Trump administration will provide the World Health Organization with as much money as China pays in certain areas.

When Trump was asked why he had not given a speech to a hypothetical WHO ministerial meeting earlier yesterday, he answered, “I chose not to make a statement. I will make a statement for them sometime in the near future, but (…) I think they did a very unfortunate job in the last period”.

Trump renewed his demand to end the country’s general closure, which was imposed as part of attempts to curb the outbreak of the Corona virus, and said in a tweet on Twitter, “Reopen our country.”

The United States recorded more than a million and a half million cases of corona, of whom 91,000 died.

As of Monday evening, the number of people infected with corona in the world exceeded 4 million and 837 thousand, of whom nearly 317 thousand died, and more than one million and 872 thousand have recovered, according to the website “World Meter”, which specializes in monitoring the victims of the virus

 

Facebook appoints ex Israeli official to oversee content

 

Emi Palmor

Facebook
has appointed Emi Palmor, the former Israeli Justice Ministry
director-general, to its Oversight Board which will be tasked with content
moderation on Facebook and Instagram.

The Oversight Board, first announced by Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg in November 2018 following the 2016 U.S. presidential elections, is expected respond to growing criticism regarding a lack of transparency and consistency in the platform’s decision-making processes regarding freedom of expression.

The move is likely to cause concern among pro-Palestine activists who already feel that the social media giant is censoring them.

Palmor, who is a lecturer in the Israeli Defense Forces, is one of 20 members selected from around the world from a wide range of professional and cultural backgrounds to be appointed to the independent board.

Their recruitment was led by Facebook, with the co-chairs then leading the selection of the rest of the members which include Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Yemeni activist Tawakkol Karman and former Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger.

 

The Oversight Board will review content that both by users and Facebook refer to it. All decisions will be posted on the board’s website and Facebook will be required to respond publicly to them.

 

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg with Benjamin Netanyahu

The board will also publish an annual report evaluating its work and the extent to which Facebook is meeting its commitments.

“I have been a civil servant for 24 years in Israel, dedicating my life to increasing access to justice and putting the citizen at the centre,” said Palmor. “For me, serving on the Oversight Board is an opportunity to do this for people around the world. I have a reputation for not being afraid of difficult issues and am dedicated to holding Facebook accountable by improving how content decisions are made and increasing the fairness and transparency around why they are made.”

Facebook has previously confirmed that the board will be funded by a $130 million trust, established by Facebook but which the board says is independent of the social network.

Mr Rusbridger said it had taken too long to create such a system for moderating content, but was pleased such a body was now in place.

“We are living in a world of information chaos and standing on the precipice of darkness,” he said. “Societies can’t function unless their citizens can agree on what constitutes evidence, fact and truth.

“It’s perhaps taken us too long to realize this. The Oversight Board seems to be the first imaginative and bold step by one of the biggest players to find a way of reconciling the need to start imposing some kind of judgment and standards on what is published, while still maintaining the things that are wonderful about social media, and necessary for free speech.”