Saturday, December 16, 2017

Thursday, December 14, 2017

 
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That is a legitimate question.  Are the cells in our brain connected and functioning in the normal manner?  When one looks and sees how our government is working so actively against the best interests of the people of this country and one looks at the passive manner the people are accepting the various abuses, insults and attacks on our society, one must wonder, "what has happened to the people of this country?"  
Is anybody paying attention?  Could people actually be aware of what is happening and still remain silent.  What happened to the 'occupy' movement?  Where is protest?  Have people just given up completely and laid down to be trampled upon more easily?
The many problems we face as a nation are well known.  The solutions are elusive.  Even when it appears as if a potential solution is on the horizon, there are serious questions about the effectiveness of - impeaching Trump, for example.  That just leaves us with Mike Pence and we would likely find ourselves worse off.
The 'Russia-gate' farce is exactly that, a farce.  That anybody even cares is deception at a very high level.  Talk about 'sleight of hand'...  And yet, the news has been filled with investigation, threat of investigation, results of investigation ever since Trump took office.  The people seem transfixed while waiting for some result as if some kind of result would have meaning of some kind, any kind.  The truth is that nothing at all related to 'Russia-gate' has anything at all to do with life in the United States - absolutely nothing at all.  
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All of this 'Russia-gate' stuff and impeachment stuff is related to political stuff wherein we have the Democrats and Republicans on one side and the people of the United States on the other side.  The 'real' problem that needs a 'real' solution is that people have been completely fooled by the concept of democracy.  The 'real' problem is that people have been completely fooled into believing that they have a choice.  The have been totally conned into accepting the 'election thing' and the 'voting thing' as having relevancy in the way the United States is governed.
The people of this country must come to understand the real facts about the political system in this country.  The Democrats and the Republicans are exactly one and the same political party.  The Democrats and the Republicans represent the exact same constituency - the wealthy elite.  There is not any representation for the middle-class in this country.  The idea of representation for the poor is a joke which would elicit laughter if mentioned out loud.
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In this country, people's lives are getting to be more and more difficult as the system pushes against the population.  The average American's life is made more difficult as people's taxes increase to make room for tax cuts for the wealthy.  Life is made more difficult as the average American must work more and more hours on more and more part-time, temporary jobs with low wages and no benefits.
The average, every-day American citizen has to learn to re-think their thinking.  We must understand that we have fallen for a con job.  Our entire history as a nation has been hypocritical.  All of those fancy words - 'of the people, for the people' and 'every man created equal' and more, much more... all fake, all for public relations, all a lie as practiced in the United States.
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The entire structure of government was designed for the wealthy elite.  The rules were established to give all advantage to the land-owners and business owners.  It was this way from the very beginning.  Look at history.  It as always been this way.
We are finally feeling the disadvantages in our daily lives.  The oligarchy is becoming so arrogant that they steal from us openly and oppress us openly.  "Too big to Jail" and 'Rip-off Taxes' are only a couple of current episodes.  
We need to engage the cells of our brain.  We need to make changes.  We don't need to run around killing each other in the process of this revolution, but we definitely need to effect some serious change.  We need to make democracy actually work.  We need to take over in our own country, and that's the truth !!!
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A Donald Trump protester on Inauguration Day. (Fibonacci Blue / Wikimedia)
Magical Thinking Is Stopping Us
​From Taking to the Streets


from Truth Dig by Paul Street

The archplutocratic tax cut Washington politicians are working on this holiday season ought to be a call to arms for the United States’ populace. The nation’s economy is already so savagely unequal that the top 10th of its upper 1 percent owns as much wealth as its bottom 90 percent. Its corporations are raking in record profits. Half of its citizens have no savings. Half its population lives in or near poverty. Twenty-one percent of its children are growing up at less than the federal government’s notoriously inadequate poverty level, and 41 million Americans—12.3 percent of the population—are “food insecure.”

It is against the backdrop of this shocking disparity and related want that one should try to comprehend the regressive and malignant sociopathology of a Republican tax “reform” that:
● Drastically slashes the corporate tax rate without closing loopholes and deductions that allow the nation’s already cash-flush corporations to register their profits overseas.
● Does nothing to switch corporations’ focus from maximizing short-term returns to investing in the creation of more jobs and higher wages.
● Encourages corporations to invest in automation without offering any assistance to displaced workers.
● All but eliminates the estate tax for the nation’s richest families.
● Adds $1.5 trillion to the nation’s debt over the next decade, setting the stage for major slashes to the nation’s three biggest social insurance programs—Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare (they will be cut back in the name of “scaling back” so-called entitlement programs to “reduce the deficit”).
● Gives a major tax cut on profits multinational companies have stashed in offshore tax havens.
● Cuts taxes on “pass-through” businesses—a benefit that will be disproportionately enjoyed by the rich.
● Makes it easier for rich people to classify themselves as businesses to get a tax break.
● Increases the complexity of the tax code.
● Tightens deductions for lower- and middle-income wage-earners.
● Subsidizes private and religious schools, a boon to corporate school privatizers and the religious right.
● Repeals Obamacare’s individual mandate, which will leave millions without health insurance and raise the cost of health insurance.

The GOP tax “reform” rewards the already rich and punishes the poor at a time, The Atlantic notes, “when post-tax corporate profits have hovered at a record-level high for the last seven years, and the 1 percent’s share of total income is higher than at any time in the second half of the 20th century.” The just-passed Senate bill, likely to be “reconciled” with the right-wing House version and signed by Donald Trump before Christmas, grants what New York magazine calls “a huge windfall for the wealthiest Americans.” It is “certain to exacerbate income [and wealth] inequality at a time when the playing field is already heavily tilted towards the rich.” The New Gilded Age is slated to become yet more grotesquely unequal.

As some GOP congressmen have acknowledged, Republican legislators are acting at the command of their billionaire and millionaire “donor class.” “My donors are basically saying, ‘Get it done or don’t ever call me again,’ ” Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y., candidly told The Hill.

Adding authoritarian insult to plutocratic injury, the Senate tax bill was rammed through the upper chamber with brutal speed and barely a speck of public input. As John Cassidy notes in The New Yorker, “the process … [has] … been a travesty of the legislative process. … [T]here have been no public hearings, and the measure is being rushed through in a few weeks, with virtually no transparency.”

The speed-up and smash-through reflects Republicans’ awareness that a significant majority of the populace rejects the tax “reform” (it’s curious how commonly regressive measures are sold as “reforms”). A Nov. 15 Quinnipac poll found that just 25 percent of U.S. voters approve of the Republican tax plan. More than half (52 percent) disapprove. By a 59 to 33 percent margin, voters said that the plan “favors the rich at the expense of the middle class,” and 61 percent believe “the wealthy would mainly benefit.” Just 36 percent believe the plan will lead to an increase in jobs and economic growth.

This makes the Trump-GOP House and Senate tax bills “among the least popular pieces of major legislation in modern history, with the public rejecting it by a two-to-one margin,” Derek Thompson wrote.

So why don’t we see millions of Americans in the streets protesting the brazenly oligarchic tax heist being perpetrated in the name of “fairness,” “simplicity” and even “democracy”? I can’t answer that question in full here. The forces and factors that have turned tens of millions of Americans into an inert mass are numerous and complex. They deserve book-length treatment and have received it: See, for starters, Alex Carey’s “Taking the Risk Out of Democracy: Corporate Propaganda versus Freedom and Liberty”; Sheldon Wolin’s “Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism”; Chris Hedges’ “Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle”; Henry Giroux’s “Terror of Neoliberalism: Authoritarianism and the Eclipse of Democracy”; and my own “They Rule: The 1% v. Democracy.”

Part of the answer lies in the pervasively disseminated belief that we the people get meaningful say on the making of U.S. policy by participating in the “competitive” biennial major-party and candidate-centered elections that are sold to us as “politics”—the only politics that matter. Showing how and why that’s a false belief was the mission of my last Truthdig essay, titled “U.S. Elections: A Poor Substitute for Democracy.”

A second populace-demobilizing form of n thinking that is keeping people quiescent in the face of abject racist, sexist, ecocidal and classist-plutocratic outrage is the belief or dream that Russiagate special prosecutor Robert Mueller will save us and our supposed democracy by putting together a slam-dunk case for impeachment and removal on grounds of collusion with Russia and/or obstruction of justice.

A remarkable 47 percent of the electorate already supports impeachment less than a year into Trump’s first year. But so what? There is an outside chance that the malignant quasi-fascist tumor that is Donald Trump can be cut out this way. As liberal commentator Peter Beinart notes in The Atlantic, however, the odds of impeachment are poor. This is because “impeachment is less a legal process than a political one,” and the partisan alignment in Congress favors Trump in ways that appear unbreakable, given Republicans’ control of Congress and the dogged determination with which Trump’s white nationalist base is deplorably determined to stand by its man, no matter how low he sinks. As Beinart explains:

Passing articles of impeachment requires a majority of the House. Were such a vote held today—even if every Democrat voted yes—it would still require 22 Republicans. If Democrats take the House next fall, they could then pass articles of impeachment on their own. But ratifying those articles would require two-thirds of the Senate, which would probably require at least 15 Republican votes. …That kind of mass Republican defection has grown harder, not easier, to imagine. It’s grown harder because the last six months have demonstrated that GOP voters will stick with Trump despite his lunacy, and punish those Republican politicians who do not. … Among Republicans, Trump’s approval rating has held remarkably steady. Trump’s approval rating among Republicans has not dipped below 79 percent since he took office. None of the revelations from Mueller’s investigation—nor any of the other outrageous things Trump has done—has significantly undermined his support among the GOP rank and file.

Meanwhile, Arizona’s Jeff Flake and Tennessee’s Bob Corker, the two Republican senators who have had the decency to openly challenge Trump, have lost much of their support from GOP voters in their states.

Also rightly skeptical about prospects for Trumpeachment is Newsweek’s liberal political editor Dalia Lithwick. She finds it distinctly possible now that the purported “rule of law” has become “a relic” in “our ongoing nightmare of creeping authoritarianism.” She says we may have to shed the “magical thinking” that tells us that the U.S. “is a nation of laws, not men” as we behold “the shocking norm-and-truth defiance of the GOP tax bill, the refusal of the GOP leadership to criticize or even comprehend the enormous violence done by Trump’s anti-Muslim tweets, the president’s staggering support for the candidacy of Roy Moore, the silent Republican collusion to the seating of demonstrably unfit judges, and the virulence of the White House’s attacks on the press.” As one Trump outrage has piled up on top of another this year, Lithwick reflects, “it’s become clear that absolutely nothing will persuade Trump supporters and Republicans in Congress that it’s time to disavow the president. Given that reality, it often feels like it wouldn’t be enough for Mueller to hand us a smoking gun and an indictment. What if they threw a conviction and nobody came?”

The Mueller investigation, Lithwick writes, has helped “numb us, and leads to a declining sense of agency. … So long as Mueller is working, filing documents, and convening grand juries,” we are lulled into believing that “nobody has to take to the streets.”

The chances of Mueller or some journalists coming up with blockbuster revelations powerful enough to shake Trump’s hold on the GOP and his white-nationalist base are low. Most Alabama Republicans still back alleged child molester Roy Moore. The great majority of conservatives get their news from the pro-Trump, right-wing media ecosystem, led by Fox News, talk radio and Breitbart. As Beinart notes, that media can be counted on to “downplay or distort virtually anything Mueller or the mainstream press discovers” and to depict any push for Trump’s removal as a provocative “ ‘left-wing coup.’ ”

It seems more likely that Trump will be removed from the White House by his insane, cardiology-defying McDonald’s diet than through constitutional defenestration.

Forget for a moment the fact that establishment liberals like Beinart and Lithwick likely exaggerate the significance and degree of Russian intervention in the 2016 election (a drop in the bucket compared with the influence of U.S. corporate and financial money). Forget also that impeachment would place the right-wing Christian Mike Pence in the Oval Office; that the tax bill is slated for Trump’s signing long before he could be gotten rid of through impeachment or—another fantasy—ejection on the grounds of the 25th Amendment; and that U.S. plutocracy reigns with corporate Democrats in office, too (review the neoliberal records of the Bill Clinton and Barack Obama presidencies). Those key points aside, Beinart and Lithwick offer wise and informed counsel on how impeachment is a pipe dream that helps keep citizens passive and, as Lithwick notes, off “the streets.”

Here I might add that the nightly roster of talk-show hosts and comedians making endless fun of the ridiculous bad grandpa in the White House (Trump is a truly a gift that keeps on giving for late-night comedy) may help feed the fantasy that Trump is just a passing dream and not a clear and present danger to democracy and life on earth.

In an important commentary in The New York Review of Books in March, Russian dissident Masha Gessen tried to warn U.S. liberals and progressives against putting their anti-Trump eggs in the Russia basket. Gessen felt that the Russiagate gambit would flop, given a lack of smoking-gun evidence and sufficient public interest, particularly among Republicans. Gessen also worried that the Russia obsession was a deadly diversion from issues that ought to matter more to those claiming to oppose Trump in the name of democracy and the common good: racism, voter suppression (which may well have elected Trump, by the way), health care, plutocracy, police- and prison-state-ism, immigrant rights, economic exploitation and inequality, sexism and environmental ruination—you know, stuff like that.

Some of the politically engaged populace noticed the problem early on. According to the Washington political journal The Hill, last summer, “Frustrated Democrats hoping to elevate their election fortunes have a resounding message for party leaders: Stop talking so much about Russia. … Rank-and-file Democrats say the Russia-Trump narrative is simply a non-issue with district voters, who are much more worried about bread-and-butter economic concerns like jobs, wages and the cost of education and healthcare.”

Here we are now, half a year later, careening into a dystopian holiday season. With his epically low approval rating of 32 percent, the orange-tinted bad grandpa in the Oval Office is getting ready to sign a viciously regressive tax bill that is widely rejected by the populace. The bill will be sent to his desk by a Congress whose current approval rating stands at 13 percent. It will be a major legislative victory for Republicans, a party whose approval rating fell to an all-time low of 29 percent at the end of September—a party set to elect an alleged child molester to the Senate.

The dismal, dollar-drenched Democrats, the party of “inauthentic opposition,” are hardly more popular. Their approval mark was 37 percent in a recent CNN poll, their lowest level in 25 years. Pervasive scorn for the party is richly appropriate, given its role as “the graveyard of social movements” and its long history of serving the nation’s financial, corporate and imperial ruling class. As the venerable progressive hero Ralph Nader recently told The Intercept:

There are some people who think the Democratic Party can be reformed from within by changing the personnel. I say good luck to that. What’s happened in the last twenty years? They’ve gotten more entrenched. Get rid of Pelosi, you get Steny Hoyer. You get rid of Harry Reid, you get [Charles] Schumer. Good luck. … Unfortunately, to put it in one phrase, the Democrats are unable to defend the United States of America from the most vicious, ignorant, corporate-indentured, militaristic, anti-union, anti-consumer, anti-environment, anti-posterity [Republican Party] in history.

“Unable” or unwilling? As two sharp Canadian correspondents recently wrote me in response to Nader’s reflections:

“ ‘Unable?’ No. Unwilling? Absolutely. The Democrats are ‘history’s second-most enthusiastic capitalist party,’ in the words of Richard Nixon strategist Kevin Phillips. They are dive artists. This is what they do: provide the illusion of opposition. “They are unreformable. Workers need their own party” (Matt Gardner).

“It is worse than merely being unable to defend working people from the Republicans. The Democrats are serially complicit in these multi-level attacks and the wars launched on the outside world” (Gabriel Alan).

The plutocratic tax “reform” right now is a perfect example. The GOP is likely to pass this epic fiscal robbery in the next few weeks—Merry Christmas, 1 percent—and the inauthentic opposition party, which essentially elected Trump last year (see this remarkable new volume) are blathering on endlessly about Russiagate while pathetically bemoaning that Trump is not being more “bipartisan,” on the model of the malicious right-wing president Ronald Reagan’s 1986 tax bill. MSNBC’s rambling rock star Rachel Maddow is a ferocious lioness on Russiagate and a whiny kitten on the arch-corporatist, Putin-like tax bill.

It’s surreal. An explosion of sex scandals, the interminable Russia madness, a bizarre embassy move in Israel, an Alabama freak show, a prolonged game of bizarre verbal-thermonuclear chicken between the insane clown president in Washington and the dear leader in Pyongyang combine with the National Football League, Netflix, online shopping and porn, endemic video-gaming, epidemic mass shootings and the mindfulness and happiness industries to run diversionary interference for the evermore drastic and dangerous upward concentration of “homeland” wealth and power. Meanwhile, the death knells of the coming environmental catastrophe Trump is dedicated to accelerating—with unmentionably climate change-driven “wildfires speaking apocalyptic destruction” across Southern California this week—ring across the land and the world, barely breaking into the presidentially obsessed news cycle.

Welcome to the de facto banana republic that is, as Noam Chomsky said, America’s “really existing capitalist democracy—RECD, pronounced as ‘wrecked.’ ”

Revolution, anyone?
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Wednesday, December 13, 2017

 
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Our country is having great difficulties on so many level and on so many fronts that it is problematic to focus on solutions.   There is no 'one' type of solution that will do the job, solutions are necessary of several different kinds.  New leadership, for example, is one of the solutions needed more than any other kind of improvement. 

Politicians are more interested in their pursuit of power and in building their personal fortunes than in solving our country’s problems. The news is filled with violence ignited by both 'law enforcement' and criminals.  The nation’s infrastructure is deteriorating in an incredible manner... becoming 3rd world in many ways... everything is just crumbling and falling apart.

More and more we can't drink the water or breathe the air because of our policies of poisoning our life-giving necessities as the corporations seek more and more profit.  There are limits.  There are limits to potential profits and there are limits to the air and water damage that can be tolerated.

The tax system, which should keep us functioning in a modern fashion is being destroyed in favor of gifts to the fabulously rich.  The poor cannot afford to support our needs, especially when the military is the priority.


​Current leadership of many government agencies is actively working to defeat the purpose of the agency they lead.  It seems hard to believe, and that is why we are so desperate for some help of some kind.
Our political system, while faking democracy, is completely controlled by the 'oligarchy' who operate behind a front of Republicans and/or Democrats to keep order while 'misappropriating' the nation's wealth to 'their own accounts'.  'They' run a successful public relations campaign that fools most of the population into believing that the people have some sort of choice... part of the 'keeping order'.
Looking around us in this country shows the criminals in charge in every sphere.  The financial institutions have been labeled as 'too big to fail' which only means that the crooks stealing from those institutions are 'too wealthy and powerful to jail'.  
We have the largest military in the world.  We are constantly at war in virtually every area of the world.  And with all of the equipment and all of the practice, we can't seem to win any wars.  But, we can't quit fighting these wars because our entire economy is dependent on warfare.  We are destined to lose in the war arena - either economically or militarily or both, and we are setting ourselves up for failure in each area.
We aren't paying enough attention to global warming and climate change.  Flooding coastal areas and wildfires in the west are changing the status of our nation in problematic ways and we are denying the very facts that threaten to destroy us.  
The middle class has already died and we are just waiting for the body to fall over.  Stagnant wage growth has doomed the middle class.  The cost of education medical care, for example, is far ahead of  wage growth.  Attempting to keep up causes the middle class to copy the federal government in terms of borrowing.  It can't work at either level.
The middle class is turning more and more to part-time and temporary jobs to try to fill the gaps.  More than one job is becoming necessary.  All of this together is not solving the financial problems of the middle class.  Inequality is growing faster than any other part of the financial system and is eliminating the middle class.  The ultimate result will be, as is seen in other societies, the very wealthy and the very poor with not much in between.
We know that the 'systems' will not save us or our country.  The people could make enough changes as individuals to make some sort of difference.  As the people learn to change there is the possibility that improvements can be made.  Massive change on the part of masses of people could overwhelm the systems that hold us captive in our 'place'.   It must come from the people or it will continue to decline.  We can't afford much more on the downhill side because we have already slid so low.  We have to 'turn the corner' soon or it will be too late, and that's the truth !!!
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The Calculated Destruction of America’s Government
from Counter Punch by MEL GURTOV 

It is truly extraordinary: the still-new Trump administration keeps appointing people whose common priority is the destruction of the agency they head. Their mission is therefore the opposite of their agency’s: priority to management over responsibility, product over people, and private interests over public service. In essence, Trump is presiding over a government that rejects governing and seems intent on creating a state within a state.

The examples are well known. Consumer protection is now in the hands of an anti-consumer, pro-business guy, someone who once called the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau “a sad, sick joke.”

The Environmental Protection Agency is under an oil and gas industry proponent who despises
environmentalists and denies human agency in climate change. He is removing environmental reporting from the EPA website and preventing government scientists from speaking to the public.

​Housing is under a well-known surgeon and political airhead who hasn’t the slightest idea about his department’s purposes.

A millionaire who leads the department of education has no experience in public education and is busily trying to privatize it.

Trump’s pick for health and human services is a drug company executive who had a hand in raising drug prices.

And then there’s the justice department, run by a racist who is determined to keep non-whites out of the country, limit enforcement of civil rights laws, and disenfranchise minorities.

Other government agencies, such as defense, homeland security, and immigration and customs (ICE) follow the same pattern of politically skewed missions that undermine our most cherished values, not to mention common sense.

But the best example is the state department under Rex Tillerson. He announced his purpose as being to reorganize the department and save money, not promote diplomacy or refine America’s interests abroad. Tillerson’s notion of good management has resulted in a gutting of the department and loss of considerable expertise in precisely those regional specialties—East Asia, the Middle East, and Africa—that demand constant attention. Following the lead of the president and his inner circle of inexperienced know-nothings who spout a white nationalist agenda, Tillerson is showing career staff the door in disdain for “bureaucrats.” Even when he makes a feeble mention of peacemaking, as with North Korea, Iran, and Israel-Palestine, Trump immediately pulls the rug out from under him—as he just did with recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.

The state of State is disheartening, to say the least, and the rumored removal of Tillerson in favor of CIA director Mike Pompeo will not make the slightest difference. Career diplomats are leaving in droves, the budget is being cut by nearly one third, and the number of new applications for the foreign service is down by one half. The new guy in charge of personnel, who would normally be a senior diplomat, has only eight years of experience. (But then, who needs an experienced personnel manager when so few people are left to manage?) Another Tillerson appointee who was supposed to manage the downsizing has resigned after only several weeks at the job.

What we are witnessing is the destruction of the government we pay for and to which we are asked to pledge allegiance. Every week some government service we took for granted is weakened or eliminated by official fiat. By my count, Trump has now severely criticized or attacked outright seven American institutions: the media and various courts; the departments of Justice and State; the FBI; and both political parties. No public official who defies presidential preference is immune from Trump’s wrath. He has played with the idea of establishing a private spy network to get around the CIA—an idea being peddled by none other than Erik Prince (of Blackwater fame) and Oliver North (cf. Iran-Contra). This president is totally committed to sustaining an oligarchy in the image of Vladimir Putin.

Those critics who point to the Trump administration’s failure to pass any legislation as evidence of the strength of the resistance are only partly right. When you put together all the Obama-era administrative regulations that have been rescinded and the legal cases in defense of the public interest abandoned, and add to that the reactionary actions of right-wing dominated state legislatures and the Supreme Court majority, you have quite a record of intentional destructiveness as prescribed by Steve Bannon.

There is no law that says weakening the federal government’s role is a crime. But deliberately subverting the US government is reason enough to seek Trump’s impeachment. He is doing to America what no foreign adversary could do. Some might call it treason. 

MEL GURTOV is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Portland State University, Editor-in-Chief of Asian Perspective, an international affairs quarterly and blogs at In the Human Interest.
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stocks doubling is unrelated to economic growth... the economy didn't double... the system is designed to deceive, and if ever there were a 'truth' that is it...

Monday, December 11, 2017

 
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Cruel & Male Dominated, everywhere on the Planet...
What type of person abuses others as a routine manner of relating.  Sexual abuse simply adds to the outrage. 
A big part of our problem is that the shameless human beings whom we allow to occupy positions of power in our nation’s capital are absolutely without any moral or ethical fiber.  To refer to them as ‘human beings’ is, in some sense of the phrase, very generous.  'Scum' carries more information about who these people actually are as defined by their own personal actions.  Their list of negative, hateful goals and accomplishments appears to grow with each new breath they draw into their bodies.  Selfish greed seems to know no bounds, especially among those who have corrupted the system to match their own corruption.

This manifests itself on the smallest individual level within simple personal relationships.

One can see how, working at the large national and international level could lead one to overlook the personal connection one has to another individual.  But, to lose sight of the personal connection with someone with whom one works on a regular basis – a daily association, for example, defies a relationship with humanity itself.  And in personal living relationships such as marriage, how can abuse be the norm in a normal person?

To understand that these very people are the ones who are making the rules and regulations that guide each and everyone of us through our lives is sickening to even comprehend, but it is in fact true.  It is to these ‘low-life’ creatures that we owe every ill that befalls our culture, our society, and our individual lives.  Really, whatever is not right in your life can be blamed on the influence coming out of our nation’s capital.  Sexual abuse is just the latest example gaining the national spotlight.

Our problems go deep.  In our cultural mythology, our problems begin at the beginning.  According to the popular beliefs of our society, those in control have always been abusive, sexual and otherwise.

And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man (Genesis 2:21,22).

Having wrongly and purposefully mis-interpreted religious poetry to their own benefit, men have fabricated our society and our culture to place men in a hierarchy above women.
By the time schooling ends and 'real life' begins, the girls know their place beyond any doubt.  To complain about being treated a 'certain' way seems futile at the very least and detrimental if pushed too hard or too far.  After all, she knows, "I am only getting what I deserve, since I am a woman".
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By the time our children start to attend pre-school & kindergarten the issues are well established and, by the start of formal education, those issues only need reinforcement.  It begins with giving the baby girl a cute pink blanket and giving the boy baby a blue blanket… it lets them know there are ‘differences’ from before they recognize any other thing.  It is the ‘frilly cute skirt’ exposing her legs as compared to the ‘masculine’ attire for the little boy that sets up a pattern.  The little plastic house-keeping ‘tools’ we give to the little girls (the iron, the cooking tools) as compared to the plastic gun or hammer we put into the hands of boys.  By the time they leave home and enter the world outside, the die is cast – in almost every case, cast permanently and in almost every case, against the girl.
As only one more example, among the many examples, the entire industry of cosmetics and 'make-up' indicates that there is a need to 'make up' for the woman, because without 'make-up' something is missing -something is lacking, 'you are not good enough by yourself, you must 'make up' before going out into public... as if the man were anywhere near 'good looking' or attractive without being 'powerful' and able to 'bully' his way into and through the 'relationship'... no wonder she has gone for the gun...
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And if she decides to defend herself, and if some sort of violence occurs, and if the criminal justice system becomes involved, she will be the one to go to jail... and that's the truth !!!
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Washington, DC: Where the Abusers Make the Rules

from Truth Out by Elizabeth Schulte

After women stepped forward to tell their stories of how they had been sexually abused and harassed by members of Congress, it didn't take long for political leaders from both sides of the aisle to talkabout how serious this all was.

But when the rules and regulations surrounding sexual assault allegations in Congress were finally made public, revealing all the ways that women are forced into silence, it became very clear that talk is cheap -- and that neither of the two parties that rule in Washington are prepared to act with seriousness about sexual assault.

Confidentiality agreements that prevent women from speaking in public, a process that bars women from getting co-workers to corroborate evidence, secret settlements paid out of the federal treasury -- all are part of a process where sexual assault claims never see the light of day, remaining confined to a rigged in-house system, with rules that Congress made up for itself.

Thanks to the #MeToo movement that began with women in the entertainment industry revealing producer Harvey Weinstein to be a sexual predator, accusations against men in positions of power are at least being taken seriously, including in Washington.

In politics, the spotlight has fallen mainly on Roy Moore, the bible-thumping Republican running for a crucial Senate seat from Alabama, and liberal favorite Al Franken, the senator from Minnesota.

When it was revealed that Moore had sexually assaulted and harassed women and girls who were teenagers at the time, some top Republicans called on Moore to step down as a Senate candidate -- but plenty of others, including the sexual harasser-in-chief Donald Trump, circled the wagons around a fellow reactionary and joined in smearing the women who accused him.

Several women have also come forward with allegations against Franken, and the response among liberals was tellingly similar: Some suggested Franken should pay a price, but for others, the first concern was naked political calculation about giving the Republicans a further advantage in the Senate if Franken had to step down.

The Republican reactionaries have been more openly vile in their defense of Moore, but more than a few members of the Democratic Party -- which claims to champion the oppressed against the horrible Republicans -- stooped to slandering accusers to back up one of their own.

What unites the two parties' callous and cynical attitude toward sexual abuse in the corridors of power in Washington is a shared commitment to the status quo -- something illustrated by the unsolvable maze that confronts anyone who dares to raise an allegation of sexual harassment or assault on Capitol Hill.
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Most women who work on Capitol Hill know little about the Office of Compliance, which is charged with adjudicating complaints, or about the twisted mess of rules and regulations it is supposed to follow.

A complaint must be filed with the office within 180 days of the incident. In order make an official complaint, the accuser must submit to mandatory counseling, which usually takes 30 days, and then, if they continue with their complaint, they must complete another 30 days of mediation.

During the mediation process, women must follow strict rules of secrecy, including agreeing to a non-disclosure agreement that bind victims from talking.

"The trappings of confidentiality, they permeate the process," Alexis Ronickher, an attorney who has represented several people pursuing harassment claims, told Politico. "The law is written to create a system to disincentivize staffers from coming forward."

Maybe "Office of Silence" would be a better name.
If mediation fails, the person must wait 30 more days before seeking an administrative hearing or filing a lawsuit in federal court against their harasser.

If there is a settlement, any financial award comes from a special US Treasury fund. The Office of Compliance reports that it has paid out more than $17 million since 1997 to settle workplace disputes on Capitol Hill.

As Politico's Elana Schorr points out, there's no way to know how much was spent on sexual misconduct claims, because the $17 million includes payments over pay and workplace safety.

We also have no idea how much money has been spent by the offices of individual members of Congress, who may decide to settle harassment allegations using their own office budgets.
That was the case with a former aide who negotiated a settlement with Rep. John Conyers of Michigan -- one of the most powerful Democrats in the House, with close relationships to the party's establishment -- in 2015. Like Compliance Office payouts, these individual settlements are also funded by taxpayer money.

The identities of members of Congress or aides who reach settlements over misconduct allegations are kept secret -- so there's no warning system for potential victims. During congressional testimony, Rep. Jackie Speier of California described the Compliance Office as "an enabler of sexual harassment."

"This is not a victim-friendly process," Speier said in an interview on ABC News' "This Week". "One victim who I spoke with said, 'You know, the process was almost worse than the harassment.'"
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Speier, who initiated a #MeTooCongress campaign at the end of October, also points to a larger problem of a work environment where sexual abuse is not only tolerated, but encouraged.

Only about 20 percent of members of Congress are women. Although almost half of congressional staffers are female, women are far more likely to hold lower-ranking positions, like office manager or constituent representative, than to serve as chief of staff or legislative director, according to FiveThirtyEight.org.

Men occupy the more powerful positions -- and there are few positions more powerful than the office of senator or representative. "The power disparities in Congress are enormous," Debra Katz, an attorney who specializes in sexual harassment and has represented congressional aides, told FiveThirtyEight.org.

Katz pointed to a 2016 Equal Employment Opportunity Commission report that discussed "superstar harassers" or employees who are especially powerful or valuable to an organization, and therefore believe they are above the rules. "Members of Congress are, by definition, superstars," Katz said. "And many believe the rules do not apply to them."
For decades, sexual assault and harassment has been a sometimes open, sometimes closed secret on Capital Hill.
The Office of Compliance was put into effect as part of the Congressional Accountability Act of 1995 -- the year that Republican Sen. Bob Packwood of Oregon was forced to resign after multiple women stepped forward with allegations of sexual assault.

Two years before, amid several public allegations against Packwood, a Washington Post survey showedthat one-third of female congressional employees said they were sexually harassed by members, supervisors, lobbyists or fellow aides.
Since then, there have been other high-profile cases, such as Florida Republican Rep. Mark Foley, who resigned in 2006 after it was revealed that he repeatedly made sexual advances to several congressional pages. The page program was suspended as a result.

But there were many more cases over the years that didn't seem to merit the front pages.

That changed with #MeToo. Since the campaign began with claims against Harvey Weinstein, dozens more women who work on Capital Hill have stepped forward to tell their stories and reveal the sexism that permeates the halls of government.
Some 1,500 former Capitol Hill aides signed an open letter to House and Senate leaders to demand that Congress put in place mandatory harassment training and revamp the Office of Compliance. Right now, training isn't mandatory and can be completed online -- and only one employee at the Compliance Office is dedicated to in-person harassment training.
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Even if the rules are changed, a bigger problem remains, however -- the fact that the people who hold government office act as if they are above the law.

That's because they are -- the laws regarding Congress are mostly there to protect them from their victims, not the other way around. As a result, men who were known to be repeat offenders were given a pass, and the process itself kept women's stories hidden.

When allegations of misconduct do see the light of day, members of Congress and the media typically look at them through the lens of partisan political point-scoring, not as a wake-up call to the sexism that goes unconfronted in the halls of government.

It was certainly no surprise when a White House led by Donald Trump stood by Moore. But the behavior of liberals toward Franken -- with column after of column of hand-wringing about whether to stand by him as a "lesser evil" to the Republicans -- should especially anger anyone who cares about confronting sexism and sexual abuse.

Both political parties are showing themselves incapable of taking on the sexism that permeates the Washington political system. It was the millions of women stepping forward to say #MeToo that even forced a conversation about sexual harassment in Congress -- out in public, where it should be.
As Briony Whitehouse, who was a 19-year-old intern when she was groped in an elevator by a Republican senator in 2003, told the Washington Post: "At the time, I didn't know what to do, so I did nothing at all. Because this happened so early on for me, I just assumed this was the way things worked, and that I'd have to accept it."

She doesn't accept it anymore, and neither should anyone else.


ELIZABETH SCHULTE
Elizabeth Schulte is a journalist and reviews editor for the Socialist Worker, writing frequently on low-wage workers, the Democratic Party and women's liberation.
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Saturday, December 9, 2017