Not about Woodrow Wilson

The mariner is reading the newly published book on Woodrow Wilson (“Wilson” by A. Scott Berg, Penguin Group Publishers). Harry Truman considered Woodrow Wilson to be the greatest of all Presidents of the United States. Virtually all the key concepts of government in place today, including many that FDR implemented, were initial accomplishments or designs promoted by Wilson.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt has become such a benchmark in history that few study the years prior to the depression, the New Deal, and the Second World War. Yet nothing in history leaps to the forefront without decades of forethought, tribulations and transition. Wilson was the start of the Twentieth Century; Wilson’s administration is the source of most of today’s Government – including the United Nations.

However, the mariner does not write to describe the contributions of Wilson. If you are interested, acquire the book. What has caught my attention is the writing style of author Berg. His style is as smooth as silk; his descriptions are as detailed as to note the color of the bedspread in wife Edith Wilson’s stateroom on the USS George Washington. His vocabulary is precise and endless, always selecting the perfect word placed in the perfect spot of an efficient sentence.

The American English vocabulary used today by every general class is unimaginative, inappropriate, not descriptive and fortunate not to have been subsumed by the word “got.”  Further, the usable words in American conversation are merely connecting words that imply something wholly circumstantial; only the recipient understands unspoken meaning and nuance. The same words are meaningless used in conversation with another recipient.

Now the age of acronyms and cryptic shorthand forced to say the simplest, meaninglessly nuanced thoughts that can be expressed in 180 characters or less has arrived. The mariner’s linguistic friend considers language a constantly changing process reflecting the need of the culture.

Alas, this is not the mariner’s culture. Society grows less meaningful to him at the same rate as new iphones roll off the assembly line. Increasingly, it is one’s knowledge of touched icons, each driven only by a few hidden verbs; no words are spoken; no grammar required; no vocabulary necessary.

It is a joy to read superior, polished writing by Mr. Berg.

The word of the day is revanche.

Ancient Mariner

The Wedding

The mariner attended a wedding the other day. The entire wedding party (10) was in their late twenties and early thirties. It was not a splashy ceremony; there were no flowers, no tuxedos, and no flamboyance of the kind we are accustomed to seeing. Music was from a CD although a guitarist and soloist performed two numbers.

It was two large families plus a number of guests who made a long trip to the church. The tone of the families and the wedding party was subdued but committed to the couple. They showed contentment that this event was happening but the parents were not exuberant; the grandparents were pleased but quiet. The mariner saw in the eyes of the families a weariness. Weariness not related to the wedding but to strife, to the burden of working class people across a lifetime. There had been divorces in both families.

The mariner is pleased to believe the match is a good one. The marriage will last. He wonders whether our society will let them lead a life of personal growth, financial opportunity, and the chance to feel successful.

Once the wedding was over, everyone relaxed a bit and socialized for a half hour while many took pictures of the wedding participants. The wedding was an event, not a ceremony. The mariner believes, though, that things are better now. Like most weddings, there is a new chapter in the life of the bride and groom – especially for this bride.

Ancient Mariner

What Shall We Do?

The mariner has laid out a despairing image of the United States political culture. Will there be a culture crushing tsunami? Are the citizens to wait until another Maximilien de Robespierre leads us to cast out the plutocrats?

Must we wait until a Robin Hood raids the coffers of the wealthy and distributes the wealth to the commoners? Will a shift in the wealth of nations leave the United States as an also ran country? Must we wait election after election after election until the government functions again?

The answer to all is “no.”

Each of us, one person at a time, represents a powerful political force. Each of us is bound to do our share to right the ship of state. This is not the duty of our representatives, though it should be. Each of us must become active defenders of a functioning, efficient, caring, and free United States. Each of us will contribute financially. Each of us will be informed citizens ready to voice our opinion to government, corporations, and bankers that we do not approve of sloth, greed, and inequality. We have the right to bear arms, not with bullets but with conscientious, firm, educated resistance with our vote.

By what means shall we begin this task? By far, the most powerful weapon each of us has is our vote. Look at the following list. Can you find the United States?

 

Turnout in national lower house elections, 1960–1995

Country

Compulsory

Turnout

                                                                       Malta N 94%
      Chile N 93%
      Austria N 92%
      Belgium Y 91%
      Luxembourg Y 90%
      Italy N 90%
      Iceland N 89%
      New Zealand N 88%
      Denmark N 87%
      Germany N 86%
      Greece Y   (not enforced) 86%
      Sweden N 86%
      Czech Republic and       Slovakia N 85%
      Venezuela N 85%
      Netherlands N 83%
      Brazil Y 83%
      Argentina Y 83%
      Romania N 81%
      Costa Rica N 81%
      Norway N 81%
      Australia Y 81%
      Bulgaria N 80%
      Israel N 80%
      Portugal N 79%
      Finland N 78%
      France N 76%
      United Kingdom N 76%
      South Korea N 75%
      Ireland N 74%
      Canada N 74%
      Spain N 73%
      Poland N 71%
      Japan N 71%
      Estonia N 69%
      Hungary N 66%
      Russia N 61%
      Pakistan N 60%
      India N 58%
       Switzerland N 54%
      United States N 48%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even as this post is written, many states, especially the most conservative states, are gerrymandering their districts to minimize black, Hispanic and liberal districts to the point that they are not represented. These states are actively in violation of the spirit of the Constitution, doing everything they can to discourage voting by those who would fare better were the white plutocrats not in office.

These states are in the minority among other states. Today, those elected members without compassion or interest in their constituents dominate the Lower House and almost dominate the Senate. If one of these spiritless representatives represents you, vote them out. It is that simple. Vote. But more than that, you must join with your party in an effort to register everyone who has the right to vote – many who are not even aware that their vote makes a difference. Be active in your local party activities.

There are other things we citizens can do, but there will be sacrifice – far less than if we waited for the tsunami.

Ancient Mariner

Tired.

The mariner is tired, so, so tired of the squabbles over social issues. Gays (He misses that word; it had a unique meaning that has not been replaced), abortion, medical care, tax imbalance. The mariner is very tired. He is driven from any news except, sometimes, PBS Evening News.

People are full of vitriol and destructive poison that erodes our society as acid erodes metal. It certainly isn’t a gay old time…

Prejudice, elitism, exclusivity, racism, liberalism, conservatism, libertarianism – it just doesn’t matter anymore. People are mean. Like street philosopher Rodney King said, “Why can’t we all just get along?” This reference adds another to the mean list: police brutality. Rodney’s four attackers, by the way, were acquitted except for one minor charge against one officer. Finally, the brutal disregard both by Congress and the National Rifle Association to incessant, sensational murder sprees and the deaths of 30,000 each year by hand guns is irresponsible. Where are the religious influences? Where is moral authority? The Tea Party has laid claim to Christianity and the high moral ground. Yet they espouse the list at the top of this paragraph. What would Jesus do? They are false prophets.

The issues of political philosophy have become so tightly wrapped around conservative and liberal fiscal policy that they may as well wear Civil War uniforms. Taxes are horrendously out of balance but this issue is held hostage to government spending in the last decade. The deficit, attested by many sources, is reduced more and more rapidly as the government climbs out of the recession.

I feel sorry for poor people – most who work for starvation wages. They don’t deserve to be the victims in all this vitriol.

As for the rest of us, we are victims, too. We have lost our good-time American culture. We have lost the belief that every American is equal under democracy. We have lost the ability to bind together to reach the moon. Norman Rockwell rolls in his grave.

There is no gaiety today.

Ancient mariner

Pragmatism

The mariner has always been pragmatic. He supposes most folks feel that way about themselves. The mariner tends to depend on his five senses and his experience to evaluate the world around him. As a child of five, he saw in an encyclopedia pictures describing the solar system and the universe. That great bodies could float in space was a mysterious marvel and that meteors came from nowhere and left just as mysteriously was fascinating to conjure.

This mystery and others eventually made the mariner a frequent visitor to the local library and in later years to the Internet as well. He sought what others thought about his questions; perhaps an answer would be provided – at least a better one than the mariner had at hand.

There is good and bad in being pragmatic. The good is that rationality prevails in all circumstances. What is reasonable is the most correct perspective. Among fellow human beings, the mariner’s dependence on rationality leads to a middle of the road attitude and, to a degree, a willingness to search for better solutions.

The mariner does not accept behaviors that reinforce dependence on mystery as fact. He has difficulty understanding why so many believe in miracles and intervention by otherworldly beings. Often, his perception of a situation is far different from others. One that most can relate to is the leap from reason to belief in “flying saucers and creatures from space.” This is not the place to debate the subject. It is an example of building belief on mystery rather than fact.

To the mariner’s dismay, there are many pragmatic behaviors for identifying the correct perspective. For example, one wonders why the Congress (the sentence can be ended here as a question) vetoes gun registration when 92% percent of U.S. citizens favored registration. The rationality is perverse and is centered on personal success rather than American wellbeing. The concept of greater good has disappeared from virtually every government in the United States. The idea of greater good and democracy go hand in hand. Without one or the other, the whole concept is dysfunctional. This dysfunction includes the Supreme Court. The Court refuses to hear cases that deal with one-person one-vote, a subject that encompasses voting practices based on racist and political oppression, abuse of the concept of redistricting, and the Court bias toward Reconstructionist thinking at the expense of large numbers of citizens suffering repression and the lack of fairness. The framers of the Constitution established a capitalistic democracy because they were businesspersons and successful entrepreneurs. Still, it was important to them to preserve fairness and civil liberty for every citizen. This is no longer true in the halls of government.

To the dismay of extreme conservatives and extreme progressives, the world will never be a happy place. These folks are dreamers, believers, and champions of their cause. The world is a pragmatic place. The significantly bad side of pragmatism is that it lacks soul. Lack of soul is what permits the rich to get richer, the Earth to fall into disarray from human abuse, and the lack of concern for victims and disadvantaged peoples. All these imbalances stem from a pragmatic logic but a logic that has no soul.

Some individuals and organizations combine soul with pragmatism: volunteer organizations, charitable organizations, even the United Nations, the only government designed to be a worldwide government – albeit it strangled by the wealthier nations. The UN is buried under the motives of international banks, military supremacy, corporate greed, crooked governments, often, if not totally, denied the right to intercede in behalf of the starved, the slaughtered, and the bereft. Woodrow Wilson rolls in his grave.

Pragmatism shows its best side when the greater good is included in its rational conclusions. The greater good is the soul of pragmatism.

Ancient Mariner

What’s Wrong?

The mariner is sure that most Americans are deeply concerned at this moment of failed national government. Something is wrong at the fundamental level – something that causes the national government to be disabled. The mariner suggests a few basic aberrations in our philosophy of government.

Foremost is the practice of allowing the two political parties to gerrymander voting districts. On the surface, this appears to be a temporary advantage of the prevailing party every ten years when the census is taken. It is true that States and Counties must recalculate the distribution of the population; within ten years, a lot can happen. But that’s not the issue.

Gerrymandering is an abuse exercised by both parties. Right now, the tea party demonstrates the effects of gerrymandering very clearly. The ultra conservative members of the House of Representatives have no fear of the normal democratic processes of government because they represent districts gerrymandered to be composed only of those citizens who share the extremist views of their elected representative. The need to negotiate for the common good does not affect the tea party representatives; they are doing what their district voters want them to do. They will be reelected precisely because they have stalled the democratic process of government.

Another dysfunction will occur in the long term. Already more than ninety percent of our Federal Representatives are continuously reelected and will have a lifelong career. This is not healthy. The government is not refreshed over time and Congress becomes an old men’s club. There are a few women most of whom are reelected for life as well but they are a small minority.

Over the years, Congress forgets what the real world is like and what the real issues are for the common citizen. Further, as most old folks do, they are not in touch with the realities of modern science, modern medicine or modern culture. Members of Congress benefit from the contributions of lobbyists and therefore can afford expensive reelection campaigns. It is difficult for a competitor for office to match that advantage. This makes it easier to be reelected time after time and only a rich person can compete.

What can correct the dysfunctions that derail our government elections is to remove redistricting from party politics and have districts drawn that make sense geographically and represent a balanced cross section of the population. Further, fund raising should be limited to contributions from entities and citizens within the boundaries of representation. Lastly, a very small group of political regulars determines who runs for office. This can be remedied if each voter attends party meetings and especially participates in party activities as an election grows near.

Another aberration is the common practice of making it hard for some elements of the population to vote. Voting by every citizen is what makes democracy work. Gerrymandering is one way to reduce voting rights; the other is to make it very hard if not impossible for the common citizen to vote. Tricks like:

not allow voting on a weekend; not allowing absentee ballots; requiring identification that the poor and nonwhite classes often do not have – or need; limiting the location of voting centers to the disadvantage of college students, citizens without automobiles and others who cannot spare the time to travel an hour or more to vote; setting voting hours limited to the work hours of the working class so that time off, which may be impossible or will reduce wages, is common.

What causes failure in our governments is lack of concern for the common good. Special interests and undemocratic practices at the grass roots level is what brought our government down. Each of you is to blame.

Book recommendation: On God’s Side: What Religion Forgets and Politics Hasn’t Learned About Serving the Common Good by Pastor Jim Wallis, the editor of the magazine Sojourners.

Magazine recommendation: YES!, a magazine dedicated to solving the world’s problems in the context of the common good.

Ancient Mariner

The Power of Cities

The mariner gives his post to the review of a book by  Vishaan Chakrabarti .

Following is an excerpt related to the power of cities to lift us from an agricultural society that continues to dominate its influence beyond its true value. In recent posts, the mariner has suggested that the way to the future power of the United States is to recognize the power of states and cities as the future owners of economy – and the answer to the recession is state and city political energy.

In A Country of Cities, author Vishaan Chakrabarti argues that well-designed cities are the key to solving America’s great national challenges: environmental degradation, unsustainable consumption, economic stagnation, rising public health costs and decreased social mobility.

If we develop them wisely in the future, our cities can be the force leading us into a new era of progressive and prosperous stewardship of our nation. In compelling chapters, Chakrabarti brings us a wealth of information about cities, suburbs and exurbs, looking at how they developed across the 50 states and their roles in prosperity and globalization, sustainability and resilience, and health and joy.

Counter to what you might think, American cities today are growing faster than their suburban counterparts for the first time since the 1920s. If we can intelligently increase the density of our cities as they grow and build the transit systems, schools, parks and other infrastructure to support them, Chakrabarti shows us how both job opportunities and an improved, sustainable environment are truly within our means.

In this call for an urban America, he illustrates his argument with numerous infographics illustrating provocative statistics on issues as disparate as rising childhood obesity rates, ever-lengthening automobile commutes and government subsidies that favor highways over mass transit. The book closes with an eloquent manifesto that rallies us to build “a Country of Cities,” to turn a country of highways, houses and hedges into a country of trains, towers and trees.

The mariner advises that the solutions, while true to the dilemma of cities, does not encompass the global conflicts that confront the nation.

Vishaan Chakrabarti is the director of Columbia University’s Center for Urban Real Estate (CURE). In March 2012, Chakrabarti became a partner at SHoP Architects, where he will be working on such projects as the Atlantic Yards development in Brooklyn. An architect and planner, Chakrabarti has worked in both the public and private sectors: as a top executive at Related Companies; a director at the New York City Planning Commission; an associate partner at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; a transportation planner for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

The mariner urges that you consider reading this book or at least consider the political power that exists within states and especially cities while the Federal Government struggles with a solution.

Ancient Mariner