
Nonviolence in the Middle East sounds idealistic to be sure; and to some, dangerously naive. Yet it has a track of successes including India, the Civi Rights movement and South Africa. It also provides an alternative to the ongoing circle of hatred, suspicion, revenge and violence. Sami Awad, who is a Palestinian Christian and one of those whose life is dedicated to nonviolence, told me: “Nonviolence is not a solution to the conflict, it is the only solution.”

A man traveling across a field encountered a tiger. He fled, and the tiger ran after him. Coming to a precipice, the man caught hold of a wild vine and swung himself over the edge. The tiger sniffed and paced above. Trembling, the man looked down, to where another tiger had come, waiting to eat him. Two mice, one black and one white, little by little started to gnaw away the vine. The man saw a lucious strawberry growing near him. Holding the vine with one hand, the man stretched until he reached the strawberry. How sweet it tasted!
Recently I reread this well known Zen parable and suddenly realized that Pollyanna was really a Zen master. Her “glad game” epitomized the lesson this parable teaches – no matter what is going on around you, no matter how terrible things are or seem to be, you never want to let them keep you from enjoying and appreciating the sweet things in life.
If one speaks or acts with a cruel mind, misery follows, as the cart follows the horse … If one speaks or acts with a pure mind, happiness follows, as a shadow follows its source. – the Dhammapada
A blind man had been waiting a while at a busy road for someone to offer to guide him across, when he felt a tap on his shoulder.
“Excuse me,” said the tapper, “I’m blind – would you mind guiding me across the road?”The first blind man took the arm of the second blind man, and they both crossed the road.
Apparently this is a true story. The first blind man was the jazz pianist George Shearing. He is quoted (in Bartlett’s Anecdotes) as saying after the event, “What could I do? I took him across and it was the biggest thrill of my life.”
There are times when we think we cannot do something and so do not stretch or take a risk. Being forced to stretch and take a risk can often help us to reduce our dependencies (on others, or our own personal safety mechanisms), and to discover new excitement and capabilities. The poem Come to the Edge is another wonderful perspective on risk and stretching.
An old lady had a hearing-aid fitted, hidden underneath her hair.
A week later she returned to the doctor for her check-up.
“It’s wonderful – I can hear everything now,” she reported very happily to the doctor.
“And is your family pleased too?” asked the doctor.
“Oh I haven’t told them yet,” said the old lady, “And I’ve changed my will twice already..”
the bath and the bucket
A party of suppliers was being given a tour of a mental hospital.
One of the visitors had made some very insulting remarks about the patients.
After the tour the visitors were introduced to various members of staff in the canteen.
The rude visitor chatted to one of the security staff, Bill, a kindly and wise ex-policeman.
“Are they all raving loonies in here then?” said the rude man.
“Only the ones who fail the test,” said Bill.
“What’s the test?” said the man.
“Well, we show them a bath full of water, a bucket, a jug and an egg-cup, and we ask them what’s the quickest way to empty the bath,” said Bill.
“Oh I see, simple – the normal ones know it’s the bucket, right?”
“No actually,” said Bill, “The normal ones say pull out the plug. Should I check when there’s a bed free for you?”
rocks in bucket
Start with a bucket, some big rocks enough to fill it, some small stones, some sand and water.
Put the big rocks in the bucket – is it full?
Put the small stones in around the big rocks – is it full?
Put the sand in and give it a shake – is it full?
Put the water in. Now it’s full.
The point is: unless you put the big rocks in first, you won’t get them in at all.
The very old lady
A very old lady looked in the mirror one morning. She had three remaining hairs on her head, and being a positive soul, she said, “I think I’ll braid my hair today.” So she braided her three hairs, and she had a great day.
Some days later, looking in the mirror one morning, preparing for her day, she saw that she had only two hairs remaining. “Hmm, two hairs… I fancy a centre parting today.” She duly parted her two hairs, and as ever, she had a great day.
A week or so later, she saw that she had just one hair left on her head. “One hair huh…,” she mused, “I know, a pony-tail will be perfect.” And again she had a great day.
The next morning she looked in the mirror. She was completely bald.
“Finally bald huh,” she said to herself, “How wonderful! I won’t have to waste time doing my hair any more..”
the buddha and the abuse
A tale is told about the Buddha, Gautama (563-483BC), the Indian prince and spiritual leader whose teachings founded Buddhism. This short story illustrates that every one of us has the choice whether or not to take personal offence from another person’s behaviour.
It is said that on an occasion when the Buddha was teaching a group of people, he found himself on the receiving end of a fierce outburst of abuse from a bystander, who was for some reason very angry.
The Buddha listened patiently while the stranger vented his rage, and then the Buddha said to the group and to the stranger, “If someone gives a gift to another person, who then chooses to decline it, tell me, who would then own the gift? The giver or the person who refuses to accept the gift?”
“The giver,” said the group after a little thought. “Any fool can see that,” added the angry stranger.
“Then it follows, does it not,” said the Buddha, “Whenever a person tries to abuse us, or to unload their anger on us, we can each choose to decline or to accept the abuse; whether to make it ours or not. By our personal response to the abuse from another, we can choose who owns and keeps the bad feelings.”
the donkey
One day a farmer’s donkey fell into a well. The farmer frantically thought what to do as the stricken animal cried out to be rescued. With no obvious solution, the farmer regretfully concluded that as the donkey was old, and as the well needed to be filled in anyway, he should give up the idea of rescuing the beast, and simply fill in the well. Hopefully the poor animal would not suffer too much, he tried to persuade himself.
The farmer asked his neighbours help, and before long they all began to shovel earth quickly into the well. When the donkey realised what was happening he wailed and struggled, but then, to everyone’s relief, the noise stopped.
After a while the farmer looked down into the well and was astonished by what he saw. The donkey was still alive, and progressing towards the top of the well. The donkey had discovered that by shaking off the dirt instead of letting it cover him, he could keep stepping on top of the earth as the level rose. Soon the donkey was able to step up over the edge of the well, and he happily trotted off.
Life tends to shovel dirt on top of each of us from time to time. The trick is to shake it off and take a step up.
Any time the hair on the back of my neck stands up when I hear something on the news or get a forwarded email I go to www.factcheck.org. They provide documented debunking and set the story straight. This has been particulary valuable during elections and during political controversies. Don’t blindly pass on lies – do your research!
In 1931, the same year he died, Edison told his friends Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone: I’d put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that. http://environment.about.com/od/renewableenergy/a/thomas_edison.htm
Humanity continues to pump huge amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Many people think we have slowed the pace of this suicide, but sorry, no. The climate systems of the world continue their expected response, just a lot faster than anyone expected. The natural world that supports us continues to fail, but since it is 99% ignored in the reporting of the news media the importance of this story is 99% outside of the awareness of ordinary people. Even when some catastrophe breaks through, appropriate strong action to control greenhouse gas pollution has not been the result. We need to stop burning coal and oil, but that is not on the legislative table yet. One of the things that has helped to deflect any sense of urgency has been the constant stream of whiz-bang ideas claiming to be solutions– in fact much of the coverage of Global Warming has been reporting about these inventions based on press releases which were designed to raise capital. The effect has been to allow us to imagine that we will not have to make real changes to deal with this problem. In a benign example, changing light bulbs to energy efficient models like compact flourescents (CFLs) is a good thing, as are all energy efficiency measures. But scale counts. According to Architechture2030, if every household in the United States of America changed a light bulb, greenhouse pollution was not emitted because the electricity was not used… but the greenhouse gases from just two coal-fired power plants is enough to wipe out that improvement. So changing light bulbs is not bad, but it is inadequate unless we ban the burning of coal at the same time. Then there is another category of solutions– those that claim to take the greenhouse gases, especially CO2 and make them go away. Planting trees is the prime example, but climate change has already turned millions of acres of forests into carbon sources instead of sinks, so we have to rethink that one. Then here come the Oil Guys. They tell us that they will take CO2 that has been liquified and sent via pipeline to them and store it thousands of feet underground. They will make the problem go away. They argue that they know how to do this because they’ve developed this technique in what is called ?enhanced oil recovery,? or EOR. For many years they have taken liquid CO2 and pumped it underground under high pressure near an oil well because it makes the oil slipperier and makes it easier to force more oil to the surface. The pumps at the wellhead pull at the oil and the CO2 push it. They can get a lot more oil out of the ground that way. I was astonished to find that the oil guys have been mining CO2 for this purpose. Paying for it. Which reveals the motivation behind referring to EOR as CCS (carbon capture and sequestration). The plan now is that instead of buying CO2 they will get us to pay them to use it. There are lots of other questions, like what portion of the CO2 will come back up during the active life of the wells? (30-70% is the best guess.) How will they determine if the CO2 is going to stay down there after the pumping and injection wells are capped? (They say they will do ?whatever EPA requires.?) And guess what happens when they say they have stored more carbon than they get in the oil from the well? The “black gold” becomes Green Oil! I hope that this is a technique that works in a provable way. But clearly the oil guys are boosting the idea because it will make them richer, not because they are anti-Global Warming activists. It has boondoggle written all over it. So, what do we really need to do about Global Warming? In plain words, stop burning coal in less than 20 years. Focus on public transit, weatherizing buildings and building wind farms. Expressed more technically, bring the atmospheric concentration of CO2 down from our current level of ~388ppm to close to the pre-industrial level of ~280ppm. How? Bring net emissions of greenhouse gases to zero by mid-century and get the biggest part done quickly– about a quarter of this stuff will continue warming the planet for over a thousand years. In other word, stop being distracted by technical fixes that promise to make the problem go away easily. Stop re-creating the problem every day. Just don’t do it.
Reproduced from an email I received from John Atkeison (504) 208-9761 (Office) (504) 428-6996 (Cell) Director, Climate and Clean Energy Programs, Alliance for Affordable Energy 1001 South Broad Street, Ste. 202, New Orleans, LA 70125
I woke up this morning. Frankly, I was surprised. I mean, after all, it was the last thing I expected to do.
I had never gone to a job interview at 10 p.m. But there I was ringing the doorbell, in the dark, wondering if I was crazy, or just desperate.
I peer quivering from under the sheets towards the half-opened door of my closet.
A moist, low carb, healthy, delicious snack, breakfast, lunch, or desert with no wheat or refined sugar, a low glycemic index and high nutritional value.
A good friend and I were trading emails during the 2008 election. Here is my response to one of hers.
The Democrats have certainly disappointed me at times, but I cannot imagine trusting the ones who have been power for 16+++ years. McCain is part of and has surrounded himself with the group who created the mess we’re in and are making it worse (Black, Gramm, Berman, Rove, Bush). The ones who keep lying to us. The ones who took us into an illegal war based on lies and are the direct cause of the deaths of 100,000+ people and the wounding of 100,000 more, including our own. The ones who are in bed (literally, we find out now) with the oil companies and banks, mortgage and insurance companies we are now bailing out.
What did you mean with the Coolidge reference? Coolidge was a republican for deregulation, which is widely regarded to be mostly to blame for the wall street / mortgage corruption (even by McCain now, so he says). While individuals have a responsibility not to get in over their heads, these companies played a shell game, misrepresenting their offers, steering people into deals they couldn’t afford, just to get the mortgage. Then they sold it knowing full well it was likely to fail, took their profits and ran. Are you for deregulation or against? Cause I’m not sure what McCain’s stance is at this point. He’s voted for deregulation for years, but all of a sudden he’s talking serious regulations and even new agencies because everyone is upset. Yet he is still taking advice from Gramm, the king of deregulation.
And what does your WWII reference mean? 56 million dead would seem to support an ANTI war stance. Especially since 40 million of them were civilians. We should be doing everything we can to avoid war. The LAST thing we need is another war, which is exactly what the republicans are posturing for and stirring up the hornet nests, playing one side against the other, talking about war. We are teetering on the edge of WWIII. I want someone in office who values the lives of our soldiers and citizens and the lives of the Iranians and Russians (e.g. human beings) so much that he does everything in his power to avoid war via non violent cooperative methods, not someone who believes “other wars” are inevitable. I want someone who is not afraid to sit down with the leaders of other countries, allies and otherwise, to figure out how we can make this work and rebuild our credibility and ties. It’s not an easy task, especially now after all this damage has been done. Trust is a difficult thing to regain once you’ve lost it. But if we don’t try we will get what we deserve. McCain’s comments that “there will be wars” are very disturbing to me. War is never inevitable unless you believe it is and I don’t want someone like that in the white house.
I’m confused that you seem to be blaming the democrats for the Americans killed in Iraq – that was Bush/Cheney et al’s doing, and they lied to us to do it. We didn’t go in because of any weapons of mass destruction. First of all, we would NEVER have attacked Iraq if we really thought Sadaam had chemical or nuclear weapons (he didn’t use them against us because he didn’t have them – not even one!). And why didn’t any of the insurgents or al quaeda use them if they were sitting around? Even Bush Jr. has finally admitted there no weapons.
But if Iraq did have them it was our own fault: “From 1980 to 1988, the U.S., the West and the USSR fueled the Iran-Iraq War which cost an estimated one million lives on both sides…. The U.S. tried to build up Saddam Hussein as the new Western strongman in the Gulf. It showered arms, technical assistance and economic aid on Iraq. Between 1985 and 1990, U.S. firms sold almost $800 million in “dual use” aircraft–ostensibly to be used for civilian purposes, but easily convertible to military uses. In 1988 and 1989 alone, the U.S. government approved licenses to U.S. firms to sell biological products to the Iraqi Atomic Energy Agency and electronics equipment to Iraqi missile-producing plants. In July 1988–two months after Saddam used chemical weapons to wipe out the Kurdish village of Halabja–the California-based Bechtel Corp. won a contract to build a petrochemicals plant. Iraq planned to produce mustard gas and fuel-air explosives in the plant. The Bush administration doubled agricultural credits to Iraq to $1 billion a year. Other Western allies, like Britain and France, also helped to arm Saddam. While being courted as a Western enforcer in the Middle East, Saddam could also rely on friends in high places. In April 1990–four months before Iraq invaded Kuwait–Saddam received a delegation of U.S. senators who assured him the U.S. stood by him. Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.) assured Saddam that Bush would veto any threatened sanctions on Iraq. Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.) joined Saddam in blasting the “haughty and pampered” media that had criticized Saddam’s regime. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) told Saddam: “I am a Jew and a staunch supporter of Israel . . . I am now aware that you are a strong and intelligent man and that you want peace.” All of the charges U.S. officials hurl against Saddam today–that he attacks his “own people,” that he is a brutal dictator, that he used chemical weapons against Kurds and Iranians, that he builds “weapons of mass destruction”–were known in the 1980s. In fact, as history shows, the West helped Saddam build his arsenal.” (source: isreview.org).
Iraq is the U.S. linchpin of the Middle East oil fields in a sick real-life game of “Risk”. It has nothing to do with weapons or human rights or even Israel. It was the only piece of the puzzle we thought we could easily conquer. We used to be “buddies” until Sadaam invaded Kuwait in 1990 because we didn’t want Sadaam to control so much oil. Yet, it was OK for him to attack Iran when it suited our needs. As Lawrence Korb, former Reagan assistant defense secretary said “If Kuwait grew carrots, we wouldn’t give a damn.”
We went in for the oil and control of the region, and because we could. If we truly didn’t want other countries to have those kinds of weapons or hurt their own people, we’d be bombing a lot of other countries. Why only threaten Russia and Iran now? Why don’t we bomb China? What about Pakistan? They already have nuclear weapons. They’re supposedly our friends and Pakistan just issued an order to fire on our soldiers! (Isn’t Pakistan also harboring the most wanted man in the world?) And where do we get off dictating who can and can’t have nuclear weapons when we’re the ONLY country who has ever used them, and killed millions of innocent civilians with them. No one should have them. Period. Right now we’re in a standoff, and until we get rid of ours, they won’t get rid of theirs. I’m ashamed to think that we would actually consider using a nuclear weapon again, even in retaliation. Haven’t we learned anything? Why are we threatening anyone?
Regarding Israel… Is Palestine any less valuable than any other country? Israelis deserve a place to live, but not at the expense of other human beings. Did you ever really think about why so many countries hate Israel? Have you ever researched the root of the conflict there? How would you feel if the UN declared that Baton Rouge was now partly owned by the Canadians, kicked you out of your home onto the streets at gunpoint, killed your children, burned your crops, imprisoned your husband, and moved a bunch of Canadians onto your property in the name of God (and not even your own God at that). Blood would run in the streets if the UN granted Florida to Cuba because there were a lot of persecuted Cubans there and they wanted a new homeland. That’s exactly what the UN did in 1947. And then Cuba decides Florida isn’t enough so they start taking over Georgia – that’s what Israel did, and they still haven’t returned what they took, despite the international court ruling it illegal. If the US kicked your neighbor out of their house where they’ve lived for generations so you could move in, would you? Of course not. It wouldn’t be right. And you probably wouldn’t blame your neighbor if he put up a fight. Yet that’s what thousands of Israeli settlers are doing to entire Palestinian neighborhoods and cities, and the Palestinians are fighting for their lands and their lives.
Which brings us to Iran – Is an Iranian child any less valuable than an Israeli child? Do any of them deserve to be bombed and killed because their leader believes, rightly or wrongly, that Israel should be “annihilated” for trying to annihilate the Palestinians? Of course not. But what’s the difference between Iran bombing Israel and the US bombing Iraq? The reasons are similar from each point of view – stopping an evil regime – and results are the same – dead children. It was OK by the US for Iraq to attack Iran and kill their children, but not OK to attack Kuwait – Huh? NO ONE has the right to invade/attack another country, and until that concept is accepted and enforced universally, we will be in a perpetual state of war. If you say, it’s ok if it’s self defense when someone attacks you – then ask the Palestinians how they see it – they are defending their land that has been taken from them, and their very lives. So why is it OK for Israel to take over Palestine, but not OK for the Palestinians to fight back?
And, by your own logic, Iran won’t nuke Israel either. In your own words: “Think about this, if North Korea [Iran] were to actually be planning to release nuclear weapons in the proximity of South Korea and Japan, [Israel] the nuclear fallout would have also greatly affected Russian and China [Palestine, Syria and Lebanon] which is right across their border.” Furthermore, they’d be destroying one of their most holy places. And, by the way, did you know that Israel and Iran used to be allies not long ago: “During the era of the Iranian Monarchy (1948-1979) under the Pahlavi Dynasty, Iran enjoyed cordial relations with Israel. Israel regarded Iran, a non-Arab power on the periphery of the Arab world, as a natural ally and counterweight to Arab ambitions as part of David Ben-Gurion’s alliance of the periphery. Even after the Iranian Revolution and Ayatollah Khomeini’s public condemnations of the “Zionist entity“, Israel shipped arms to Iran for use against Iraq, which it regarded as the greater threat.” (source: wikipedia)
And as for our going to war with Iran – have you looked at a map lately? We can’t even control Iraq – Iran is almost 4 times as big. It has over 72 million people. We’d be nuts. And it would unleash a torrent of attacks on American and Israeli soil that would make 9/11 look like a good day. They also can shut down the Persian Gulf, hence disrupting world oil supplies. Bad idea.
Your statement: China and Russia were both parties to the deception. That is why Bush called them the “Axis of Evil.” - Last time I checked China and Russia are still considered our allies. Bush called Iran, Iraq and N. Korea the Axis of Evil. And just what is the criteria for being a member of the Axis? Invade/bomb other countries they don’t agree with and develop nuclear weapons – oops – where do we pick up our membership pin? It works both ways. And if terror is a criteria, then look into the heart of an Iraqi or Afgani child as they cling to their dead mother’s body as U.S. bombs are dropping on their house. Terror doesn’t need the bomb to be strapped onto a fanatic.
Enough about war – I’m a pacifist. I don’t believe in killing, and believe that even in self defense one should do everything possible to not kill or hurt the attacker. That’s why I studied Aikido, a Japanese martial art that teaches how to disable an attacker without harming them or yourself. The founder of aikido declared: “To control aggression without inflicting injury is the Art of Peace.” And another of my favorite quotes: “We will not learn how to live together in peace by killing each other’s children.” (Jimmy Carter)
As for gasoline, I want someone in the white house who will be serious about weaning us off of petroleum products, not just “foreign oil”. I want someone who promotes and understands conservation, not someone who makes fun of it (you’d think a “conservative” would be pro conservation!). I don’t want my energy needs dependant on something that is toxic and volatile physically, economically, politically and biologically, not to mention controlled by evil, power/money hungry people. The chant of “drill baby drill” is shortsighted, selfish, destructive, and a ruse to keep our eye off the real problems. It doesn’t matter how many oil wells we have. If they really wanted to become independent in a petroleum based energy policy they should be shouting “refine, baby, refine.” We are at capacity with our refineries and we are actually IMPORTING GASOLINE from Europe and South America because we can’t make enough of our own, and we’re competing with India and China for it now. Even if we tried to only use our own, every hurricane season our own supply gets interrupted, sometimes for months. If we really needed more oil, then why aren’t the oil companies drilling more in areas they already have licenses for. Because there’s nowhere to refine the extra oil. So why aren’t they building more refineries? The logical thing when demand of an item increase 45% is to make more. However, memos and internal documents from major oil companies were discovered detailing how capacity in the US refining industry was reduced [i.e. they closed refineries] to maintain higher profits (source: BBC) and they still have NO plans to build any new ones.
Then there are the ecological costs. We are constantly cleaning up oil spills and leaks – hundreds every year worldwide, the Gulf of Mexico has the highest number of spills of all the world, the US has over 450,000 underground tank leaks a year – which destroy our water and ecology and economy. We are poisoning our air and water and food and economy with oil. Oil is Killing Us – literally, via toxins and via wars.
And think about this tidbit: Iran is the 2nd largest holder of natural gas and oil reserves and is OPEC’s 2nd largest exporter. Yet, in 2004, Iran opened its first wind-powered and geothermal plants, and the first solar thermal plant is to come online in 2009.
I’m extremely concerned that his core energy plan also includes “clean coal” – there is NO SUCH THING – McCain is lying – look it up – the technology doesn’t exist to clean up coal emissions. In fact, our government even already started – and canceled – a “clean coal” project. In January of THIS year the Dept. of Energy pulled all funding for the Futuregen project in the development stage citing it was too expensive. Plus, it is a very dangerous and unregulated industry – I know, I grew up in coal country. And if you’re hearing about the miracle fuel “liquid” coal, well, more lies – it releases almost double the emissions per gallon as regular gasoline, making a hybrid filled with liquid coal as dirty as a Hummer H3 running on regular gas (source: fueleconomy.gov). Liquid coal also requires huge amounts of water and energy to produce and takes a full ton of coal to produce just 2 barrels of fuel. This would only help the coal companies sell more coal.
And if you like the idea of nuclear power plants – well, they’re lying about that, too – big time. They tell us they are cheap to run, but not when you factor in that they are exceedingly expensive to build and, even more importantly, to decommission and store the radioactive waste, which we still have no solution for and is currently being paid for by tax dollars. A 2003 study by M.I.T. estimated the cost of electricity from a light-water reactor to be $0.067 per kWh without the costs of the government subsidies to storing the waste added in. That is more than twice the cost of wind power in Kansas. And that doesn’t even include the cost to protect the plant from terrorist attacks and the increasing costs to build them. Even the U.S. DOE stated in its 2005 Annual Energy Outlook that “new [nuclear] plants are not expected to be economical.” Then there’s the deadly radioactive waste – we have no place to store it. Each nuclear reactor produces about 33 tons of hot, extremely radioactive waste each year. 80,000 tons of radioactive waste sits in cooling pools next to 103 US nuclear plants, waiting to be shipped to a storage facility yet to be found. And the next time you see an unmarked truck or train car, there might be radioactive waste or fresh fuel being transported in there, vulnerable to an accident that would turn Baton Rouge into a wasteland. The supply of uranium is limited, and on top of that, the world’s largest processor of uranium in Canada has been closed because toxic uranium may have leaked into Lake Ontario. And did you know that nuclear power is the most water-hungry of all energy sources, with a single reactor consuming 35-65 million litres of water each day (coal plants also use an incredible amount of water). We’re in a drought in many parts of the U.S. as it is. And it is NOT ecologically friendly, either. A report by the U.S. Nuclear Information and Resource Service details the destruction of delicate marine ecosystems and large numbers of animals, including endangered species, by nuclear power plants. I won’t even get into the problem of the dual use of the fuel for weapons.
I don’t want to think every time I turn on a light or drive my car that people, plants and animals are dying for it, especially when we have clean, cheap, safe alternatives NOW. Billions and billions of our tax dollars are subsidizing oil, coal and nuclear, plus billions in trying to figure out how to make a bad idea work, billions more in tax cuts, billions in clean up costs, billions in health care. Think what could be accomplished if those Trillions of dollars were refocused to develop clean renewable energy. So why is McCain pushing so hard for and lying about oil, coal and nuclear when none of these are safe, clean or viable in the long term and will only make things worse? GREED and POWER. Just look at who his advisors are. They’re the ones getting our tax dollars and pulling the strings to their advantage. There is a saying: Whoever controls the energy controls the people. It’s a lot harder to control the sun and the wind.
I agree that we each have a great personal responsibility in how we live and the choices we make, just as we have a responsibility to not empower people who believe it is OK to kill and torture others in the name of democracy or God, rape our lands, and enrich themselves at the cost of our economy on the backs of the people. We each have the responsibility to insist on peace and clean water and honesty. Our leaders have an even greater responsibility.
I don’t like to be lied to, especially when lives are at stake. I don’t want someone who voted against banning torture and believes that only Americans deserve due process to represent me to the world and set policy. I want someone highly intelligent and on the ball who knows and understands the players of the world, not someone who doesn’t even know who the president of Spain is, repeatedly gets the Shia and Sunni confused in a war he voted for, and on and on. Petty mistakes for the average person, but serious when we’re talking about one of the most powerful people in the world who would be making decisions based on these mistakes and confusion. Even more concerning when you think he’s been in congress for 26 years! Would you let a surgeon who constantly mixes up your appendix with your pancreas operate on you? Of course not. I think every presidential candidate (and vice president and senator) should have to take a test just like a lawyer before they’re allow to run. This job is too important and the stakes are too high.
It will take a wise, smart, trustworthy (and trusted), forward thinking and steady head to guide us through the next decade. Obama doesn’t have all the answers (no one does), he has made some mistakes and misspeaks as well, and I don’t agree with everything he is proposing or has done. But I believe him, and more importantly, I believe IN him. I want someone I think will lead the world by example, not by force.
I look forward to discussing more with you. This is what makes the U.S. great! We have a lot to think about with this election.
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