Gertrude Winter, a char lady in her sixties who works at a government office, will have a turkey after all this Thanksgiving. At one stage yesterday, it seemed a close run thing. As she sat in the hallway of the Bread for the City charity a rumour swept the place that they were out of turkeys. 
Agitated, another woman said: "The lady says there are no turkeys left, what are we going to do?" In fact the turkeys were already on their way from another warehouse and what might have degenerated into a mini-riot, reverted instead to the good-natured banter of strangers.
Thrown together by poverty and the pinched generosity of the United States, they waited to be interviewed to see if they were eligible for a free turkey and a bag of groceries. Mobile soup kitchens are keeping the homeless on the streets fed, but it is the working poor and those with young and old dependants who patiently line up at Bread for the City. Even with the help of government food stamps, most earn less than $7,000 (£3,400) a year, not nearly enough to survive on. They have long overcome the shame of queuing up every week in public for free food
"I used to come here all the time when my kids were growing up," said Ms Winter, "and now I'm back because everything is so expensive out there".
Today as millions of Americans sit down to their turkey dinners with all the trimmings, the safety net of hundreds of food banks and pantries that put food on the table of the nation's poor is creaking and torn as a result of sharply reduced donations. From New England to California warehouses that should be groaning with surplus foodstuffs are going half empty.
"We're bracing ourselves for a very tough winter, especially with home heating fuel prices at record highs in the north-east," said Mark Quandt of the regional food bank in New York. "People living in poverty or near poverty just can't sustain those types of increases."
America's obsession with energy independence from Middle East oil may be to blame. The country's farmers have brought in the greatest corn harvest since the Second World War, but their surpluses which once were bought by the government and sent to food banks are no longer available. Instead the corn is turned into heavily subsidised ethanol and less land is available to grow food.
And the corn syrup that turns up in almost every product found on a US supermarket shelf is in short supply. A cheap dollar means that food exports are booming and a crippling two-year drought in the south has left fruit and vegetables withered and useless.
Unnoticed by most Americans, as they drop off their old canned goods and surplus food at schools and church halls for the Thanksgiving food drives, the entire system may be heading for collapse.
A visit to three of Washington's largest charities - a shelter for 300 men, a community kitchen that feeds 4,000 every day and a food bank that supplies the basic needs of 108,000 people a year - revealed sharply reduced donations and a sense of desperation for the future. In the gleaming workspaces of DC Central Kitchen, half a mile from the White House, fresh vegetables were being chopped by volunteers from Georgetown University Law School. DC Central's culinary institute turns homeless drug addicts into professional chefs and provides hot meals for thousands of homeless people in shelters all over the city. Mike Curtain, its executive director, could pass muster as a US version of Jamie Oliver. "I don't think as a nation we are who we think we are," he says. "When I see the money wasted overseas in Iraq and knowing what it could do here, it makes me sick. I think Bush is a criminal for what he is doing.
"People in the world hate us, and rightly so, because of the way we treat our own people," he continued, "poverty would soon disappear if we invested some of that money on a living wage, healthcare and education. "
For now he is looking to the future by diversifying the DC Kitchen's food sources away from hotels and restaurants by negotiating directly with farmers. "I know donors that look at us as a way to keep their trash hauling costs down," he said. "Of the 80 trays of food we received from the company, 60 went into the dumpster."
In the south-east of the city, where the murder rate is rising and substance abuse seems uncontrollable, Jarval Green runs a homeless shelter for 300 people that focuses on addicts. It is funded by a Catholic charity and the numbers seeking emergency shelter keep growing.
"Now we are seeing veterans from the war showing up," he said, " the real problem here is poverty especially among men who are substance abusers."
Part of the reason food banks are running low on supplies is the absence of direct government spending. There is a political culture in the America that abhors spending taxpayers' money on the poor, even as the amount president Bush is spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan approaches a trillion dollars.
Many Americans are hurting because of the collapse in the sub-prime mortgage market, but the country has never been wealthier. There has been an explosion in the number of millionaire American households in recent years. Those earning $1m, $10m, $100m have more than doubled over the past decade and the wealthy of America are wealthier than most countries, with the top one per cent controlling $17trn.
But none of this wealth seems to have trickled down to the poor despite the promises from supply-side economists that it would.
George Jones, who runs Bread for the City, says the new rich also seem more interested in donating to the arts and universities than in giving their fellow Americans a leg up. Bread for the City is finding that law firms which once gave generously have cut their donations in half.
This week some 35.5 million Americans lined up at soup kitchens and food stamps offices to feed their families for the holiday. The look of panic that flashed across Gertrude Winter's face, when she though she was not getting a turkey, is being seen elsewhere in the country.
Now the homeless poor are having their ranks swelled further by war veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. Nearly 200,000 veterans were homeless on any given night last year and their numbers make up a quarter of the US homeless population - a figure that has been called "shockingly disproportionate".
Life below the poverty line is seen almost as boot camp for the shiftless. But if American taxpayers have been conditioned to reject any form of social welfare, they seem to accept that they cannot ignore hunger.
As a result a vast and complicated system has grown up over the years - part private charity, part government aid - to help the neediest get fed. The US social welfare system is miserly at best. Food stamps - a maximum of $3 per person a day - are given to the needy. In all it has 15 separate food assistance programmes which go though some $53bn a year, making it America's largest welfare programme
Now Congress is arguing with President Bush over a farm bill, which both unlocks cash to buy food for the poor and guarantees million-dollar cheques for some food producers.
"We have food banks in virtually every city in the country, and what we are hearing is that they are all facing severe shortages with demand so high, " Ross Fraser, a spokesman for America's Second Harvest, the nation's largest hunger relief group, "One of our food banks in Florida said demand is up 35 per cent over this time last year."
At the Society of St Vincent de Paul food pantry in Cincinnati, clients now get three or four days' worth of food instead of six or seven. "We are trying to stretch our resources to help more people," said Liz Carter, executive director of the society. "But it's so difficult when you see the desperation and have to tell them you just don't have enough to give them what they need."
When George Bush pitched up in southern Virginia this week there was nothing to indicate that food banks were in trouble. The food bank he visited, the media were blandly informed, sends millions of pounds of groceries to needy families each year. Mr Bush walked past stacks of peanut butter, green beans and tinned soup. Then for the cameras he lifted a few crates of oranges, potatoes and macaroni and cheese on to a cart, telling the pastor: " C'mon man, let's go."
Then it was off to the banks of the James river and site of America's first official Thanksgiving. In 1619 Captain John Woodlief and his crew of 37 men fell to their knees and read a proclamation stating that the day of their ship's arrival should be "yearly and perpetually kept holy as a day of thanksgiving to Almighty God".
Presidents typically make light work of the Thanksgiving holiday, but Mr Bush decided to dedicate an entire speech to it: "Our nation's greatest strength is the decency and compassion of our people," he said. " As we count our many blessings, I encourage all Americans to show their thanks by giving back."
America's working people are increasingly unable to say where their family's next meal is coming from and demand is so outstripping supply that many food banks have had to cut back on portions. "I've been doing this for 20 years, and I can't believe how much worse it gets month after month," said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, of Second Harvest.
The shortages being experienced indicate a burgeoning crisis in feeding the poor, caught in a vice of rising food prices, rent, healthcare and petrol. Another problem, says Mr Curtain of DC Central Kitchen, is that food manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers are getting better at managing their surplus food and are donating less to charity.
Mark Winne, author of Closing the Food Gap, says many dump unwanted inedible food on shelters. He recalls his days running a food bank when "no food donation was too small, too strange or too nutritionally unsound to be refused".
"I remember the load of nearly rotten potatoes that we gratefully accepted at the warehouse loading dock and then shovelled into the dumpster once the donor was safely out of sight."
At this time of the year Americans are at their most giving. The annual Thanksgiving turkey drive at a food bank Mr Winne founded in Connecticut has had its annual appeal for "A turkey and a 20 (dollar bill)". It collected 14,000 turkeys and $400,000 from the public in the richest state in the union. "At least at this time of the year they are prepared to give generously but the worry is that a system based on charity will mean that the supply of donated food will always ebb and flow," he said. " We may be entering one of those perfect storms where everything goes wrong but if we depend on food charity rather than ending poverty, this is what is bound to occur."
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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70 Comments so far
Show AllYou should all read this...
"A Generalized Meltdown of Financial Institutions"
http://tinyurl.com/2g5ho5
Thanksgiving is a crock if we dont address the hungry. One quarter of them are veterans? "Thanks for fighting my war, now go to hell."
Homelessness is criminal. Any society that aborts its own living, breathing citizens (and veterans!) onto the streets is not fit to be called a society. If the Christian right is so "christian," this should be a major issue. I'm an atheist, and feeding the hungry and clothing the naked are central to my beliefs of social justice and equality. Why isn't it so for so-called "christian" America? And to say nothing of Bush!
As soon as you employ them joneden. As soon as you make bread for the weak. As soon as you pay attention to your own children. As soon as you work for the rest of the world and not just yourself.
This life is not filled with 100% literate folks or folks who know all the languages and/or formulas, but with folks with a special skill set and one with limitation. As an employer I have never had a person I could not use. They might not be affordable at the time... but that is my point, it can lead to poverty, just like the american auto workers with all the new plant closures. No Jobs. Time to retrain. You teaching, and affording them the time to do so? You have no compassion for others with a comment like that.
P.S. Do you have to get up like your Grand Pappy to watch the slaves, big boy? I don't think so. Are you a trust fundie?
My great grand daddy was up early in the morning supervising the planting and harvesting of cotton so that his descendants could have a good life. When are all of these poor people going to get up early like my grand pappy and pull themselves up by their bootstraps so that they and their descendants can have plenty like I have.
Happy Holidays
Shameful. Funding places for hungry and homeless is tip money for wealthy.
Locally, we have a home for homeless and place to get food.
Each do things to raise funds. Loaves and Fishes has a line of people each morning getting groceries.
A representative has spoken in our church on Sunday several times.
One family in our church could sponsor the group each year and never miss the money from their many millions.
Four local families each worth hundreds of millions could care for all the needs and not miss the money.
I do not know details on all, but one philanthropist close friend gave gave--Jesus said with a Happy Heart--
What his accountant told him he could give and deduct from his taxes.
Considered a very devout man. No way.
Barn Burner,
"I guess every Holiday celebrated in the U.S. can be turned into a negative event, Thanksgiving is "American Indian genocide day", Christmas is "shop till you drop" day, Columbus day is "slave trader day", etc. Is it safe to say "Happy New Year without someone on this thread getting their nickers in a twist?"
Depends which day you have in mind.
If you reckon according to the prevailing (i.e., Gregorian) calendar, you're implicitly sanctioning Gregory XIII's papal bull Inter gravissimas, which shortened the month of October, 1582 by 10 days and was widely regarded as an effort by landlords to screw tenants out of one and a half week's rent.
It should go without saying that only slumlords and their degenerate shills celebrate "Gregorian rack rent day".
:)
ALL,
I realized today that I was MISTAKEN in my attempts to instill a humorous distinction between those progressively aligned as are workers of LIGHT, as -- USans,
while the antipodal workers of Darkness, as -- THEYans.
We're ALL that there is, and petty labels and divisiveness are tools of the DARK forces (even though sometimes it "feels" right, oh yeah, it is righteously conservative).
But who wants to conserve this type of Malarkey?
TAT SWAM ASI (that thou Art that) = LIGHT
Namaste
SallyUUKent,
Yes rightly so, you go girl!
_ I S _ C O M M O N D R E A M S _ L I S T E N I N G _ ?
Maybe the dollar$ will speak louder than mere words,
so HOW ABOUT targeted contributions, which aim to
prioritize this issue?
Perhaps we could also add that a summary number (of responses to) for each article would aid creating this empowering COMMONS, and could be added for a negligible cost.
There is scant time (for many of us) to monitor many threads by opening a new browser window each time, and besides, we ALL love a good pile-on where the synergy of thoughts weaving together literally jumps out of the moment. We want to be able to readily see where the action is, to virtually meet with our comPATRIOTs.
Thanks to CD, for a wonderful and powerful tool regardless.
Namaste
abbybwood wrote:
"Is Commondreams listening?
Please have a staff meeting about helping us network.
Kind of set it up like an AA thing. You know. Where ever you go you can punch in a zipcode and find a meeting! All the open hours of the coffee shop are fair game! If the group can get chummy with the owner, then after-hours discussions too."
Hey, I live between the local Starbucks and a local coffee shop franchise, a charming little place with drop-dead delicious coffee, baked goodies and the best soup this side of mom's homemade. (That's the one you'll find me frequenting - I prefer to support a local franchise that returns its money to the local economy!)
It'd be a great place for CD'er's to meet up and plan action. Atmosphere aplenty, great coffee, across the street from campus so a lot of college kids with laptops tend to hang out there, free wi-fi with purchase (hey, all that means is, come in and get a cup of coffee to sip while you surf your laptop!) - it's a perfect coffee shop in which to meet for folks from my locale.
Anybody else? Got a great coffee shop where you live where those CD'er's from your area can meet up and plan action? Sure, we're great at talking, but talk is cheap. Remember, actions speak louder than words!
How 'bout it, readers?
Drink Water and GROK with me (while we rage against the dying of the light).
Soon enough, we'll all be as Heinlein's Martians in "Stranger in a Strange Land", where having any water will be a worthy celebration, and bring us together to GROK.
The point of diminishing returns will also soon become a fatal tipping point, as more and more of the wealthy find that there aren't enough hours in the day nor stores to shed their ill begotten loot. It is not THEYans who fuel the monster, they only drive out the profits into their off-shore banks and tax evasion.
It is USans in the middle and bottom tiers that through our continued "consumer circulation" enabled the filthiest richest rightest to survive -- as without our rampant consumption there will no longer be massive profits. At what point will the edificial Wall(mart) Street cave, and realize that their "Midas touch" has turned all of their food into "worthless" gold (for the hungry that is).
I like the idea of the ZIP thing and coffee shops, it is a return and recreation of the COMMONS, which our history rests upon (and city/suburbination has throttled), forcing our touch points to vanish (or rest upon scant electro impulses, passing ethereally from finger tip to other's eyes)
I have so much more to say, to acknowledge and bond (virtually so) to the many shared thoughts above, but shall pause to circle my own wagons.
Unbelievably for myself, I've found the poorest and most (MEEKly, thanks EBONIV) destitute in this glorious world, to be the happiest and most filled with joy. When I asked my Babaji, I was amazed to realize that it was our own thought filled neuroses and blindingly pathetic pace, that causes so much suffering (even with our food and heath beyond proportion to that of the world's other inhabitants).
And then, SINCE1492 reminds me that our manipulators want USans to "establish a faith based solution to a social problems". This scares me to visualizing those luckless ones, like non-Christians (and spiritualists), that might be 'below the line' of their generosity.
When times becomes seriously challenging, will the private providers of aid continue to be unconditional in their service, or choose to care for their like-minded faith-inspired 'kindred'.
Here is the perennially emergent need for social democracy and culturally blind service of our government, as BARN BURNER reminds us:
"It breaks my heart to see a once great people with a noble political experiment fail in protecting the ideal of "every man is created equal", not just those who lived in the confines of our borders, but mankind,.
Virtual H2O and cheers to you all!
Namaste
The "new year" is the only thing we can lookforward to. So, when its time to say "happy new year" you can just say "happy globally warmer year"! The warmer it gets the cheaper land will get. The more people and animals will die the drier the land that is left will get. Its something to lookforward to! This next year we get to say thanks to everyone for helping us get where we are going to die. The last year of our downward trend? Like we are going to change. The last year of your car? The new year of change in humans wasteful consumtion? The new year without clean water or food? (That was twenty years ago, sorry!) Happy new year under the Dictatorship? What you want Foo? What are you going to do? I'm sick of driving but I'm a carpenter! I'm gonna build a water-resistant bike trailer for my hand tools! The power tools I'll have to drive along with materials but its what I can do. Whats your good new year gonna bring? Whos barn you gonna burn?
Sorry, as a "wood butcher" I can get on myself and others too. I don't mean to be rude to you personally. With the help of others we can do many things. We can use our forrests to make things to last many lifetimes or we can act like crap just "grows on trees". We have a choice in what we do and the outcome. Every day I go to work to make things for peoples homes and their lifestyles dictate how long they are going to live. Its something to keep in mind as you pass the antique store on your way to IKEA.
Alas, I fear that we would have to gabble in Newspeak while drinking Victory Gin, the while looking carefully around to see if we could identify who of our little gathering were members of the thought police.
When Faux News broadcast the two minute hate, we would all have to vie with one another in screaming, "Hurrah for BB!" and booing the enemy of the day.
Crazy Mike Medved begs to differ, from Wed, 11-21-07:
"By any and every measure, Americans are right when they assess their own situations in a positive live (sic), but they're emphatically and entirely wrong when they guess that their neighbors are suffering.
"Lower-income Americans have disproportionately benefited from the increase in leisure over the past generation. Less educated and lower-income Americans now work less and enjoy more leisure than Americans with higher incomes."
"Nevertheless, the fact that Americans feel free to make even frivolous or self-destructive spending decisions contradicts the portrait of a helpless, choiceless middle class in the grip of powerful, exploitative elites, perversely bent on destroying the very public that makes possible corporate prosperity.
"Misleading whining about falling living standards and the end of economic mobility may serve as a self-fulfilling prophecy for those who embrace the underlying message of powerlessness and self-pity. If you buy the idea that corporate exploiters and corrupt politicians have poisoned your life and stolen your ability to create a better life for your family, you've obviously damaged your own ability to get ahead."
See? It's all the damn liberals and their attempts to keep America gloomy about the economy in order to win elections, and not the actual gloomy economy that's killing most of us, because the economy is, in fact, super rosy and terrific!
After-hours chummy pajama meetings inspired by common dreams?
I guess every Holiday celebrated in the U.S. can be turned into a negative event, Thanksgiving is "American Indian genocide day", Christmas is "shop till you drop" day, Columbus day is "slave trader day", etc. Is it safe to say "Happy New Year without someone on this thread getting their nickers in a twist?
Plight of the Befuddled Masses: A Hard Time everyday.
Who will repair the streets and plumbing and electric grid when the Filthy Rich Fascists finally starve the last American worker to death?
My mother was telling us last night over Thanksgiving dinner about FDR's "Four Freedoms" that were the mantra, the cornerstones, of his tenure:
Freedom from Fear
Freedom from Want
Freedom of Speech
Freedom of Religion
What prompted this discussion was a picture in yesterday's newspaper of one of Norman Rockwell's paintings depicting one of these four freedoms, "Freedom from Want". It showed a family sitting around an abundant Thanksgiving table with Grandma about to place an enormous turkey on it for all around the table to admire.
Sure, Rockwell tended to paint very idealised pictures of the America that he imagined, and this one painting was no exception, but my mom was telling us of how Roosevelt was like a trusted father figure during those dark years of the Depression and WWII. Contrast that, she remarked, with the "Current Occupant", as she called Dubya.
We do not have Freedom from Fear.
We do not have Freedom from Want.
We do not have Freedom of Speech.
We do not have Freedom of Religion.
All of Roosevelt's work has been undone in 7 mere years of this criminal administration. We will probably never again see their likes again. I suspect that these four freedoms have been permanently relegated to the dust bin of history. It will take nothing short of either a miracle or a New American Revolution to restore what has been lost, and even then, it will take generations to repair the deep damage that has been done in just 7 short years.
It's a sad day when those of us in the $20,000 to $40,000 a year income bracket are considered "the working poor". That used to be entrée into the middle class. Now, it's a reminder that even having a job paying in this income bracket is no guarantee of security. All those hard years of work to obtain a college degree mean that I am struggling daily just to make the bills and have enough left over for an emergency, even though I have what is seemingly a secure job from which I plan to retire in a little over 5 years.
Even then, I can't retire completely. BushCo has seen to that. I'll have to work until my body gives out and I am too old and infirm to do so. No retirement for our generation. BushCo has made sure that none of us will be able to collect our retirement benefits. I suspect that they see that as some kind of welfare to be done away with anyway. They've hated Roosevelt's social programs from the get go and have been trying for over 60 years to dismantle them.
Well, they've succeeded in doing just that. I'll bet FDR is rolling in his grave at the injustices that this criminal administration has wrought upon this country.
Oh, and just for the record, I went to college thanks to Roosevelt's social programs. My father's GI Bill and Social Security survivor's benefits paid my way through school, allowing me to graduate debt free. I still wear my college class ring all these years later as a reminder to myself of my good fortune and as a way of thanking my father for his sacrifices in WWII that allowed me to receive an education on the government dime.
That investment allowed me to have gainful employment at what I always thought was a fairly decent wage, although it barely gets me by anymore. Still, I suppose it could be worse. I could be on welfare and be homeless. At least I have a roof over my head, a car in my driveway, food to eat and clothes to wear. It's just that with gas prices sky high and a long commute to work each day, it's getting harder and harder to afford much of anything. Everything I buy is more expensive as a result of sky high gas prices.
No big surprise, given that oil men are running the country and are laughing all the way to the bank while the rest of us struggle just to keep our utilities connected, our rent or mortgage paid, our car payments made, and put food on our tables at night. You know that it's bad when those of us who used to be considered middle class are now lumped into the category of "the working poor".
And you know it's bad when you drive by a food bank that has a sign out saying "we need food" because demand is skyrocketing as people struggle to make ends meet with higher and higher energy prices. You know it's bad when social services are strained to the limit and have to turn away prospective clients for lack of enough personnel to deal with them. You know it's bad when even churches are scratching their collective heads over what to do about these crises that have yet to reach their peak as winter sets in.
Yeah. It's bad, all right. So what are we going to do about it, huh?
Well! I said I'm in! The 'moderated' part said we would be considered terr or ists because we are truthseekers and patriots and are rather anti- consumeristic in nature. I don't care if we would be infiltrated and our names placed on lists, bound for camp commie. I'd meet you all for coffee! The local groups here are lame. I wonder if Gene ral STR IKE moderated me? I used no swearing and I only used the spaced words above, like they havent been used before.
To Jungleboy:
Try re-wording your post and leave out the items: 9/11, Nazi, Zionist, Fascist, war crimes, international criminal courts, etc. and then see if it will go through.
I guess it wont show you my post?? I can see it while I'm logged in but it won't show you, the public. I'm being moderated on CD.
What does "Your comment is waiting moderation" mean?
Then the riot police come in and chip us all and we cannot go to shop on black Friday because we have this chip planted under our skin that tell security we are true patriots and we have to be watched like terrorists. Because we are terrorists... to consumerism, waste and greed. I'm in. General strike!
Is Commondreams listening?
Please have a staff meeting about helping us network.
Kind of set it up like an AA thing. You know. Where ever you go you can punch in a zipcode and find a meeting! All the open hours of the coffee shop are fair game! If the group can get chummy with the owner, then after-hours discussions too.
Truthseekers and Patriots Anonymous.
"Hi. I'm Abbybwood and I'm a Truthseeker and Patriot."
"Hi Abbybwood."
"It all started when I was a little girl. I guess you might say "The Weekly Reader" got the ball rolling. I remember the day the first one came in the mail. It was the summer of 1958. I started reading it and I couldn't stop. That led to "The Bobbsey
Twins", then "Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase", then later on "The Harrad Experiment" and "The Godfather" (1967?)."
"But college got me in deep trouble. Professors started telling me the truth about all kinds of things! I read lots of books then got magazine subscriptions to "The Progressive" and "The Nation"."
"Then along came the Internet and someone turned me onto Commondreams. Then Rense. Then Informationclearinghouse. Google REALLY f'd me up bad! Imagine! Any subject and voila!...videos to watch...on 9/11! More books to read!"
"Then things really got out of control. I hit bottom. I spent every waking moment in my pajamas online reading things and writing things on different websites."
"One night it dawned on me. I need to connect with these smart, energetic well-read people in person! We need HELP!!!!!"
And then everyone in the group applauds and wipes their tears away. They all know how she feels, because they are just like her.
And the next speaker comes up.
"Hi. I'm Kem Patrick and I'm a Truthseeker and Patriot."
"Hi Kem Patrick."
When we're all done we have coffee and hand out 30 day chips etc. and eat snacks and chat. What do you think?
ALEX NOSAL: Excellent point!
ABBYWOOD: I love the coffee shop idea.
Finally got to catch up on some reading today, and was getting the abreviated version of Naomi Klein's "Disaster Capitalism" in October issue of Harper's. Human life simulating the vulture, a pecking order of social darwinism aimed at another's slow death and misery. When so much profit is being derived from such a model, you know some phase of transition for earth can't be far off. I shared this before, but this mode of capitalist exploitation reminds me of the pirate mentality that also created "prosperity" in Key West, one of the nation's wealthiest zones at the turn of the 20th century. By LURING ships via lighthouses to what purported to be safe harbors, instead this strategy was an outright trap intended to bring cargo ships to places where coral would cut their bodies and pirates would plunder the sinking vessels.
I bought a time share in Key West many moons ago believing the hype. I came to realize "time shares are to real estate" what mafia is to free enterprise, but increasingly are the lines blurred as what once may have passed for honor and fairness with respect to any contract, now has become a bad joke. Like Bush's vocabulary, like the moral record of ANY appointed by this neocon rag team of plunderers, words mean only what they can suggest at any given moment. There is nothing in the way of substance of decency that these promises are bound to. And here comes my mantra, "That's why I believe in karma." This is NOT the way human beings are intended to act, nor accrue obscene profits by gutting every provision of fairness in their dealings with others. HIGHER sources are maintaining the record... our lesson is not to allow this fest of bottom feeders to prompt us to act with less integrity. To be the light, to act from a place of spiritual responsibility in times as compromised as these is to rage against the dying of the light, and be the example that might light someone else's torch.
Ha! :)
Eureka!
I have found my Army.
it is all volunteer, it is all professional.
It is comprised of seasoned veterans who have all seen the
elephant and survived.
It consists of 200,000 of the world´s finest, whose only crime is that they served an ideal that had long since been kidnapped by criminal interests. Nobody ever bothered to tell them in time, though.
It will sweep the floor with ANY mercenary ever born.
Now hear this:
Pull yourselves together and form up.
Do it locally.
Coordinate your tactical objectives.
If you need it, get it.
If it is necessary for the mission, do it.
God Bless all of us, and may God have mercy on their souls, for we shall not.
That is all.
Coffee shops, pajamas and wifi; let the solution begin!
secretarybird,
"As a UK citizen, I agree that charitable giving is much higher in the US than in the UK and Europe. But over here the state provides much that charities and private citizens provide in the US."
With us yanks, you can't understate: the fact is that the "charitable giving" doesn't begin to make up for the lack of what the common wealth provides in the First World nations.
Most Europeans and all but a few Americans are astonished when they learn that the unemployment rate in America doesn't include the number of unemployed, but only the numbers currently receiving unemployment benefits, which consist only of a certain percentage of what one earned and only for a certain number of months; and that the poverty line is actually far below what can be considered a living wage.
Happy Thanksgiving?
"The village was set fire, and 500 Indian residents were put to the sword.
A day of thanksgiving was proclaimed in the churches of Manhattan. As we will see, the European colonists declared Thanksgiving Days to celebrate mass murder more often than they did for harvest and friendship.
By the 1670s there were about 30,000 to 40,000 white inhabitants in the United New England Colonies--6,000 to 8,000 able to bear arms. With the Pequot destroyed, the Massachusetts and Plymouth colonists turned on the Wampanoag, the tribe that had saved them in 1620 and probably joined them for the original Thanksgiving Day."
http://counterpunch.com/ely11222007.html
Thank you lord for killing the Indians and giving us their land. Pass the stuffing amen. See you at the wal-mart parking lot 6:00 a.m.? Sorry, one myth at a time.
Truth.
Ramsay
Everybody, recalibrate plan B.
guliper,
"My point in my last post was a lot of people with more power and privilege than they could handle were overdue for a dose of humility and I just wiggled and giggled watching them squirm."
Overdue, no doubt. They're just the symptom though.
Ramsay:
"Wishing each other happy thanksgiving, is like wishing each other, happy holocaust. Think about it."
Indeed, and my point exactly. May as well call 4th of July "Iraqi Freedom Day"...wait, they already do that. Burp.
Sorry, but it's only going to get worse. Next year's Native American Genocide Day is going to be scary, and the one after that, will be desperate.
Everything is already in motion to make it a reality. Without going into a lengthy economic description, okay how about a short one, guaranteed to cause indegistion.
The U.S. economy was running on consumption derived from increasing home values the last few years. Two-thirds of the GDP is due to consumption, it's why Georgie Boy told us all to go shopping after 9/11, we are a consumption based economy.
Because of the housing bubble crash, there is nothing left to fuel consumption in this country, call this the credit card x-mas. But after this one it's over, in fact it's already over, the lay-offs will begin shortly.
Because Georgie Boy gave away our surplus to the rich, Keynsian economic intervention is limited, and will cause interest rates to skyrocket. Okay it's turning into a long description.
Suffice it to say, it ain't gonna get better, in fact, it's gonna get a whole lot worse.
Thanksgiving is a celebration of Genocide. Burp. Ooh bad Native American after-taste in my mouth.
Wishing each other happy thanksgiving, is like wishing each other, happy holocaust. Think about it.
Ramsay
restive, and others,
I understand people prefer brevity, but it takes a while to connect the dots. And maybe I did ramble on too much.
I give to local charity, but I keep it local. I firmly believe "Give a man a fish, he will have fish for dinner. Teach a man to fish, and he will have fish forever." If you would do the Lord's work, be a teacher.
But they do poorly in school if they don't have breakfast.
My point in my last post was a lot of people with more power and privilege than they could handle were overdue for a dose of humility and I just wiggled and giggled watching them squirm.
guliper,
I was going to comment on how random your post seemed, then I realized you may be responding to something I said earlier, to wit:
"If there's any hypocrites in this, it's the people who have relatively stable middle class incomes and lifestyles, and yet do nothing to effect change. If on the other hand, those same people got together with the underclass and worked together, then there may be hope. Paolo Friere talks a great deal about this - it's more or less the basis of his work as an educator. "Every human being, no matter how "ignorant" or submerged in the culture of silence he or she may be, is capable of looking critically at the world in a dialogical encounter with others."
What I'm proposing is a way out - and what you seem to be saying is "fuck 'em". It makes me wonder if you say the same thing about poor people - "screw 'em, it's their fault they're on welfare." Are you?
I am a senior citizen, on social security. I read a blog a lot about the housing bubble. People making $200,000 a year buy a home for $400,000+, with payments maybe $3,000 a month, adjustable rate mortgage interest rates reset every year. Every 6 months in some cases. Payments are now $4,000 a month. Then property tax increases, insurance premium increases, higher gas costs, ect. I feel their pain. Like hell I do!
Then come corporate mergers and layoffs of middle management.When they lose their job, they lose their home. Seven credit cards maxed out, no job, no savings, no plan B. Really stupid. And you can't fix stupid.
I read about one lady making $125,000 a year. When she lost her job, she had to take a job as a sales clerk at Nordstroms. My poor heart was torn to shreds. (until I had another cup of coffee.)
"So, basically the derive is a Bohemian lifestyle, right?"
Sorry about the color, try this link instead: http://library.nothingness.org/articles/SI/en/display/314
Somewhat - it's more about a focused awareness of limits within an urban environment, and overcoming them. Think bohemia but with focus and discipline (literally - all of them, without one negating the other), then applied in the context Debord talks about.
"At this point I think getting off-line and networking at local coffee shops etc. might be productive for us as American citizens.
It would be swell if Commondreams could create a link where people could type in their zipcodes and find the nearest place to meet for discussions etc."
Networking is key - and so is not putting everything out publicly; it's not only the powers-that-be, it's also right-wing loonies, etc. Ounce of prevention...I do agree that meeting locally is critical, though.
Canuck and Paultics, yes, and those dark-skinned "heathens" in Iraq also need to be Christianized just as the Native-Americans were forced to give up their religion (and be unwelcome in the Caucasian churches and be forced to build their own churches). Perhaps the Iraqis can fashion trinkets to sell at outdoor markets while the oil corporations get get filthy rich off their oil. Has the U.S. built fast-food restaurants yet for the Iraqis to eat at and fatten themselves on and get diabetes, heart disease, etc.?
To Paulitics:
Too bad that golfcourse in Iraq will also be a depleted uranium graveyard.
Fore!!!!!
To Restive:
So, basically the derive is a Bohemian lifestyle, right?
BTW, the background color on that link almost made me dizzy.
After reading hundreds of articles on Commondreams and commenting on many I have come to the conclusion that we have DEFINITELY defined the problem at hand as a collective group.
But we seem to be having a problem with the solution.
At this point I think getting off-line and networking at local coffee shops etc. might be productive for us as American citizens.
It would be swell if Commondreams could create a link where people could type in their zipcodes and find the nearest place to meet for discussions etc.
When the shit hits the fan (again), we don't want to be sitting around in our pajamas typing to each other, now do we?
Happy European Native American Genocide Mass Murder of Turkeys and Many People Suffering Horrible Day to all!
And BTW, I wouldn't be caught dead in a shopping mall tomorrow.
starofthesea,
"The thing is, that 35.5 million are rather spread out, and I would assume that if they have to go to food pantries and soup kitchens to stave off hunger, they likely can't afford the computer to "network" with others to organize such a demonstration of their power."
Exactly. If there's any hypocrites in this, it's the people who have relatively stable middle class incomes and lifestyles, and yet do nothing to effect change. If on the other hand, those same people got together with the underclass and worked together, then there may be hope. Paolo Friere talks a great deal about this - it's more or less the basis of his work as an educator. "Every human being, no matter how "ignorant" or submerged in the culture of silence he or she may be, is capable of looking critically at the world in a dialogical encounter with others."
http://www.edb.utexas.edu/faculty/scheurich/proj3/freire1.html
Yes Canuck, it is ironic and an apt analogy.
The Iraqis are already defined in the MSM based on their "tribe": Sunni, Shiite or Kurdish. The violence there is "sectarian" and tribal. So why not add a little "civilisation" to the heathens (i.e. bring them "democracy").
There is already a trail of tears and movements of the "tribes" westward (i.e. to Jordan and Syria), though like the Natives before, a westward move is not a guarantor of safety (don't be surprised if an errant missile meant for a "nuclear site" in Syria "inadvertantly" hits a refugee camp).
One day in the not-too-distant future, a golf course might even be erected over the graves of slain Iraqis (Ã la Oka)!
I agree with the Since1492 but would add that the "social problems" that our government does not want to tackle, are created and further exacerbated by that very entity. It's two-tiered system of laws, the lack of regulation i.e. consumer protection, the failure to support universal quality health care, equal educational opportunities, decent affordable housing, meaningful work and a living wage for every able bodied citizen.
So not only is the government heartless in turning its back on it's huddled masses,but it perpetuates most all of the conditions contributing to its growing numbers and the misery they endure,
Someone on this thread got into a degree of "blame the victim", expressing outrage that "those cowardly people" should rise up and storm the Bastille.
The thing is, that 35.5 million are rather spread out, and I would assume that if they have to go to food pantries and soup kitchens to stave off hunger, they likely can't afford the computer to "network" with others to organize such a demonstration of their power. AND they likely can't afford a ticket to D.C. either.
"THANKSGIVING ESSENTIALS"
You can't reclaim Thanksgiving. It needs to be abolished. If the loneliness is a bit hard to handle, get together a few friends and try this in the gentle apocalypse of closed stores and too much concrete:
http://www.bopsecrets.org/SI/2.derive.htm
It's Thursday, fucking deal,
Restive
I cannot add anything more to all the comments here, except that to wish everyone a Happy Thanksgiving and a peaceful day with family and friends.
Please let France know it has elected Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and George W. Bush. Sarkozy's venomous anti-union/anti-worker action against France's transportation union is only the beginning, as for the US the beginning came with Reagan's mass firing of air traffic controllers who dared to assert their rights.
These right-wing zealots actually believe poverty is a poor person's own fault. It goes back to a 19th century philosophy called Social Darwinism that mixed Darwin's theory of the survival/thriving of species that could adapt with a religious belief that God helps those who help themselves. Monetary success? You were obviously spiritually, physically and mentally superior to your poor clod of an employee (or an unemployed person). After all, God helps those who help themselves, and He has helped you become rich. Those who do not become rich are obviously not morally fit, some because the "sins of their fathers" are being visited upon them. Being poor is thus God's punishment for those who deserve it.
I know. It is insane.
Oh the irony!!
The Iraqi's are the new Indians, being forced to give up their resources to the univited white interlopers, and ripe for genocide.
Will the Iraqis wind up running casinos on "arab reservations" in Iraq?
THANKSGIVING ESSENTIALS
Abundance: In the abundance of a heart and soul given freely to thee; Share of what is there.
Banquet: The heart that is full and tilteth to share is sure to be at the banquet of life.
Calendar: Let not the calendar be the guide for need and sharing are timeless.
Dance: Let your heart and soul dance with joy at happiness that may be brought by that which is within.
Enrich: Enrich,enrich your heart, yea, your soul and the body will gain and follow.
Family, Faith, Freedom: Family is where you come from; Faith is where you may go and Freedom gives the choice. they may be separate but together they bring life.
God: Where is your god? In what you have? What you see? Many gods, one god? No god? So many questions, so many answers and DNA is different as are souls and one will answer for itself or not. Choice.
Heaven, hell, healing: Heaven and hell, places where one wishes to go and where others may dwell, whereas if healing were the option there would be no destroying destination.
Imperishable: Here is where the heart would follow the soul,yea,the part that is of the Creator, were the heart to know that an empty table awaits the empty heart; the heart that keeps not his brothers back.
Judge, jewel: Judge not, share , even if a prayer is all that is had and your jewel will be laid at the alter of the Creator.
Kindness: Oh! the many ways that may be expressed by the actions of this word! Do and it shall be written.
Love: the many ways of this action and it has to be an action and is the most laudable of life's goals for without it there is no life.
Mercy: Do we not receive mercy all the days of this physical life in getting more than one chance to do what is right and proper?
Nurturing: Yea, nurture the young, the wounded heart, the body in need; this is a part of life very often overlooked.
Open, observe, offer: Open up hearts and minds and observe the plight of the less fortunate and offer, yes, offer.
Plant: Plant the seeds of the gift of giving in the young and they shall expand it to a thing of beauty and not just a passing fancy.
Quantity, Quality: Keep the quantity of giving to the most needful and keep the quality of the giving to all ye may know or not know.
Rewards, Rest: There will be rewards unseen on this world and rest for all practice the spirit of Thanksgiving.
Save: Save a soul with the compassion gifted by love, save a heart with more than mere words, save a mind and body with what is needed.
Treasures: Oh! Do not treasures abound for those who would know them? Materials? Nay! For wisdom would be treasure enough for any Thanksgiving.
Unburden: What may we unburden from any that they may move to that state where they may unburden another.
Visions: Visions of a world, in their own way, mirroring the spirit of this day, this Thanksgiving Day.
Wish: My wish? That Thanksgiving were more important than war.
Xenophobia: What if the Native Peoples here had been xenophobic?
Yesterdays, Yearn: Don't want to deal in the yesterdays of what might have been but yearn for a future of years of Thanksgiving.
Zenith: The zenith of all living souls on this earth would be a gathering together, like any family, and celebrating all that has been given us by a benevolent Creator.
It's rather long but I like it
Love to all. Tony 11/22/07
"First let me wish all CDers a Thanksgiving full of love and good food to share with friend and family."
Please don't take this the wrong way, but this is *never* (well, hardly ever) the way the holiday is for me - and I'm far from alone. I'm all for love and good cheer - indeed, it's what gets us through, and what allows us to thrive as social animals. Thanksgiving and it's close cousins Xmas and New Year's are about one thing in this country: marketing. The love and togetherness is either a) a means to deal with a bad situation, or b) utterly fake.
The best way to practice love and compassion is to practice it year-around, or at least do your best to. The rest is just politics and scenery.
As for the article: spot on.
First let me wish all CDers a Thanksgiving full of love and good food to share with friend and family.
I am a U.S. citizen and although my wife is also she was born and raised in the Midlands of England. I do not claim to be an authority on the social safety nets of the U.K. but it puts those of the U.S. to shame. The safety nets of Mexico where we now live with our two young children also put the U.S. to shame. Having said that, in my experience the safety nets of these Countries, Mexico and the U.K. still do not cover all the people and there are many working poor. I also believe that the generosity of Americans (U.S.) is second to none and here in Mexico if there is money spent to help the poor beyond the Government's safetey nets is usually from Americans. There is plenty of moneyed people in Mexico so it has nothing to do with lack of money it is the Spirit of empathy and giving we from the U.S. grew up with.
It breaks my heart to see a once great people with a noble political experiment fail in protecting the ideal of "every man is created equal", not just those who lived in the confines of our borders but mankind. We Americans may be generous but we have been lazy and complacent in protecting our rights as well as those of every man, woman and child in the World.
The fact is that our government could take care of all of its citizens, if it really wanted to. It's obvious that the government is privatizing its responsibilities. It is outsourcing its obligation to its citizens. Religious or other local non government entities are now expected to do what the government had been doing. Our government wants to get out of the habit of taking care of people. And they want to establish a faith based solution to a social problems. The knowledge and the money are there to take care of all of us but we have a government that only wants to take care of itself.
Hoa binh
Boycott Thanksgiving, free the turkeys, pay reparations, apologize. Next!
A war has and had been declared six years ago headed up by the Mainstream Media. Take a good hard look. The propaganda machine is in full swing today, not reporting on the things which are attacks on The Constittution of The United States of America, and our morality all in the name of a Neocon ideaology which can not survive under Democracy. So the living document, laws, goverance are under constant bombardement by the illegal regime headed up by a puppet named George H. W. Bush which is NOT the elected President of our country.
"I am thankful also for us Common Dreamers from around the world who are talking about our predicament like a big family on Thanksgiving."
Yes - to all of you who are celebrating today - have a good 'un!
MeAlsoToo,
I believe the word you are looking for, in describing the crushing the spirit of the New Deal after WW2, isn't "revolution", it is "reaction".
Here in Pittsburgh this morning a duplex housing two black families had a burning cross placed on their front lawn. But in the TV interviews the racism-denial was stunning! The word wasn't even mentioned by interviewer or interviewee. One mother only mentioned her fear that it could have started a fire, the other only said she didn't care as she "trusts in the lord". This is part of a tend of racist incidents here, including the hanging of nooses directed at black people at some workplaces.
Times will soon get hard, but the response of the US masses will be fascist reaction, not revolution.
Yes I can believe that England's government spends more on feeding the hungry folks than here in the US.
If about 10 percent of Americans are hungry, I wonder what percent of England's population is Hungry also...And if they are getting relief better than here where charity is just losing the mission because of all the causes including over population, War, and Global warming.
I am thankful also for us Common Dreamers from around the world who are talking about our predicament like a big family on Thanksgiving.
"This week some 35.5 million Americans lined up at soup kitchens…"
I'm sorry to say this but what a spineless bunch. 35.5 million of them ling up begging for food instead of rising up and claiming what's their own. The government keeps spending billions and billions of their tax dollars blowing it up in criminal wars, and people say nothing. Can you imagine that if only 10% of those people lined up at the White House they could easily do a regime change?
The only huddled masses that are going to be considered here in the states are the ones outside of Bestbuy in anticipation of 'Black Friday' . If you're wielding your wallet and cc and readying yourself with drooling anticipation for the opening of the chasm at Walmart, you're on the side of righteousness, freedom and democracy. The suburban patriot is going to brave the foulest of conditions, gather peacefully, and celebrate the joy of buying more stuff.
Personally, I have a great deal to be thankful for.
But, I am so filled with shame that the pain offsets my gratitude.
I am completely ashamed of the country where I was born, America.
My disgust and displeasure with American values has frequently put me in a state of despair and depression.
Can you find a more greedy, self-centered, war-mongering nation anywhere on the planet?
We can no longer blame the imperialistic, and inhumane behavior of our country on just a few bad apples.
Perhaps prior to the 2004 election I could have bought into that explanation.
But now it is official, the mistake of the Bush/Cheney regime in 2000 was corrected, and the worst of America's children became legally chosen to run our country in 2004.
So, at least 50% of the nation is complicit and responsible for the actions or inaction of our country.
We knowingly selected a political regime that wholeheartedly supports war, the elimination of government programs, except the dept of war, and blatantly bolstered the bottom line of the richest among us.
It is quite upsetting to be surrounded by greedy, selfish warmongers.
I am thankful for my personal gains and my family but totally ashamed of the country I once loved so passionately.
yes secretarybird... European states care for their poor a lot more than the U.S. does. Also in the absence of any real 'poor relief' in the U.S., more emphasis is placed on religious organizations to fill the gap. It is not uncommon in the U.S. to be given food while being preached to at the same time. This in turn swells the ranks of the religious right while moving the poor away from the only logical method for sweeping reforms... the electoral process.
I think it is important to start testing "patterns of children who are raised with war". Have them learn what it is like not to eat things they like/need to eat on a regular basis.
Oh, wait. It's already like that in the country they live.
I am fortunate to live somewhere that has food on every corner. Thanks to the many different cultures. Some are greedier than others. Perhaps some even practice the work for food scenario.
This is an important article to remind us the bold crassness of those who flaunt their wealth.
Plant a tree, preferably one that bears fruit.
secretarybird - What you say is so true. Charity IS a piss-poor substitute for justice. It's a good thing for us white europeans that the indigenous people of this continent were socialists. Otherwise, our ancestors would have all starved to death.
The sad thing about the plight of millions in the U.S. is that the blame is so often laid upon those who struggle most for being "lazy" or without sufficient ambition to "better themselves". I'm not fully convinced that the wealthy and upwardly-mobile are "better off" than the few,who though unencumbered with material bounty, are content and grateful for life in the present moment with all its infinite wonder and possibilities. Sadly, most of the struggling ones are desperate, angry,and bordering upon hopeless, having been inundated all of their lives with consumerist propaganda. If uncontrolled consumerism were appropriate for humans, there simply would not be the millions who fail to adopt the means to succeed at it. Perhaps it is our culture's "failures" who signify the coming necessary turning mentioned by Siouxrose. I think it may indeed turn out that the meek will inherit the earth. The meek are likely those who are resistant (consciously or unconsciously)to the consumerist disease that is threatening to destroy the planet with all its bounty of free blessings. To the infected, it appears that something is wrong with them. We are all inhabited by the consumerist meme to some degree. To the extent that we can grow beyond it by evolving to a more integral mode of consciousness, we will be prepared for the dark night that is about to descend upon the world. Such a night is the necessary prelude to a new dawn. For the sake of the planet and all its wonderous inhabitants, may it come sooner than later.
peace
As a UK citizen, I agree that charitable giving is much higher in the US than in the UK and Europe. But over here the state provides much that charities and private citizens provide in the US.
A lot of things have happened
Since the last time we spoke
Some of them are funny
Some of 'em ain't no joke
And I trust you will forgive me
If I lay it on the line
I always thought you were a friend of mine
Sometimes I think about you
I wonder how you're doing now
And what you're going through
The last time I saw you
We were playing with fire
We were loaded with passion
And a burning desire
For every breath, for every day of living
This is my thanksgiving
Now the trouble with you and me, my friend
Is the trouble with this nation
Too many blessings, too little appreciation
And I know that kind of notion well, it just ain't cool
So send me back to Sunday school
Because I'm tired of waiting for reason to arrive
It's too long we've been living
These unexamined lives
I've got great expectations
I've got family and friends
I've got satisfying work
I've got a back that bends
For every breath, for every day of living
This is my thanksgiving
Have you noticed that an angry man
Can only get so far
Until he reconciles the way he thinks things ought to be
With the way things are
Here in this fragmented world, I still believe
In learning how to give love, and how to receive it
And I would not be among those who abuse this privilege
Sometimes you get the best light from a burning bridge
And I don't mind saying that I still love it all
I wallowed in the springtime
Now I'm welcoming the fall
For every moment of joy
Every hour of fear
For every winding road that brought me here
For every breath, for every day of living
This is my thanksgiving
For everyone who helped me start
And for everything that broke my heart
For every breath, for every day of living
This is my thanksgiving
"My Thanksgiving" by Don Henley
!Happy Thanksgiving, Common Dreams!
Speaking of Bush, he has cut funding for health care and education for Native-Americans here in Alaska -- as if it were generous to begin with.
You can bet he and the rest of the greedy war profiteers will gorge themselves on feasts fit for kings today.
Happy Thanksgiving to the rest of the decent, hard-working people on CD.
That surreal sense of living in a state/nation of paradox hit me hard this morning. I finally had a chance to catch up on ONE Naomi's article in Harper's, explaining the gruesome logic behind the Shock Doctrine; only to get on-line and find the OTHER Naomi's interview on fascism, and how the 10 steps that signify its blueprint have already embedded themselves in our land. Meanwhile, as a guest of wonderful friends in the Florida Keys, the TV is on blaring the Thanksgiving Day Parade, banquet to our nation's vanities, for the still comfortable, that is; and now this article.
If there's truth to the dovetailing prophecies that current times represent a huge shift, a phase of transition, a celestial changing of the guard, perhaps the calamitous extent of human suffering symbolizes some symbolic bonfire where the karma carried from ages past is at last burned, that indeed a new global phoenix can rise and grant LIFE without all the attendant cruelties and insults, upon the truly suffering masses.
Let them eat Bush.
Thanks [pun-intended]
I didn't want to be 'First to Comment', on an article that, shamefully, commented-first on this growing-mess here, and was itself originating in the UK [where, sadly, most common-sense observations of these 'neo'/manufactured-crises' comes from -- these last/declining 7-years...].
Dammit...a 'revolution' is not required in the US -- in fact, all these 'bad-signs' we bemoan in CD is the _result_ of an on-going Revolution that, unfortunately, won-success (incrementally, but with gathering-speed/inertia) since WW-II.
A counter-Revolution is required. I read-elsewhere of a rising-tide of protest against all this related-horseshit the neo-Cons/neo-Libs have been getting away with ...and hope-like-hell that a general-Strike (Union/non-Union/Consumer) could someday be the boot-to-the-head that the 'Powers That Be' seem to need to start re-examining their role in representing the People (instead of just the 'top-1%', who have done everything possible to divide the People -- against their own-Interests -- while "laughing on their way to their-Banks").
My long-favorite of Holiday's...now I'm afraid that, although I can still 'have my turkey, and eat it too', the taste of it will "be as ashes" in my mouth, afterwards -- so shamed am I that my-'kind' has wrought such dissonance and strife and decline everywhere they stride, and so-thoroughly...
One Hopes for 'better' -- even while sliding-back with everyone-else...
[Enjoy yours, anyway -- while you still-can...]
Let's put an end to hungry Thanksgivings.