Jan 13
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Oct 02
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A Poem For The Mind

I found this poem I wrote about 2 years ago but I felt it was still relevant.

‘they bring me down with verb and nouns
to define the why’s and how’s
but what they don’t understand is now is now
and later is later. i climb the escalator.
my thoughts i expand to look at the bigger picture, man.
i want to be so far off this system
though they tell me i have to work with them
and if you even remotely understand my position
than you must be sensing some confusion
see I’m more of an influence
in the sense that i do what i feel i need to
but could it be that what i do is destructive
that’s what you have to look into
i play with words and hope that you understand why i hurt
why i laugh and why i still give a damn
there’s always hope if you remember that hope is within
not some external thing given by what you think fuels your life.
i get high off thoughts not off pot. though it does seem to attack the blocks.
we all get caught up in materials but i want to be caught up in the universe.
we create it. so we control it. it must be a matter of who wants it more
or who will do whatever for the power. in a world that’s fueled by the dollar.
i fight against my final hour. they wish i would disappear because i bring fear to their agenda
because i say explore beyond their propaganda.
i wish i could give you hope but you know it’s inside of you.
but what i can do is remind you to look inside and you’ll find the answer to the why’s.
live your life but live it. don’t let them set limits. ‘

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When people see some things as beautiful,
other things become ugly.
When people see some things as good,
other things become bad.

Being and non-being create each other.
Difficult and easy support each other.
Long and short define each other.
High and low depend on each other.
Before and after follow each other.

Therefore the Master
acts without doing anything
and teaches without saying anything.
Things arise and she lets them come;
things disappear and she lets them go.
She has but doesn’t possess,
acts but doesn’t expect.
When her work is done, she forgets it.
That is why it lasts forever.”

— Lao Tzu
Sep 28
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Cultural Elite or Imperialist Justifications by Anna Brix Thomsen

I was reading this and thought that this should be shared.

 ’In Europe we have traditionally seen and defined ourselves as The Cultural Elite of World – tracing back to the age known in Europe as ‘The enlightenment’, the age of apparent ‘reason’ and ‘logic’, where science (as a new religion none the less) was taking over from the ‘dark ages’, where ‘God’ ruled the Earth, bringing ‘sanity’ and ‘sanitation’ to a ‘dirty’ and ‘unsorted’ world. But even prior to this, in various times of colonization, religious reformations and general ‘imperialism’, the Europeans considered themselves intellectual and moral superiors,  high above the ‘savages’ of the world – as overlords and rightful conquers of land, people and resources. As far back as Plato, ancient Greece and Rom, Europe was the center of the development of the systems of the world, in philosophy as well as technology and business – At least, that is the history we learn in European and probably also American and Australian schools, as those countries along with us, are the proud decedents and living proof of the ‘prosperous evolution’ of the European people – Essentially and more precisely known as ‘The White Man’. This is the basic mentality that lays the ground for all people born in these parts of the world – and is what we take for granted as universal truths of the development of the world through history, as well as the current situation on Earth. In this article, we will disprove this position of ‘The white man’ as the ‘overlords’ and intellectual and cultural superiors of the world – we will even claim that we have failed grimly at the task of evolving and developing the world to a higher state of life and suggest that a final score is settled between The white man and himself.

As those born in industrialized, developed countries, having the luxuries of taking welfare for granted, we tend to view those in ‘undeveloped’ countries as unintelligent, lazy and largely that their misfortune and suffering is self-inflicted and can thus be written off as people who have yet to be ‘enlightened’ with the wonders of our cultural heritage to rise above their primitive lives. There are variables of this opinion, ranging from spiritual perspectives involving karma and the soul’s journey towards enlightenment (borrowed to pop-culture from the East), to rationalized evolution theories claiming that those who have worked hard and studied, have earned the right to the fortune of living in functional societies that prosper and grow exponentially accordingly. For those of us who are born, especially after 1960 in Western Europe, Australia and the United states, our very existence is founded upon this immanent or inherent belief – and we are thus the proud heritage of the overlords, the conquers of the past, and can therefore rightfully take our position of wealth, knowledge and might in the world. There are several aspects of why this is taken for granted. Depending on the level of welfare and economic infrastructure in the specific country, one does not even have to be born into a household of wealth to be granted with the luxuries of welfare and money – simply being born with a nationality, having the right to a passport and a identity as such, gives you the right to study, live and to be supported financially. Thus we do not have to physically be with money, to be apart of the riches it provides. Therefore it is often not even seen in these countries, how fortunate we actually are, and can thus easily be taken for granted or dismissed as a ‘perk’ of living in a developed society.  Another aspect of this, is that the intellectual heritage provides us with a view of the world, where we see ourselves as the cultural elite, meaning that we better than anyone else, understand the world, thus having the overview and the mental capacity to analyze other countries and cultures from above – This is apparent in the European culture as well as in the American, which both are products of the same world view, although taking different shapes, where the Americans tend to see America as the navel of the world, while the Europeans tend to claim to have the intellectual and civilized upper hand, thus the right to judge other cultures as ‘barbaric ‘and ‘uncivilized’, based on long traditions of philosophy, science and art. Long forgotten is that the numeric system was developed by the Arabs, that the Aborigines had mapped the stars with their eyes long before the astronomers built telescopes, or that the Chinese were far more developed than the Europeans a thousand years ago. Not taken into account is how African or Amazonian tribes view the world entirely different and often see the world as a whole –and not as segmented parts in war with each other over lines on a map.

All of this is our heritage that we, knowingly or unknowingly take for granted as universal laws of the world. Obviously there is the dark side of history where we through colonization, extermination and exploitation of the rest of the world, gained access to the natural resources that placed us in the abundant position we are in now – but that is seldom taken into account, as it is seen as a natural consequence of the development of the world, where some were simply stronger and more intelligent than others and thereby rightfully claimed ownership of land, crops, minerals, oil, wood and people,  along side shoving our culture down the throat of those ‘uncivilized’ and ‘barbaric’ nations. Seldom is it taken into account that those areas of the world that has been exploited the most are also the areas with most natural resources, and seldom do we ask ourselves how the world would look, had we not colonized and murdered our way to wealth and power.


We live our separate lives, taking part in the comforts, security and entertainment that is provided by our rich and civilized societies. The rest of the world, those born in misfortune and poverty are left to rot, as they apparently brought it on themselves and what we seek to do, is instead assist them to develop themselves to get to the level of comfort that we are at, by providing ‘development aid’ and through implementing the capitalistic structure of free markets and trade (that which we call democracy). We go to war in the name of freedom of speech and build oil rigs and factories in those countries, under the guise of aiding them to prosper. But we do not see ourselves in any way Responsible for their misfortune and seek thus not to share our wealth. Thus being born in a western country, you learn in school that you are lucky to be born where you are – in ‘The free world’. You learn that this is a result of a proud and glorious history, where your ancestors provided you with the land that you can now rightfully call your own. You do not learn that the welfare and comfort that you take for granted, is riding on the backs of those that suffer. This is not only true seen in the light of the historic development from the imperialistic era, but also down to the pair of sneakers on your feet or the chicken that you stuff your belly with. Suffering and poverty in undeveloped countries exists directly and solely because of how we live our lives in the west. It exists because of the lives that we take for granted as our rightful heritage.

The following story, taken from an article in the Danish newspaper Politikken (Sun Sep. 12) is an example of how much we take our position for granted and how devastating this attitude is, not only for those countries that are being exploited, but for all of us. In Malaysia a Danish company called United plantations was created in 1985. The company has been awarded and appraised as a company that provided healthcare and education for it’s Malaysian workers and that has thus supported the social and economic development of a poor and ‘savage’ country in a ‘team-spirit’ seldom seen in the corporate world. Last year they had a profit of almost 90 million dollars. The company has 5000 workers and besides growing bananas and coconuts, uses most of the land to grow palm fruits that are used to make palm oil. By pressing the fruits, oil is extracted and the oil is used in many foods and in cosmetics. (So when you bite into a Mars bar or rub lotion on your skin, remember to send a thought of gratitude to the Malaysian workers, who have risked their lives working for your comfort and satisfaction.) The company has recently been exposed and criticized for providing poor and dangerous work conditions for the workers who work every day harvesting the fruits.  United plantations uses pesticides called paraquat and monocrotoophos, both extremely dangerous, causing respiratory problems, damage to the lungs, cause nausea and severe skin rashes. The workers explain that they suffer with rashes on their hands, feet, and chests and even on their genitals. The consequences of working with the palm fruits sprayed with these pesticides are, besides back pain, nails falling off and pain when peeing or having sex. The normal work day is 8 hours, but often the workers are forced to work longer to ensure a stable income as the wages are extremely low. They also only get the full pay if they collect a minimum of 16 bags of fruits, of 50 kg. Each. The work starts at 6.30 where it is already getting excruciatingly hot in the Malaysian jungle. The workers bring food and water, but have to leave it where they start harvesting fruits and only after four hours are they allowed going back to where they started and thus they go without water for up to four hours in the boiling heat. One worker has explained that she is forced to sit down and pee, where she works to not have to walk to far away and that she can smell the metallic smell of pesticides dripping from the plants. She explains that this has caused the skin on her vaginal area to tear and bleed. When the workers go the health Clinique (provided by United plantations), they are told that this is normal and sometimes given pills that has no effect. Working with these pesticides requires equipment such as gumboots, gloves and masks, but the heat is too unbearable for the workers, so they take the equipment off. They are also not able to works as fast as they have to, if they wear the equipment.

This is but one example out of thousands, even millions, where the glorious heritage of colonization and intellectual superiority shows its true face. The suffering of the Malaysian workers is not caused by their country being undeveloped or the people being savage or unintelligent  - It is caused by a country and a people being exploited brutally by western companies, all justified in the name of free will and market forces. ‘We are stronger, so we can do as we please’ – seems to be the mantra. The Malaysians are placed in a position where they have No choice but to obey. The worst part of it is that we can go on living as though this was not happening. We have pushed the world far enough from us, so that we are out of its reach and it is out of ours. But the food we eat, the shoes we wear, the lotion we put on our skin – is all coming from this world. One thing is that it is justified by our deliberate ignorance and unwillingness to see that we ARE Responsible, but what is even worse is when we justify the abuse by claiming our superiority as a natural birth-given right. This clearly shows that we are not intelligent or developed, or in any other way ‘above’ anyone else. With our apparent superior intellectual and technological skills, we could have solved this in a way where these workers did not have to Suffer. But we didn’t – because it would have been bad for business and it would have sent a signal to the slave-workers of the world, that they are worth something, and we didn’t because we did not have to do it – because ‘the folks at home’ didn’t care – they didn’t see it either, because it was strategically placed out of their sight – serving only one purpose: to make the rich even richer. We are all caught in the same mess – and thus a Solution is required that takes all people into consideration and account as Equals on this Earth. In the United Nations Universal declaration of Human Rights, it clearly states that ‘Everyone’ has Equal Rights to a dignified life – The problem is that the ‘Everyone’, seems to only consider those that have money.

We require Practical, Livable and Principled Solutions, where we each and All take a Stand, to stop shifting Responsibility onto governmental and corporate entities, Realizing that we are All Equally accountable – deciding for ourselves to participate in Stopping the atrocities and Change this world, so that we can Live together and Breathe together and share Everything that is Here.

The European Cultural Elite is a figment of imagination, but it is also who we have tacitly accepted ourselves as, often in taking our position for granted, forgetting the process with which our riches is provided, how it is provided and Who has suffered to provide it. The final proof is the condition of the Earth at large – and who each of us Accept ourselves to be.’

(Source: sociology.org)

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Hello, Young World.

A little news for you out there. Taken from democracynow.org.

‘CIA Drastically Increases Drone Campaign in Pakistan

The CIA has drastically increased its bombing campaign in the mountains of Pakistan in recent weeks. According to the New York Times, the CIA has launched at least twenty attacks with armed drone aircraft so far in September, the most ever during a single month. According to one Pakistani intelligence official, the recent drone attacks have not killed any senior Taliban or al-Qaeda leaders. Many senior operatives have already fled the region to escape the CIA drone campaign.

US Attack Helicopters Strike Inside Pakistan

US Apache attack helicopters have carried out at least three air strikes inside Pakistan in recent days, killing more than seventy alleged militants. Pakistan criticized the NATO operation, saying the attack helicopters illegally entered Pakistani air space, but Pentagon officials said the strikes were done in self-defense. While the US regularly uses pilotless drone aircraft for missile strikes in Pakistan, manned military flights across the border have been rare up until now.

Video: US Soldier Confesses to Role in Killing Afghan Civilian

A US soldier charged with murdering civilians and other crimes in Afghanistan made his first court appearance on Monday. Army Specialist Jeremy Morlock is the first of twelve US soldiers accused of forming a secret “kill team” in Afghanistan that allegedly blew up and shot Afghan civilians at random and collected their fingers as trophies. Earlier this year, Morlock was interviewed by Army investigators and acknowledged his role in the deaths of the three Afghans. Video of part of Morlock’s confession to Army investigators has been leaked to the media. In the video, Morlock admits Staff Sergeant Calvin Gibbs ordered him to kill an innocent unarmed Afghan civilian.

Jeremy Morlock: “And then he kind of placed me and [Spc. Adam] Winfield off over here, so we had a clean line of sight for this guy. And, you know, he pulled out one of his grenades, American grenade, popped it, throws the grenade, and then tells me and Winfield, ‘Alright, wax this guy. Kill this guy, kill this guy.’”

Investigator: “Did you see him present any weapons? Or did he—was he aggressive at you at all? Did he—”

Jeremy Morlock: “No, not at all. Nothing.

Investigator: “OK.”

Jeremy Morlock: “He wasn’t a threat.”

On Monday, Army Specialist Jeremy Morlock’s attorney defended his client.

Michael Waddington: “First of all, he did not cause the death of any of those individuals. And he was present, as was everyone else in that platoon, at the time of all those shootings. But many of the individuals went along for the ride. They didn’t really have a choice. If your sergeant says, ’Let’s go to this village. We’re going to sweep through this village,” and he throws a grenade at someone, and he threatens you that if you don’t—if you’re not on his team, and you’re a possible snitch, and you’re going to get beaten or killed by him, then you’re going to role-play along with it.”

The Army is attempting to prevent the release of dozens of photographs that reportedly show Jeremy Morlock and other soldiers posing with the murdered Afghan civilians. A top Army official recently ordered that any images of dead or wounded Afghans may not be made public during Morlock’s hearing.

Israeli Commandos Block Gaza-Bound Aid Ship

Israeli commandos have boarded and seized a Gaza-bound aid ship carrying nine Jewish activists. The ship was apprehended by the Israeli navy just miles off the coast of Gaza. Navy commandos boarded the vessel and led the passengers off the boat. The activists said they were attempting to take to Gaza a symbolic load of medicine, a water-purifying kit and other humanitarian aid. Meanwhile, the UN Human Rights Council was told on Monday that Israeli troops broke international law by storming a Turkish aid flotilla bound for Gaza in May.

Karl Hudson-Phillips, Chair of the International Independent Fact-Finding Mission: “The mission considers that the conduct of the Israeli military and other personnel towards the flotilla passengers were disproportionate and excessive and that they represented levels of totally unnecessary violence. This resulted in the deaths of nine passengers and severe injuries to many. The mission finds that serious violations of both humanitarian and human rights law occurred during and after this incident.”

Income Gap Between Richest and Poorest Widens to New Record

Newly released Census data shows the income gap between the richest and poorest Americans grew last year to its widest amount on record. The top earning 20 percent of Americans received more than 49 percent of all income generated in the country in 2009. The income gap has nearly doubled since 1968. The US has the greatest income disparity among Western industrialized nations. Despite the growing income gap, Senate Democrats last week put off a vote on whether to repeal President Bush’s tax cuts for the wealthy until after the midterm election. A recent Associated Press poll found that 54 percent of Americans support raising taxes on the highest US earners.

White House Seeks Greater Power to Wiretap Online Communications

In technology news, the Obama administration is pushing Congress to make it easier for federal authorities to wiretap online communications including emails, Facebook postings and internet phone calls. The New York Times reports officials want Congress to require all services that enable online communications to be technically capable of complying if served with a wiretap order in order to give the federal government the ability to intercept and unscramble any encrypted message sent over the internet.

Hundreds Protest FBI Raids in Chicago and Minneapolis

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Minneapolis, Chicago and other cities Monday to condemn the FBI for raiding eight homes and offices of antiwar activists last week. Outside the FBI office in Chicago, protesters held signs reading “Freedom to Dissent” and “One Nation Under Surveillance.” Targets of Friday’s raids included Hatem Abudayyeh, the executive director of the Arab American Action Network in Chicago.

FBI Agents Accused of Cheating on Exam

In other FBI news, the Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine has revealed that a significant number of FBI agents cheated or acted improperly when taking an exam in 2008 about domestic investigations. The Justice Department has already identified twenty-two agents who cheated on the exam, but the total number is believed to be much higher.

Oil Spill Commission Holds Hearing

The White House Oil Spill Commission heard testimony Monday about the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Commissioners expressed skepticism that the response to the spill was not impacted by BP and the federal government’s initial underestimation of the size of the spill. Meanwhile, Retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen said that the government needs to clarify the roles that federal and local governments and companies play in response to future oil spills.

Thad Allen: “Because of the uniqueness of oil and chemical spills, multi-jurisdictions, the fact that they go beyond state waters, there was a presumption in the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 that the federal government will coordinate this. That is not what the cities and counties and locales in the Gulf had been used to; for a large spill, they’re used to the Stafford Act structure where the resources are provided to them, and they execute them. There was a reconciliation that had to be carried out between the assumption of the role of the state and local governments, as far as executing spill response, and the responsibilities we have under the law to execute the national contingency plan and our fiduciary responsibility, the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund.”

Hugo Chávez’s Party Retains Control of Venezuelan Parliament

In news from Latin America, Hugo Chávez’s Socialist Party has retained control of the Venezuelan parliament after Sunday’s elections. Chávez’s party won ninety-eight of the 165 seats in the National Assembly. Opposition parties won sixty-five seats. Both camps have claimed the election results are a victory for their side.

Opposition Colombia Senator Removed from Office

A prominent opposition lawmaker in Colombia has been kicked out of the Senate and barred from public service for eighteen years. Colombia’s Inspector General has ousted Senator Piedad Córdoba from office for allegedly aiding members of the FARC, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. Córdoba has been a leading critic of former Colombia president Álvaro Uribe and the US-backed drug war in Colombia. Despite the allegations, she has never been charged with a crime.

Retired Military Officers Urge Lifting of Cuba Travel Ban

Nine retired US military officers have written a letter to lawmakers calling for the US travel ban to Cuba to be lifted. The officers include Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell.

Mistrial Declared in Blackwater Murder Case

A federal judge has declared a mistral in the case of two former Blackwater contractors accused of murdering two unarmed Afghan civilians and wounding a third man in Kabul last year. If convicted, Justin Cannon and Christopher Drotleff face life in prison for the shootings.

Report: WikiLeaks Staffers Quit in Dispute

Wired.com is reporting at least half a dozen staffers at the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks have recently resigned in a dispute with the organization’s founder Julian Assange. The website made international headlines in July when it released a huge trove of secret US military documents about the war in Afghanistan. WikiLeaks is reportedly planning to release its next batch of secret documents on October 18. This time the documents will focus on the Iraq war.

Over 100 Arrested at Anti-Mining Protest

Over 100 people were arrested outside the White House on Monday in a protest calling for the abolition of mountaintop removal coal mining. We’ll have more on the protest later in the show.

Arizona Protester Tackled by Sen. McCain’s Security Team

And in Arizona, a protester was tackled by a member of Senator John McCain’s security team after she attempted to approach the senator following a debate on Sunday night. The woman was wearing a shirt that read “Do I look undocumented?” ‘

(Source: democracynow.org)