Sunday, October 30, 2011

Notes on the Occupy movement in America

There is nothing that I agree on with those in the Occupy movement.  At the same time, I support their right to demonstrate and put their viewpoints across.  Some of the force and violence directed by local police against the demonstrators is misguided and should never have occurred.

Now back to the points of disagreement.  A few thoughts:

1. The rich are rich because?

Because we make them so.  LeBron James can dunk like few others, and we freely pay to see him do that.  Steve Jobs had a mind like few others, and we paid him profusely to use it.  Surgeons are rich because few go through the rigor and have the skill to cut open humans to save their lives. Of course, not all rich are exceptionally skilled or gifted like Mr. Jobs or brain surgeons, but are so simply because there is a big demand for what they do.  Take bankers for instance.  If you take out the rogue few who created ingenuous financial instruments, the others do mundane stuff like maintain your bank accounts, sell you loans, and invest your retirement kitty.

America is a country hooked on debt; people take out debts to go to school, to buy cars, to buy household appliances, and to buy houses.  Someone organizes, administers and collects that debt. Naturally, bankers lead good lives in America; is it their fault?  Which brings us to the second point.

2. The bankers were surely to blame. But blame yourselves too.

There is no debate that some unscrupulous bankers conducted acts with criminal intents; acts which had far-reaching impacts on the greater financial system.  Yet, if the American people were not linked so closely to the financial system through their debts, the impacts would have been softer.  In China, for example, where the average citizen owes little money and has larger savings, a few economic blows don't snowball into a fatal punch.  In 2010, the average US household debt was 136% of income; in China the number was 17%. Leveraging amplifies your vulnerability to factors beyond your control.

As a society, America decided at some point that leveraging was okay.  Granted that the big-business-dominated mainstream media promotes spending, but if the voices promoting the Occupy movement today are sane, where were they when America was going crazy and taking on debt in various forms?  As we speak, the American government is trying to promote even more debt through various monetary measures.

Had the American public not been so severely leveraged in 2008, would the housing meltdown had caused such deep-reaching effects? I venture no.  As it is, by pinning all the blame for the economic crisis on the few (or many, does not matter) bankers, Americans are missing an opportunity to learn a lesson.

3. Stop feeling sorry for yourself

This goes beyond those in the Occupy movement.  All of American seems to be in a grip of self-pity and pessimism.  It is fashionable, for everyone from the president of the country down, to say that "America is broken", to say that this country needs a reformation, to say that that American infrastructure is falling down, to conjure up visions of doom unless one thing or the other is done.  I disagree.  The miserable state exists in the American psyche only.  As such, apart from its criminal martial intervention in other countries, the country is a place where most people are free, the rule of law prevails, accountability and order are the norm, public corruption is not widespread, life is considered valuable, commerce has a good chance, and education and innovation flourishes.

Perhaps Americans should see this as the time of renewal.  For all its faults, America's fundamentals remain strong. If anything, America needs faith and patience.

Friday, October 21, 2011

A beat deconstructed

Musical, cultural, and legal fallout of the 6-second Amen Break.  Good stuff.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Killing without anesthesia

Here is an excerpt from In Evil Hour by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. The setting: The 'lieutenant', an agent of a regime that has murdered and brutalized the people of town, has a painful tooth that is making his life hell. The town dentist is staunchly against the regime, so the desperate lieutenant raids the dentist's office with his men, and the tooth extraction proceeds under gunpoint:
The dentist located the sick molar, using his index finger to push aside the inflamed cheek and adjusting the movable lamp with the other hand, completely insensible to the patient's anxious breathing. Then he rolled his sleeve up to the elbow and got ready to pull the tooth. The lieutenant grabbed him by the wrist.

"Anesthesia," he said.

Their eyes met for the first time.

"You people kill without anesthesia," the dentist said softly.
Strangely familiar, isn't it? Even as half of Americans quibbles about namby pamby things like universal healthcare and the other half quibbles about namby pamby things like traditional social values, America's relentless warring machine rages on, abroad. Since Barrack Obama took charge of the machine, about 6,800 people have died in Iraq. Anywhere between 200-1000 people died in the US' uncalled-for bombing of Libya.

In the carefully constructed "fog of war", mistakes happen, brutalities happen, and even if they didn't, many kills are murders. For all the panty-wringing over inane issues at home, when abroad, things are easy. For native fucks, hope stops at the terminal end of a amputated limb, knowledge is distributed far and wide as brainmatter split open by a 50 cal litters a street, and everyone who avoids being blown up stays in the pink of health.  Without anesthesia.



Notice how, at 9:50, a van picking up the wounded is engaged. Without anesthesia.

Saturday, October 08, 2011

This made my day

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