Author Archives: Anthony De Benedict

About Anthony De Benedict

More about Anthony: https://www.aculpableinnocence.com/Bio.htm

Nature’s Inheritance

Recently I read an article about the healthful effects of certain wood essential oils, called phytoncides. It seems a simple walk in the woods can elicit an immune reaction that releases anti-cancer proteins. The Japanese call this exercise “forest bathing.” Recent studies have noted other benefits as well: “forest bathing” is believed to boost the immune system, lower blood pressure, reduce stress, improve mood, increase ability to focus—even in children with ADHD, accelerate recovery from surgery or illness, increase energy level, and improve sleep. For anyone who has camped or hiked in a forest, these studies are not surprising. Nevertheless, (bear with me) serious science has been devoted to phytoncides’ effect on cytolytic activity of NK-9wMI cells and the expression pf peroorin, tranzyme A, and granulysin. Now I am not one to discredit serious science, but I do wonder about this obsession to verify empirically what simple introspection already makes apparent. I doubt any research scientist would lessen your fear of cancer with the suggestion of a walk in the forest. But what this research does highlight—and affirm—is the body/mind connection, even though its focus is exclusively on the physical elements.

Over the last decade health professionals have similarly demonstrated and borne witness to the fact that meditation can improve focus, energy, peace of mind, and a general sense of well-being. Our common experience also tells us that nature often elicits this beneficial meditative state. Why else do we Americans frequent our many natural parks? They help ground us with our connection to all that we can sense and thereby with our own bodies. That connection to the tangible world is also one of the triggers for our sense of wonder and awe.

Now wonder is at the root of all philosophy, as many philosophers have told us. And awe is the inspiration for most of what we humans struggle to express in our art, music, literature, and many of our cultural forms and figures. It is, I believe, at the core of all spirituality. Nature can inspire wonder and awe. It can awaken in us a deep resonance with all that is. And, in this manner, that resonance can change the meaning of one’s life.

Some years ago I published a work of historical fiction centered on the Vietnam War and the turmoil of the 1960’s. As you might expect, the experiences I depicted are drawn from real life. There is one scene in that book where my main character finally begins to overcome his fears—of death, commitment, and love. This scene is pivotal for it establishes the basis for his future decisions and the courage he will need to act on them. The context is one of heightened tension as his headquarters detachment awaits an eminent attack. It is the eve of the Tet Offensive in which many thousands would perish.

During his lunch break, Regis climbed the water tower. He had taken off his fatigues and stripped down to his boots and shorts. When he got to the top, he did not recline as planned, for the asphalt top would have been too hot on his bare back. Instead, he sat on the edge and hugged his knees to his chest, absorbing the heat of the sun bearing down on his uncovered head and shoulders. The horizon stretched out in all directions from his perch, the highest point on the highest hill in the local landscape. The more distant hills came to life with a fresh vividness. Their sun baked treetops aligned in a rolling pattern that mirrored the rise and fall of the earth beneath them as they reached towards the sun. They did not shrink from the heat, as Regis must, after too much exposure. They embraced it. For a time, Regis tried to embrace that heat as well. He could feel the pores of his skin releasing life-giving water into the air. In the valleys at the base of the surrounding hills, Regis perceived a slight mist that added translucence to the unending green that marched up the foothills in ever deepening hues. They too were giving up their moisture in an ongoing weather cycle that connected with endless other life cycles, of which Regis was a very small part.

His head began to throb with the rhythmic pounding of blood through his temples. His body was succumbing to a countdown in its own cycle of life and death. His death, he knew, was inevitable. If not Charlie (the Viet Cong), then nature would claim its purpose with him. There was nothing for him to do except to accept it. With his brain blasted by the heat, eyes bloated with the kaleidoscope of endless shades of green against a piercing blue sky, and the sound of nature’s silent voice humming like a seashell in his ear, Regis was overcome with the sheer beauty that rampaged at the gates of his senses. An alternate reality, ever-present but previously ignored, had broken down the barriers of his consciousness. He slid to the side of the tower, clasped the ladder rungs and slowly—with a savoring deliberation—descended. He felt unfamiliarly at peace, both with himself and with everything (“A Culpable Innocence,” page 165-166).

The key words in this excerpt are “he felt.” The affinity my protagonist felt with nature opens a window of awareness into the human heart and into the mystery of our kind. In our post-industrial and contemporary technological age, we tend to favor the view that intelligence is the dominant factor in human civilization: science is dominant, logic prevails, and well written laws can define morality and social interactions. But we evolved organically out of the very stuff our senses touch every day of our lives; and our minds can do more than objectify what we perceive. Not only can we analyze, but we can also experience our presence in the world, that is, feel reality in the absence of any intervening thoughts. We are more than a pretentious self-evolving species that can define chemical changes in our cells and even begin to manipulate our genetic inheritance. In moments of deep introspection, we can identify with nature. The danger before us, I suspect, is the foolhardy assumption that we can divorce ourselves from nature, from the mother that bore us into existence, and from our own mind/body identity. Not only has nature formed the physical basis for our existence and the introspective awareness of our presence in the world, but it can ground us in its most fundamental lesson: we cannot survive a divorce from nature, neither as individuals nor as a species.

Perhaps the supreme challenge of our time is maintaining our affinity with the natural life forces that course through our bodies. A simple walk in the woods may not only bring peace of mind, but reorient our consciousness to nature’s ubiquity and the unbiased reality of pure existence. Like the main character in my book, feeling existence in the face of death might just be the premise for leading a meaningful life. At least that was what I learned on that water tower.

(Note: If this blog resonates with you, you might also be interested in “Bound in a Nutshell . . . King of Infinite Space,” “It’s a Small World After All,” and “The Doors of Perception.”)

My Anne

Her music is a bow drawn lightly across a string
rather than fingers skipping and pounding on keys.

She is exuberant like a flower opening to dawn
rather than an overripe grapefruit falling from a tree.

Her laughter sings a melodic strain
like a chime that answers a petulant breeze:
both responsive to the moment and soothing to the ear.

The music I hear in her words
is the heart that beats in her bosom:
the echo of love’s conjoining
that issued from my loins.

AJD: 7/07/2016

A Prescription for Change

A new documentary attempts to divulge the context of O. J. Simpson’s trial, the so-called “trial of the century.” It not only explores O. J.’s life before the trial, but also the circumstances of both his life and the trial, to include the state of race relations in Los Angeles generally and between the African-American community and the Los Angeles Police Department more specifically. The assumption behind this production is that we can never really understood O. J., the crime, or the verdict without an understanding of the context. You see, everything is connected: race, culture, locale, background, and even history.

Some day in the future, another documentary will be researched and presented to the American people in order to make sense of our current political upheaval. It is probably presumptuous of me to write about the context of the storm that is brewing. But it seems to me that the stakes are too high if we ignore it entirely. To the extent that we can grapple with our contemporary context, we may be able to divert a very unwelcome trajectory into our future.

What the current electoral season seems to reveal is that Americans are not happy with their government or, at least, with the candidates running for office or those already in office. And yet, Americans continue to vote for incumbents: allegedly, 80% of House seats are considered non-competitive. Meanwhile, our major parties continue to nominate established politicians—with the notable exception of a one recent Presidential nominee. On the one hand, we seem to trust local politicians or familiar candidates; but, at the same time, the new and different outsider captures our hopes for change. Clearly, we want change, but are divided on how to accomplish it. The question I am asking today is whether we are mistaken in placing our hopes in any candidate for office without understanding the context. More to my point, no champion, political savant or crash-and-burn strongman can alone change a social environment with deep historical roots, the entrenchment of a failed system of governing, or the implacable façade of an inflexible ideology.

Taking an historical perspective, one must admit our society has been both pluralistic and divisive from its very outset. Even before our slice of the continent became America, migrants began populating this land. First, they came from various countries in Europe. Those early settlers pushed the native Indians from their hereditary lands and imported slaves from Africa. To this day, most Native Americans live in impoverished Reservations while many African Americans live in poor segregated communities where access to public services, education, and job opportunities lag far behind the general population. Subsequent migrations from Europe, Asia, and the American sub continents have all been met with resistance before their eventual assimilation, usually over one or two generations. That resistance has always been colored by prejudice. Remember the injustice of the Japanese internment camps or the exploitation of Mexicans in the Bracero program. Although our society has at times assimilated large numbers of migrants, such as refugees from foreign wars, we still seem reluctant to fully integrate people who have been here as long as or longer than any segment of our population, such as Indians, African Americans, and Mexicans. The concept of a “more perfect union” still runs afoul of divisiveness born of racial and ethnic prejudice.

Overlapping with these racial and ethnic divides are social economic factors that further define both the diversity and contention within America. The mobility inherent in our system has allowed people to concentrate within communities of similar ethnic and social economic identities. It is this concentration phenomenon that has given our political parties the inspiration to develop gerrymandering into an art form. The rural/urban divide, as a result, seems to largely define Party alignments. Population centers like our major cities have no more voice in the House of Representatives than much less populated rural, districts. Should we be surprised that our diversity supports contention in Washington along the lines of race, ethnic origin, and urban/rural communities of like-minded perspectives? Both divisiveness and cultural diversity are very much a part of our context.

Another aspect of our society is what is now commonly called “low information voters.” When news outlets offer this label, they seem to imply a native ignorance within a portion of our population. But there is no lack of common sense amongst Americans. It is not “low information voters” that are deficient, but low information providers. Once again, I must turn my focus on cable news where it appears many people obtain the news of the day. The core issue here is corporately sponsored news programs produced for profit. How often do you hear a speech from a public servant without commercial interruption? Sponsorship and ratings are the driving force instead of viewer education. The few exceptions are programs that combine both characteristics or that function as “fillers” in prohibitive time slots. For the most part, the broadcast media is obsessed with the loudest voice, the most outlandish behavior, scandal, offensive dialogue, and a complete lack of in-depth reporting where context is almost never included. When politicians oppose each other’s positions, “objective” reporting most often lends air time to both positions without reporting on the objective truth of their remarks. Fair or equal access to media may seem to be a neutral position for a corporation not wanting to offend its consumers, but how neutral is a failure to report facts or state the consequences of serious issues? Neutrality in this instance is just journalistic cowardice and a disservice to the American public. Of course, the lack of substantive civics education is a factor in voter participation; and so is the truncated information or misinformation that inundates social media. Nevertheless, the broadcast media, unlike other, less available news outlets is largely responsible for the “low-information” voter syndrome. American voters are left to their own devices to search in private for credible data on the issues and candidates that interest them. The result is a public information context overflowing with data, but mostly lacking in substance.

Besides the societal context, what can be said about the current functioning of our government? It still bears the main features the founding fathers intended. Our democracy is structured around a check-and-balance system of three equal branches of government, a bicameral legislature, and the early development of a two party electoral system. The Constitution defines and regulates our separate but equal branches of government. Party constituents establish and define their respective Parties. And the House and the Senate make their own rules for conducting their legislative agendas. Their success in serving their constituents is defined by their ability to compromise in the interest of the general welfare of all Americans. Although the wheels of government were designed to move slowly, our system allows for the representation of a diverse electorate and the resolution of differences through compromise. But, currently, it is not our government’s cumbersome process that hinders American progress; it is the lack of compromise between the Administration and Congress and between the political Parties in Congress. It is too easy to cripple our form of government when our two political Parties refuse to work together toward common goals. During the Obama presidency, the lack of compromise between the Parties has become entrenched. (For more on this topic, you might refer to “Is America Broken?,” “A Tale of Two Fallacies,” or, with a touch of satire, “Politicians are One Eyed Cats,” and “Compromise: An Unfulfilled Promise.”)

Perhaps we should not be surprised that failures to assimilate in our general population reappear in our representatives’ inability to work across the aisle. Nevertheless, a stubborn resistance to finding common ground or to build a basis for compromise is not just fouling the wheels of government but betraying its very purpose. In other words, this behavior is un-American. Before Party loyalists point the finger at their opposition, let me illustrate a few areas where both Parties illustrate my point:
Party-line voting suggests that Party loyalty rather than individual conscience dominates Congress. Certainly, Party positions require teamwork, but the extent of this practice defies profiles in courage in lieu of political tribalism. Americans are best served by bipartisan legislation that addresses the diversity of the electorate.
The legislative agenda is set by the majority Party, as it should be in a democracy. But when the minority Party’s agenda is totally vanquished from the floor—prohibiting both debate and an up or down vote—then the legislature no longer speaks for all Americans. The voice of many Americans is silenced; and requisite compromise is averted. (As an aside, I might add that too often special interests are allowed to define the legislative agenda, further limiting representation of the general public’s interests.)
Political fund raising consumes much of the time and effort legislators could be devoting to working “across the aisle,” as many of them admit. Although there is evidence of some collegiality in the upper chamber, there appears to be none in the House. Obviously, political campaign reform is a major issue (reference “American Revolution 2016”), but it still cannot justify the lack of bipartisanship in our legislature. If our elected officials cannot find time to talk to each other, then there is even less opportunity for compromise.
Political strategy too often takes precedence over the obligations of public office, including the critical responsibility of compromise. Perhaps a particularly heinous example is the Republican strategy for defeating Obama: (1) delegitimize him as president (e.g., the birther controversy, secret Muslim inference, etc.); (2) block everything and make victories look ugly; and (3) make it appear to the country that anything is better than the partisan caricature drawn of the present situation. It was this strategy that killed what would have been the most significant bipartisan compromise of recent years, the so-called “grand bargain.” That compromise potentially would have curtailed growth in Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security to the tune of hundreds of billions, would have increased revenues by 800 billion, and would have reduced both defense and non-defense discretionary spending by more than one trillion dollars over a ten year period. Though this example stands out, both sides of the aisle have become entrenched in strategies that befuddle compromise.

The complexity of our diverse society and the uncompromising gridlock in Washington are both emblematic of an underlying phenomenon. While we struggle to live up to our founding principles, such as equal justice for all, promotion of the general welfare, and the spirit of compromise, we have developed the ruse of inflexible ideologies to justify this drift from core values. At the most generic level, it is no longer capitalism and democracy, but capitalism or democracy. It is not conservatism and liberalism, but conservatism or liberalism. But these “ideologies” are not inflexible, but complementary. At the outset, America was a mercantile enterprise. And capitalism was never the sole bastion of conservatism. In fact, free trade always was (and still is in Europe) considered as a liberal position. The regulation of business, which is anathema to Republican conservatives, was first proposed by a Republican President whose face appears on Mount Rushmore. The Republican Party was born out of the “far left” abolitionist movement. The Democratic Republican Party morphed into the Democratic Party and was founded on the Jeffersonian principle of a limited central government, ironically the central concept behind the current Republican Party’s preference for State’s rights. If you took the measure of history to our present day, you would find the concepts of capitalism versus democracy or conservatism versus liberalism overlap in many areas. In their actual application, they form a continuum, ever ebbing and flowing with the tides of time. The antagonism invented by protagonists is really for the purpose of maintaining divisions in our society, for stimulating those divisions to gain constituents, and for justifying positions on matters of governance (reference “The Weirdness of American Politics”). These concepts and their political representations are just the flip sides of the American experience. Regardless of Party affiliation, all Americans find themselves projected on one side or another of a seesaw. The task before Americans is to find that balance in the middle and not to contend with one another until one side is thrown to the ground.

Often our Constitutional “professor and chief” has denounced unfairness, meanness, or uncompromising behavior with the words, “that’s not who we are.” Unfortunately, his words are a lie that panders to our mistaken self-image as a nation. What he should be saying is “that’s not who we want to be.” America, the so-called “melting pot,” is a cauldron of burning elements that cannot be reduced to a single entity. The fired-up passions of an election season might promise total victory for one Party, but governing in our system must assure “justice and liberty for all” members of our pluralistic society. Of course, we want our businesses to succeed, but not at the expense of a diminishing middle class. Naturally, we want our Constitutional principles to address contemporary issues, but not at the expense of those principles. The liberal/conservative push/pull is a natural concomitant of the American system, as is the for-profit/public service tension. The diversity of our history, our society and our beliefs demand that we accept our past and present differences and work toward the greatest good.

The American Constitution is a hallmark of the Age of Enlightenment. The system of government it constituted is both an experiment and a challenge for succeeding American generations. Our task is to learn from our failures and make that document a living trust in order to realize its promise. Recent history has shown us the pitfalls of other systems. America has fought in world wars with countries that adopted nationalism where the state subordinated the individual and populism where tribal beliefs victimized individuals who were different. Those ideologies are antithetical to our Constitution, and anybody who proposes them should be considered a radical and un-American. Equally, we should be wary of corruption from within, to include the influence of money and the usurpation of power for its own sake. When self-interest trumps public service, both our institutions and Americans suffer. And, finally, we should not give too much credence to the recently touted analogy with right wing challenges to the European Union. Washington DC is not Brussels, but a part of our country, the United States of America.

A prescription for change, then, is for Americans to cast off the indifference displayed in low voter turnout. It is long past the time for us to address our problems with class/ethnic/racial inequality in our society and with the uncompromising/nonsensical ideological contest for power in our politics. We already have what we need to continue America’s evolution in the Articles of our Constitution and in the core values expressed in that document. The change Americans seem to be seeking will not be found in antithetical political philosophies or radical demagogues that deviate from those values, but rather in a creative application of our founding principles to our contemporary problems. That change is solely in the hands of individual Americans. We simply need to reengage with the promise of our heritage and with the responsibility it entails. Let’s make our voices heard in the halls of Congress and in local voting booths across our great country. Awake, America!

Why does Putin Favor Trump?

Early in the primary season, Putin spoke out in favor of Donald Trump. He seemed to be responding to Trump’s stated remarks praising Putin. But it still struck me as odd that the Russian President would bother to remark on the American presidential campaign before the Parties had even selected their candidates. During the Cold War, a Russian President’s endorsement would have been the kiss of death for a candidate. So why would Putin speak out in favor of Trump? Was he seriously impressed with Trump’s credentials, as he indicated? Or did he have a subversive or other ulterior motive? Well, I did a little research and have discovered a few correlations that may hint at his motives. Of course, I have no way of knowing what is in Putin’s mind. But, still, I thought it useful to share the following:

➣ Maybe Putin sees Trump as somebody he can understand. Both are nationalist and use populist rhetoric to gain support of their followers. They both seem caught up in nostalgia for the past whether in Putin’s commitment to restoring the Soviet empire or in Trump’s avowed dedication to “making America great again.”
➣Putin might also infer some like mindedness between him and Trump in their professional associates and in their reaction to demonstrators. Paul Manafort, Trump’s political strategist, performed the same role a little more than two years ago for Viktor Yanukovych, the Ukrainian president that Putin controlled and protected. Although I have no reason to impugn Manafort’s involvement in the political repression of Ukrainians, his political involvement with both Yanukovych and Trump could be interpreted by Putin in Trump’s favor. Putin also shares Trump’s distaste for political opposition. His government threatened to withdraw financial aid to Yanukovych unless he suppressed protests. In February of 2014, Yanukovych ordered the mass shooting of protesters, thereby spurring a revolution, his own exile in Russia, and Putin’s invasion of Crimea. Trump certainly shares Putin’s distain for protesters and likewise disregards the possibility of any violent consequences.
➣Putin’s desire to form a Eurasian alternative to the European Union would be abetted by Trump’s stated intent to withdraw from NATO. The only entity in Europe that is committed to protecting state borders since World War II is NATO. Russia under Putin is provocatively testing those borders in his quest to form a counterweight to the EU. Trump’s interest in freeing America from European “free-loaders” goes far beyond President Obama’s insistence that NATO countries devote two percent of their state budgets to mutual defense. Trump is threatening to remove the American safety net altogether—a policy proposal that has already shaken our allies but that must warm the heart of Putin.
➣Trump’s perspective that America has failed, that the government is led by “losers” and “incompetents,” fits nicely into Putin’s view that the West is corrupt and a foil for his type of authoritarianism. Although Putin might like Trump’s analysis of America’s state of the union, he likely is more interested in what a Trump presidency would mean for Russia. In fact, the Kremlin seems to believe Trump’s erratic foreign policy initiatives might benefit Russia. According to the television producer and writer Peter Pomerantsev, the Russian elite are convinced that Trump will destroy US power (reference “Nothing is True and Everything Is Possible: The Surreal Heart of the New Russia,” Public Affairs, p. 241).
➣ Besides, Putin really does not like Hillary Clinton. He accused her during her last state visit as Secretary of State of stirring up trouble amongst Muscovites and his opposition in Parliament over alleged rigged elections. After she left Moscow, he had the opposition leaders arrested.

So why does Putin favor Trump? Why does he insert himself in American politics? What has emboldened him to do so?

If we know anything at all about Putin, we must recognize that he is reliving, even recklessly reviving, the Cold War. Diplomacy for him is a zero sum game that he feels Russia must play against the West and specifically against the United States. When President Obama pulled Putin aside at the G20 Summit and told him “that if he forced Assad to get rid of the chemical weapons, that that would eliminate the need for us taking a military strike” (reference, Jeffrey Goldberg, “The Obama Doctrine,” The Atlantic, April 2016 issue), Putin agreed with the President’s proposal, but not out of any conciliatory or humanitarian initiative. It is likely he saw his own interests served. Perhaps he wanted to forestall the possibility of chemical weapons falling into the hands of terrorists. Many Islamic Chechens who violently oppose Moscow are fighting with Daesh in Syria. But it would be naïve to overlook his likely intent to undercut our President in his ongoing tryst with political opponents at home. Republicans immediately highlighted the President’s weakness vis-à-vis Assad and Putin. The appearance of being upstaged by Putin played very well in the Kremlin, in the US media, and in Europe. This is the result, I believe, that Putin sought, especially in its effect on American allies whose trust in the American President’s “redline” was shaken.

There was a time in American politics when political adversaries in America always agreed on supporting the Presidency against any form of foreign aggression, including diplomatic. That time has passed. Some Republicans in Congress have unwittingly, or perhaps unconscientiously, aligned themselves with our diplomatic foes. It would have been unimaginable for any Republican to align with Khrushchev during the Kennedy administration or with Brezhnev or Andropov during the Reagan administration. Yet we hear the President’s political opponents praising Putin as a statesman who outwits the Administration’s foreign policy at every turn. What was unimaginable is now reality: the Kremlin is now emboldened to insert itself into American politics. A former KGB operative, a Cold War antagonist, can now openly favor a candidate for the American Presidency.

Whatever interest the Kremlin has in Trump and whatever Putin hopes to accomplish by publically commending him, we can be sure of one thing—his interests are not ours.

Is America Broken?

Is America a “house divided against itself?”

This question is assumed by many political observers in this country and is voiced by many world leaders abroad. Within the beltway, it seems common wisdom to accuse the opposing side of intransigence. Recently in a Charlie Rose interview, the Senate Majority Leader blamed the President for not supporting what he terms as the biggest problems facing America, namely, tax, entitlement, and regulatory reforms. He would like to simplify the tax code by eliminating deductions and lowering the tax rate at the top, while maintaining a neutral fiscal balance. The President agrees with the tactics, but not the overall strategy: he wants to raise money for both debt reduction and infra structure “investment” which, in Republican eyes, is merely a pseudonym for “expenditures”. The Senate Majority Leader would like to “save” entitlements by extending age eligibility for Medicare and Social Security, following the path taken by President Reagan. The President recognizes that people live longer, but does not agree that they should work longer or retire later. Instead, he appears to favor an increase in the income cutoff for Medicare taxes and to maintain the status quo with Social Security which is projected to remain solvent for the next several decades. The Senate Majority Leader strongly feels that regulations are stifling small businesses in America. He specifically calls out the Environmental Protection Agency and the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, while castigating all regulatory agencies in general. The President believes that government must regulate the economy to provide for the safety, protection, and economic interests of the general public. He has pointed out that the EPA and Dodd-Frank have mainly impacted multi-national energy companies and America’s largest banks, respectively, rather than small businesses. Maybe there is some room for compromise on these differing positions regarding tax and entitlement reform. For example, Congress could give the President some “investment” income and stipulate a measure of debt reduction from tax reform while lowering the corporate tax rate and eliminating tax “loopholes.” And it could take a balanced approach to Medicare, possibly raising the income cutoff for the Medicare tax in exchange for raising the age limit for eligibility, perhaps to match Social Security. But the ideological arguments on regulatory reform seem to offer no quarter for compromise. Besides the public interest interwoven into many regulations, many were created for and written by business. Culling out the bad regulations would be like pulling weeds from an overgrown and long unattended garden. Many parasites who feed there would object.

Our two political parties appear to be locked into positions defined by ideologies that may be generalized. The Republican Party emphasizes personal freedom, largely unhindered by government. The Democratic Party champions equality, largely guaranteed by government. Remember “one Nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all” in the Pledge of Allegiance. Liberty and equality under the law are both interwoven into the very fabric of our nation. The Parties should be like a happily married couple who work as one team, each party completing the other. Whose interests are they really representing? Why do they act like embittered divorcees?

I can think of several reasons. David Brooks points out that besides freedom and equality there is a third refrain at the heart of the American experience, specifically, economic mobility. The latter was a theme of the Whig Party, to which most of our founding fathers belonged. It was most eloquently espoused by Alexander Hamilton, generally recognized as the primary author of our economic system. Oddly, it has been incessantly repeated by our current President when he speaks of opportunity—“any person who works hard should have a fair shot.” Perhaps our government would interfere less in personal freedom and at the same time provide more equality by focusing on the opportunities available to Americans and to their ambitions in life. Most conservatives, I suspect, would agree in principle. If so, why can our government not insure a quality education for every citizen, provide funds for infra structure investments, institute only those regulations and patent laws that encourage entrepreneurship, and provide healthcare at a reasonable costs to all its citizens. Most liberals, I suspect, would not only agree but strongly affirm “yes, we can.” If our government truly focused upon providing every citizen the opportunity for his/her personal realization of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness,” the currently divisive approach to regulatory, tax, and entitlement reform would dissolve into a single goal. Compromise would necessarily be the result. Each side would lose something in order to benefit society as a whole. We could then lift the burden of a government without representation from our collective shoulders. That burden weighs heavily on us today and cannot be born for long if we are to remain a free society. Emphasizing one American ideal over another can lead either to worthwhile debate or to gridlock. The latter serves neither the synergy of those ideals nor the American people who strive to live them. Instead, our political Parties should focus on what government can do to promote equal opportunity for individual Americans. “It’s the economy stupid” is not the right catch phrase if it is measured by a rising stock market and increased corporate profits. The economy is a byproduct of equal opportunity—as are personal freedom and equality.

Another reason for the intransigence in Washington is something we too easily take for granted. It was part of that loudly proclaimed refrain in the French revolution, namely, liberté, egalité, fraternité. That last element, “brotherhood,” addresses our feelings for each other and the realization of our common humanity. It is implied in our dedication to “form a more perfect Union.” But it cannot be realized until all barriers to our union are torn down, including all forms of bigotry, gender bias, racial or ethnic discrimination, and the systemic impoverishment of the less fortunate. Only compassion for each other can break down those barriers. It is not the same as “nationalism” which establishes the state’s interest over the individual’s. Nor is it encompassed by “popularism” which tends to represent tribal or class interests over that of the individual. Compassion is that quality that can unite all of us on a person-to-person basis and is the integral binding force of communities. Of course, the larger the community, the more difficult it is to represent the value of personal relationships. However, the leaders we elect and the laws our legislators pass must reflect the empathy we share as individuals for each other. Otherwise, these leaders and legislators can be seen as personally unauthentic, as “not one of us.” And their governing principles will not reflect the welfare of individual Americans, but some self-interest, such as staying in office, rewarding their supporters, or serving those adolescent goals that can entice any of us to money, power, fame and/or status. America can still promote individual self-sufficiency without betraying its communal devotion to all of its citizens, its sense of “brotherhood,” and its unrelenting quest to “form a more perfect Union.”

So, again, why is there so much vitriol in our politics and antagonism between the Parties? Is there simply an absence of unifying principles and goals? Are our elected officials more devoted to narcissistic hubris or just lacking in any real empathy with those they are elected to represent? In some measure, it would seem both questions can be answered in the affirmative. But there is another reason for the ineffectiveness of our politics: there is a complete and total breakdown in communication. The problem begins with the distinction between discussion and dialogue. “Discussion,” like the word “percussion,” implies the pounding of the air with sound waves. A person delivering a lecture behind a podium or a speech before a camera has little if any feedback from an audience. There is no dialogue: communication is one way only. Likewise, a debate in which opponents attempt to disprove each other’s argument in favor of their own can easily devolve into straight-on attacks, as seen in recent political debates. Again there is no real attempt at understanding the opponent’s position and no real dialogue. Have you ever watched a Senator or Congressman address his/her colleagues on C-Span? When the camera pulls back from the speaker, you will most likely see an empty chamber. The speaker is talking for the record, perhaps for his constituency, but definitely not for his/her fellow legislators. Has anyone of us ever resolved a disagreement with a spouse without first attempting to understand our spouse’s position? Compromise requires dialogue. Without the ability to listen and understand someone with whom we disagree there is no space for identifying common ground or correcting our own misconceptions.

Referring again to Charlie Rose’s interview, the Senate Majority Leader explained the President’s intransigence in this manner: “instead of talking about things upon which we might agree, he wasted my time trying to convince me of things with which he should know I could never agree” (my paraphrase). The door into his mind was shut before the President even began to state his argument. Why even bother having a meeting if at the outset you refuse to listen or even try to understand a different opinion? From the Senator’s perspective it was arrogant of the President to believe he could change the Senator’s opinion. Is it no wonder that the Republican majority cannot suffer this President and are offended by him? Both sides appear to be talking past each other. In the case of the Senate Majority Leader, he clearly demonstrates the problem in his refusal to even listen to the President’s position. There is no dialogue here and, therefore, no possibility for compromise on the real issues that separate the Parties. Instead, there is just a growing disrespect for those in the opposition Party. At best our Congress can make spineless agreements to extend funding on programs that require revision. But it declines any real dialogue on those major issues that both Parties will turn into campaign attack fodder.
Unfortunately, this breakdown in communication extends into the public forum. Yesterday, I was fortunate to hear three complete speeches; two were by major Party candidates for President, and the third by Elizabeth Warren. All but one of these speeches clarified Party positions; and all three were noteworthy for the hateful vitriol they poured upon the opposing Party nominee. Today, I witnessed how cable news reported these three speeches. They clipped out any context and broadcast only the vitriol. The one speech that was largely incoherent and clarified nothing was given equal treatment and, therefore, equal weight. What we have come to accept as fair and impartial reporting is no longer fair or objective for it leaves out the truth. What we are forced to witness is politicians engaged in self-gratifying harangues and a media obsession with the spectacle. What is missing is substance.

Maybe, the American system is not yet broken, but cracks are noticeably developing, as evident in both major political Parties’ complaints. Neither side seems willing to address the issues considered most important to the other side. Should our government address income inequality or tax reform? Should it address a deteriorating safety net or entitlement reform? Should it address climate change or regulatory reform? Each of these questions juxtaposes the opposing priorities advanced by each Party. If we had a decent civics education program, every 16 year old in America would be able to see that these priorities are not opposing, but interrelated. They are two sides of the same coin. Their presentation as opposing viewpoints clouds the real issue: our elected officials are not listening to each other, making it impossible to appreciate other perspectives; and their lack of real dialogue makes it impossible for them to understand where compromise might exist. The issues they raise about laws affecting abortion, guns, religious freedom, and voting restrictions are all legitimate Constitutional issues that will wind their way through the judicial branch of government. But they are not the major issues that sit unattended in the Congressional inbox. Those issues can be readily identified in a dialogue with Charlie Rose, but never seriously addressed in any dialogue between our elected representatives. What might motivate that dialogue is a heartfelt concern for the welfare of the people that elected them. What might keep them on track is the common goal of providing equal opportunity for every American.

So how do we burst the beltway bubble and force our government to attend to the people’s business? Some number of blogs ago, I proposed “voting rights legislation consisting of universal voter registration, Federal fair election guidelines, and populist regulations governing Federal campaign funding and candidate debates” (reference “American Revolution 2016”). My intent was to promote discussion around a proposal that would return power to the voter rather than to campaign funders. I still cannot envision another way to both preserve the promise of America for all of its citizens and prevent the breakup of our system of government.

We must begin to realize that the people we vote in office govern with our consent. Their failure is as much ours as theirs.

Ali

My father was a boxing fan. His hero was Rocky Marciano, the only undefeated heavyweight boxing champion of the world. I remember seating beside my father at a closed circuit theater broadcast of Marciano’s last title defense. The fight was so brutal I buried my head on my father’s shoulder. Later, my father took me to the home of another Italian boxer. He was a middleweight known within his community for his courage, but to the outside world as the boxer with a glass jaw. He invited me, a 12 year old kid, to hit him: “you can’t hurt me, you’ll see.” I took a swing and caught him flush on that jaw. As he staggered backward, I knew at once that he could not have been a very good fighter. But both of these boxers were revered within an émigré community exiled by circumstances from their native land and ridiculed for their ethnicity. Both were bold and confident they could make it in America.

My grandparents escaped violence and famine in Europe during and after World War I. They were refugees. When they came to this country, they faced recession and the task of raising another generation to endure a world war. As Italian Americans, their very ethnicity was a handicap. They were stereotyped as Mafiosi and as illiterates. My grandfather and namesake was a band leader who tried to win acceptance by Americanizing his name. But he was still identified by an ethnic slur. He died in his early twenties, working in a coal mine. My father and uncle, as pre-teens, gathered coal from abandoned mines in order to survive the harsh winters in upstate Pennsylvania. Their future did not seem promising; yet they persevered. Both raised children who went to college. Both were bold and confident they could make it in America and provide a better future for their children. Of course, not every Italian émigré succeeded, but hope is a strong motivating factor and is magnified by the courage of recognizable heroes, like Rocky Marciano.

Muhammed Ali was one of those recognizable heroes, though not just for African-Americans.

While the press caricatured him as brash and clownish, he manipulated them to draw attention to his fights. He introduced the mantra, it is not bragging when you can back it up. The government branded him a traitor for refusing the draft, but after a multi-year struggle in the courts he won his case as a conscientious objector. Even today, his stand as a peace loving Muslim is a rebuke to radical jihadists/terrorists. Ali not only had the courage to fight in the most brutal athletic arena, but to stand up to a government that prosecuted him for his religious beliefs and to a media-drawn image that belittled him as an illiterate black man. His braggadocio was deliberate, playful and entertaining (perhaps even prescient of contemporary hip-hop), but it was never intended to be offensive. That prerogative is more a contemporary phenomenon.

Ali became more than his exploits in the ring. His metal was fired in the cauldron of a life beset with challenges. He not only had to overcome persecution by his government and ridicule by the press, but he also took on Parkinson disease for the last 29 years of his life. He once said that if a fifty year old man claimed he was the same man he was at twenty, he would have wasted thirty years. His life demonstrated the value of courage and perseverance. He was actually grateful for the physical challenges he faced; for he said they gave meaning to his life—“they made it all worthwhile.” After leaving the ring, he became an international figure that inspired people to overcome failure and obstacles in their lives and to show compassion for others. But he was more than a retired pugilist or Parkinson patient advocating for peace and love. His message became the raised fist that calls for universal justice while celebrating individual achievement. There is a special irony his life exemplifies. Whereas the South is the only part of the country that has suffered the loss of a war and a way of life, Ali was a member of the only group in America that won freedom in that war along with a more promising future. Some parts of the South still look to the past with nostalgia, while the African-American community looks to the future with hope. Ali, like Malcom X, one of his mentors, and Martin Luther King projected himself into that future and brought us all along for the ride.

This blog, however, is not really intended to be a eulogy, for there are others who can more appropriately perform that task. Nor is my intent to explore the irony of a man once rejected and now revered by the very same public institutions. What brings me to write about Muhammed Ali, formerly known as Cassius Clay, is the role he played in a still unreconstructed pluralist society. He was a bridge persona who somehow persevered on a fickle world stage to bring people together without losing his dignity or integrity. Who can do so today? Who will?

“I am America. I am the part you won’t recognize. But get used to me—black, confident, cocky. My name, not yours; my religion, not yours; my goals, my own. Get used to me.” (Muhammed Ali, 1942-2016)

Letters from the Front

Recently I came across a trove of letters from a soldier drafted into the Vietnam War. Though he refrained from any graphic content in those letters, much was implied in the mental and emotional state of this soldier. Even while in BCT (Basic Combat Training) his anger boiled within him as he saw boys barely out of high school being brow-beaten into a warrior-like machismo. Unlike the current model of a volunteer professional army, Vietnam era draftees were just kids picked at random. Training was intense in order to transform average, non-violent civilians into a fighting force. They needed to follow orders and react as trained without thinking and under fire. They were inundated with propaganda about the threat of communism to Americans and our way of life. Many of them, he would come to learn, would not see more than their initial six months in Vietnam. If they survived that period, they would become seasoned veterans in a combat zone. Otherwise, they would have returned home in body bags. He, however, was fated to survive. In one of his letters, he described how he had experienced such good fortune. He had retreated into his mind, a condition he called “body alienation.” At one point, he could not even relate to his own image in a mirror. From a hospital bed, he writes,

“My corporeity is no longer something real to me. I am mind and spirit that subsists regardless what happens outside of me. Among events that affect my extended self are pains, sickness, strain, physical mutations. These events/experiences touch not me. When I view myself in a mirror through the window of my soul, I am genuinely surprised to discover figure, size, solidness where I expected to see nothing but air. The mass in the looking glass, however, is nothing I could identify with. Across its forehead, there seems to appear an emblem of the United States Government and the number (his military ID number).”

I suspect many have shared his feelings of alienation: the slave before emancipation, the democratic Muslim reformer in a Middle Eastern jail, perhaps even a teen age gang member in an American inner city. Despair may have many different causes, but we all suffer it the same. Later, after experiencing the worst phase of the Vietnam War—the Tet offensive and its aftermath, this soldier came to see the “enemy” in a new light. Some he was even fortunate enough to befriend. With a new perspective, he writes,

“I’m not with movements, idealism, religions . . . There has been an undercurrent of change building in me these past years. No longer can I visualize man as the re-former of reality in his own likeness or, rather, in his self-deceived projection of himself . . . The era for loving man, humanitarianism, must now yield to the era of loving individual men, (that is) this man—personalism.”

War can change people in many different ways. Apparently, this soldier came to realize the shift Martin Luther King demanded from a “thing-oriented society” to a “person-oriented society.” Amongst the “things” we pursue are not only material things, but the things we create in our minds, like the feeling of security, the need for power, and the various “-isms” that inspire or demand our commitment. But the people with whom we relate are the only realities that truly matter in our lives. You cannot harm somebody with whom you have connected, for that person has become a reflection of who you are. You cannot form a close-knit community without respect for individuals’ differences. You cannot maintain a cohesive society without common values that respect the basic rights of individuals.

It may well be that the most sacred part of our lives is the relationship we have with the deepest mystery we will ever encounter: the other person. That relationship must become the basis for society, culture, and human co-existence. On that basis we humans could end civil injustice, xenophobia, racism, war, and the deepest alienation of all: estrangement from the persons we really are. But that day will not come unless each of us learns to live in our relationships now.

It took a war for me to learn that truth.

Fishing in Dark Waters

A butterfly flutters through a maze of waving tall grass
Weaving its course unafraid of any threat,
While dancing to the music of nature’s breath.

Perched on man-built pilings that hold back the Bay
A seagull patiently studies the incoming tide
For the measly offerings polluted waters may abide.

An old man sits on a rock like the bird on the pilings
His young granddaughter holds tight the rod at his side
Her hair whisked cross her face like the wind on the tide.

“Papa, you’ve caught one – the line is taut”
“No,” he responds, “the fish is too small.
Our table can suffer for the sake of all.”

AJD, 5/22/2016

A Time for Reflection

Have you ever said aloud whatever comes to mind? If you have, I hope you were alone. Giving voice to your stream of consciousness might interest a psychiatrist or entertain your family and friends. But I suspect you would find it personally embarrassing. Fortunately, most of us do not talk to ourselves and consciously filter out whatever might cloud our focus. This internal audit is the result of reflection, sometimes practiced automatically and sometimes with a good deal of effort. In this manner, we avoid being scatter brained so that we can function and fulfill our life goals. Unfortunately, we cannot always avoid external distractions. These can be obstacles both to clear thinking and to achievement of personal goals. I am not referring here to those natural impediments to human progress that bedeviled our distant ancestors. They had less means to protect them from harsh weather, to travel far from home, to care for their sick and disabled, to secure their comfort and safety, to communicate with each other over vast distances, and so on. Today, we face obstacles from the very environment we initially created to overcome those past impediments.

We live in an age that is transforming almost beyond our control: technology commands much of our time and daily activities; global and national economic systems define the extent of our material wealth and physical wellbeing; and politics determine our governance and security, often unpredictably and undemocratically. We awake to alarms and march to predetermined schedules; we communicate more in hurried calls and short texts but less in substance, depriving us of that deeper understanding gained from different perspectives and more authentic relationships; we obey rules and laws we have no time to question; we spend a significant portion of our lives apart from those we love; and we are constrained to live and prosper within the opportunity boundaries set by circumstances over which we have very little control. Has our modern world provided us with more comfort, security, freedom and opportunity than in the past? Most would answer affirmatively. But I question whether we are not unlike the poor soul caught talking to him/her self. Our focus is scattered; and our lives to some extent predetermined. The larger context in which we choose lifestyle, job, or status is less ours than the result of forces over which we have little control. We are losing that singular focus that is both defining and defined by our uniqueness and that allows for our personal imprint on everybody and everything we encounter. If my thesis seems a bit farfetched, consider the following:

➣ Our jobs are increasingly managed by computer systems that not only control robotic assembly lines but our performance and interface with associates in the workplace. I know this fact because I participated in the design of many systems that automated what used to be wholly human systems. The people in those human systems now work in and for more efficient programmed systems. (I admit they are still human systems in their origin, but far less personal and more uniformly regulated.)
➣ The free enterprise economy of early 19th century America no longer exists. Replacing most craftsmen, apprentices, small businesses and farms, we now have corporate enterprise, agribusiness, an international financial industry, and a global economy. Most of us do not own or control what we produce. We earn what the corporate bottom line allots to our individual workplace contribution or monetary investment. Since World War II, more and more workers depend upon the largess of a relatively small number of corporations that have grown into international behemoths. A significant number of these enterprises hire cheaper, even subsistence, foreign workers and store hundreds of billions of dollars overseas while funding their operations with tax deductible loans in order to secure greater profits. Not only their workers but tax paying citizens can effectively become victims of their corporate greed.
➣ The intersection of money and politics has limited the will and personal goals of citizens in many areas of common interests whether you consider health, safety, property ownership, education, access to natural resources, or even self-government.

Let me elaborate on this last point. Health care, for example, was not made more available without first securing the profits of health insurance companies, that unproductive middle entity that secures profits for itself at the expense of patients and medical professionals. Even at this writing, another judicial challenge to the Affordable Care Act has been waged on the basis that the insurance industry has not been adequately reimbursed by the Federal Government. (Apparently, tax credits do not suffice in place of cash on hand.) Another example is gun safety. Background checks on gun purchasers have been blocked in Congress because gun manufacturers—not gun owners—control the most powerful lobby in Washington. That lobby has also blocked the manufacture of safer guns that could not be accidentally fired, for instance, by children. One more example is State governments’ use of eminent domain. Citizens have been disowned of their property at the behest of large corporations. In like fashion, our Congress recently allowed crude oil to be exported, not only to enhance the profits of energy corporations but to provide them the export protection of international trade agreements. As a result it is more difficult for the Federal government to slow down or regulate the damage done by energy extraction companies on air, water and land. Money politics has even affected the education we all want for our children. From the high costs of textbook publishers’ monopoly to the prohibition against student loan bankruptcy, from exclusion of merit pay for teachers to ever diminishing investments in public colleges, legislatures across the country demean the value of education in lieu of private profit and other budget priorities. But, worse, money has corrupted our politics at its core, that is, in our electoral system. Political Action Committees, billionaire funding of political organizations (with misleading names), and various campaign scams have all been made legal by a very compliant Congress. One Presidential candidate, for example, has borrowed between 36 and 50 million dollars to win his Party’s nomination. It would be perfectly legal if he demanded repayment of this loan from his Party. He would simply be leveraging the purchase of the highest office in the land with borrowed money, a common practice in his real estate development business. He may yet not demand repayment because he promised voters his campaign would be self-financed. But if he does, he would be executing the greatest legalized con ever. Does a political system that allows this type of chicanery represent the will of its citizens? In fact, it is just another example of a system out of control, in this case a political system unfit for the body politic.

I wrote “When Education is Not Education” to specifically address how our schools might better develop the potential of our children and prepare them to flourish in a world they will create. I wrote “The Clash of Minorities” and “American Revolution 2016” to expose the economic and political detour America seemed to be taking from its founding principles and, further, to propose a possible blueprint for its restoration. The technology, economy, and politics we have inherited—and in part we continue to create and serve –may now pose as our greatest challenge. It may seem easier to focus on our respective jobs and personal responsibilities than to digest the significance of the noise around us. It may seem quite reasonable to ignore a public discourse drowning in a broadcast media dead pool like an unwieldy stream of consciousness wallowing in scandals, mayhem, word games, sound bites, talking points, and senseless passions. But this unruly noise is only irrelevant to our daily lives until that moment of realization when we become irrelevant to it. We must bend back the arc of history, which is the core meaning of the word “reflection” (from re, “back,” and flectere, “to bend”). Let us reevaluate and redirect the path we are on, before we lose our way.

Now is the time to regain clarity as citizens: to discover our personal truth, to pursue its purest expression in our lives, and to find a meaningful and nurturing role in our human community. The latter requires us to voice our concerns and vote our interests. If the chatter in our heads is further confounded by the chatter in our environment, we must make the effort to refocus on what really matters. This truly is a time for reflection.

Politics Past Reprised

Western democracy can be viewed in the context of its break with the past, as I noted in my previous blog. But elements of its predecessors can still resurface, however inappropriately. Since this is a presidential election year in America, I simply cannot resist illustrating how the past is reprised by our politicians. If you read my recent blog, then you can relate to the following.

➣ How would a Neanderthal or a Cro-Magnon lead and protect in our current world? Probably, he would establish himself as the strongman who could defeat all potential foes. He most certainly would build a wall to protect his collective from outside invaders who might compete for resources. And he would insist on preserving ethnic homogeneity within that collective. He would appeal to a tribal-like insecurity, without regard for the pluralist nature of a democratic collective.
➣ How would a shaman lead and protect in our current world? He/she would likely call upon the magical powers of transformative ideals to create a modern utopia. Inspiration would be the calling card for this shaman. His/her goal would be some form of transcendence or, in political terms, a change revolution.
➣ How would a leader who equates himself with god or with god-like powers lead? Well, he would be Kim Jong-un of North Korea. Fortunately, he would be laughed out of any democratic electoral campaign.
➣ But what might be the leadership style of a candidate whose political positions were presented as mandates from god? It is doubtful that past monarchs actually believed in the “divine right of kings”; but a modern equivalent, mimicking those monarchical forbears, would justify a campaign for elective office on the basis of religion. This candidate would quote divine texts and appeal to “god given rights” and the need for more religious practices within the electorate. Moreover, this candidate would campaign for specific religious practices, decry their apparent suppression, and use the American Constitution to justify these positions—ignoring the fact that it only secures the individual practice of religion and not its imposition on the rights of others.
➣ How would a leader claim the right to lead on the basis of infallibility? In the current political theater, infallibility is assumed by many candidates who feel free to misquote established documents, like the Constitution, or misrepresent facts, like historical events or scientific evidence. When rebuked, these candidates simply equivocate and justify positions as some version of the truth, thereby inserting their equivocations or lies into the political pundits’ discourse and gaining free media exposure. Self-promotion then trumps truthfulness.
➣ How would a feudal aristocrat campaign for office in a democracy? It would not be necessary for that aristocrat to espouse any relevant qualifications. Only status or class would be required. In the current political environment, celebrity status and membership in the political class would substitute. The modern day “aristocrat” need only establish the inevitability of election based upon his/her position in society. (Remember the movie “Being There” with Peter Sellers.)

Perhaps these analogies are a bit whimsical. But I offer them for your consideration when evaluating candidates during this campaign season. Separating the chaff from the kernel is the craft every citizen must learn. Without that craft, the political remnants of the past will infiltrate and corrupt the seeds of our democracy.