May 2011


General21 May 2011 08:59 pm

Recently I’ve been describing my ego, as the conscious part of who I am. I’ve also been thinking of how often my body is able to just wing it without my ego being involved. In this poem I explore the relationship between my mind and my body, the relationship between I and me.

I Realize it is Me

You and I together
We listen to me speak

Yet, of course,
You could say the same

You and I together
We listen to me speak

Yet, quicker than the labor of thought
You respond
As fast as a tap under the kneecap
With a river of cogent words
Reflexive but coherent

We can continue this way
for minutes
if not hours

With long verbal volleys
and fierce rallies
Words lobbed about
With deft and force
We are on our game
With more instinct that thought

In the now of speech
Who has time for thought?

You and I together
We listen to me speak

I realize it is me speaking
Though I am more observer than participant
Yet, every word is me
Said by me,
Expressing me

Speech is more me than I
While thought is more I than me.

When speaking I learn about me
While listening and thinking
I guide me
I mold me
I judge me
I improve me

I am amazed by me
The me that is my body
That moves about
and inhabits the world
Even while I am lost in thought
Or completely asleep

The me that is my body
That smells, tastes, feels, sees and hears
That breathes, loves and lives

I often take me for granted
I often forget about me
Or mistake me for I

Some believe that I will live on
Long after my body dies
Yet, I can’t imagine
Living without me
Even if this were true
It really wouldn’t be I anymore

For if I were to lose me
The I that would remain
or return
Would surely bear little
resemblance to me

Personally,
I hope that
I and me die together
It’s not just a romantic ideal
But it only seems fitting that
Since I have no memory
of a time without me
That without me
I am nothing
I owe everything I am
To me
All I think and know
I’ve learned from me

Without me
I would never have met you
I would not know your smile
your laugh, or the sound of your voice
I would never have touched your body
Or felt the pleasure of your embrace
I would never have been able to say
Or even learnt your name
Without me
I would have never experienced life
I wouldn’t have known love
Or been able to share the
Miracle of life with you

I am nothing without me
I am no thing without me
Thanks for being there for me
Thanks for caring for me
Thanks for sharing with me

Without you I never would have found me
Without you I would not have become me
Without you I would not be me

Jim Guido
5/21/11

General15 May 2011 06:19 pm

Dear Aunt Nancy,

As I mentioned in my last letter I prefer our conversations to me writing you a letter. On the telephone I can learn of what you’re currently thinking and feeling and co-tailor our conversation to take into consideration both of our present concerns and joys.

Often our conversations begin with your making an observation, stating an opinion, or asking a question based on a recent thought you’ve had, discussion you’ve been part of, or a news report you’ve heard. This leads me to a favor I want to ask of you.

Could you please email any thoughts you have so that I may be able to respond to it? It would be very helpful. I may not be able to respond quickly, so anytime you have a thought you’d like to share or talk on, just send it to me. I’ll read and mull them over and then write my thoughts when I get a chance. Is it a deal?

In the meantime I thought I’d just do some of my current thoughts mixed in with some extensions of my last letter. In my last letter I talked of your being like a river, with your ability to both influence and adapt to your environment. A side bar to that letter was my having you explore what one can do, and how you could best adapt to your current state of health and well being.

So, let me be selfish a second and answer that question from my own perspective. When not feeling well or recuperating from an injury I often resort to contemplation. Which even though is sometimes difficult due to the distractions of illness, is far more feasible than most other human activities.
So, lets spend some time contemplating.

In my last letter I mentioned how much I enjoyed our conversations and how much I would miss having them. The bulk of the letter focused on you and the person you bring to the table. Yet, I would be remiss if I didn’t talk about me and my motivations for liking our conversations.

One of the major reasons I enjoy our conversations is that I like the person I am when I’m speaking with you, and I like the person our conversations inspire me to become. Reflecting on that last observation I realize that those internal feelings truly mark off my strong friends from my acquaintances.

Many people, often through no fault of their own, have me speak and respond in ways which make me uncomfortable with myself or with my reactions to them. My distance from them is more created by how they make me feel about myself or who I am with them, then any judgement on my part about them as a person. Wow, I think that’s bordering on a self-revelation, thanks for inspiring that thought. Is it any wonder I miss our conversations?

This morning while I was walking my attention was drawn to the elaborate song of a mockingbird. Over the last several years a mockingbird has been a constant companion to my spring and summer walks perching in a short list of high places and singing away with rapid urgency. I am amazed at how often I hear him sing no matter what time of the day I choose to walk. Even during the short time it takes me to pass him he serenades me with dozens of bird songs.

Most of us are like most songbirds. We spend our lives developing and perfecting our song. We develop very deep grooves of habit which gives us a sense of history, identity and meaning. These are all very good things.

Yet, in some ways I would like to be more like a Mockingbird. It would be nice to be able to learn and perfectly repeat the songs of others. It would appear that to truly learn anothers song I would have to inhabit their reality and there way of living life. This would be true compassion and allow me to stay sensitive to the needs and feelings of others. Being able to sing anothers song would be invaluable in terms of creating harmony and having a positive influence on those you speak to.

The greater portion of my contemplation centers on human experience and my experience in particular. I never stop marveling at how intricate and fascinating human sensorial experience is, and how inaccurate our unreflected assumptions of what we actually experience often is.

One of my strongest joys is in reflecting on simple experience and being able to describe my observations to others. The following lyric and a few reveries on each line will help demonstrate what I mean.

The World Touches Me 4/26/2008

What I do see is more than I see everyday
What I do feel is more than I sense
Sometimes the world touches me
Keeps me company while I think

I shoot out thoughts like a Tommy gun
Words pour out in rapid runs
Painting the world that is me
Making the world I am to be

Wonder fills my joy
Laughter seasons the stew I’m steeping
Every day is a feast
So much to taste of which comforts and awakens
Sometimes the world touches me
Talks to me while I think

Sharing all our days
Gives my life dimension widens my perception
Listening to the rain
The rhythm is dreamy soothes like honey

Every breath I take
Is filled with wonder new world to uncover (discover)
Everything takes shape
Random seeks order when the world touches me
_________________________________________________

If you want to listen to the song you can go to guidoworld.com and listen to it on the Go! CD in the music section of the website.

What I do see is more than I see everyday

To understand and appreciate this first line and the general tenor of the song takes a little background. So,….


In every conscious experience I have there is part of me having the experience (my sensorial body) and part of me that is aware of it (ego, self-consciousness). A large part of my life is unthought and kind of on autopilot. I walk, pick things up, breathe, move my arms and legs, smile and make gestures often without any conscious assistance. Even a great part of speech is done naturally and in the flow of the moment far faster and more often than conscious thought is capable of producing.
Life happens too fast and there is far too much information for us to weed through in the most basic experience to depend on our ego. In order to survive and make sense out of life we need a most basic part of us to exist and be in the world prior to a self-conscious decision process.

A major part of us needs to be in the world and respond to it with lightning speed. First we need to be able to select and organize a world out of the tons of sense data assaulting our eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin at every moment. Then while doing this we must breathe, chew, blink and respond to specific demands of the environment (someone speaking to you, a dog running in front of you, or catching yourself as you fall) all at speeds faster than our ego can think.

Our ego, though slow is extremely valuable. Without the ego we would not process, appreciate, evaluate, alter or plan our actions. Our ego, is the central manager, who feels embarrassed, proud and happy. It is our self-consciousness which gives life its history, meaning and sense of direction. Yes, it is our ego which often causes us conflict with others or gives rise to negative emotions, yet it is also the ego that makes loving, savoring and relishing life and others possible.

So when I say that “What I do see is more than I see everyday” I mean it literally and figuratively. First, the amount of input coming into my eyes has to be organized into a comprehensible (and livable) environment. Yet, what I see at the moment with the help of my ego becomes part of my history. So, at each moment I see, I see with the eyes and knowledge of my past as well as the feelings and memories they evoke in me.

Yet, even in vision itself we see more than we see. As I look about my room I see many things. I see a table, lamps, chairs, sofa, TV, speakers, paintings, pictures, plants, shelves, walls and floor to name just a few. The simple fact of the matter is that I never fully see any of these things.

I never actually see the entire room, only a series of partial snapshots. Yet, I am able to imagine it as a whole, and to move about in it as if I saw the entire room at once. If I stare straight ahead I begin to realize how little I actually see at one moment. Even individual object only seems to come alive as my eyes move about and quickly make scan after scan.

What is even more astounding is the fact that I never see all of the chair or even the lamp. Depending on my position and its distance from me I may only see a fraction of the object, the rest of it is filled in by me. I never see the backside or the underneath of the sofa or lamp, but it does not prevent me from seeing the lamp or instinctively being able to reach and lift the entire lamp.

When in a room, walking in your neighborhood, or driving in town, you are able to successfully move about, adapt to, and respond to these environments even though you are not seeing a substantial portion of, or even thinking about them. We truly do see more than we do see.

What I do feel is more than I sense

Likewise, what I feel is more than I sense in a number of ways. First, though I never touch the entire cat, I know what my cat feels like. With my eyes close I recognize the cat almost the moment my hand makes contact with her. There are very few objects I could feel at one moment, and even many of those have shapes, contours, nooks and crannies which make it impossible for me to feel it completely. Yet, my mind is able to fill in what is missing, both in what can’t be felt in one caress as well as the absences that could not be felt at all. It may be a little misleading to say my mind fills in the gaps because it often is done with no thought and instead accomplished by the preconscious part of me that lives in the world which usually is labeled the body.

“What I feel is more than I sense”, is also true in terms of emotional feeling. The entire network of sensations cannot explain nor capture my emotions and feelings. I always feel more than I sense, and my feelings are also influenced by reflections of sensations that has taken me an entire lifetime to form.

Sometimes the world touches me
Keeps me company while I think


We often make thought in charge of perception and view perception as something that occurs in the brain (mind). Sight, for example, is when images come to us through our eyes and rest on our retina in an inverted fashion, only to be corrected by our mind. My experience tells me that world -body – self consciousness are one intimate network, in which complete separation is impossible.

My experience says that sometimes the world beckons my attention and touches me. It is obvious that the world touches me when a breeze blows or when the sun peeks out from a cloud and bathes me in sudden warmth. Often times when deep in thought, or reflection a sound or smell will summon me, or keep me company while I think.

Also, often events in my environment will touch me in the sense of having a certain poignancy or inspire me to have some strong emotion. In this sense, the world in all its wonder and mystery is forever touching me. When one recognizes the intimate relationship between the world – our body – and our sense of self, it is truly impossible to feel isolated and alone.

The world, the environment and my immediate setting affect all that I feel, perceive, sense and think. My environment defines my limitations as well as my possibilities. At each moment my setting and my body color, guide and inspire my thoughts, emotions and experiences.

My setting and others who are part of my setting, influence and help create who I am. In so many ways I am the product and project of others and the world I live in. All of my experiences are created by the world and my body, and I would not be who I am if I had a different body or lived in a different setting.

I shoot out thoughts like a Tommy gun
Words pour out in rapid runs
Painting the world that is me
Making the world I am to be


We’ve already covered those first two lines with the realization that we speak far faster than we can think, and therefore, most of speech is preconscious and evaluated by our ego as we speak. If the ego agrees or is pleased it lets us ramble on, and only intervenes when it feels a need to interrupt or redirect.

Words paint and describe the world and person that is me. My words not only express who I am, but are the very tools which help construct my view of myself, my world, and my future. My perceptions and experiences are articulated through words, but words also help create and fashion my experiences and perceptions. My words and perceptions have a mutually beneficial relationship. My experiences can inspire me to find better words to articulate my perceptions, yet well chosen words can improve and refine my experiences and give it a richness it would otherwise not have.

Similarly, it is impossible to assess to what degree the world forms my perception of myself as opposed to how my self-perception fashions my views of the world.

Wonder fills my joy
Laughter seasons the stew I’m steeping
Every day is a feast
So much to taste of which comforts and awakens


All of the above thoughts lead me to see the world, my body, and my sense of self all with a sense of wonder and mystery. We are all born out of the world and at some point dissolve back into it. With something like a plant this concept is very easy to see. The plant sprouts forth from a seed in the ground and after a time dies and becomes reabsorbed into the earth.

We are born from a seed in our mothers body. Our life, being self-conscious, evolves a little differently than our experience of the plant. Becoming conscious is born out of the entire stew of sensations and perceptions fostered by the interaction between the world and our body. Soon our sense of self seems to form like condensation. Where eventually we become self-conscious, that is we become aware of the fact that we are alive. Not only that, but we become aware of all life, whereby through us life is becoming aware of itself.

We are aware of not just our ego centric existence but we become engulfed and surrounded by life. We exist and are alive, because we inhabit a world teeming with life.

Our self-conscious existence is dependent on the fact that we have a body and live in a world. The world, our body, and consciousness are co-existent. This is the beauty and wonder that is human life. We only live because we can breathe in life from the outside world.

When we inhale we take in life, when we exhale we give part of ourselves to the outside world. With this in mind it is hard to say where we end and where the outside world begins.

I became enthralled with life many years ago. I find great joy and satisfaction in reflecting on human experience and life and in describing what we actually see and feel. I find meaning in life itself and have no desire to try attain ultimate Truth. I stopped asking big questions when I realized I was only capable of producing small answers.

Sometimes the world touches me
Talks to me while I think

Obviously other people talk to me. Yet, even those who speak a foreign language speak to me through their gestures and through my interpretations of their actions. Animals, insects even trees and plants seem to speak to me, to teach me their secrets. All of nature reveals themselves to me, and in the process reveal me to myself.

The world touches and speaks to me through every sensation of my body. I reach out and touch the world in all my activities. When I have my hands touch each other, one always has to be the toucher and the other the one being touched. I can switch the roles at a moments notice, but one hand cannot be both toucher and touched at the same time. Likewise it is just a matter of perspective that has me switch from being touched by the world to its touching me.

Sharing all our days
Gives my life dimension widens my perception
Listening to the rain
The rhythm is dreamy soothes like honey

Though I’m never separate or alone in the world, I feel the most connected to other conscious beings. We all need to feel unique and special as well as a need to belong and be connected. It is through higher animals and people that we get these needs met. It is though others that I get validation as well as a greater perspective. Many experiences and thoughts I would otherwise have no access to, I can vicariously experience through my dialogues with others.

I find comfort in the predictable, in habits and in the patterns of life. The basic rhythms of life ground me and from this base give me the courage and stability to grow and develop.

Every breath I take
Is filled with wonder new world to uncover (discover)
Everything takes shape
Random seeks order when the world touches me

Life is a never ending process of growth and discovery. Each sensation, perception, experience and feeling we have is just another color with which to paint our world or a puzzle piece to use in constructing the great mosaic of our life.

Many seek to overcome life and view it as an illusion. Me, I view life as this wonderful dance we have the privilege to attend. I love the world, the body and our consciousness and relish the opportunity to live and savor this life.

Every sentence needs a period to have meaning. Every song only becomes one when it ends. We would not know the day without the night, and life would have no significance if it had no end.

We are bound by the limits of a body that occupies a specific space and experiences life as an unfolding of time. Yet, their would be no experience for something limitless or eternal. Something all knowing could not learn, grow, be surprised or have a revelation. The true beauty of human life is that it is born with so little, and through the unfolding of time, through the interaction of world-body-and self-consciousness develops a history and a personal story of ever increasing complexity and richness.

Wonder and mystery fill our days, and as we touch the world and the world touches us we begin to see patterns and forms, and we begin to feel connected to the world, nature and others. The miracle of conscious life is in its delicate fragility which dazzles the eye and captivates the reflective soul with its rarity and ephemeral beauty.

United in Compassion,

Jim

General06 May 2011 07:39 pm

The last few posts have all dealt with my concern and fear of certain personality types which seem to wield a disproportionate amount of power and influence in modern society. Please read and refresh yourself with the ideas expressed in The People Who Frighten Me, Scary People All Rolled Into One, Getting Poorer By the Day, One If By Internet To if By TV and Overkill to catch you up to speed and give you sufficient background for understanding this post.

In the previous posts I’ve covered pretty thoroughly the ways in which I feel increasingly vulnerable from an economic perspective. Starting over a decade ago with my suspicion that the policies and strategies used by the IMF and World Bank to successfully gain access and control over nations assets was about to be implemented on the American middle class. In short, this technique focused on burying a nation in debt through unrealistic loans and then forgiving their debt in exchange for ownership and control of their assets such as oil, natural gas, cash crops, minerals, slave labor, etc.

Shortly after this revelation the housing bubble began to validate my suspicions. In response to this I paid off my house, got out of all debt, and made saving money my major focus. Likewise I warned all my friends and anyone willing to listen and not consider me paranoid or mad to do the same.

Initially I felt relatively good and safe about the prudent and frugal path I chose. Yet, as time has passed I no longer feel safe. This all has been covered in the previous posts listed in the first paragraph. Yet, let me take a moment to fill in a couple a more blanks before moving on to the non-economic fears that I’m beginning to have.
Indulge me a moment as I expand on my economic concerns. Not only is our financial security being attacked through personal and governmental debt, but we are being stripped of whatever relative wealth we have by the massive printing of money making it almost inevitable that the US middle class will be destroyed and the vast majority of American’s will enter into some form of poverty.

There is no doubt that adding to the money supply increases inflationary pressures. This is evidenced by the constant rise in prices as the money supply expands. It has been our experience that the basics of life such as food, shelter, utilities, and insurance policies (car, home and health) have risen steadily for decades.
Statistics show that US wages have stagnated for the last 15 years while inflation and its related cost of living have not. This means that the standard of living for the vast majority of Americans has deteriorated over this time frame.

Yet, the bailouts and gigantic loans to the privileged few present an additional and severe challenge to the survival of the middle class while threatening to place millions of Americans into abject poverty and destitution. The growing disparity between the privileged few and the other 99.9% of the populace is showing signs of skyrocketing past even the most cynical views held by paranoid conspiracists.

In just a few decades the percentage of wealth held by the top 20%, got halved into the top 10. Before we could even digest the consequences of this shift of wealth to half as many people, the same percentage of wealth went from 10% of Americans to 1% of Americans. So, instead of 10% of the population owning about 50% of our nations wealth it quickly became 1% owning our nations wealth. Yet, wait there’s more, recent statistics collected before the bailouts and outlandish loans showed that the same proportion of wealth now resides in the hands of just 1/10th of 1%.

So, in a system where everyone grew at the same pace we would all be seated around the game board and when the bank printed money we would all get an equal share of the action. Picture yourself at a table of ten people and the banker saying, “one dollar for you, and one dollar for you” as he goes about the table.

Yet, in the real world the vast money printed wasn’t given out equally. For awhile only one person at the table of ten got thousands of dollars while the rest of us got nothing. Then it went to millions of dollars. Soon only one person of a table of 100 got billions of dollars while the rest of us weren’t even invited to the table. Now, only one person of a thousand is sitting there receiving trillions of dollars of newly printed dollars. Not only that but a good portion of this money was taken away from money we had previously earned and was taken out of our paychecks with the promise that we would get it back when we retired or when we needed it.

The concept of a living wage has been around for decades. The basic premise of a living wage is to gauge how much money a household needs to earn in order to have an acceptable standard of living. Most living wage formats focus on basic survival and do not account for extra monies to be used for saving for the future (retirement, college, etc.).

When I was on a local planning board we assessed that a family of three needed a minimal of $26,000 dollars to survive, with the possibility of savings or even health insurance somewhat in doubt. Yet, now a decade or so later the survival earning base for a family of three in our community is quickly approaching $50,000.
During this time frame the wages in our area have remained flat which means a significant number of additional families are now existing below a basic survival level. If the current trend of money printing and massive bailouts for those two big to fail continues the $50,000 survival threshold will continue to climb and more and more families will go underwater, even if they have no debt.

Unless wages grow substantially in the very near term the following statement would be hard to contest. If we continue to print money at our current pace, in the not too distant future the vast majority of Americans will be impoverished. This is not a political statement, but just a statement of fact based on a path we are currently on.
One of the reasons that many Americans have been blind to or have been able to minimize the descent of their standard of living for the bulk of this time frame was do to the housing and stock market bubbles. While people’s wages were lagging behind inflation gains in their stock portfolios and assessed value of their homes made them feel like they were keeping up. This is what was commonly referred to as the “wealth effect”.

So, let me take a minute to talk about some of the non-economic dynamics which are increasing my sense of fear and vulnerability. There is increasing evidence that the ambitious, desperate people of certainty who control and spin the news we receive will not allow me a safe place to hide out. No longer do I feel that I will be considered harmless and the few dollars I have will be considered not worth the effort to take from me.

Just as I see the imperialistic techniques of the IMF and the World Bank being used domestically to dismantle and destroy the American middle class I also see the foreign policies of empire being turned upon US citizens. This is not necessarily new for the US to do, but the intensity and degree of this assault on our rights and freedom of thought is unprecedented. Let me take a minute to explain the title of this post.

The Red Scare of the 50’s and the current War On Terrorism bare more than a few resemblances. Both government promoted movements used fear and accusations to inspire both patriotism and a willingness to sacrifice one’s rights and privacy for the good of the country. In both eras we have been told that our very way of life was under siege and that our very safety depends on complete intolerance of thoughts, ideas and activities which could be construed as giving comfort or support to our enemies. Any questioning of our government, its intentions, or its policies is considered an act of treason worthy of punishment or imprisonment. The exception to this, of course, is to restrict your questions and criticisms to the narrow debate between the Democrats and Republicans.

During the anti-communist era the focus was more on prevention and damage control to our nation’s imperialistic intentions and the unrestricted growth of industrial capitalism. Obviously the concern wasn’t that citizens of the wealthiest and freest nation on the globe would overthrow its democracy to install a totalitarian state, but rather it was concerned with possible socialistic contaminations offered through any adaptation of communistic (communal) ideology.

Sharing the wealth was only desirable to the degree necessary for winning elections, motivating workers, creating consumers, and winning support for the wars and policies necessary to become the greatest empire and super power the globe has ever known. A pragmatic social analysis of the last few decades would demonstrate how the advancement of the empire and the New World Order has a direct relationship to the deterioration of the standard of living of the middle class and the loss of personal rights and freedoms of its citizenry.

This sums up the Communism and Terrorism portion of this posts title now lets talk about the Charity and Compassion components. I’ve shown over the last few posts, this one included, how the predatory practices of the IMF and World Bank which were instrumental in empire building have been turned on the American and European middle class. The motives for this being greed and a quickened reaching of a global New World Order.

I’ve talked mostly of my fears being based on how the economic techniques of the IMF and World Bank are now being used on the American and European middle classes. Yet, we can also draw parallels of how the US’s foreign policies and strategies which have maximized their strangle hold of empire abroad are now being exacted internally upon its citizens.

In the realms of economics and politics there seems to be no quit or endpoint in the ambitions of the ambitious policy makers. No matter how much money and monetary control we have over a nation or a region, our corporations and government seem to seek more. Any country resisting our economic terms and political policies risks being punished, invaded, isolated and verbally demonized by our leaders and press. Any nation not giving us access and control of their resources, or places the needs and wants of their citizens above the interests of the US and the financial health of its multinational corporations is an enemy of the US.

To be fair, this stance and policy is not an unusual one to have for the reigning world. In fact it is safe to say that, for an empire, this demand is the norm and not the exception. In becoming and maintaining an empire it is customary that they demand free access to their allies resources and man power, while expecting political allegiance and subservience. The only way the US might be unique is to the degree that they deny their imperialistic intentions and designs.

A list of US enemies has little to do with their political ideologies and more to do with their unwillingness to conduct business according to the US’s rules. Any ruler who desires his nations independent sovereignty, has more allegiance to its own citizens or constructs separate economic partnerships with other nations will be viewed as an evil dictator (even if he is democratically elected).

No country no matter how small or insignificant is allowed to stray. Cuba, Haiti, Paraguay, Argentina, Iran and Iran are all nations that had to be held accountable because they were a bad example. Currently Libya is being singled out amongst all the North African nations due to its leader’s economic policies and future plans. The human rights violations and violence of many of its neighbors is far more egregious than Libya’s, but Libya’s way of conducting business is viewed as being unacceptable.

It appears as if citizens of the US are now being treated in the same way as foreign nations. We are now targets of the empire. The attacks are both economic and political. The Red Scare of the Fifties is being replaced by the War on Terror. The fear of being labeled a Communist is now being replaced with the fear of being labeled a Terrorist.

Our government and corporations are coming after us. They are destroying our standard of living through bailouts and handouts. They are passing laws which will rob our retirement funds, reduce social security, make quality health care even more rare and increase our debt load.

At the same time they are attacking us economically they are attacking us politically. We are losing all semblances of privacy, many of our basic rights, our access to representation through unions and collective bargaining, and with it our voice in government.

The money I earned and was taken out of my paycheck is no longer mine. Our government and corporations no longer consider it an obligation, but rather an “entitlement” no longer feasible or practical. They are too big to fail, and we are too small to succeed.

Just as nations who want to provide their people with a decent life are considered evil and terrorists, so are any American’s who question our policies or ask that we are given what we have earned. Yet, we are heading into even more dangerous territory. We are heading towards having all acts of compassion and charity being viewed as an act of terrorism, for the simple fact that it is depriving the rich of even more money and is straying away from being part of the grid, being a cog in the system.

In the 60’s and 70’s John Lennon became an enemy of the state, was threatened with deportation and labeled a communist and a terrorist due to his peaceful anti-war stance. He was considered a terrorist years after the end of the draft and the Vietnam War.

Holding opinions or embracing ideologies contrary to the ambitions of empire have been a problem for popular influential people since the Red Scare. Yet, just as no country can be too small or meaningless to be ignored or left unpunished, so too it may be that no American’s voice is to small or meaningless to be tolerated.

The ideas of peace and love are no more politically dangerous than the acts of charity and compassion. When one is charitable and compassionate one is inspired to share and give things with no expectation of pay or profit. Yet, sharing, charity and compassion are just as much in violation of capitalism as peace and love are in violation of our military objectives in our “fight for freedom” and our war against terror.

This may seem far fetched to some, but remember that we were told that the terrorists wanted to destroy our freedom, our economy and our way of life by the attacks of 9/11. We were told it was our civic duty to not give into fear and that we needed to shop and consume. If we stopped shopping, even for a week, it could mean the end of our economy, our nation and our democracy.

About a decade ago I ran across some folks who were using something called Liberty Dollars at a few businesses around town. They were somewhat idealistic and mostly Libertarians which has since become fashionable. What I gleaned from my conversations with them is that they were concerned about the national debt and felt that the private cartel of bankers (the Fed) was making too much money off of citizens and the Federal Reserves actions were having a negative impact on the national debt. A few of the people I talked to said that the goal of the Liberty Dollars was to support local businesses by forming a partnership with local businesses, kind of local currency for local business.

Only businesses signing on would recognize and accept Liberty Dollars amongst themselves. As far as I could tell it functioned kind of like a barter or token system where Liberty Dollars were used like casino chips where they aren’t considered money but could be redeemed for money if taken out of the system.
The entire Liberty Dollar network functioned like casino chips or like tickets you buy at a fair which you can purchase food or beverages with. The network never grew very large and as far as I knew every thing was above board with patrons and business owners using the Liberty Dollars always treating the currency as separate from real US dollars.

Some months ago I came across an article stating that some Liberty Dollar people were arrested and were on trial for counterfeit and fraud. The article was very straight forward and interviewed one of the leaders of the local Liberty Dollar economy.

What he said pretty much coincided with my scant knowledge of the coins. He said the Liberty Dollars were only used by local businesses who had given their permission to honor the coins with full knowledge that they were not US minted coins. He acknowledged that the coins were modeled after US coins, but that no one in the network mistook or misrepresented them for US legal tender.

The article was short with quotes by both the prosecutors and the defendants. The concern of the prosecutors was that the coins bared too much of a resemblance to US silver dollars and that they could be mistaken. The defendant stated that there was no deception taking place and this was echoed by business owners who were questioned.

A few hours later I went back to the website for the local paper to show the article to my wife. The article was gone in its place was a very cold threatening article with no quotes accept from the US attorney involved in the case. The following is the major quote from the article.

“Attempts to undermine the legitimate currency of this country are simply a unique form of domestic terrorism. While these forms of anti-government activities do not involve violence, they are every bit as insidious and represent a clear and present danger to the economic stability of this country”
-Anne M. Tompkins, U.S. Attorney, March 18, 2011 [von NotHaus trial]

Wow, suddenly we went from a couple of local dreamers who are doing their bit for the local economy to a clear and present danger to the economic stability of our entire nation. Next, we will be busting bingo parlors for using counterfeit coins and threatening our nations economy by engaging in pseudo commerce for non-profit religious organizations.

By definition the goal of terrorism is to have people feel fear and terror. I never felt terror or heard of anyone who felt terror when talking to or dealing with the people who were using Liberty Dollars in our community. Yet, the words of Ms. Tompkins struck terror in me, and in many others. Those who feel that our government created and capitalizes on the war on terror will undoubtedly find validation in Ms. Tompkins framing of the situation.

I have spent my adult life working for various human services. In response to the substantial cuts in budgets for most non-profits I have been giving a portion of my check back to the agencies I work for to help insure that they will be able to continue to offer quality services for those in need. I now worry that I could be accused of being a terrorist in treating my pay check in such a non-capitalistic manner.

Each passing day it seems as if the leash were on is getting shorter and shorter. More and more thoughts and actions are being deemed an act of treason or terrorism. While this is happening we are losing our rights, our voice and whatever money we have is being methodically and systematically being diluted and removed from our possession.

Before ending I’d like to give my thoughts on the whole perceptual management technique being used in the whole union collective bargaining issue. It appears to me that the average American has too little of voice rather than too much of one. The average American has too little representation, or too little leverage in both politics and their workplace.

I agree that unions often fall short of their goals and some may even be corrupt and self-serving. The same complaints of unions can be made of management, yet I hear no discussion of dissolving management or restricting the rights of management.

The efforts to end unions and collective bargaining practices cannot be in the best interests of workers, because it takes away their voice, their leverage, and their representation. There is always room for improvement, but annihilation is not improvement.

Ending unions and collective bargaining because of its flaws and abuses would be like ending voting because of the lies and deceptions of politicians. There is no way that unions have been any worse in terms of keeping their word or truly representing the best interests of their constituents as politicians have. Yet, we could not have a representative democracy without elections and without politicians. Sure our political process is in need of reform and improvement to better represent the wishes and interest of the electorate, but ending all elections would solve nothing and only further injure our democracy and its ability to represent its citizens. In business, unions and collective bargaining are the only means available for the workers to be represented and to have a voice.

Jim Guido