David Greene, teacher of teachers, author, and photographer, offers these thoughts and reflections in this time of anxiety. He says this is a “mashup” of the last chapter of his new book, He Could Make Words Sing: An Ordinary Man During Extraordinary Times.
He writes:
Relax. We are just ordinary people living in our own ordinary times. As my friend Harris sarcastically says, “We all think our times are the most extraordinary ‘evvvvverrrr’.” However bad things might seem as we read this today, they are really rather ordinary historically. Our times do not compare with the extraordinary times Harry Greissman’s generation faced.
Yes, we face economic inequality and loss of jobs, but the unemployment rate is under 5%, not hovering at 25% as it did in the GREAT Depression. Yes, we face racial issues and de facto segregation, but de jure segregation is pretty much gone. Black Lives Matters would have had a far more difficult task then, when lynching was rampant and whole neighborhoods in cities like Tulsa Oklahoma were burned down by whites. Watch the new movie, “Mudbound” as a reminder of Black Lives in the south in the 1940s.
Broken Healthcare system? Then, there was none to break. Medicare and Medicaid were mid 1960s inventions. The numbers of veterans with wartime injuries, both physical and emotional during World War 2 was in the millions, not thousands. The environment? Coal fired furnaces were everywhere. I played in a coal chute as a kid in the Bronx. Whole cities were covered in clouds of grey smoke and soot. Choose a domestic problem, any problem, and it was worse when they grew up. What rights did women have then? For the first fifth of the 20th century, they couldn’t even vote. I know that Tom Brokaw’s “greatest generation” had it far worse than my privileged Boomer generation, Generation X or today’s Millenials.
Of course, today’s new stories and cable shouting matches called newscasts scare the living shit out of many of us. We are still stuck in the longest war in our history, and face terrorist threats daily, these are nowhere as horrific as the death and destruction of World War 1 (when poison gas bombing was used as a weapon de jure), the Armenian Genocide (before Syria even existed as a country), World War 2, the Holocaust, the Korean “conflict” and the Vietnam War. North Korea is not exactly the same nuclear threat the Russians were, especially during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. We sat at the edge of our chairs watching Kennedy square off with Khrushchev.
Refugees refused? Border walls? How about turning away victims of the Holocaust? Poison gas in Syria? NO comparison to the Nazi poison gas chambers relatives of American families died in.
The Red Scare? McCarthyism? The Civil Rights struggles? Selma? Birmingham? Mississippi murders? Kent and Jackson State? The assassinations of MLK and RFK? Battles in the streets of NYC between hardhats and hippies? The whole world WAS watching. The Pentagon Papers? NIXON?
Relax. This is not to disparage those in duress today. God know our world faces too many serious man-made problems. We have Trump and his reality-TV version of the world that is becoming all too scarily real. Environmentally, like the Wicked Witch of the West, the world is mellllllting. The immediacy and verbal violence in social media’s, divisiveness and fear mongering stresses us to no end.
Are we as bad as Orwell’s1984 or Asimov’s Fahrenheit 451 predicted? No. We aren’t even as bad off as what was “predicted” in “The Man In The High Castle”, Philip K. Dick’s alternative history novel and the TV series based on it…All we have is “alternative facts”.
But if we take the long historical view of human endeavors, how special is our time? Even the “Jetsons” predicted we would be farther along technologically than we actually are. Where are our flying cars and personal robots? Alexa doesn’t compare to Rosie.
Relax. There is a monologue in Steven Levenson’s play, “If I Forget”, spoken by the patriarch of the family, Lou Fischer, who in the year 2000, is a 75-year-old World War 2 Veteran. In it he describes the horrors of being one of the American soldiers who liberated Dachau. After a long sigh, he says as I believe many of his generation would have said, “For you, history is an abstraction, but for us, the ones who survived this century, this long, long, century, there are no abstractions anymore.”

Thanks! I needed that!
LikeLike
Kind of puts my own silly anxieties in perspective but may be small comfort to those who have never had the chance to relax when living is a daily struggle and/or miracle. Maybe some of us can relax a little, but we must never forget how really easy it is to backslide.
LikeLike
Diane there IS a larger context to understand there, and some “relaxation” that comes from Green’s recovery of it.
I don’t know, however, that we’ve ever had a time before the sixties where we go to bed worrying about the world being blown up in the night by some deranged egotistical bozo responding to another deranged egotistical bozo who has such powers literally at their fingertips. We are involved in a poisonous disease which, in its own way, only resonates with the Red Scare and the McCarthy era, and with Hitler consciousness before that. We may have political reservations about globalism, but never before has the general public been so aware of global events and possibilities of destruction on that scale.
Also, Greene rightly talks about changes for the better. These better-ments didn’t happen by themselves, however. Rather, they were hard-won, and many good people paid a heavy price for them–and for us.
Frankly, I think “relax” would better come later and perhaps is not the remedy for what presently ails us? On the contrary?
LikeLike
Not the time to relax. Time to resist!
LikeLike
Thank You .
Relax what do you have to lose. As we sink into an autocratic fascistic dictatorship.
Relax as that social saftey net that prevented Americans from experiencing the harshness of the 1890s or Late 1920s and early 30’s is disassembled brick by brick by brick.
Resist every minute of the waking day. Its a lot longer day, since any American with gray matter has trouble sleeping at night.
LikeLike
Joel Herman You too?
LikeLike
While It might seem we are mired in an (un-drainable) swamp of complexity, in reality, the political landscape is a bone-dry wasteland, wrought by a single factor — the addictive nature of greed.”
Phil Rochstroh wrote this in his piece at Oped News
https://www.opednews.com/articles/When-The-Unthinkable-Becom-by-Phil-Rockstroh-Chaos_Complicity_Corporate_Disgrace-171223-721.html
My comment added was:
That is the crux of what is afoot on the stage of human society in the 21st century,
” EVERYTHING FOR THEM AND NOTHING FOR EVERYONE ELSE”… was Adam Smith’s prediction.
From the moment that the hominoid that became us grasped that having the most stuff was a positive step to survival in a world where life was nasty,brutish and short greed became an inherited trait.
Looking back on the history of civilization, power at the top, and the enormous wealth of the top dogs, corrupted the society and brought it down.
Today, there are men who have the kind of wealth that once belonged only to nations. To imagine that they will use that wealth to benefit humankind is a fantasy.
LikeLike
Sorry, guys! I am NOT relaxing. Well, now and thenI will in order to recharge, refresh, and refortify. But to relax in general is a disastrous idea.
The author seems to think that because other people and epochs had it much worse, that we should appreciate the relativity of it all. I don’t disagree with that at all, but the fact the Medicare idd not exist prior to the 1960s is no excuse to relax now, nor does it mean that one generation’s cross to bear is not as bad as the next, save for, perhaps, atrocities.
No, I ain’t gonna relax by any means, but I will step back and take a break from time to time to get right back into the ring.
So too should all of you . . .
LikeLike
Yes. Exactly, Diane.
LikeLike
I Austin, Xmas music is playing as my son and family bake and decorate hundreds of cookies…and then there is this
https://www.opednews.com/articles/Intel-Vets-Tell-Trump-Iran-by-Ray-McGovern-IRAN-NO-NUKES_Intelligence_Iran_Terrorism-Definition-171222-599.html
and this nails who we have running the show:
https://www.opednews.com/articles/The-ABCs-of-Trump-s-Politi-by-Alon-Ben-Meir-Bigotry_Fraud_Political-In
LikeLike
My favorite American city.
LikeLike
With all due respect, the advice to “relax” could only come from a pretty privileged perspective. I doubt that the children and young persons affected by DACA feel very relaxed nowadays, with the threat of being sent back to dangerous conditions a daily thing…or Muslim-Americans, or LGBT folks, or African-Americans…and while it’s true that women can vote now, the “me too” movement has exposed rampant sexual assault and harassment in every sector of our society–so I’m not sure that being told to “relax” is very good advice.
Better perhaps to take a measured view of the progress we’ve made–which is significant in many arenas–as well as the backsliding that’s happened so quickly over the past 12 months–the environment, income inequality, tax plan, health care, racism, sexism, xenophobia, white supremacy, neo-nazis, anti-semitism–and the encourage one another to be and remain “vigilant.”
When I coached high school basketball, we never called a timeout to tell the players to “relax.” Being “relaxed” on the court is likely to cost you an easy lay-up, a missed pass, or a silly turnover. We did tell our players, however, to be “alert,” to “listen to each other,” and to “help your teammates.” All of which would be pretty good advice today.
LikeLike
There are many sub-groups in our population that have legitimate concerns under the current administration. Progressives particularly are vexed by the direction of the country, and it is important to resist all the garbage dispensed from Washington. Greene, I think, is trying to urge people not to allow Trump to suck the life out of us and pollute our collective psyche. It is true we have faced down other mad men and despots before. It is important to continue to organize and actively fight back. As far as coping, I find myself hitting the mute bottom more during the news broadcast.
LikeLike
What news broadcasts?
LikeLike
When I was a kid standing on the pitchers mound, in the goal on a penalty kick, at the free throw line, or over a golf ball, I was trying not to relax, but to be “in the zone”. Butterflies and a sleepless night before the game? Absolutely. Trying to keep perspective and remember it’s just a game? Positively. Getting complacent and giving up if the score was getting out of hand? Now, wait just a rootin’ tootin’ minute! It’s easy to loose hope, especially when you’re behind, and even worse if your supposed teammates turn out to be in cahoots with the opposing team’s rich owner. Yes, I am looking at you, Presidents Barack and Bill. I played a lot of sports when I was young, though, and I know that the key to avoiding frustration is not meditation or relaxation, but controlled pugnacity. Tenacity is required. Sacrifice (including living with those menacing butterflies) is required. For those qualities to persist, leadership is required. Thank you, Coach Ravitch.
LikeLike
It is beautiful to realize that now we are just a part of history and that times in the past were worse. Still, why has mankind not progressed further than this? Why do we not care for those who are suffering? Some, like Mother Theresa cared and there are many others who also show daily compassion. Take hospice workers. They are daily working to make the lives of those who are at the end feel better. Those are unspoken heroes in our time. What about those who work at food kitchens or food banks? There are a lot of good things that go totally unnoticed. That doesn’t negate the horrors that are being perpetrated in the name of “freedom of will”. It also doesn’t negate the trials that politicians who have been bought off put on the middle class and the poor. Would that these people cared as much for those who need help as they care for enriching the wallets of those who need nothing more. How sad that greed in humanity never seems to end.
We must, at least part of the time, look at the achievements of those who are doing work to enrich our lives. They are there but too often, they are hidden. The media rarely shows these people at work. So, time to relax and know that things will get better, if we work at it.
LikeLike
Teaching social studies and English to middle schoolers in America today, hiding from edupreneurs, is not nearly as stressful as teaching algebra and Latin to Margot and Anne Frank in an Amsterdam attic above a factory, hiding from the Gestapo in 1944. Still, it’s not a very relaxing profession, teaching. It is tremendously rewarding, and yet deeply troubling. Ignorance would be bliss, but too late for that. Worries about the future are, in my case, inevitable. It would be pleasant to ignore the fact that powerful forces are aligned to, with online curricula, charter chains, and standardized tests, end public education and, for that matter, the New Deal, and much of the Bill of Rights along with it. To stop caring if they prevail, it would be pleasant.
I will take your advice, and try to relax. Let go. Deep breaths. Picture Charles Koch in his underwear. …Ew, scratch that. Picture David Koch in his underwear. …That’s better. Deep breaths. Picture Betsy DeVos being chased in circles by a sleuth of mama grizzlies. Nice and relaxed. “Bill Gates doesn’t want my data. Bill Gates doesn’t want my data. Bill Gates doesn’t want my data.” Calm and chillaxed…. Okay that’s the end of my meditations. Actually, there is one thing that always relaxes me. I watch it whenever I wake up at 2 AM with nightmares of Common Core. It’s a post of a video that appeared on this blog at this time of year a while back. It has the same message as this post, actually. https://dianeravitch.net/2015/12/24/true-facts-about-the-dung-beetle/
LikeLike
Inservice, thank you for reminding of that wonderful video about the life of the dung beetle.
LikeLike
Love it!
LikeLike
Especially Santa Baby.
LikeLike
RESIST! Speak OUT. And we need to vote not only at the polls, but also every day with our precious time and what little money we have.
LikeLike
Well, I did smile/relax as I slipped a Season’s Greetings card addressed to DJT at The White House in the mail slot.
But I’m reflecting on supermarkets asking customers to donate $1 to Community Food Bank at checkout. People who are food insecure shouldn’t have to rely on such a random approach. It’s hard to relax when we could be doing much better for our citizens.
LikeLike
Many years ago, I did my student teaching with a lady whose father had been on the advance guard that had liberated one of the death camps of the Nazis. When I got to that part of the history class she asked me if she could pass around pictures of the camp, and I agreed. The pictures were absolutely breathtaking in their horror. Piles of burned corpses, living conditions that were sickening, and hollow faces of a few survivors greeted these high school students in an abstraction few understood. I recall the horrified look on one girl’s face while her classmates chattered on like so many squirrels about which of the bodies might have been alive. I was helpless to make the experience something they really learned from.
This illustrates my greatest fear of our time. While David Greene has a point, there are attitudes afoot that threaten so much of the progress we have made. When I was a boy, I went to school with kids who lived in people’s chicken houses. They had no running water and were cold in the winter. These places no longer exist, but those who,are homeless today are hidden behind social barriers that make them invisible to most people. The students who saw those pictures saw them in abstract. Today we seem to see more things in abstract. This threatens the empathetic consensus that produced the politics of the “greatest generation.” It was that generation, or perhaps those who were the older members of that group, that organized a society that began to strip away the racism and hostility of our society. The rises in wages, the enactment of civil rights protections, the improvenets on environmental practices, all could revert back to a previous age when we did not care so much if we are not vigilant.
Relax? Maybe. I prefer the approach of Candide. Let us cultivate our gardens.
LikeLike
Roy,
I endorse yout view. It is so easy to turn people and horrors into abstractions. When 1,000 (or six million) die a horrible death, it is an abstraction. When one person with a name and a face suffers unjustly (Anne Frank?), we respond as a fellow human.
However, I question the reference to Candido as an example of resistance and activism. That is one of my favorite shows, and I have always understood the message to be that we should ignore the turmoil of the world and turn inward (cultivate our own garden). Yes? No?
LikeLike
Roy Turrentine: “When I was a boy, I went to school with kids who lived in people’s chicken houses. They had no running water and were cold in the winter. ”
……………..
I grew up on my grandfather’s 40 acre farm outside of Meridian,Idaho. The place my mother, father and I lived in had been a chicken coup with tar paper on the outside. We had a coal burning furnace. There was no running water and we had an outhouse. There was water in the well house that could be carried to the house. I often bathed in a small zinc tub inside the well house.
I belive that, and the fact that my folks were never rich but did move to Boise in a house that my father largely built, is why I am so angry at people who despise the poor. Nobody needs to be treated with the disrespect that Congress and Trump show to those who are exactly the same but lack money. My folks worked hard and barely survived. My mother longed to have one decent dress. Sometimes we’d go to town and my mother would buy a candy bar and say to hide the wrapper. That was an expense we couldn’t afford.
LikeLike
Powerful story, Carol.
LikeLike
Powerful writing, roy. I, too, cannot relax as I listen to the cold, callous conversations among our people and hear that monster who passes as a leader.
you go††a see these sycophants applauding the cruel tax bill. “There was a festival of flattery on the White House lawn today to celebrate the passage of the Republican tax cut bill,” Lemon said. After playing a clip, he couldn’t hold back the chuckles any longer. “Oh my god, is that SNL?” Lemon …
https://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/don-lemon-cracks-air-watching-republicans-lavish-trump-praise
But it wasn’t fantasy. This man leads, even as the television puts forth a torrent of violent images and aggression, and video games offer kids target practice.
Selling callous, cruelty is the business model. Even the commercials are nasty.
What a surprise that crime is up and so is drug addiction. Coping with life in America, today, makes relaxing hard to do, especially when one ha to chose between putting food on the table, and paying the rent, let alone buy-in medical care, or education for a kid.
LikeLike
Susan: What a bunch of disgusting sycophants! Trump did NOTHING to pass this horrible bill except to tell us what a ‘wonderful Christmas present’ we’d all be getting. I LOVE the fact that my Medicare will be cut. Why not praise this Orange IDIOT for having the insight to want a bill that makes him richer? Are all of these Congress people really that afraid of the endless bluster of an ignorant bully?
LikeLike
The Congressional Republican leaders have learned to keep Trump far away from the legislation and leave them to do the dirty work while he boasts about how it is the best ever. He is the salesman who has nothing to do with making the sausage.
LikeLike
Fifty Shades of Orange – The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/22/opinion/fifty-shades-trump-republicans.html?rref=collection%2Fsectioncollection%2Fopinion-columnists
“It was a neat summation of where the Republican Party is at the end of the first year of Trump. There’s been a synthesis, in which Trump and establishment Republicans adopt one another’s worst qualities. Trump, who campaigned as a putative economic populist — even calling for higher taxes on the rich — will soon sign into law the tax plan of the House speaker Paul Ryan’s Ayn Randian dreams. The majority of elected Republicans, in turn, are assuming a posture of slavish submission to Trump, worshiping their dear leader and collaborating in the maintenance of his alternative reality.”
LikeLike
Susan, how about this that just appeared in WaPo. (I can’t pull up the whole article.) This is truly frightening.
……..
How criticism of the Mueller probe has grown from a whisper to a clamor
The allegation that FBI and Justice Department officials are part of a broad conspiracy against President Trump is suddenly center stage, amplified by conservative activists, GOP lawmakers, right-leaning media and Trump himself. The partisan atmosphere is a sharp departure from the near-universal support that greeted Robert Mueller III’s selection as special counsel in May.
By Michael Kranish, Devlin Barrett and Karoun Demirjian
LikeLike
a must read https://www.opednews.com/articles/Democrats-Need-to-Make-Cle-by-John-Nichols-Accountability_Democrats_Impeachment_Injustice-171224-220.html
Democrats Need to Make Clear that Firing Mueller Triggers Impeachment
“When a president creates a constitutional crisis, there is only one remedy.
….and why is this not happening as this dictator rips up the Constitution”
Virginia Senator Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, delivered a powerful warning to the Trump administration and its Republican allies this week, when he declared on the Senate floor that a move by the president to fire special counsel Robert Mueller or to undermine Mueller’s inquiry would cross one of the “red lines” that Congress must maintain.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/12/20/politics/mark-warner-mueller-warning/index.html
“Any attempt by this President to remove special counsel Mueller from his position or to pardon key witnesses in any effort to shield them from accountability or shut down the investigation would be a gross abuse of power and a flagrant violation of executive branch responsibilities and authorities. These truly are red lines and [Congress] simply cannot allow them to be crossed,” explained Warner. “Congress must make clear to the President that firing the special counsel or interfering with his investigation by issuing pardons of essential witnesses is unacceptable and would have immediate and significant consequences.”
Warner’s right. Though Trump aides deny that the president is angling to shut down Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling with the 2016 presidential election–and a host of other issues that cut close to the president and his inner circle–there can be no question that the Trump team and its media allies have launched a campaign to discredit the special counsel. This has stirred speculation on Capitol Hill that Mueller and his investigation are being attacked in order to clear the way for a firing. So high marks to Warner, and to others who have raised concerns. It is vital to get ahead of these threats.
LikeLike
Ray Bradbury, not Asimov, wrote Fahrenheit 451. And people in the Stone Age had it worse. Everything is relative, right?
LikeLike
No, that is not applicable. You cannot compare apples nd orange and say, hey they are both fruit.
In the modern age, what is ongoing today, this grand theft and the many indications that we r moving to a fascist state cannot be ignored. Look at all the modern nations nd you will see that they give their people time off when they have babies, they offer vacations, not to mention health care and Educations
You want relive? Look at Canada nt Neolithic culture…tht is if you wan tot debate with folks like me, who know a thing or two about history, and what happened to all cultures when the greedy took over EVERYTHING.
LikeLike
It should read. ‘you want ‘relative”?
there is no comparison to this;
Week 36: Experts in authoritarianism advise to keep a list of things subtly changing around you, so…
View at Medium.com
http://billmoyers.com/story/american-inequality-threatens-republic/
http://billmoyers.com/story/consequences-fail-climate-crisis/
LikeLike
Here are some statistics from Mother Jones. It tells just how horrible this bill is for everyone who isn’t wealthy. This is a gargantuan monstrosity. Will the effects of it ever be rectified?
…………
These 6 Jaw-Dropping Charts Show Just How Much Rich People Will Gain From the GOP Tax Bill…Mother Jones
Dec 22 (1 day ago)
On Wednesday, House Republicans approved a sweeping $1.5 trillion tax bill that’s deeply unpopular among Americans. The bill now just needs President Donald Trump’s signature to become a law. Recent analyses by the Tax Policy Center and Joint Committee on Taxation agree: The Republican tax plan will undoubtedly fill the coffers of America’s wealthiest…
In 2027, the top 1 percent would receive 83 percent of total benefits, while 53 percent of taxpayers will see a tax hike. That year, people making less than $75,000 in income would see tax hikes, including a 26 percent tax average increase for those who make between $20,000 and $30,000.
[…]http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/12/these-6-jaw-dropping-charts-show-just-how-much-rich-people-will-get-richer-from-the-gop-tax-bill/
LikeLike
Opps. Mother Jones says this site isn’t working. Sorry about that.
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/12/these-6-jaw-dropping-charts-show-just-how-much-rich-people-will-get-richer-from-the-gop-tax-bill/
LikeLike
NOW IT WORKS!!! Ahhhhh!
LikeLike
A Tale of Two or More Times!
David Green stated, “Yes, we face economic inequality and loss of jobs, but the unemployment rate is under 5%, not hovering at 25% as it did in the GREAT Depression. Yes, we face racial issues and de facto segregation, but de jure segregation is pretty much gone. Black Lives Matters would have had a far more difficult task then, when lynching was rampant and whole neighborhoods in cities like Tulsa Oklahoma were burned down by whites. Watch the new movie, “Mudbound” as a reminder of Black Lives in the south in the 1940s.”
The official unemployment is about 4.7% yes, but this calculated by taking the unemployed that are receiving checks (about 12.5 million) from Uncle Sam and dividing it by the size of the labor force (264 million adults 18-64 years old). This 12.5 million is the same number of unemployed as during the height of the Great Depression 1931-32.
If we factor in long-term unemployed we add another 88 million unemployed and a total of about 100 million unemployed. This is 100 million is about total US population of the 1930s. 33% of the unemployed are not even counted as such and thus paints a rosier picture of unreality. So, we have about a true unemployment rate of 37% which is worse than the Great Depression. Some of these people may not want jobs but to totally dismiss them is unconscionable.
We have a total of only about 151 million jobs about 145 million filled and only about 6 million open. Even using the official number of unemployed of about 12.5 million is used there are only 6 million open jobs or a 2:1 ratio of people to jobs or about ½ of the jobs needed. This is not good.
In order to achieve full employment we’d need about 94 million more open jobs than we currently have and this is impossible.
So, the true unemployment rate is much worse than at the height of the Depression.
During the recession it was 9-10% unemployment officially but that is of over 300 million population but in the 1930s it was 25% of 100 million which is less than 9-10% of 300 million (27-30% of 100 million—I am saying worst case scenario here as not everyone was in the workforce back then or now). Actually they both were 12.5 million people unemployed.
In his recent book The Vanishing Middle Class: Prejudice And Power In A Dual Economy, by Dr. Peter Temin of MIT, published in 2017, writes, ”The participation rate that measures how many of the available population is at work gives a better picture (than the unemployment rate). This rate has been declining since 2008.” [p.141]
So he is saying that the unemployment rate is not a good measure of the economy, which is what I said above. How many out of the 264 million are actually employed is the better question. Again, we have almost 1 million legal immigrants coming here each year many of which will need jobs and we do not have enough for our own citizens. Why do you want more?
Actually candidate Trump had it right when he said that the unemployment numbers are bogus.
We’ve got lead in some of our schools and water supplies, not just Flint Michigan. We may have it in the Greatest Generation’s time but now we know about it and it still happens.
Women have had the vote for about 100 year now. Most do not know it was like back before they had the vote. But we have dead people voting and non-US citizens voting.
Part of the Cuyahoga River caught on fire in 1969 and Three Mile Island nuclear disaster happened in 1979. Also, the nuclear power problems in Japan and Chernobyl. There is no such thing as safe nuclear power! I and Germany figure three strikes and your out. Germany is either shutting down its nuclear plants or not building any new ones or both. So, should we.
David Green wrote, “Of course, today’s new stories and cable shouting matches called newscasts scare the living shit out of many of us. We are still stuck in the longest war in our history, and face terrorist threats daily, these are nowhere as horrific as the death and destruction of World War 1 (when poison gas bombing was used as a weapon de jure), the Armenian Genocide (before Syria even existed as a country), World War 2, the Holocaust, the Korean “conflict” and the Vietnam War. North Korea is not exactly the same nuclear threat the Russians were, especially during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. We sat at the edge of our chairs watching Kennedy square off with Khrushchev.
Refugees refused? Border walls? How about turning away victims of the Holocaust? Poison gas in Syria? NO comparison to the Nazi poison gas chambers relatives of American families died in.”
It is just more subtle now compared to then. No war since WWII has been legal, Constitutional. North Korea is not the same nuclear threat as the USSR but it may just be more likely to launch what it has.
How about Pol Pot in Cambodia that killed 1-3 million (out of a population of over 8 million) or about 25%, of his own people, in 1975-1979?
David Green queried, “The Red Scare? McCarthyism? The Civil Rights struggles? Selma? Birmingham? Mississippi murders? Kent and Jackson State? The assassinations of MLK and RFK? Battles in the streets of NYC betwen hardhats and hippies? The whole world WAS watching. The Pentagon Papers? NIXON?”
The Red Scare has just been replaced by nearly a worldwide Jihad .You forgot the big one of the assassination of JFK and the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan.
The cover up not withstanding Nixon did get us out of Vietnam and end the draft and other positive things.
We are witnessing riots in some of our streets today as we did back in the 1960s. From the 1960s and today we have University of Texas shooting and mass shootings and using trucks to kill people, etc.
Insofar as the environment goes, we got a massive deposit of plastic refuse in the Pacific Ocean and a Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico from the mouth of the Mississippi River westward thinning out at around Galveston.
David Green declared, “Relax. This is not to disparage those in duress today. God know our world faces too many serious man-made problems. We have Trump and his reality-TV version of the world that is becoming all too scarily real. Environmentally, like the Wicked Witch of the West, the world is mellllllting. The immediacy and verbal violence in social media’s, divisiveness and fear mongering stresses us to no end.”
Fear mongering is what Global Warming is all about. Al Gore got it wrong. Yes there may appear to be some correlation between CO2 and temperature but he got it precisely backwards. The increase in temperature has led (if there is a direct cause at all) the increase in CO2 not the other way around. The oceans put more CO2 than man does and so do volcanoes. Even his own graph shows CO2 levels going through the roof but temperatures remaining constant in the not too distant future.
The world is not melting. Global Warming now when in the 1970s it was the next ice age we needed to worry about. There are not enough weather stations around the world to come up an accurate average global temperature. Using what we have indicates that the average temperature increase has been 0.8 degrees Celsius over the last 150 years and no increase over the last 15 years or so.
Even with a chunk of ice breaking off of the Larsen C Ice Shelf of Antarctica the size of Delaware is a miniscule amount compared to the continent. Delaware is 2024 square miles and Antarctica is 5.045 million square miles for a 0.04% chunk. Maybe the ice just gave way under its own weight and had nothing to with air temperature at the South Pole. Anyway because that ice shelf is floating even if it melts it will not raise sea water levels at all.
David Green posited, “Are we as bad as Orwell’s1984 or Asimov’s Fahrenheit 451 predicted? No. We aren’t even as bad off as what was “predicted” in “The Man In The High Castle”, Philip K. Dick’s alternative history novel and the TV series based on it…All we have is “alternative facts”.”
No, we are worse off than 1984 as government’s snooping around the world including us is more hidden than 1984 but in many ways even more extensive. Big Brother is truly watching. We are the most surveilled generation ever and throw in face recognition software and Echelon, it is worse than 1984. There are cameras almost everywhere. We have words that we cannot say, such as Islamic terrorists. This smacks of Newspeak and thought control. Political Correctness was not around in the 1930s-40s.
So, do not tell me that 1984 is irrelevant. Again the control is more subtle than in that book but it is there and more so.
David Green stated, “But if we take the long historical view of human endeavors, how special is our time? Even the “Jetsons” predicted we would be farther along technologically than we actually are. Where are our flying cars and personal robots? Alexa doesn’t compare to Rosie.”
I agree that an early 1960s cartoon got it wrong. But driverless cars are just a few years away (I hope a large number of years away) and robots (automation) are taking over some jobs even now, unfortunately. They may have come close just the wrong forms. Yesterday’s science fiction is tomorrow’s science fact. But I am not sure of when the Jetsons actually is supposed to have lived, maybe in the distant future and not now, so they may still be proven to be right. Or they could have been in the 1960s so it was not prognostication at all. Automation has cost us more jobs than it creates.
We have been to the Moon and landed a robot of sorts on Mars. We have sent a probe out of the solar system.
David Green concluded, “Relax. There is a monologue in Steven Levenson’s play, “If I Forget”, spoken by the patriarch of the family, Lou Fischer, who in the year 2000, is a 75-year-old World War 2 Veteran. In it he describes the horrors of being one of the American soldiers who liberated Dachau. After a long sigh, he says as I believe many of his generation would have said, “For you, history is an abstraction, but for us, the ones who survived this century, this long, long, century, there are no abstractions anymore.””
Yes War is Hell. Back then we knew who our enemies were but now they are abstractions. They are not necessarily countries but some people in some countries.
LikeLike
I can understand why Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates need tax breaks. Thank you Republicans for making this possible.
……………………….
The world’s 500 wealthiest people got $1 trillion richer in 2017 | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The world’s richest people got a whopping $1 trillion richer, according to a new report from Bloomberg News. That’s about four times the gains they made last year.
That data comes courtesy of the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, which tracks and ranks the world’s 500 richest people. It attributes much of the economic growth to the stock market’s record-high year. (The MSCI World and Standard & Poor’s 500 indexes grew about 20 percent this year.)
Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, clocked in as the world’s richest person, gaining $34.2 billion in wealth. (Mr. Bezos owns The Washington Post.) Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates came in at No. 2. Mr. Bezos is worth about $99.6 billion, according to Bloomberg. Mr. Gates is valued at $91.3 billion…
http://www.post-gazette.com/business/tech-news/2017/12/27/The-world-s-500-wealthiest-people-got-1-trillion-richer-in-2017-Jeff-Bezos-Bill-Gates/stories/201712270146
LikeLike