Thursday, December 26, 2013

The Pope and The Rhodes Scholar

It shouldn't take a Rhodes Scholar to figure out what Dr. Maddow states in the above graphic.   It's been obvious for the last 30-plus years, and has touched all of us in one form or another in that space of time. 

What's rattling the right-wing even more, however, is the recent economic rhetoric delivered by Pope Francis.   This type of speech should not be surprising, considering that Pope Francis has direct experience from the Friedmanist economic experiments conducted in South America and has seen all of the wreckage those experiments created, human and otherwise.  His recognition and calling out of the fraud that is modern economic thought (as displayed by Friedman and his followers) is welcome to hear, no doubt.    But don't get too excited about the possibility of a sea change at the Vatican when it comes to other issues - women's standing, gay rights, etc.   This is the Catholic Church, after all.   

The Repubs thought that the Teabaggers and America's changing demographics, not to mention the attitude differences those changes bring, were challenges enough.   Now they may be losing the unspoken endorsement of the Catholic Church.    

This is getting good.   Stay tuned.  

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Quibbles and Bits, Reverence for the Reverends edition

More mental morsels for your chewing pleasure...

>>Charlie Hunter and Scott Amendola made their jazzy duopolistic presence felt at Harlow's in Sacramento a couple of evenings ago (www.charliehunter.com, www.scottamendola.com).   I nearly always recommend just about anything Charlie Hunter does, in large part because of his unparalleled ability to play both guitar and bass parts simultaneously on his custom 7-string guitar.  (What’s more, the guitar parts sound like guitar parts, and the bass parts sound like they were played on an upright.)  And while his chops are, as some say, sick, his taste - knowing what to play, when to play it, and how to play it, is what sets him apart from the wannabes.      Scott Amendola’s playing, at first glance, seems almost free-form as he navigates his kit (complete with heart-shaped gong) like one of the deities you see on a East Indian or Tibetan thanka painting.   But he and Charlie have that seemingly extra-sensory perception, and it was on display tonight.    

Check ‘em out.

>> Saw What Would Jesus Buy earlier this evening.   It is the second documentary film about activist/performance artist/hell-raiser Reverend Billy, with this Church of Stop Shopping in tow (www.revbilly.com).      The film succeeds in showing a multidimensional portrait of the man and his cause - demonstrating the excesses and consequences of consumerism.   Besides the often laugh-out-loud humor of his performances and the lyrics he writes (parodying such classic Christmas carols as Deck The Halls and Joy To The World), it shows the seriousness with which he takes his mission.   He is shown walking the walk (getting arrested at Disneyland, getting kicked out of malls and stores, being banned from all Starbucks in California), as well as talking the talk as only he can in the faux-Billy Graham style.   He deals with his troupe’s bus being rammed by an 18-wheeler on an icy road, resulting in 13 hospitalizations.    He is also shown with his wife, expressing a sincere doubt about whether his message will have any effects, or have we as a society been so brainwashed by consumerism that it’s now an irremovable part of our cultural DNA.

One cannot expect movements like this to have results overnight, or even within the historical finger snap of a few years or even a decade.    Changing attitudes like the deep strand of consumerism in our culture takes generations to fully realize.   What Reverend Billy is doing is sowing the seeds of change, seeds that like their literal counterparts, take time to germinate and grow - and that assumes that the soil in which they are planted are fertile.    It may not seem like it now, but with the rise of the Transition movement, the rise of the “sustainability” concept, and the awareness of the limitations of unfettered capitalism articulated by the likes of Senator Bernie Sanders and Thom Hartmann, our soil may be receptive to the concept to a life beyond consumerism.   Perhaps the soil is hardened at the first few inches (our current generation), but if you dig deeper (the future), you’ll run into some receptive soil waiting for Reverend Billy’s ideas to take root.

It may also be possible, that if the predictions made regarding economic collapse come to fruition (see Mike Ruppert's work, and Thom Hartmann's recent book The Crash of 2016), then a life beyond consumerism may be made for us.    

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Better Way than a Third Way...

Check out this post in Salon regarding the recent attempts by the Democrats to cut Elizabeth Warren's bank-regulatin', give-em-hell ideas down to a size small enough to drown in a bathtub.   Don't want to offend those that really own this country (and both political parties) now, do we?  Don't want to see all that effort Billary spent gathering corporate cash into the Dem coffers go away to the Repubs now, right?   Make nice with corporate pigs, or else...

This is why we need more than two parties in the political system, along with instant run off voting.   The powerbrokers at the Democratic party know damned well that they are perceived to be the lesser of the evils right now (considering the kookiness of the Teabaggers), but lesser of evils is still evil to me.   

The PTB have set up a nice, neat dichotomy.    You can vote against the Repub, or against the Dem.   But how do you vote against Goldman Sachs?  Or B of A? 




Tuesday, December 3, 2013

New flavors on the plate...

As you may have noticed, my updating of this humble and not so obedient blog has been sporadic, at best.   Thus, I will be making the following changes:

1.  I'll try for a weekly-minumum update schedule.   One post per week, by Saturday at the latest.   Even if it's one Quibble or Bit;
2.  I'm expanding the purpose of this blog to include cultural and arts commentary, especially music.   I'm finding that I've got quite a bit to say about the sordid state of popular music these days, and have some ideas as to how we can improve what we hear on our perpetually-plugged-in earbuds.  

So - new purposes, new stories, new flavors of Quibbles and Bits.   Stay tuned for a new entry by the end of this week...

Public and Private Yuletide Health

I’ve taken a break from blogging over the last several months, in large part because of a deluge of things that have happened in my life.  ...