Monday, April 8, 2013

The problem with LAW




The law is just a thin floor covering the cesspool ...
The problem with law goes beyond content to its only purpose which is to place a limit on behavior.

The law is just a thin floor covering a cesspool of human wrong.

Down at the bottom is all the selfishness and anger of mankind.  The law is just a hair's breadth above the waste and filth.  A misstep and you're in the goo.

Obeying the law is perhaps a good beginning place, but it's just the first tiny step, and only a short distance away from being disgusting.
The law won't make us great or noble or even nice; it's just to keep us from doing harm.  


Far away, at the other end of the spectrum are those wonderful heights of courage and nobility that we imagine for ourselves; all are wildly far above the law, and nothing connects them to the pit and the slime. Greatness of character and purpose, generosity and compassion, all are so far above the law that to live in one world is to be completely separated from the other.  We hope for the best in ourselves and others, don't we.  Indeed we do.

So, of what use is the law to someone who hopes to be truly, magnificently good?  Rules can perhaps serve as a reminder of the simplest things, like:

'Share, be nice, don't hurt anybody.'  Good stuff we learned at home and maybe in kindergarten.

'Play fair, don't cheat, be a good loser or a gracious winner.'  Elementary school level, but great nonetheless.

Farther up and further in?  Where might that lead?
'Be generous to others, have good manners, be polite and scrupulously honest.'  Absolutely essential pieces.

So then, in our business and life affairs, such foundation principles are visible, ... or not.
And our chance at true greatness follows, farther up and further in,  ... or not.
For those of us who live by 'the rule of law', remember that law is just one microstep above the fecal matter. 
Imagine where that that puts the Wall Street mentality?  How about the political party process?  Or the lobbyists?  Or the pursuit of wealth ...  Time to unlearn some things?  Where is your life invested, by the way?  Great joy is only found on the good road.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Learn Unlearn Relearn


Racial bias.
Gender bias.
Political bias.
Religious bias.
Philosophical bias.
The uninformed arrogance of wealth and position.
The justifications of greed and selfishness, of avarice, of hubris.

Objectivity is often encumbered by day-to-day experience, by business or media pressures,  and much of it is just dung.  Often, it seems that every bad way to reach a conclusion has contributed to modern thinking, and we're challenged to make our way through it with integrity and a good conscience.

Did you know that Mexicans are poor because they're lazy?  They're not.
Did you know that the poor in America are unmotivated?  Not true.
Did you know that girls are poor decision makers?  Nonsense.
Did you know that Texans are tougher than most folks?  OK, that's maybe true, but way too much of our understanding is incomplete or perhaps even just wrong.

We've acquired thinking from our traditions, from the thoughts and behavior of others, and so much of it good.  It has been passed down from parent to child, from community to schools, from churches to adherents. most with thoughtful and gracious origins.  Some however, particularly from popular media, is just the inadvertent stains of life without any virtue or value.  Just dirt you picked up along the way that you need to brush off and leave behind.

Much has changed.
 Is this still democracy?
  Is that justice?
   Are those honest businesses?
    Am I represented?  Are they?
      Is that fair?
Can we think with clarity enough to dump the trash?


If you're out of ideas, go where the world is different than yours.  A different viewpoint can help you change.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Banks; bigger than countries.

Click on the chart to see countries and banks (in yellow), in order of financial size.
If banks were countries ...

Among the world's largest, based on GDP and revenue, many financial companies are bigger than most of the world's countries. Beginning with the 57th largest country in the world, it's Fannie Mae with revenues greater than the 60 countries at the bottom of the list, combined. Bank of America is next followed by other familiar names.

Too big to fail or jail? Of course they are. They wield more influence than most of the world's governments and they are NOT there to serve any citizenry or national interest. They have no granted constitutional role in the countries where they play. They provide no goods or services.

Their business model is competitive, bottom line driven; take wealth and use it to make more wealth. They are willing to take money from anyone in any country regardless of the damage done. There are no policies of benefiting others. They recognize no higher good or greater purpose than their own financial success. And so far, no one is holding them reasonably accountable for their adverse impact on the world.

Mega-banks provide no significant social benefit; there is no correlation between size and performance. Mega-banks do, however, create significant systemic risk and, being profit driven, exert their influence in favor of increased autonomy and against regulatory oversight that might reign them in. When the inevitable crash came in '07, government had no choice but to bail them out for fear of a complete financial system collapse.

In the larger context of a world economy:

“Globalization is the result of powerful governments, especially that of the United States, pushing trade deals and other accords down the throats of the world’s people to make it easier for corporations and the wealthy to dominate the economies of nations around the world without having obligations to the peoples of those nations.” — Noam Chomsky

"The financial debacle has many causes and implications, but it would be wrong to underestimate systemic corruption."  ~Daniel Kaufmann, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, formerly World Bank director of governance.


Feel free to inquireto have an opinionto fire the bank you've been using and join the credit union, write your congressman, ... and the white house, or join the movement to occupy wall street.   This sort of volatility is a precursor to change; we should consider investing ourselves in the process.  Perhaps we'll be the impetus that provokes change for better.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

This is wrong.

(NC-17 Subject)   .   .   .   .   .   .   .   .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .  .


There are no excuses. There are no adequate circumstances to justify such suffering. There cannot be any 'turning away' from this until such things no longer happen.

Realistically, there are too many occasions of suffering where it didn't have to happen.  There are too many who die because of greed and selfishness.  There is no excusing those at fault.  There cannot be any pretense that they didn't know.

There is no food shortage.  There is plenty for everyone, at least for now.  The rich never go hungry.  They do, however, manipulate the world's marketplaces to serve themselves, and the poor die because of such behavior.  There is no excuse.

Don't turn away.  Do something.  Say something.  Join in, and insist on change now.

There are way too many things that should not be irreverently or callously photographed.  I've posted this picture reverently, and with a broken heart.  This precious mother buries her little baby in the Dadaab refugee area of northern Kenya.  Hundreds of thousands have fled for their lives to such areas, hoping for a chance to just survive, but thousands die. 

Monday, March 25, 2013

"World Population"



We all know that living things need resources in order to survive. We often, however, don't make the connection that the amount of available resources dictates the size of a population – 
that a population will grow when resources are in surplus, decline when resources are scarce, and stabilize when the population is at the maximum level that can be sustained.  It smoothes out generally like the S-curve here (right).


There are a number of complex variables, but the results are understandable.  Continuous growth depends on unlimited resources.  Equilibrium comes with a balance of population and resources.  Overshoot and oscillation  occurs with fluctuating resource events like drought and flood and marketplace upheavals.  Collapse comes when resources are used and not renewed.

Human population is on a steep J-curve rise based on our aggressive exploitation of resources. We're bringing water, food, power, raw materials in at an accelerating pace, and population responds accordingly, particularly urban population.

It's not a smooth path across the globe. Oscillations occur regionally with drought and flood, earthquake and marketplace upheavals, things that interrupt the flow of resources.  The world's rich don't feel the inherent distress others do.  The poor are affected the most.

Do we know what resources will be available to support human population? Do we know which ones are not being replaced at an adequate rate to support our current consumption?  Of course we do.
Change is certain.  

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Billions of babies

In 1810, one billion; in 1930, two billion; in 1960, three billion, in 1980, four billion; in 1990, five billion.
In 1999, just at the end of the millennium, our numbers hit SIX billion. 
(Update) In 2011, we reached SEVEN billion.  Curious what's happening?

For our entire existence, there's been plenty of room and resources.  We were nomads, and there were never more than a few million of us on Earth at any one time.  Until recently, anyway.

Modern humans spread across Africa and began to spill out into the Middle East around 100,000 years ago.  Populations were established in Europe and Asia by 40,000 and 30,000 years ago, respectively.  We reached the southern tip of South America and settled in around 12,000 years ago.

Folks settled down a bit for tending crops and herds.  At the dawn of agriculture, about 10,000 years ago, the world's population was perhaps five million or so.  Numbers increased oh so slowly until just a few years ago.

Today, hundreds of cities and hundreds more of urban areas have more than a million inhabitants each, and populations continue to skyrocket. Take a look at the recent changes and the forecast for 2050.  Things will change, of course.  

The fascinating question is regarding where the limits might be.  Can we produce enough food?  Can we provide education and medical care?  Can we govern justly?  All the high-intensity issues are amplified by the now densely populated world.