Nine Peace Laureates Continue Advocating Peace

A very sad world we live in when it takes a minority of living Nobel Peace Laureates to point out that:

WAR ISN’T ENTERTAINMENT–
AND SHOULDN’T BE TREATED LIKE IT IS

How could tens of millions of Americans have sat through all the adverts during the Olympics for NBC’s new “reality” show “Stars Earn Stripes” and not been repulsed?  The concept alone without video imagery was repulsive.
The letter from these nine extraordinary people brought tears to my eyes and abstracting from it risks lessening the felt experience of reading it in full.  However, this point cannot be made often enough:

Trying to somehow sanitize war by likening it to an athletic competition further calls into question the morality and ethics of linking the military anywhere with the entertainment industry in barely veiled efforts to make war and its multitudinous costs more palatable to the public.

Those worthy of being Peace Prize Laureates:

Jody Williams, Nobel Peace Prize, 1997
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Nobel Peace Prize, 1984
Mairead Maguire, Nobel Peace Prize, 1977
Dr. Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Peace Prize, 2003
President José Ramos-Horta, Nobel Peace Prize, 1996
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize, 1980
President Oscar Arias Sanchez, Nobel Peace Prize, 1987
Rigoberta Menchú Tum, 1992
Betty Williams, Nobel Peace Prize, 1977

Notice all the living Peace Laureates missing?  Not that a few haven’t been more about war than peace.

The Importance of Tamale Ladies

I don’t know Juana Reyes, a woman that has been making and selling tamales in Sacramento and is now facing deportation.  What I do know is that there aren’t enough “tamale ladies.”  

Sundays and Tamales:

The best Sundays were always those when Carmen wasn’t inside the church praying but standing before the front doors with her big tamale pot. This was back when fasting overnight was part of the communion ritual; so, hunger was always present at church. But on the best Sundays, the tummies began to growl as soon as we saw Carmen and her pot. Our tongues were salivating by the time mass was over and we were standing in front of Carmen and her steamy pot of deliciousness. The five-minute drive home before we could inhale those tamales were always the longest minutes except for those that came with earthquakes and the aftershocks.

After The Olympics, It’s Todd’s "Star"-Turn

Somehow missed the latest Wesley Clark effort to cash in on his shiny four stars.  Stars Earn Stripes to debut at the closing of the Olympics and with that major star Todd Palin competing at a  faux, excuse me –  “reality show,” boot camp.
Should be exciting fare for the other Palin family star Bristol’s fans.  And all the warmongering couch potatoes.  It will be like Private Benjamin, Stripes, and An Officer and A Gentleman without stories, laughs, drugs, sex, romance and stars.  

Worthy of P. T. Barnum. Better to let H. L. Mencken sum it up:

“No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.”

Built All On One’s Own?

Hah! A True Story

The decade from 1985 to 1994 was difficult for California public works construction contractors.  Most of the large and mid-sized contractors survived that period of Republican domination of state and federal government, but even among those that did many were financially stressed or on the brink of bankruptcy.  One in the latter category was a company that I’ll call J. Doe Constructors.  It was a family operation started decades earlier by J. D. Doe.  In the late 1980s, he passed the business down to his sons, Will and Tim, both of whom had been active in the company for over twenty years.  As soon as the transfer was complete, public works almost totally dried up.  With their solid reputation and skilled workers, they chased and secured private contracts.  Not enough to generate the revenue volume they were capable of  handling; so, they were forced to downsize.  A couple jobs were a bit outside their normal operating territory which put them at a further disadvantage.  Then they began to experience the “joys” of working for private owners.
By 1995, J. Doe Constructors had numerous suits against owners that hadn’t paid.  Those uncollected receipts constituted all of Doe’s working capital and equity.  There was no market for the real estate they’d purchased when times were good and had planned to develop.  Shortly before increased public works project began to appear, their surety bonding company canceled their account.  Severing a four decades long relationship.  After being declined by several other sureties, their broker managed to get Doe placed with a substandard surety, a facility that limited the size and volume of public works that Doe bid on. Enough work for them to post a smaller loss than they had the year before.  Without a prompt and positive resolution of one or more of their claims/lawsuits, another loss year would lead the bank to reduce their line of credit and that in turn would lead the surety to reduce its support.  A grim downward spiral profile.

Had Will and Tim made mistakes?  Maybe not.  There’s only so much belt-tightening that a construction contractor can do in the absence of new work and remain viable.  The drought of new public works projects had been unusually severe and prolonged in their territory, and there were slim pickings in the private commercial market.  As a nation, we’ve learned little to nothing from the WPA demonstration project.  And the lesson was freaking simple – ramp up public works projects when the private sector busts and vice-versa.  

Had Will and Tim experienced more than a fair share of bad breaks?  Possibly.  A poorer organized and capitalized contractor, which describes a majority of contractors and small businesses in general, wouldn’t have survived J. Doe’s string of bad breaks.

Did Will and Tim work really hard?  You betcha.  As did all those that had worked for them for many years.  Several of whom had stayed out of loyalty when other and higher-paid offers came their way.  

However, what should never be overlooked is that Will and Tim didn’t build the business but inherited it.  That’s a bigger break than most people ever get.

Today J Doe Constructors is a financially strong and healthy family operated company with a thirty million dollar backlog.  Has been since 2000.  How?  One person facilitated their ability to get 25% more work than they were financially qualified for.  Endorsed the payment of small bonuses to loyal employees before it was financially prudent to do so.  Advised accepting a claim settlement offer and taking a loss on it rather than holding out and hoping for a better outcome.  That person also disappointed Will and Tim a couple of times – the job’s too large for right now.  

Will and Tim have the hearts and minds of social democrats.  Unfortunately, the construction contractor  culture is one that supports all but the most loathsome Republicans over the best Democrats.  They are among the donors to the AGC-PAC that distributes those over 80% of those funds to Republicans.  While Democrats have historically been better at funding the public works projects that produce the bread and butter revenues for so many contractors they don’t like that those revenues come attached to regulations regarding workplace safety and prevailing wages, to support for union works, and the imposition of business and personal income taxes.  They are like the Log Cabin Republicans – dependent on traditional Democratic policies and values – yet convinced that they made it all on there own and therefore, shouldn’t have to pay for the privileges they’ve enjoyed.

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A note on Ms. Rebecca Smith, President and Founder of  A. D. Morgan Companyand supporter of Mitt Romney who claims to have “built it all on her own,” I can state categorically that her claim is false.  She was educated at the PUBLIC University of Florida and couldn’t possibly have been competitive five years later with highly experienced and well capitalized contractors unless she received substantial help in various forms from many others.  WBE (woman owned business enterprise) set-asides and SBA loans and guarantees would be the most likely.  As the Tampa Bay Times blog points out, her business is currently dependent on public works contracts and she may still enjoy a WBE advantage to secure them.  Finally, Ms. Smith isn’t out there pounding nails, pouring concrete, etc.  She’s dependent on her employees and subcontractors to actually build anything      

The Romneys Going For Gold!

With all eyes on London 2012, Mitt Romney has had visions of lots of gold.  As Bob Holher reported in the Boston Globe in 2007, he isn’t shy about his efforts to

Having been defeated in his Senate race against Senator Edward M. Kennedy in 1994, Romney knew his political future hung on the fate of the Games.
”If this doesn’t work, I can come back to private life, but I won’t be anything anymore in public life,” he confided, according to D’Alessandro.

Nothing like another Olympics for Mitt to insert himself into during the beginning of the stretch to his POTUS race.  To assert once again on camera that he’s the guy that saved the SLC Winter Olympics.  Not to waste a trip to London for what may be no more than a five minute photo-op, he’ll hang (NYTimes link) (no cameras please) with some one-percenters and wanna-be one-percenters.

They were envisioned as low-key, across-the-pond fund-raisers that would allow Mitt Romney to extract campaign cash from expatriates in London by night as he played statesman by day.

Just a few of his “friends” stuffing wads of cash into his campaign coffers.

…The former chief executive, Robert E. Diamond Jr., has since withdrawn his name as the event’s co-host. The bank’s lobbyist, Patrick J. Durkin, remains a co-chairman: he has bundled $1.1 million for Mr. Romney from friends and business associates, more than any other lobbyist, according to federal records.

Besides Barclays, executives at several banks under investigation, including HSBC, Deutsche Bank and Credit Suisse, are co-chairmen for the Romney fund-raisers in London.

Apparently there’s lots of excitement for Romney among the bankster ex-pat communities.  Israel is another planned fundraising pit-stop.  Can Dubai, Macao, Hong Kong, Tokyo be far behind?  Easier assignments and better press than showing up at teabagger rallies.  Particularly since all the LIBOR banksters are garnering so little public attention in the US.  Unlike the UK press that is all over the LIBOR scandal.  There are also a few members of the British public that don’t take kindly to Romney’s UK exploits.  And those few happen to be members of Parliament.

There was British Members Of Parliament Call For Closure Of Romney’s Cayman Islands Tax Haven as Travis Waldron at Alternet reported.  Now we have Parliamentary motion calls on Barclays’s senior staff to stop fundraising for Romney.  Am guessing a “Parliamentary Motion” such as this one in the UK is similar to the “sternly worded letters” Congressional Democrats issue when they get upset.  Still, there’s a chance that the UK press will run with it as part of the continuing LIBOR, banking, and elite corruption scandals.  

The third piece of the Romneys’ gold treasure hunt is an actual Olympic event.  One of the elite events.  Not elite as in the ranking of phenomenal athletes, but elite in that it’s really expensive to acquire/ride an elite horse.  It’s a sport for  royals (those with bloody ancestors that stole untold wealth)  such as Princess Anne, serious newish money such as that of Athina Onassis, and then there’s Ann Romney’s hobby horse, Rafalca.  (Sorry, Mrs. Romney, claiming an income tax deduction for a horse (that you don’t train or ride) that you enter in dressage competitions isn’t therapeutic for MS or anything.  It’s an exhibition of wealth as arrogant as saying “We’ve given all [that] you people need to know and understand about our financial situation and about how we live our life, …”  

So, this is totally fair game and I only hope that the Olympics highlight for average Americans that part of  “our financial situation and about how we live our life, …” that you’re so fond of:

Mitt Dancing Around The Issues”