Below are 2
articles by Mark Morford, the first is
piece on
reality pure and simple, written with
Morford's delightful wit.
And
the second is a a sad account, a somber
realization
of the America we live in today. Some day
when the Bush
types have made a total mess of our
beloved country,
people may wake up from their apathetic
sleep and get
rid of the warmongers who are destroying
our way of life.
Let us all hope it happens before it is
too late!
The
pictures were gathered from various
webpages
I found on the Internet. Carolyn
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
It
Will All Be Over Soon
BushCo? Kerry? SUV gluttony? Your
last orgasm? All flashes in the
geological pan, baby. Don't
forget
By Mark Morford, SF Gate
Columnist
Friday, October 8, 2004
It's so
easy to get all caught up in the
everyday spit and hiss and noise
and blank presidential smirks.
Isn't it?
It is, after all, incredibly easy
to get stuck in the white-hot
moment, all screaming elections
and bland debates and counterfeit
terrorism fears and ugly obesity
epidemics and Atkins-approved
bubble gum and air/water
pollution like an afterthought,
all commingling with the mad
melodrama of your last bad
haircut and the scratch on your
precious bumper to the point
where we forget the scope of it
all, the scale, the macro and the
micro and the ebb and flow and
the imminent flip of the cosmic
switch.
This is how we are wired. This is
only what we see. The long view
is clearly not our forte, a sense
of the celestial a concept we
just can't quite taste. We
forget, for example, how
relatively quickly regimes rise
and neoconservative empires fall
and populations overturn and how
nearly every single human biped
now alive and walking and
spitting and parallel parking and
consuming Big Macs and not
watching ABC sitcoms on the
planet today will be very much
completely dead within a short
100 years, if not sooner.
Pause here. Think about that. A
hundred years, everyone now
alive, dead. Everyone. You. Me.
Bush. Your kids. All dead.
Guaranteed.
And of course you are not exempt
because if you are old enough to
read this and if you are old
enough to make it through this
paragraph without caring all that
much about the general carefree
lack of major punctuation or a
clear thesis statement, then it
is indeed proof that you are
already well on your way toward
some sort of Regurgitative
Afterlife Leapfrog-arama, some
sort of mystical evolutionary
whoop, if not a ghostly dreamy
moist sepia-toned afterlife
featuring a plethora of nubile
long-eyelashed callipygian
assistants plying your luminous
self with wine and chocolates and
fine artisan cheeses,
forevermore.
But as true as that scenario may
be, on a moment-by-moment basis,
we aren't much aware of what
might be in store. We block, we
dodge, we fill up on grease and
poison and anger, and it all
seems so immediate, so right now,
so present and hateful and
suffocating as if there has never
been anything else but this, but
Bush and Kerry and Saddam and
Ford Expeditions like a national
cancer, bad schools and
staggering third-world poverty
and a Dubya-ravaged planet.
And history merely seems like a
blurry, unrecognizable movie and
the future just a vague
intangible notion, a blip, a
hint, so much so you can only
smell the immediacy in the air
and taste the bitter metallic
tang of it on your tongue and you
want to spit it out and cleanse
your palate on something fruity
and swooning and just a little
bit eternal, which is why we so
desperately turn to religion, and
religion can only mostly shrug
and offer platitudes and guilty
doctrine and blind faith and ask
for money. You know how it is.
Funny, then, that the mystics and
the gurus and the deep thinkers,
they always tell us that true
awareness, true power of self,
comes from living in the now, in
the moment, in the deep Yes of
today, though of course we look
at them and say but wait you
can't possibly mean I must commit
myself with full unwavering
intimate intent to the war and
Donny Rumsfeld's black soulless
eyes and cancerous McNuggets and
hissing policy wonks and Bill
O'Reilly digging himself a karmic
grave with every shouted sneer
and Jessica Simpson's ubiquity
infecting us like an STD, right?
No no no, they reply. No, of
course that's not what we mean.
Then they might roll their eyes
and sigh and order another
pitcher of mojitos.
What they mean, rather, is to
sink so deeply into the hot
moment of now that you can
actually transcend the mad swirl
of heatstroke and hate and bile
and Bush and jackhammers outside
your window, and learn to see
through the raw everyday
smoke-and-mirror shell game of
blissful agony and corrupted
paradise to where you can
actually begin to see the eternal
in it all, lick the
interconnectedness, move like you
know you're really just a
thousand pins dancing on the head
of an angel.
This is the trick, then. To live
so intentionally for the wet
sticky Now that you dissolve the
distinctions and see that it all
flows together and it's all just
two (one? zero?) degrees of
separation between Us and Them,
Fear and Hope, War and Love and
Porn and Religion and Man and
Woman and Self and Divine and
Will and Grace and this too shall
pass and Bush is just a sad bleak
phantasm we have to pass through,
like a sewer pipe, a dark reeking
cloud, a bad fever dream, a nasty
flu you had as a child where you
dreamed your hands were two
balloons.
Live in the moment, pay
attention, participate, delve
into the issues as if your life
depended on it, fight your ass
off for what you believe in and
what you care about and what
matters most. But then again,
avoid toxins, don't get poisoned
by it all. Stay clear, be
spiritually nimble, physically
radiant, transcend at will. This
is the balance. This is the flux.
This is the only way.
Because soon enough, a small hunk
of time will pass and this epoch
will flit away and we'll blink a
number of times and feel a slight
shift and not remember much of it
anyway. Which is why we have the
Internet. And books. And "I
Love the '00s." And faint
wisps of memory, like threads,
like smoke, like vague hints of
something else.
We will very shortly all look
back on this and laugh. And cry.
And point fingers and lay blame
and try to figure out what the
hell went wrong and where we
screwed it all up and what we did
right and where we found our
glimmers of hope and our
delicious hallowed balms of
much-needed temporal salvation.
Do you see? Does it make any
sense at all? Are you paying
sufficient attention? No?
Then come closer to the screen.
No, closer. Even closer, still.
Do you see it now? See how it all
begins to dissolve and soften and
pixilate? To break apart into a
million tiny perfect luminous
dots with nothing but infinite
space between and infinite
potential betwixt? Well, there
you go. There's your current
event. There's your immeasurable
now. Think about it...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Most of us grew up
speaking a language that
encourages us to label, compare,
demand, and pronounce judgments
rather than to be aware of what
we are feeling and needing. I
believe life-alienating
communication is rooted in views
of human nature that have exerted
their influence for several
centuries. These views stress our
inherent evil and deficiency, and
a need for education to control
our inherently undesirable
nature. Such education often
leaves us questioning whether
there is something wrong with
whatever feelings and needs we
may be experiencing. We learn
early to cut ourselves off from
what's going on within ourselves.
Life-alienating communication
both stems from and supports
hierarchical societies, the
functioning of which depends upon
large numbers of docile,
subservient citizens. When we are
in contact with our feelings and
needs, we humans no longer make
good slaves and underlings."
Compassionate
Communication by Marshall
Rosenberg
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Why
Don't Americans Care?
Do you know who Halliburton is? Dick
Cheney? How about Karl Rove? Alas, most
Americans don't
- By Mark
Morford, SF Gate Columnist
Wednesday, October 6, 2004
Let's be honest.
Percentage-wise, few people in America
really give much of a crap about what's
going on in the hallowed halls of
politics and power.

This is
what we in the media and maybe you in the
media-consuming audience tend to forget
far too easily: This country is simply
jam-packed with millions of people who
have no time for, or interest in,
politics, or media, or environmental
policy, or education, or global issues,
or which presidential candidate lied his
ass off about which aspect of his
military career and which Orange Alert is
totally bogus and how many soldiers are
dying for what imbecilic war.
It seems
hard to believe. But the general rule of
thumb is that major cities are slightly
more attuned due to aggressive media
saturation and how issues tend to make
themselves known more urgently, more
immediately, whereas Middle America is a
scattershot conglomeration of the
politically apathetic and the actively
disenfranchised, full of people far too
busy with their lives and kids and jobs
and zoning out on "Fear Factor"
and "Monday Night Football" to
care about following the elitist, ever
dire dramas playing out on the nation's
gilded stages.
Most
Americans, in other words, have no idea
what the hell a Halliburton is. Or a Karl
Rove. Or a Donny "Shriveled
Soul" Rumsfeld. Or a Lockheed
Martin. Or a Carlysle Group. Or have any
idea that Saddam had nothing whatsoever
to do with 9/11. Or that WMDs were never
found. Or that President Bush has taken
more vacation time than any president in
U.S. history. Or that Jesus thinks Dubya
is "sort of a dink." Or where
Iraq is on a map.

Fact is,
in the past decade, TV-news ratings --
cable and network, combined -- has shrunk
to a fraction of its former numbers.
Newspaper subscriptions have been either
flat or dropping for just about as long.
Newsmagazines, radio, historical
nonfiction: flat or dropping fast. Even
the Internet, that vast teeming
customizable firestorm of news and info
streaming in from all over the planet,
even the awesome Net draws far more
people to its porn and gossip and
shopping departments than any e-news
joint could ever wet dream.
Is this
unfair? Does it sound elitist and biased?
It's not. There have been studies. And
reports. And alarming indicators of all
kinds telling us time and again that, for
example, fully 50 percent of eligible
Americans don't even bother to vote (a 15
percent drop since 1964), and many have
no idea who's on the Supreme Court or
what Congress does, and many can't even
point to France on a globe.

Voter
turnout, comparatively, in Italy, Spain,
the U.K., or Germany? Anywhere from 75
to 92 percent, every time. The
sad fact is, the United States ranks
139th out of 172 countries in voter
turnout. Wave that flag proudly, baby.

The Citizen's Psalm
You've
seen the headlines. Alarming numbers of
American high school students can't even
identify the current vice president, much
less name a half dozen presidents from
history. Far too many citizens can't name
the capital of their own home state or
recognize their own senators, much less
discern how Bush's environmental policy
is poisoning their water or how Ashcroft
wants to scan their email and tap their
phones and suck the pith from their
souls.
A recent
report by the Organisation for Economic
Co-Operation and Development states that
upward of 60 percent of Americans ages
16-25 are 'functionally illiterate',
meaning they can't, for example, fill out
a detailed form or read a numerical table
(like a time schedule). A recent Florida
study shows at least 70 percent of recent
high school graduates need remedial
courses -- that is, basic reading and
math -- when they enter community
college. These are kids who, you can be
assured, think Colin Powell is that nasty
British dude on "American
Idol."
And
everyone you know seems to have a parent
or a sister-in-law living somewhere
conservative and podunk for whom politics
and news media is like some sort of
impossibly dense morass, alien and
strange and vaguely threatening, like a
nasty, painful growth on their big toe,
best ignored in hopes that it will just
dry up and go away.
Maybe
this, then, is the most pressing question
of our time: How to get the vast majority
of Americans to care? To pay attention?
To read? To effect change and demand
accountability from bumbling spoon-fed
leaders who count on voter apathy and
force-fed ignorance to cram through their
environmental rollbacks and homophobic
laws and draconian Patriot Acts? Is it
even possible? Are we too far gone?
How to
make America more like, say, Europe,
where knowledge of current events and
political intrigue is not only hugely
important to the vast majority of
citizens but is also deeply woven into
the very fabric of daily life, an
integral part of the educational system
and the café conversation and the
workplace water-cooler chats, and to
ignore it is considered, well,
irresponsible and even a mite traitorous?
True,
part of why they care so much is because
America is the foremost bully on the
block and it pays to know what makes the
bully tick. And whine. And kill. In
short, as the theory goes, most Americans
don't give a damn because we're on top
and we own everything and have more nukes
than anyone and we're never the ones
getting invaded. It's our unofficial
motto -- America: We Don't Have to Care.
And this
very column is frequently slapped with
the accusation that it merely
"preaches to the choir," and if
I really want to affect minds I should
consider tempering or sanitizing my
opinions for a more "moderate"
mainstream readership, as if the nation
was chock-full of opinionated, well-read,
temperate thinkers ready to be gently
informed of new ideas, when in fact this
group is but a fraction, a sliver, far
overshadowed and overpowered by the real
majority in America: The detached. The
disinterested. The intellectually lazy.
So,
what's the solution? It is as simple as
dramatically changing the way we educate
our children, our population? Is it
desanitizing our vacuous history
textbooks and making media studies and
political science and current events as
mandatory to the educational diet as
macho sports and bad lunches and
playground kickball?
Or maybe
it's a new national draft? Will that
galvanize the rest of the populace
sufficiently? How about Iraq devolving
even faster into Vietnam 2.0? Is it
10,000 dead U.S. soldiers and nary an
imprisoned terrorist or fresh barrel of
oil to show for it? How about five bucks
a gallon? Ten? Is it legalizing pot and
banning guns? What will it take?
Maybe
another massive national catastrophe?
Maybe a 9/11 cubed, and cubed again,
something unthinkably horrific and
unleashed upon the innocents and the
children and the puppies, something that
so jars and infuriates and undermines our
desperate empire that even the
cold-blooded neoconservative Right can't
possibly leverage our sorrow and pain for
its own political gain? Very possible.
After all, nothing like a little
hard-earned apocalypse to make you
consider voting independent.
Or maybe
it's something entirely different, maybe
some sort of potent, unimaginable
spiritual enlightenment that looks like
revelation and smells like Vishnu and
sounds like harmonic convergence and
tastes like Buddha and has nothing
whatsoever to do with fundamentalism or
Christianity or Bush's angry homophobic
flag-wavin' God. The mystics say we're
very close. They claim the next decade
will offer, to those who care to
participate, one helluva transformational
vibrational wallop. Possible?

Whatever
it looks like, we can rest assured we're
still not out of the dark, dank woods
just yet. Our national apathy is well
protected, our intellectual ignorance
secure and our fears well fed and
carefully, perpetually reinforced by the
Powers That Be and the fact that the
overall 50 percent voter turnout never
moves by more than a point or two,
usually downward.
And the
Establishment, it only smiles knowingly,
and nods, and says there there now. It'll
be all right. Just go back to sleep.
Thoughts for the author?
E-mail him. E-mail him

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Try
to practice [mindfulness] everywhere. Be
ever mindful. Test yourself daily. All
the time. Make mindfulness first in your
life ... everything will naturally
follow. Mindfulness is the only
protection in the world. Insight is the
special understanding which will
transform your life. It is the end of
birth and death. It is the end of
craving. It is the emancipation from all
attachments, from all bondage, and is the
realization of the highest happiness. It
is the end of the journey." - Ven.
Sobin S. Namto, author of Insight
Meditation.
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