Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greens. Show all posts

The Lie of the Land

SUBHEAD: Will Trump’s presidency spell disaster for the climate, or can the green movement seize back the debate?

By Paul Kingsnorth on 18 March 2017 for The Guardian -
(https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/mar/18/the-new-lie-of-the-land-what-future-for-environmentalism-in-the-age-of-trump)


Image above: Detail of photo of man in suit ignoring woman with sign reading "Need ticket home 2 Maine! Stranded in NYC w/abusive husband! Please help me get out of here!" From (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/making-sense/why-education-wont-solve-americas-inequality-crisis/).

Last June, I voted to leave the European Union. I wasn’t an anti-EU fanatic but I was, despite my advancing years, still something of a green idealist.

 I had always believed that small was beautiful, that people should govern themselves and that power should be reclaimed and localized whenever possible. I didn’t think that throwing the people of Greece, Spain and Ireland to the wolves in order to keep bankers happy looked like the kind of right-on progressive justice that some of the EU’s supporters were claiming it represented.

So I voted to leave. I didn’t say anything about this before the vote and, despite being a writer, I didn’t write about it either. There was too much mudslinging on both sides already, and I didn’t want to throw any more or have any thrown at me. In any case, I didn’t have much to say.

The mudslinging, it turned out, was just a prelude to what would come next. The EU referendum, like the election of Donald Trump in the US five months later, and the Scottish independence question, newly reopened this week, tore the plaster off a pre-existing national wound that now began to bleed freely.

All sorts of things bubbled up that had been suppressed for years, and everyone was suddenly taking sides. Some people, when I told them that I’d voted to leave, looked at me as if I’d just owned up to a criminal record.

Why would I do that? Was I a racist? A fascist? Did I hate foreigners? Did I hate Europe?

I must hate something.

Did I know how irresponsible I had just been? Had I changed my mind yet? I needed to go away and check my privilege.

The eruption of anger that followed the vote, on all sides, was surprising enough. But what was also surprising to me was the uniformity of opinion among people I had thought I shared a worldview with.

Most people in the leftish, green-tinged world in which I had spent probably too much time over the years seemed to be lining up behind the EU.

The public intellectuals, the Green party, the big NGOs: all these people, from a tradition founded on localization, degrowth, bioregionalism and a fierce critique of industrial capitalism, were on board with a multinational trading bloc backed by the world’s banks, corporations and neoliberal politicians. Something smelt fishy.

I was born in the early 1970s. At around the same time, two forces – two movements, if you like – were also born that would shape the lives of my generation. One was neoliberalism. The other was environmentalism.

Neoliberalism was an economic project. It sought to replace stuttering statist economic models with a new laissez-faire order by removing “barriers to trade” wherever they might be found.

These barriers might be protectionist tariffs or taxes; they might also be national laws, local customs or environmental regulations.

The creation of the World Trade Organization in 1995 was the culmination of a decades-long project, pushed by the economic and military might of the United States and its allies, to globalize the neoliberal model and cement it in international law.

By the early 21st century it seemed that this globalization process was both unstoppable and almost complete. Political parties from all traditions had surrendered to it, and the pundits and the economists were happily on board.

In the process, the economic project had developed into a cultural one, promulgated by its beneficiary class, the urban, tech-savvy, cosmopolitan bourgeoisie.

Often referred to as “globalism”, this worldview envisaged a borderless, one-world culture, in which trade tariffs and national boundaries were seen as equally damaging to the new hypercapitalist conception of freedom.

Traditions, distinctive cultures, national identities, religious strictures, social mores – all would dissolve away in the healing light of free trade and a western liberal conception of social progress.

Only bigots and luddites could possibly oppose such a utopian dream.
Being something of a luddite myself, I wrote a book, One No, Many Yeses, opposing it 15 years ago.

The book tracked the great wave of anti-globalization movements that washed over the world at the end of the 20th century, from the summit blockades at Seattle, Prague and Genoa to the uprising of the Zapatistas in Mexico and the anti-privatisation riots in South Africa.

What I found as I investigated these movements was that the most lasting of them were fuelled not by a general rage against “the system”, but by a sense of place and belonging.

Somewhere that people loved or felt attached to was being threatened by outside forces, whether they be trade treaties, buccaneering corporations or oppressive governments, and people were fighting to defend what they knew and what they were.

This sense of the uniqueness of places, and of the cultures that sprang from them, had been what pushed me towards green activism in the first place.

From a young age I had an inchoate sense that much of the world’s color, beauty and distinctiveness was being bulldozed away in the name of money and progress.

Some old magic, some connection, was being snuffed out in the process. It must be 20 years since I read the autobiography of the late travel writer Norman Lewis, The World, The World, but the last sentence stays with me.

Wandering the hills of India, Lewis is ask by a puzzled local why he spends his life traveling instead of staying at home. What is he looking for? “I am looking for the people who have always been there,” replies Lewis, “and belong to the places where they live. The others I do not wish to see.”

As a writer, whether of fiction or non-fiction, I have been looking for the same thing. That first book of mine, it turned out, was a journey in search of people who belong. It was a defence of a threatened fragility. A few years later, I wrote another, this time about globalisation’s impact on England, my home country.

I’ve since written novels and essays and poems and they always seem, however hard I try to write about something else, to circle back around to that primal question: what does it mean to belong to a place, to a people, to nature, in a time in which belonging is everywhere under attack?

 Does it mean anything? Why should it matter?

All I know is that it matters to me. That was why I joined what I wanted to believe was a movement that could derail globalization. For a while, it looked like it might.

Then came 9/11, and a different kind of anti-globalization movement – violent Islamism – began stalking the west. Governments cracked down on dissent and populations grew fearful. Everything suddenly seemed darker.

Still it seemed that nothing could stop the neoliberal train. It kept rolling, faster and faster, until in 2008 it hit a wall at full speed.

Remarkably, it survived the crash. When the banks were bailed out and the corporations given another series of blank checks, I gave up on the idea that much would ever change.

The power of money seemed as stark as the stench of corruption. Perhaps neoliberalism was unstoppable after all. Perhaps, as Margaret Thatcher had once famously claimed, there was, indeed, no alternative.

On 24 June last year I woke up, made a cup of tea and turned on my computer, wondering by what margin the nation had voted to remain in the EU. On the BBC website, the headline seemed to take up the whole screen: BRITAIN VOTES TO LEAVE THE EUROPEAN UNION.

Five months later, my morning seemed to repeat itself. I woke up, made another cup of tea, wondered how many votes Clinton had won by, and then gaped at the margin of Trump’s victory. It was clear the poles were shifting. Something big was going on.

On both occasions I can remember precisely how I felt. It was a feeling that had nothing to do with what might happen next, and it wasn’t really related to my opinions about any of the issues involved.

The feeling was exhilaration. I suddenly realized that for the last decade I had believed, even though I had pretended not to believe, in the end of history. Now, the end of history was ending. Change was possible after all.

I also began to realize something else: the anti-globalization movement had not died. Its impulse had driven Brexit as it had driven Donald Trump’s victory. It had driven Jeremy Corbyn’s rise, and those of Syriza in Greece and Bernie Sanders in the US.

In their different ways and for different reasons, coalitions of people were again pushing back against the dehumanizing world that the global economy was creating. Globalization had been impoverishing the south for decades. Now it was impoverishing the west, too, and the discontent had reached boiling point.

But change is a trickster and it makes no promises.

Back in the day, those of us who fancied ourselves as radicals thought we were the shock troops in the battle against globalization. As a young greenie, I would consume the words of Edward Abbey and Murray Bookchin, Vandana Shiva and EF Schumacher, James Lovelock and Dave Foreman.

These were the people who were constructing the sane future, and I wanted to join them.

Campaigning environmentalists, the “social justice” movement, the lefties and the greens: we would be the heroes of the coming hour.

Our rational solutions to climate change, our well-argued deconstructions of neoliberalism, our piles of evidence about the negative impact of trade treaties, our righteous demands for justice – these would shake the world. When they learned the truth about the continuing corporate stitch-up, the people would rise up in opposition.

They did rise up in the end, but it wasn’t us they were listening to. The message had found a different messenger. Trump said in his last TV spot before election victory:
“There is, a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth and put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities”.
They were words that could have been heard at any social forum, anti-globalization gathering or left-green beanfeast from the last 20 years, as could the rousing final sentence:
“The only thing that can stop this corrupt machine is you.”
In a penetrating essay in The American Interest last July, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt sought to place all this in context. He suggested that the old left-right political divide, which had been looking iffy for years, was being supplanted by a new binary: globalism versus nationalism.

Nationalism, in the broadest sense of the term, was the default worldview of most people at most times, especially in more traditional places. It was a community-focused attitude, in which a nation, tribe or ethnic group was seen as a thing of value to be loved and protected.

Globalism, the ideology of the rising urban bourgeoisie, was more individualistic. It valued diversity and change, prioritized rights over obligations and saw the world as a whole, rather than particular parts of it, as the moral community to which we all belong.

The current explosion of nationalism in the west, Haidt said, was due to globalism having overplayed its hand. Different attitudes to the issue of mass immigration – the spark that lit the fire on both sides of the Atlantic – demonstrated how this had happened.

While globalists saw migration as a right, nationalists saw it as a privilege.

To a globalist, border walls and immigration laws are tantamount to racism or human rights abuse.

To a nationalist, they are evidence of a community asserting its values and choosing to whom to grant citizenship.

Psychologically, Haidt suggested, what happened in 2016 was that many nationalist-inclined voters in the west felt that their community was now under existential threat – not only from large-scale migration, but from Islamist terrorist attacks and the globalist elite’s dismissive attitude to their concerns about both.

In response, they began to look around for strong leaders to protect them. The rest is history, still in the making.

This is the power of the new populists. The likes of Stephen Bannon and Marine Le Pen understand the destructive energy of global capitalism as well as the left does, but they also understand what the left refuses to see: that the heart of the west’s current wound is cultural rather than economic.

What is driving the modern turmoil are threats to identity, culture and meaning. Waves of migration, multicultural policies, eroding borders, shifting national and ethnic identities, globalist attacks on western culture: all that is solid is melting into air.

Who can promise the return of that solidity?

Not the left, which long ago hitched its wagon to the globalist horse, enthusing about breaking down everything from gender identities to national borders and painting any dissent as prejudice or hatred.

Instead, a new nationalism has risen to the occasion. As ever, those who can harness people’s deep, old attachment to tribe, place and identity – to a belonging and a meaning beyond money or argument – will win the day. This might be as iron a law as any human history can provide.

It didn’t take Trump’s cabinet of millionaires long, having got themselves comfortable in the White House, to start dismantling the nation’s environmental protections.

Two months in, the administration has given the green light to two controversial oil pipelines and removed environmental oversight on others, cancelled Obama’s climate action plan, removed regulations protecting clean water and appointed a former head of ExxonMobil as secretary of state.

Anti-green campaigner Myron Ebell, who believes that environmentalism is “the greatest threat to freedom and prosperity in the modern world” was asked to head Trump’s transition team for the Environmental Protection Agency, which he wants to abolish, and which has just seen its budget slashed by 25%.

Trump himself is notorious for his cavalier attitude to anything furry or leafy that gets in the way of his gaudy developments. The natural world has always been an inconvenient barrier to economic growth, which is why we are faced with a global ecological crisis.

But Trump’s anti-environmentalism, while it serves the interests of corporations, speaks the language of the people. In his telling, protecting the natural world from destruction is another example of the globalist elite sticking it to ordinary folk.

The notion that environmentalists are a privileged elite telling the hard-pressed that they can’t have decent lives has been a staple of corporate propaganda for decades.

Look at these horrible elitists, runs the line, trying to abolish your hard-earned holiday flights and double the price of your car journey. Who are they to tell you that you can’t give your children plastic toys at Christmas, or eat air-freighted avocados? Have you seen the size of Al Gore’s house?

Hypocrites!

Like all effective propaganda lines, this one works because there is some truth in it.

The environmental movement that emerged in the west more than 40 years ago, with the founding of organizations such as Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth and the birth of green parties across Europe, had its roots in the conservation world.

While its outlook was planetary – no true ecological movement can be anything else – its actions were often local or national. “Think globally, act locally”, perhaps the movement’s most effective early slogan, looks in retrospect like a beautiful combination of the best of the globalist and the nationalist impulses.

These days, though, as the Brexit vote demonstrated, green politics is a marker of the globalist class.

With their grand ecological Marshall Plans and their talk of sustainability and carbon, environmentalists today often seem distant from everyday concerns.

Green spokespeople and activists rarely come from the classes of people who have been hit hardest by globalization. The greens have shifted firmly into the camp of the globalist left. Now, as the blowback gathers steam, they find themselves on the wrong side of the divide.

All this can look like bad news from a certain perspective, but maybe it isn’t.

While environmentalism has changed the world in the last four decades, in recent years it has been spinning its wheels.

Increasingly unrealistic demands for global action on climate change, pie-in-the-sky manifestos calling for global rollouts of this or that eco-megaplan, the promotion of enormous windfarms or solar arrays that do more damage to wild nature than they prevent, all backed with a “40 months to save the world” narrative that’s been going on for 40 years: something had to give.

Some of the new populists may hope they can sound the death knell of the green movement, but perhaps they can instead teach it a necessary lesson.

What Haidt calls nationalism is really a new name for a much older impulse: the need to belong.

Specifically, the need to belong to a place in which you can feel at home. The fact that this impulse can be exploited by demagogues doesn’t mean that the impulse itself is wrong. Stalin built gulags on the back of a notional quest for equality, but that doesn’t mean we should give up on trying to make things fair.

The anti-globalist attack on the greens is a wake-up call. It points to the fact that green ideas have too often become a virtue signal for the carbon-heavy bourgeoisie, drinking their Fairtrade organic coffee as they wait for their transatlantic flight.

Green globalism has become part of the growth machine; a comfortable notion for those who don’t really want much to change.

What would happen if environmentalism remade itself – or was remade by the times?

What might a benevolent green nationalism sound like?

You want to protect and nurture your homeland – well, then, you’ll want to nurture its forests and its streams too. You want to protect its badgers and its mountain lions. What could be more patriotic?

This is not the kind of nationalism of which Trump would approve, but that’s the point. Why should those who want to protect a besieged natural world allow billionaire property developers to represent them as the elitists? Why not fight back – on what they think is their territory?

It has been done before. The nation that gave us Trump also gave us Teddy Roosevelt, another Republican populist president, but one who believed that America’s identity was tied up with protecting, not despoiling, its wild places.

Roosevelt created one of the greatest systems of protected areas and national parks in the world, using his presidency to save 230m acres of land. He wrote:
 “We have fallen heirs to the most glorious heritage a people ever received,”“and each one must do his part if we wish to show that the nation is worthy of its good fortune.”
Protecting nature, Roosevelt believed, was a patriotic act.

If I had to offer up just one thing I have learned from my years of environmental campaigning, it would be this: any attempt to protect nature from the worst human depredation has to speak to people where they are.

It has to make us all feel that the natural world, the non-human realm, is not an obstacle in the way of our progress but a part of our community that we should nurture; a part of our birthright. In other words, we need to tie our ecological identity in with our cultural identity.

In the age of drones and robots, this notion might sound airy or even ridiculous, but it has been the default way of seeing for most indigenous cultures throughout history.

In the resistance to the Dakota Access pipeline, recently given the go-ahead by Trump, where the Standing Rock Sioux and thousands of supporters continue to resist the construction of an oil pipeline across Native American land, we perhaps see some indication of what this fusing of human and non-human belonging could look like today; a defense of both territory and culture, in the name of nature, rooted in love.

Globalism is the rootless ideology of the fossil fuel age, and it will fade with it. But the angry nationalisms that currently challenge it offer us no better answers about how to live well with a natural world that we have made into an enemy.

Our oldest identity is one that stills holds us in its grip, whether we know it or not.

Like the fox in the garden or the bird in the tree, we are all animals in a place. If we have a future, cultural or ecological – and they are the same thing, in the end – it will begin with a quality of attention and a defense of loved things. All else is for the birds, and the foxes too.

Paul Kingsnorth’s new book, Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist, is published by Faber.

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Jill Stein shreds Shriver

SUBHEAD: Asking the wrong questions for the same-old answers will get the same disastrous consequences.

By Staff on 10 October 2016 for Jill Stein for President -
(http://www.jill2016.com/debates)


Image above: Still from video interview below. Maria Shriver can't put down the cellphone that's telling her what ridiculous questions to ask to Stein. Most backfire on her.  From (http://www.jill2016.com/debates).

Last week Jill stopped in for an interview with Maria Shriver, corporate media icon and heir to one of the great establishment political families.

To be blunt, Maria tried to ridicule, mock and undermine Jill. And just as at Standing Rock -- Jill stood strong, powerful and unwavering.

What you'll see is a candidate who will not bow down and will not give in. What you'll also see is a so-called “journalist” attempting to trivialize real issues to defend Hillary Clinton. Maria Shriver used  every “gotcha” tactic in the book, and Jill was nothing short of phenomenal!

It was particularly galling to hear Maria Shriver try to shame Jill (and her supporters) for not supporting Hillary Clinton, and strongly implied that YOUR vote automatically belong to Hillary. Be sure to listen to Jill's fearless answer.


Video above: Maria Shriver interviews Jill Stein. From (https://youtu.be/eNAUW2KzjKk).

Jill's days are filled with back-to-back interviews and last night, at the second Presidential Debate, Democracy Now! Was prepared to allow Jill's answers to be heard after Hillary and Donald's non-answers to each question.

But for the first time in their history, technical difficulties prevented them from being able to do a live show from a different location.

But Jill’s team turned on a dime, and created a Facebook stream to allow Jill to respond in real time. Over 2 million people were reached this way!

Please check out that recording on the website, and you will see that Jill always comes back to the issues that are literally killing us: climate disaster (Matthew being just the latest superstorm), wealth inequality, access to medical care, student debt, institutional racism, police brutality, and so much more.

The Green Party has the answers that Americans are desperate to hear. We will continue to take to the “people's media”, social media like Facebook and Twitter, to make our case and spread the Green movement.

The establishment media is trying to silence us. But the great wind of change is blowing …

This movement will not be stopped - it will be heard, and it will grow. The work we do this year will directly translate into more Green candidates in the next election cycle, and a 2020 presidential campaign that will be immediately well-funded, organized, and effective.

But we can't keep up this work, especially our 50-state Get Out The Vote campaign, without your financial help. Please, will you chip in $29 for Stein today, or any amount you can give up to $2700 per person.

Hillary and Donald don't have bold, breakthrough answers. You know that. The Maria Shrivers of the world don't have brilliant, incisive questions. You also know that.

If you ask the wrong questions and put forth the same-old, same-old answers, all you get is the same disastrous consequences.


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Debate includes all major parties

SUBHEAD: It's unlikely that the Libertarian or Green candidates will get another chance to share a stage.  

By Eric Ortiz on 12 August 2016 for Truth Dig - 
(http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/live_blog_bill_clinton_jill_stein_and_gary_johnson_speak_in_las_vegas_20160)


Image above: Presidential candidates Gary Johnson (L), Jill Stein (G), former President Bill Clinton representing Hillary Clinton (D) and Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes representing Donald Trump (R).  From original article.

Thanks to the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA) and Asian and Pacific Islander American Vote (APIAVote) for putting together the 2016 Presidential Election Forum.

The quad-partisan forum marked the first time in this election cycle that the top four presidential campaigns participated in an event together. The Republican, Democratic, Libertarian, and Green Party presidential campaigns were all represented. Let’s hope it won’t be the last time.

So what did we learn? We have four horses in the race. But only two have a realistic shot to win: Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Still, having Green and Libertarian Party candidates on the same stage as representatives of the Democratic and Republican campaigns is a positive development. And something that should be celebrated. The next step is getting all four campaigns on the same debate stage in prime time.

Baby steps to democracy. We have to start somewhere to fix a corrupt system.

2:18 p.m. PDT: Libertarian presidential nominee Gary Johnson will be the first to speak, followed by the Green Party’s Jill Stein. “There is an opportunity to not only hear from these political leaders, but also be represented on television,” Chen tells the crowd. She also stresses that it’s important not to group all Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders together, noting that they “don’t all vote alike.”

2:21 p.m. PDT: “How crazy” is this election, Johnson asks. “I might be president of the United States.”

2:29 p.m. PDT: “Will this be a wasted vote?” asks interviewer Richard Lui.

“A wasted vote is a vote for someone you don’t believe in,” Johnson says. “If you want to waste your vote on Clinton or Trump, have at it.” Johnson then refers to the “magic 15 percent” he needs to get into the debates. “There’s no way I am going to win the presidency if I’m not in the debates. ... I do think that there’s a real possibility that I’ll be in the debates.”

Asked about what he would say to Clinton in a debate, Johnson remarks, “Hillary has been the architect of our foreign policy. ... She and Obama support the opposition in Syria and Libya.”
Lui asks how Johnson will bring an end to terrorism. “When we kill innocent people abroad, this is what adds to the recruitment when it comes to [Islamic State].”

2:38 p.m. PDT: They briefly discuss Donald Trump, who is notably absent from the forum:
The talk focuses on the economy. “Crony capitalism is alive and well,” Johnson says, arguing that “free trade is the opposite of capitalism.” The conversation turns to the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Johnson says:
I do support TPP. Is it a perfect document? No, nothing really is ... my advisers have told me that this does make things better.
Lui notes that Johnson has been labeled “Governor No” for his use of the veto to kill legislation. “What will you say no to” as president, Lui asks.

“No new taxes,” Johnson says.

The conversation turns to gun legislation, specifically a ban on assault weapons. Johnson doesn’t fully answer the question but does note there is a misunderstanding about what “automatic weapons” are. Lui asks Johnson how many guns he owns. “I have a pistol, a .38 pistol, and I have a 12-gauge shotgun.”

2:42 p.m. PDT: After a question from the audience, Lui brings up the subject of marijuana regulation. “58 percent of Americans supports legalizing marijuana,” Johnson explains, telling the audience that “every single one of you” knows somebody who uses marijuana. “What’s the difference between that and having a few drinks in the evening?” Johnson asks, receiving cheers from the audience. “I don’t want to take away from a person’s right to use these products.”

Lui asks when Johnson last used marijuana. “Last time I took marijuana was about three months ago,” Johnson says. “It was pleasant.”

2:50 p.m. PDT: Johnson explains his solution to education funding: giving control back to the states. “By eliminating the Federal Department of Education” there will be more money for the states, Johnson argues.

“If you had the states engaged in this competition, I believe there would be fabulous success,” Johnson continues. “That’s how we get better, by competing with one another.”

Finally, the conversation turns to the AAPI community and its vote. Lui asks Johnson what “AAPI” stands for—and he doesn’t know (Hillary Clinton probably does, though.)

“I don’t think any of us are different, I think we all have common goals here.” Johnson argues that entrepreneurship should be encouraged more in the United States.

Lui asks about undocumented workers, many of whom are of Asian-American descent. “The system is broken, we should make it as easy as possible for somebody who wants to come into this country and work to get a work visa,” Johnson declares. “I don’t want to break up families, I don’t want to be deporting.”

 2:52 p.m. PDT: The interview wraps up as Lui asks Johnson what family means to him and what his father taught him. Next up: Green Party presidential nominee Jill Stein.

3:01 p.m. PDT: I will be taking over the live blog for Emma Niles. If you want to watch a broadcast of the town hall forum in Las Vegas, click here
 
3:04 p.m. PDT: Dr. Jill Stein takes the stage. Stein is the Green Party presidential nominee. She is representing mothers, doctors and citizens of the planet. “Will we have a planet going forward?” she asks. Fair question.

3:08 p.m. PDT: How does Stein define her party in one sentence? The Green Party is the only party that can stand up for people and peace over profits. Stein is calling for a Green New Deal that fixes the crisis of the economy and the crisis of the environment. Recently, Truthdig political correspondent Bill Boyarksy talked with Stein, and she laid out the Green New Deal in more detail.

3:12 p.m. PDT: How would we pay for the green energy transition? Stein says it will pay for itself. Lui is skeptical. Stein makes the case: (1) Cut the wars for oil. (2) We get healthier when we zero out the polluting fossil fuels.

3:14 p.m. PDT: Stein has come up in the polls from being a nonfactor, almost invisible, to now polling at 5, 6 and 7 percent. “Democracy needs a moral compass,” Stein says. The Republican Party is eating itself. The Democratic Party is fractured. Stein is talking about how the Democratic primary was rigged in favor of Hillary Clinton. And the feed goes down. Coincidence?

3:18 p.m. PDT: The way Stein talks is refreshing. We need a politics of integrity. She says 42 million young people have student debt and she wants to wipe out all of that debt, the same way Wall Street got bailed out. How will she pay for it? Quantitative easing. The Fed buys up the student debt and cancels it digitally. Lui calls it the “magic eraser” and says many people don’t like that. Stein is unmoved and wants to create the economy of the future.

3:22 p.m. PDT: A common knock on Stein is that she has never served in a major political public office. Lui points this out. She says this is true. She doesn’t have the experience of making secret deals behind closed doors. She believes her lack of public political services is an advantage. She is running for president as “an honest broker.”

3:25 p.m. PDT: What is Stein’s favorite green energy source? Solar power. Go solar. Lui is a fan of wind power. Having a wind turbine in the backyard is a little more difficult than installing solar panels on the roof.

3:27 p.m. PDT: Stein wins points with the Asian community. Stein knows what AAPI stands for: Asian American Pacific Islanders.


3:30 p.m. PDT: Talk turns to feminism. Women deserve equal rights. Stein is all for gender equality and wage parity. We need a national federal minimum wage of $15. How important is it for men to be feminists? In Stein’s view, feminists are humanists.

3:32 p.m. PDT: Is it time for an Asian-American Supreme Court justice? Stein says yes. Lui tells her to stop pandering. “Test me,” Stein says.


3:34 p.m. PDT: No hardball questions here. “What does family mean to you?” Richard Lui asks Jill Stein. It is the same questions he asked Gary Johnson to close his interview. There is no wrong answer, and she gets the answer right.  

Family means love, connection. We are connected by community, cultures, nations. We are all on one small boat: planet earth. We are all part of the same human family, striving for human rights and justice.

Stein says her parents taught her to have a backbone and to stand up for what is right. She talks about growing up in an immigrant Jewish family after the Holocaust. That is when she was introduced to doing the right thing and standing up for the right thing, even if the position may be unpopular.

3:37 p.m. PDT: That’s all for Jill Stein. If you want to learn more about her, she stopped by the Truthdig headquarters in Los Angeles on June 7, the same day as the California primary. Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at her visit.

3:45 p.m. PDT: What happens in Las Vegas today, we want the whole world to know. Hillary Clinton couldn’t make it to the town hall event, so she sent her husband to represent her. He is not complaining. Sin City is his kind of town.

3:52 p.m. PDT: William Jefferson Clinton has arrived. The woman who introduces him tells everyone to welcome Bill Clinton by giving him a hug. She must not have gotten the memo from the Hillary camp: No touching allowed. It’s like the sign at the zoo says: Do not feed the animals.

Up next is Bill Clinton, the 42nd president of the United States.

3:55 p.m. PDT: Clinton gets the podium all to himself.

3:56 p.m. PDT: Clinton gets the crowd fired up by talking about building potential for the future that allows people to give themselves better lives and give their children better tomorrows. He’s done this before. We need to create more and better jobs and accelerate the formation of small businesses.

He talks about the economic plan Hillary Clinton laid out in Detroit on Friday. He brings up the aftermath of the crash. That’s rich, considering he helped accelerate the income inequality gap with the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act. Truthdig Editor in Chief Robert Scheer examined how the groundwork was laid for the collapse of the U.S. economy in his book “The Great American Stickup.”
Since the collapse happened on the watch of President George W. Bush at the end of two full terms in office, many in the Democratic Party were only too eager to blame his administration. Yet while Bush did nothing to remedy the problem, and his response was to simply reward the culprits, the roots of this disaster go back much further, to the free-market propaganda of the Reagan years and, most damagingly, to the bipartisan deregulation of the banking industry undertaken with the full support of “liberal” President Clinton. Yes, Clinton. And if this debacle needs a name, it should most properly be called “the Clinton bubble,” as difficult as it may be to accept for those of us who voted for him.
3:57 p.m. PDT: A mayor, governor and United States senator—Bill Clinton is talking about Tim Kaine, Hillary Clinton’s running mate.


4:01 p.m. PDT: Clinton is sticking to the script and hitting all of the talking points: student debt, education, small business loans. He doesn’t want to upset Hillary. You won’t like her when she’s angry. He knows.

4:10 p.m. PDT: According to Bill Clinton, the unemployment rate with people with college degrees is 2.4 percent. He then acknowledges that there are 1 million jobs for plumbers, welders, construction workers—working-class jobs. Many people don’t have the training to work these jobs. Hillary wants to change this.

 4:12 p.m. PDT: Hillary Clinton promises to provide a new path to citizenship for immigrants in the first 100 days of her presidency, Bill Clinton reminds us. She is determined to bring stability and sanity to this issue. Sounds great. What’s not to trust?

4:18 p.m. PDT: Bill Clinton gets serious. Walls or bridges? That will be the metaphor for this election. Are we stronger together or stronger apart? Our diversity is a blessing. We can live together. Hillary can grow our economy and lift the world to a better place. As a politician, Bill Clinton is a pro and talks a great game.

The key question as always is this: Can you trust the rhetoric? Will the actions mirror the words? Will the Clinton do what they say? Or will they say one thing and do another behind closed doors? Let’s just say we’re not going to bet the farm on taking the Clintons at their word. They need to earn the trust of the people and regain the trust of the people. If that is possible.

4:26 p.m. PDT: Vote Hillary Clinton for 30 years of prosperity. Bill Clinton’s talk in a nutshell.


4:27 p.m. PDT: Time for audience questions. The first one is no softball. Will the Trans-Pacific Partnership promote your values? To create better allies and strengthen American values globally?

Would you support the TPP? “That’s a very adroit way you asked the question. Congratulations,” says Bill Clinton. It’s a difficult issue, Clinton explains. Hillary does not support the latest version of TPP, he says. These things have political consequences that go beyond the economic consequences.

The United States has proven extremely vulnerable to profitable job loss, that is jobs that are doing well in our country. We have too many companies in American that are dominated by shareholders that want quick returns. All these trade deals that don’t deal with currency valuation changes are not solving the problem. I signed over 300 trade deals. I was in favor of more trade. I understand why there is more resistance to multinational trade agreements instead of country by country deals. 

Corporations have sold out the American people. The reason that Hillary has opposed this. We don’t have enough stakeholder-driven corporations. We have too many shareholder-driven corporations. The real nub of this problem is the intersection of a trade agreement with countries that want to keep their good jobs in their country and they still want to make American goods. We are dominated by a stockholder mentality. We are not protected by currency manipulation. In other words, a very political answer. Sounds smart, but really, a lot of words that don’t say much.

Translation: Of course, Hillary skirted the rules. She’s a Clinton. I taught her the art of obfuscating the truth. But if we admitted to all the wrongdoing we have done over the years, there’s no chance we would get back to the White House. We don’t want that. The establishment doesn’t want that. So we will keep bobbing and weaving, ducking and jiving, slipping and sliding until we can return home to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

4:35 p.m. PDT: The music begins to play. Time for Bill Clinton to go. They have other speakers. He wants to answer one more question. He’s still got juice. They turn the music off.
4:37 p.m. PDT: The last question is about the emails. Hillary Clinton’s emails. “It’s the biggest bunch of bull I’ve ever heard,” Bill Clinton says. The emails weren’t relevant, he continues. He names a bunch of people who are supporting her, including people from the National Security Agency, the CIA and on and on. Would everybody who worked with her be for her if she wasn’t trustworthy? But what if the people who support her aren’t trustworthy.

Who is policing the police? She’s the only one who was transparent, her husband continues. There is a long-running dispute from the State Department and the intelligence community. There are people in the intelligence community who believe she is the only person left you can trust with classified material. Julian Assange and Edward Snowden may disagree

4:43 p.m. PDT: Bill Clinton exits stage left. He warmed up the mic for Mike Honda, a congressman representing the 17th District of California, otherwise known as Silicon Valley. He turns the town hall into a sporting event and leads the crowd in a cheer. When I say APIA vote, you say, “Power up.” APIA vote. Power up. “Democracy is not a spectator sport. This is participatory.”

4:51 p.m. PDT: Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes is here to speak on behalf of his candidate, Donald Trump. Reyes has a sense of humor. He takes a selfie.



4:54 p.m. PDT: Time for an etymology lesson. What’s in a word? Politics. Reyes explains. Poli means “many.” Tics are “blood-sucking insects.” Politics is all about blood-sucking insects. Reyes seems like a nice, normal person. Maybe Donald Trump isn’t the crazy demagogue everyone says he is?

4:57 p.m. PDT: Who thinks karaoke should be an Olympic sport? Sean Reyes will be here all week. Please tip your waitresses.

4:58 p.m. PDT: For being a Trump surrogate, Reyes hasn’t said much about Trump. That changes. “Donald Trump sends his thanks and appreciation,” Reyes says. Short and sweet. Less is more. I think it says a lot about Donald Trump and Mike Pence that they would let an average person like me speak to a special group like you.

5:07 p.m. PDT: Reyes reiterates the data about unemployment and the economy that Donald Trump used during his speech at the Republican convention. Nearly 14 million have left the workforce since Obama took the oath of office in 2009. Household incomes are down $4,000 since 2000. Reyes says the 5 percent unemployment number bandied about is a big hoax. Trump will make the American economy grow. Trust them.

5:12 p.m. PDT: One of the keys to public speaking is delivery. Reyes is saying the same things Trump says, but with less fire, brimstone and spittle.

5:19 p.m. PDT: Reyes wants to clarify some things Trump said about the Philippines, and Reyes says he has the full authority to do so. Trump welcomes law-abiding Filipinos. Trump was talking about terrorist elements that exist in the Philippines. Trump promotes legal immigration. Don’t ever forget, Trump is a humanitarian. He is the biggest and best humanitarian in the history of humanitarians.

5:27 p.m. PDT: What would a pro-Trump speech be without a little Hillary Clinton-bashing?

5:28 p.m. PDT: Reyes doesn’t agree with everything Donald Trump says, but Reyes wants a new future, not the status quo. He wants a visionary leader. Trump is that leader, says Reyes. But he will not be taking questions because he has a plane to catch. Couldn’t they hold the plane? He ends with a rap. Don’t mess with Reyes. That was worth the price of admission.

5:29 p.m. PDT: Reyes told his personal story as an Asian-American and Pacific Islander. He spoke from the heart. But did he convince anyone to support Trump?

5:33 p.m. PDT: The live stream wraps with analysis from Jason Chung from the Republican National Committee and Politico’s Seung Min Kim. Chung thinks Trump will be the next president. Do we want four more years of the last eight years? Or do we want a change? Chung thinks people want a change. Polls are painting a different picture. We’ll see what reality shows.

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Not feelin' the Bern!

SUBHEAD: Bernie Sanders endorsed Hillary Clinton but would have led the ticket with Jill Stein.

By Juan Wilson on 13 July 2016 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/07/not-feelin-bern.html)


Image above: Born from the mouth of Sara Palin in 2012; "How's that hopey, changey thing goin'?" From (http://whiterhinoreport.blogspot.com/2015/03/stoneham-theatre-presents-that-hopey.html).

Yesterday's headline on CNN: "Bernie Sanders endorses Hillary Clinton"
Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders formally declared an end to their political rivalry Tuesday, joining forces to take on a shared enemy: Donald Trump.

"I have come here to make it as clear as possible why I am endorsing Hillary Clinton and why she must become our next president," Sanders said at a joint rally here. "Secretary Clinton has won the Democratic nomination and I congratulate her for that."

The 74-year-old self-described democratic socialist, who has been a thorn in Clinton's side over the last year, pledged to support his former rival through Election Day: "I intend to do everything I can to make certain she will be the next president of the United States."
The Democratic Party has moved to the center and taken the role the "moderate" Republicans" had in the past. That may have worked fine in a time of peace, prosperity and not threat of existential extinction due to our own human activities.

The major parties have yet to finalize 2016 platforms but what we have seen so far is not encouraging.

The compromises made on the development of platform positions of the Democratic National Committee on such issues as fracking, the TPP, Israeli Occupation, and NATO will make an awful structure for democrats to run on. It leaves the door open for more war-mongering by a future President Clinton.

Sanders, in our opinion, would have done better to take Green Party's Jill Stein (http://www.jill2016.com/) offer to step down as her party's possible presidential candidate and let him head the Green Party ticket. On June 9th she spoke on Democracy Now and said "Run on the Green Party ticket and continue your political revolution".

Had Sanders acted on that advice he likely would have kept the momentum of his supporters intact. Many young and enthusiastic workers would have come to the Greens and they could have laid the foundation of a real third party challenge next time around.

The Koch Brothers, George Will, and other prominent conservative Republicans are going to back Clinton to the hilt. And so will the mainstream Democrats. It's doubtful that whatever Bernie does will keep Hillary and Bill out of the White House for another season of "House of Cards".

Bernie would at least be able to live with himself and sleep peacefully at night if he was leading the Green Platform.

As far  as I'm concerned, the Libertarian and Green parties have more to offer on matters of principle than the Republican or Democratic parties - and I believe most Americans will come to think so too.

Green Party Platform adopted for 2014 race
(http://www.gp.org/platform)

Libertarian Party Platform adopted in May for 2016
(http://www.gp.org/platform)

Democratic Party Platform draft in June 2016
(https://demconvention.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/2016-DEMOCRATIC-PARTY-PLATFORM-DRAFT-7.1.16.pdf)


Republican Party Platform for 2012 race
(https://www.gop.com/platform/) as recommended by GOP

Just remember the words of Sara Palin regarding buyer's remorse of Democrats on reelecting the Perpetual War candidate Barack Obama:
How's that hopey changey thing going?



Jill Stein de-Googled

An email from the Jill Stein for President organization indicates they believe Google has slighted third party candidates - particularly the Green Party.

As you may have heard, interest in our campaign is surging right now. Blowing up. Through the roof!
In the last 48 hours, our donations have skyrocketed 999%, 10,000 new people have signed up for the campaign, and 30,000 new Facebook fans have poured in. Google searches for “Jill Stein” have spiked dramatically.

But if you search on Google for “Presidential candidates”, here’s all you see: Donald Trump. Hillary Rodham Clinton. Bernie Sanders. Gary Johnson.

So we’re asking the #1 most visited website in the world - what about Jill Stein?

Sign and share our petition to Google: stop censoring the Jill Stein for President campaign!

It’s unacceptable that the world’s top search engine - a website whose very purpose is to help people find information - is apparently keeping our campaign out of their results.

Here’s what Google searches for “Jill Stein” in the past 30 days look like - talk about a hockey stick graph!



But here’s what you see when you search for “Presidential candidates”:



So either someone at Google doesn’t know how to use a search engine - or they are deliberately excluding our campaign from the results.

As champions of the free exchange of information over the free and open Internet, we can’t let this continue.

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Green Party deserves attention

SUBHEAD: Candidate Jill Stein's Green New Deal deserves the widest possible audience.

By Bill Boyarsky on 6 July 2016 for TruthDig -
(http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/jill_steins_green_new_deal_deserves_to_be_heard_by_wide_audience_20160706)


Image above: Jill Stein speaking in front of the police station in Ferguson, Missouri. From original article.

This is a crucial time for Dr. Jill Stein. It’s a test of whether she can move her presidential campaign from the fringes into the mainstream of an election that she says “has tossed out the rule book.”

“We are here to keep the revolution going,” Stein, the prospective Green Party presidential candidate, told me in a telephone interview Tuesday. “Bernie [Sanders] supporters are grieving over the loss of the campaign, of their hard work, their vision, but they are remobilizing. Our events are absolutely mobbed with Bernie supporters.”

We spoke in the morning, before FBI Director James Comey threw yet another twist into the presidential race by announcing that while the bureau would not recommend criminal charges in the Hillary Clinton email affair, she had been “extremely careless” with her use of a personal email address and a private server for sensitive communications.

Comey’s recommendation against criminal charges is good news for Clinton. But his comment about carelessness is not. It is one more factor injecting volatility into her contest with Donald Trump, the presumed Republican presidential nominee. With Sanders’ presidential campaign falling short in the primaries and Clinton battling for her good name, I thought I’d call Stein, the progressive alternative, a pediatrician-turned-presidential candidate.

She and the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson, former governor of New Mexico, are far behind. According to a CNN/ORC poll in June, Clinton had 42 percent of the vote, Trump had 38 percent, Johnson had 9 percent and Stein had 7 percent. When Sanders was put in the poll against Clinton, 43 percent said they backed him.

The Johnson and Stein programs are very different from one another. Johnson, while favoring a laissez-faire approach on personal and social issues, embraces a balanced budget limiting federal action, opposes tax increases and favors a consumption (or sales) tax, which hurts the poor. All of this has a Paul Ryan sound to it and is far removed from Stein’s progressivism.

I asked Stein how her administration would create jobs for working people who have seen manufacturing plants and other businesses close because of foreign competition, automation and corporate financial machinations.

EXPERIENCE: She’s No Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump—Behind the Scenes With Jill Stein (Multimedia)

She likes the idea of a Green New Deal, a combination of ideas that basically revolve around the notion that the government would help to finance the conversion of old industry into new industry—solar energy devices and wind farm materials instead of internal combustion engines and oil drilling equipment. Doing this would require a considerable government investment—certainly not a Gary Johnson idea—plus investment from a banking industry converted from giant banks to smaller state and community banks.

There’s much more to the Green New Deal. Eliminating carbon-based fuels would improve health and reduce—if not eliminate—global warming, saving big amounts of money for health care. It includes Medicare for all.

I wondered about the practicalities of converting the old auto plant into something else. Who would decide on the new products? Stein said the unemployed workers or members of the community would pick a product. I reminded her of something I had seen when you try to get community consensus.

“You know,” I said, “it’s hard to get people to agree on the location of a stop sign or what should go in a community garden.”

Stein has a more optimistic view of human nature than I do. She believes that ordinary people can get together to make decisions on financing, manufacturing, marketing and all the other facets of a big, complex business. Now, Stein said, businesses, big and small, make decision-making by communities or local governments impossible because of their narrow interests and campaign contributions.

“The Green New Deal operates in a far different process, not subject to money and backroom deals,” she said. “People can get together, make compromises. You can’t make compromises when there are predators. This is a society poisoned by distrust.”

Another big issue for her is student loans, which she wants canceled.

“This has to be the most mobilizing issue,” Stein said. “It started happening in Carbondale, Ill. Suddenly, our events were mobbed. This became the norm, and we did an event in San Francisco before the primary. We thought it would be a quiet visit to California. We had to turn hundreds of people away.

“There is a rebellion, and it is being led by millennials. There are 43 million young people locked into predatory debt. They just have to know they can cancel their debt by voting Green. Just by organizing on social media, young people can take over this election. We have full houses at millennial events. Debt is the sleeper issue in the campaign. It is the elephant in the room.”

Stein said this kind of support is why she has moved up in the polls without “any major-league coverage” by the television networks and the cable news channels.

But both she and Johnson, the Libertarian candidate, face a big obstacle. The Commission on Presidential Debates requires that candidates get at least 15 percent on five national polls before they are admitted to the debate club. Formed by Republican and Democratic Party officials several years ago, the commission looks as though it’s another establishment ploy to exclude outsiders.

Stein has got good, progressive ideas and deserves to be heard by a wide audience. This is especially true since the election is coming down to a contest between Clinton and Donald Trump, who are battling each other for first place in the unpopularity category. In that kind of election, nothing is impossible.


.

Vote for Jill Stein

SUBHEAD: The two party system in America has failed. It drifts right with madmen and warmongers.

By Juan Wilson on 28 June 2016 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/06/vote-for-jill-stein.html)


Image above: 2016 Presidential candidate Jill Stein at the podium. From (http://www.mintpressnews.com/jill-stein-green-party-set-break-2016/216317/).

The power elites of the "Western World" would have you think that the British exit (Brexit) referendum vote to leave the European Union is a reactionary effort. In effect, that it is smeared with racist xenophobia and is an affront to the liberal egalitarian sophistication that Europe has so carefully adorned itself with.

The Western World has been epitomized after the Second World War by Pax Americana. The United States extended Pax Americana in Europe through our loyal ally Britain and our vanquished foe Germany. America's "defense" against the Soviets included all Western Europe and recently has been extending its reach into Eastern Europe against the Russians.

However, the "Western World" was built on a foundation modern industrial production and supported by international free trade. But modern industrial society has been failing since the 1970's do to environmental collapse, material  resource depletion and exhaustion of sources for cheap fossil fuels.   

This winding down has led to the power elites desperate juggling to keep its balls in the air by any means available... namely issuing more debt, demanding bail-outs, decreeing bail-ins, betting on failure, decreeing negative interest rates and creating any and all kindsof Ponzi schemes just to preserve the appearance of credit and wealth.

But even that game is coming to an end. The reality is the Western World is broke and cannot afford what it thinks should be its lifestyle.

Here in America we began the abandonment of the poor under Clinton a quarter of a century ago. Worldwide the middle class has been eviscerated for the elites. Although Europe still provides an envied system of entitlements to a large proportion of its citizens there come a day of reckoning.

The vote on the Brexit was that day. The people of England registered their lack of faith in the fairness of The Game.

We are about to see an acceleration of big things coming apart. In America this July such things will be televised live during the Democratic and Republican party conventions.Cleveland and Philadelphia may never be the same again. Both parties have doubled-down on on insanity and are ready to explode.

REPUBLICANS EXPLODE
The Republicans are ready to nominate a bankrupt sideshow barker as president. His tools are expressing xenophobia and bluster. Much of party apparatchiks are willing to join a Nazi inspired festival if it means winning.

Notice though, the rats deserting the ship to embrace Clinton.

Right-wing pundit George Will has pledged to vote for Hillary Clinton. He's not alone.

So has Henry Paulson (George Bush's Treasury Secretary and former Goldman Sachs chief exec) has rushed to her side as well.

So has Brent Scowcraft endorsed Hillary Clinton (a Republican who served as National Security Adviser to former presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush).

So have many more. 

The smoke is in the air and when the Republican National Convention takes place in Cleveland, Ohio the flames will be licking at the structure of the Grand Old Party.

DEMOCRATS SELL SOUL TO DEVIL
As the Republicans find no more rightside to go to they have left a lot of ground for the Democrats to take easily. Clinton is leading them to a new Republican Party. In preparation she she has wooed and been wooed by the Goldman Sachs crowd to the tune of a dozen speeches at 300k each. She a banksters wet dream.

Moreover she is a hawk's hawk. Clinton's trail of death and failure in the Middle East is the legacy of her unflinching support of Israeli militarism. Hillary will extend the perpetual Mideast War we've been in since 1991. Clinton's also pushing hard against Russia over the Ukraine, comparing Vladimir Putin to Hitler.

She's also making the Pacific Pivot to push hard on China and North Korea to establish America's "Pacific Century".

The Democratic National Committee, under the leadership of Clinton follower Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, has ignored Bernie Sanders' issues and endorsed fracking, the TPP and Israeli Occupation of Palestine. See (http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2016/06/betraying-bern.html).

Hillary is a Republican in Democrat's pantsuit.

BOTTOM LINE > VOTE FOR STEIN
Jill Stein (http://www.jill2016.com/) is running for US President for the Green Party and will be on the ballot in Hawaii and a dozen other states. Although she is unlikely to win she represents our sentiments and beliefs.

These are the core values of the Green Party:

Grassroots Democracy
Every human being deserves a say in the decisions that affect their lives; no one should be subject to the will of another. Therefore we will work to increase public participation at every level of government and to ensure that our public representatives are fully accountable to the people who elect them. We will also work to create new types of political ]organizations that expand the process of participatory democracy by ]directly including citizens in the decision-making process.

Ecological Wisdom
Human societies must operate with the understanding that we are part of nature, not separate from nature. We must maintain an ecological balance and live within the ecological and resource limits of our communities and our planet. We support a sustainable society that utilizes resources in such a way that future generations will benefit and not suffer from the practices of our generation. To this end we must have agricultural practices that replenish the soil; move to an energy efficient economy; and live in ways that respect the integrity of natural systems.

Social Justice and Equal Opportunity
All persons should have the rights and opportunity to benefit equally from the resources afforded us by society and the environment. We must consciously confront in ourselves, our organizations, and society at large, barriers such as racism and class oppression, sexism and heterosexism, ageism and disability, which act to deny fair treatment and equal justice under the law.

Nonviolence
It is essential that we develop effective alternatives to our current patterns of violence at all levels, from the family and the streets, to nations and the world. We will work to demilitarize our society and eliminate weapons of mass destruction, without being naive about the intentions of other governments. We recognize the need for self-defense and the defense of others who are in helpless situations. We promote nonviolent methods to oppose practices and policies with which we disagree, and will guide our actions toward lasting personal, community and global peace.

Decentralization
Centralization of wealth and power contributes to social and economic injustice, environmental destruction, and militarization. Therefore, we support a restructuring of social, political and economic institutions away from a system that is controlled by and mostly benefits the powerful few, to a democratic, less bureaucratic system. Decision-making should, as much as possible, remain at the individual and local level, while assuring that civil rights are protected for all citizens.

Community Based Economics
We recognize it is essential to create a vibrant and sustainable economic system, one that can create jobs and provide a decent standard of living, for all people, while maintaining a healthy ecological balance. A successful economic system will offer meaningful work with dignity, while paying a "living wage" which reflects the real value of a person's work. Local communities must look to economic development that assures protection of the environment and workers' rights, broad citizen participation in planning, and enhancement of our "quality of life". We support independently owned and operated companies which are socially responsible, as well as co-operatives and public enterprises that spread out resources and control to more people through democratic participation.

Feminism
We have inherited a social system based on male domination of politics and economics. We call for the replacement of the cultural ethics of domination and control, with more cooperative ways of interacting which respect differences of opinion and gender. Human values such as equity between the -sexes, interpersonal responsibility, and honesty must be developed with moral conscience. We should remember that the process that determines our decisions and actions is just as important as achieving the outcome we want.

Respect for Diversity
We believe it is important to value cultural, ethnic, racial, sexual, religious and spiritual diversity, and to promote the development of respectful relationships across these lines. We believe the many diverse elements of society should be reflected in our organizations and decision-making bodies, and we support the leadership of people who have been traditionally closed out of leadership roles. We acknowledge and encourage respect for other life forms and the preservation of biodiversity.

Personal and Global responsibility
We encourage individuals to act to improve their personal well being and, at the same time, to enhance ecological balance and social harmony. We seek to join with people and organizations around the world to foster peace, economic justice, and the health of the planet.

Future Focus and Sustainability
Our actions and policies should be motivated by long-term goals. We seek to protect valuable natural resources, safely disposing of or "unmaking" all waste we create, while developing a sustainable economics that does not depend on continual expansion for survival. We must counter-balance the drive for short-term profits by assuring that economic development, new technologies, and fiscal policies are responsible to future generations who will inherit the results of our actions. Our overall goal is not merely to survive, but to share lives that are truly worth living. We believe the quality of our individual lives is enriched by the quality of all of our lives. We encourage everyone to see the dignity and intrinsic worth in all of life, and to take the time to understand and appreciate themselves, their community and the magnificent beauty of this world.


Video above: Jill Stein on "The Two Party System is Broken" from her website. From (https://youtu.be/2NjkCfjU-FY).

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Earth Day and Green Movements

SUBHEAD:This Earth Day get involved with some Green Wizardry. Prepare yourself and enjoy the ride.

By Juan Wilson on 22 April 2015 for Island Breath  -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2015/04/earth-day-and-green-movements.html)


Image above: Earth Day by Sam Spook on Deviant Art. From (http://happywallpaper.net/earth-day-pics.html).

GREEN ENVIRONMENTALISM
Each year, Earth Day -- April 22 -- marks the anniversary of what many consider the birth of the modern environmental Green Movement in 1970.
"Earth Day 1970 achieved a rare political alignment, enlisting support from Republicans and Democrats, rich and poor, city slickers and farmers, tycoons and labor leaders. The first Earth Day led to the creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Endangered Species Acts."  (http://www.earthday.org/earth-day-history-movement).
GREEN POLITICS
Along the way the Green Environmental Movement became political. There was a time about a quarter of a century back when the Green movement was a political idea with some teeth. The Green Party Movement was (and is) a real force in German politics that was compared by some with Red Communism. In America the Greens have run candidates for office with little success. In 2012 Jill Stein ran with Cheri Honkaka against Obama and Biden. Did you vote for them?

The Ten Principles of the Green Party of the United States are (http://www.gp.org/tenkey.php):
1. GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY
Every human being deserves a say in the decisions that affect their lives and not be subject to the will of another. Therefore, we will work to increase public participation at every level of government and to ensure that our public representatives are fully accountable to the people who elect them. We will also work to create new types of political organizations which expand the process of participatory democracy by directly including citizens in the decision-making process.

2. SOCIAL JUSTICE AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
All persons should have the rights and opportunity to benefit equally from the resources afforded us by society and the environment. We must consciously confront in ourselves, our organizations, and society at large, barriers such as racism and class oppression, sexism and homophobia, ageism and disability, which act to deny fair treatment and equal justice under the law.

3. ECOLOGICAL WISDOM
Human societies must operate with the understanding that we are part of nature, not separate from nature.  We must maintain an ecological balance and live within the ecological and resource limits of our communities and our planet. We support a sustainable society which utilizes resources in such a way that future generations will benefit and not suffer from the practices of our generation. To this end we must practice agriculture which replenishes the soil; move to an energy efficient economy; and live in ways that respect the integrity of natural systems.

4. NON-VIOLENCE
It is essential that we develop effective alternatives to society’s current patterns of violence. We will work to demilitarize, and eliminate weapons of mass destruction, without being naive about the intentions of other governments.  We recognize the need for self-defense and the defense of others who are in helpless situations. We promote non-violent methods to oppose practices and policies with which we disagree, and will guide our actions toward lasting personal, community and global peace.

5. DECENTRALIZATION
Centralization of wealth and power contributes to social and economic injustice, environmental destruction, and militarization. Therefore, we support a restructuring of social, political and economic institutions away from a system which is controlled by and mostly benefits the powerful few, to a democratic, less bureaucratic system. Decision-making should, as much as possible, remain at the individual and local level, while assuring that civil rights are protected for all citizens.

6. COMMUNITY-BASED ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
We recognize it is essential to create a vibrant and sustainable economic system, one that can create jobs and provide a decent standard of living for all people while maintaining a healthy ecological balance. A successful economic system will offer meaningful work with dignity, while paying a “living wage” which reflects the real value of a person’s work.
Local communities must look to economic development that assures protection of the environment and workers’ rights; broad citizen participation in planning; and enhancement of our “quality of life.” We support independently owned and operated companies which are socially responsible, as well as co-operatives and public enterprises that distribute resources and control to more people through democratic participation.

7. FEMINISM AND GENDER EQUITY
We have inherited a social system based on male domination of politics and economics. We call for the replacement of the cultural ethics of domination and control with more cooperative ways of interacting that respect differences of opinion and gender. Human values such as equity between the sexes, interpersonal responsibility, and honesty must be developed with moral conscience. We should remember that the process that determines our decisions and actions is just as important as achieving the outcome we want.

8. RESPECT FOR DIVERSITY
We believe it is important to value cultural, ethnic, racial, sexual, religious and spiritual diversity, and to promote the development of respectful relationships across these lines.
We believe that the many diverse elements of society should be reflected in our organizations and decision-making bodies, and we support the leadership of people who have been traditionally closed out of leadership roles. We acknowledge and encourage respect for other life forms than our own and the preservation of biodiversity.
9. PERSONAL AND GLOBAL RESPONSIBILITY
We encourage individuals to act to improve their personal well-being and, at the same time, to enhance ecological balance and social harmony. We seek to join with people and organizations around the world to foster peace, economic justice, and the health of the planet.

10. FUTURE FOCUS AND SUSTAINABILITY
Our actions and policies should be motivated by long-term goals. We seek to protect valuable natural resources, safely disposing of or “unmaking” all waste we create, while developing a sustainable economics that does not depend on continual expansion for survival. We must counterbalance the drive for short-term profits by assuring that economic development, new technologies, and fiscal policies are responsible to future generations who will inherit the results of our actions.
The only problem with Green Politics in America is that no one is listening or cares. It's dead in the water because it would mean turning our attention away from the big colorful flat screens that suck the life out of us.

GREEN CONSUMERISM
The Green Consumer movement envisions solar panels charging lithium batteries in self-driving sedans and home 3D printers producing plastic buckets and dustpans while thorium and fusion reactors power server-farms for our wireless devices. And let's not forget local food production - there is nothing like foraging at the artisanal food market for expensive organic greens grown sustainably by wwoofers.

One thing that Green Consumerism clings to is Techno-Optimism. That's the idea that more advances in science and  technology - and their implementation in our everyday lives is the only way to save ourselves and the world. The TED Talks - focusing on Technology, Entertainment and Design - are a good example of the Green consumer propaganda. Today's Earthday TED talk is titled "How Virtual Reality can can Create the Ultimate Empathy Machine".

There is also the feel-good side of being a green consumer. TreeHugger.com is one sterling example. It once was a website with some teeth. It has devolved into one "Partial to a modern aesthetic, sharing sustainable design, green news and solutions." Some headlines from Earthday 2015:


A look at NYC's eco-friendly residential buildings

China's low-carbon electricity on track to be greater than entire U.S. grid
Cutting emissions slows climate change faster than we thought
Twelve really cool random things about planet Earth  subtitled:
In celebration of Earth Day: An ode to our awesome orb.

GREEN ROT
And so Earth Day has become an empty vessel. Environmentalism has become co-opted and transformed into a new approach to corporate consumerism and dragged the Earth Day crowd along for the ride. They do not want to hear the bad news or change what they are doing. Who does? Unless knowing the truth is required to living life in the future.

As individuals there is precious little we can do to influence the large environmentally destructive forces that surround us and in which we are embedded. One can participate in organized protests, demonstrations, walk-outs, sit-ins and the like, but these efforts are more symbolic than strategic.

The economic, political, military and social forces that weave the tale of history may even notice your efforts in numbers, but the play of the larger forces are what really make the changes on the ground.

What is available to individuals is an understanding of the overarching forces and how personal planning and action can anticipate changes over the horizon and make decisions that result in the best accommodation to the future.

The players in the big system have to do this all the time. The pharmacy chain Walgreens just made such a decision regarding Kauai. See TGI article from 4/18/15:
The first Walgreens on Kauai will not be opening after all, at least not in the Hokulei Village shopping center under construction in Lihue.

Walgreens spokesman Philip Caruso said the decision was based on review of the geographic market presence and performance of its stores, including existing locations and future-planned stores, conducted over the past year.
“As a part of this process, we conducted a comprehensive financial reassessment of our plans to open a new store in Kauai and have concluded that it is not in our company’s best interests to move forward with opening a store in that location.”
In my opinion the Hokulei Village was one shopping center too many for the Lihue-Puhi area to accommodate. The idea that a giant Safeway Lifestyes supermarket was needed within a stone's throw of the Kukio Grove Times supermarket and the Costco supermarket is obviously a bad idea.

If there was a need for another supermarket on the southside of Kauai  perhaps it might be located in a town without any supermarket -  like Kalaeho or Kekaha.  Wouldn't that help to alleviate the traffic we are forced to widen the Kaumaalii Highway for?

Walgreens will not be the last to decide Kauai is not a place to invest for growth. The reality is that the world powers are being dragged kicking and screaming away from abundant energy, resources and consumption.  Many of their best laid plans for Californicating Kauai will face economic headwinds that will not abate.

The Chinese real estate bubble is unraveling and their economy is entering recession. So is Europe while facing the Greek Euro Exit and a war in the Ukraine...  and so is America and its federally financialized fake equity markets and fake job markets and fake promise of higher education for everybody. The old growth model, and the middle class are in the dust bin.

Things will not get built that already have permits. Middle class tourists won't be able to afford a family of four vacation to Hawaii. Existing national chain stores on Kauai will start closing their doors.

You will find your life here changing dramatically. What you can do?

GREEN WIZARDRY
John Michael Greer, the Archdruid of North America, coined the term. See(http://www.dailykos.com/story/2013/09/17/1239343/-Green-Wizardry-People-Get-Ready#) and http://www.amazon.com/Green-Wizardry-Conservation-Gardening-Appropriate/dp/0865717478)

Greer sees the environmental movement of the 1970s of having grasped the solution to our current dilemma of social and environmental collapse. It is a combination of conservation, solar energy organic gardening, and other hands-on DIY skills from the appropriate tech toolkit.

So this Earth Day get involved with some Green Wizardry. There is hard work ahead. But it is work that you can do on your own and those close to you, that will improve where you are. That is really all we can do. 

Prepare yourself and enjoy the ride.

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Why I voted for Obama

SUBHEAD: Winona LaDuke ran for vice president twice on the Green Party ticket. Here’s why she voted for Barack Obama this time around.

By Winona LaDuke on 6 November 2012 for Yes Magazine -
(http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/winona-laduke-why-i-am-voting-for-barack-obama)


Image above: Photo portrait of Winona LaDuke. From (http://www.theseasonsyakima.com/products-page/events/%E2%80%9Crage-against-the-machine-the-pacific-northwest-and-imperial-oil%E2%80%9D-winona-laduke/).

Let’s start big. It’s official. Climate change is no longer a topic of the presidential election banter. Since pretty much no one has mentioned climate change for the past three months, we must be free and clear. As I watch the East Coast get hammered by Hurricane Sandy, and 7.4 million people have no power, I note that politicians may be wrong.

I just spent an evening with my Harvard classmate Bill McKibben, president of 350.org, who sobered me up a bit on where we are. As of May, we had broken world temperature records for the 327th month in a row. Worldwide, we broke maybe 100,000 temperature records this year. We saw the sea ice melt in the Arctic, making it possible to move through the region and exploit more oil, deeper than ever. Nice, except if you are a polar bear, or happen to live on Christmas Island, Tuvalu, or other Pacific countries that are now going underwater. Then there is our food, coming from the ocean to a Red Lobster near you. The north Pacific itself is already about 30 percent more acidic than it was 25 years ago. That is climate change.

In Copenhagen, in a post-conference accord, 167 countries agreed to not hit the two-degree temperature rise mark. We have already driven global temperatures up 0.8 degrees. And if we are interested in the tipping point: Swiss Re, the world’s largest reinsurance company, predicts that climate-change-related disasters will be costing about 20 percent of world GDP by 2020—that’s a scant eight years, or two presidential elections, away. That will be a costly problem for our economy, and for whomever is in the White House.

World leaders also agreed that we could only burn some 565 gigatons of carbon, and, as McKibben explains, “have some reasonable hope of staying below two degrees—reasonable in this case means four chances in five…pretty good, except for this is like roulette.”

Here we see the problem on the horizon speeding towards us and our kids. The fossil fuel industry has about 2,795 gigatons of carbon already in their “reserves.” That is about five times more than we can safely burn without combusting ourselves to oblivion. But it sure looks good on paper and in corporate portfolios.

The Alberta tar sands (or what is at the other end of the Keystone XL pipeline) represent a big chunk of that carbon—about 240 gigatons, give or take a few. Exxon itself, with some 7 percent of the remaining carbon reserves, calls climate change an “engineering problem with an engineering solution. “ Exxon’s CEO Rex Tillerson says, “If we need to move our crop production areas, we will.” This is a bit optimistic. Crop production areas are farms, and they exist on land. You cannot just move a cornfield to the subarctic. And, unless you are divine, it is unlikely you can make it rain when the farmers need it, without dire consequences elsewhere in the world.

Then there is the pro life thing. Now, I am pro life. It just turns out that my definition of pro life is a bit broader than that of the Tea Party. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman’s Sunday opinion piece notes that:
Hard line conservatives have gone to new extremes lately in opposing abortions. In late October, Richard Mourdock, the Tea Party-backed Republican Senate candidate in Indiana declared during a debate that he was against abortion, even in the event of rape. And Missouri Representative Todd Akin told the press that pregnancy as a result of “legitimate rape” is rare because the female body has ways to try and shut that whole thing down.
Wow, that is a really interesting factoid that I, who have a uterus, did not know.

Freidman continues:
In my world you don’t get to call yourself pro-life and be against common sense gun control, like banning public access to the assault rifle which was used…in a Colorado Theater. You don’t get to call yourself pro-life and…shut down the Environmental Protection Agency, which ensures clean air and water, prevents childhood asthma and preserves biodiversity, and combats climate change that could disrupt every life on the planet.
I would add that you don’t get to call yourself pro-life if you advocate—by default—for extinction of species or for wars that will result in four out of five casualties being non-combatants (that is what wars generally cause).

So, where am I going with this column?

I know President Obama does not share my enlightened views on all issues, but I am dead sure that the terrain should be contested.

I am a person of faith, who does not happen to be Christian.

And I am pro-life, in a much larger sense.

I believe that life should include the Earth.

So there you have it. I am a two-time Green Party Candidate for vice president and I am voting for Barack Obama because I am pro-life and want to see our descendants have a beautiful life on our Mother Earth.

Winona LaDuke (Anishinaabe) is a Native Amer­i­can activist, envi­ron­men­tal­ist, econ­o­mist, and writer. In 1996 and 2000, she ran for vice pres­i­dent as the nom­i­nee of the United States Green Party, on a ticket headed by Ralph Nader. LaDuke is a contributing editor at YES! Magazine, as well as an internationally acclaimed author, orator, and activist. A graduate of Harvard and Antioch Universities with advanced degrees in rural economic development, LaDuke has devoted her life to protecting the lands and life ways of Native communities.



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