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Welcome to Brave New World News.

Tonight’s topic: NAU

Ladies and Gentlemen, as global citizens becoming more connected through technology and innovation we have limitless opportunities to succeed, to evolve, to unite. The question is, What happens to Sovereignty?

The European Union, the African Union, and soon, the North American Union. Oh, you didn’t know about the African Union? You will notice it now. Awareness of a thing brings greater attention to it.

BBC and The Nation are just a couple of examples using AU and African Union in their reporting. Surely there are millions of global citizens whom aren’t even aware this happened between 2000 and 2002.

Consolidation to centralise anything in life is a single-edged sword. Perish the thought that we will allow centralised blocs of power to dictate our lives as human beings on this planet.

Breaking news update:

There is no imminent threat to your safety, other than your own carelessness.

Centralised governments want you to feel insecure, unsure of your own capabilities because then you will rely on them at an ever increasing rate, in an ever increasing number.

People of the world, we are capable of greater autonomy.

Many citizens are switched on, (not to network news, mind you). They are being curious, asking questions, looking for truth and logic, and understanding. Many are aware that the U.S. has signed an agreement with Canada and Mexico to create the North American Union as of 31 December 2009. This is not far away, 17 months. Considering how fast the last 7 months have vanished, it is imperative that we not wake up on New Year’s Day 2010 and ask ourselves, “How did this happen?” (Reminiscent of the Talking Heads song, Once in a Lifetime) If this comes to fruition, it will be a time of further consolidation as a single currency for Mexico, Canada & the U.S. will be introduced. It’s called the Amero. But you knew this already. Network news won’t report about it, & CNN has mentioned it a few times.

And folks, if McCain or Obama takes an oath in January 2009, you can rest assured either man will be required to follow through on the implementation eleven months later on 31 December 2009.

This is one of the numerous reasons Dr. Ron Paul is needed as President. He is a strong advocate of free markets, free speech, responsible monetary policy, and has my vote for President. Ron Paul wants to maintain a sovereign nation with sound economic and monetary policies which in turn requires a logical return to the gold standard and the eventual dissolution of the Federal Reserve. Dr. Paul, as a 10-term Congressman knows first hand that business and government don’t mix, as I’ve written before in another commentary entitled In the days before Dumbledore, “…, as we know, government and business make for wicked bed partners. The outcome cultivates torrid monetary affairs.”

Which leads to our dominant headline story at the moment here in New Zealand.

Our current Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Peters has been snagged for dodgy actions with fundraising contributions. Oh, the delight of greed in politics and the media. Mostly owned by our Tasman neighbour, Rupert Murdoch, the printed and broadcast news networks paint convoluted images and thrashing messages to swing mass opinion. All it does is reinforce the point above about government and business.

Now back to our main story.

Where does Ron Paul stand on the NAU? He opposes it. It’s the expansion of socialism.

The seeds of the NAU agreement were planted in NAFTA, followed by secret meetings. Shocking, I know. You can even read about it at wikipedia.

I think this writer is starting to understand the dynamics of the last 7.5 years. Cheney, Carlyle Group and even Condi are the ones creating policies to benefit corporate balance sheets. Not that this is a revelation by any stretch of the imagination. It was a matter of understanding how George Bush the younger fits in to the scheme. It may be that he just shows up when he’s told to and does what his ‘advisors’ say. He is not a businessman, nor is he a statesman. George W is a trust fund baby, mainly incompetent and unmotivated to do anything substantial. Hence, how he became the President all fits in with the larger picture.

However, and this is crucial – all his lacking was the golden bounty for hidden powers behind his embarrassing terms as President. George Jr has been a willing, useful and lucrative pawn for those more adept at manipulation. George can go to sleep every night, blissfully ignorant, because in this writer’s opinion, he isn’t told very much. Ever. I wonder if he actually attends meetings and listens to what is being said. We know he gets paid to wear a suit, wave, sound ludicrous amongst other world leaders while the “real” work happens, and vacation in Crawford, Texas. We also know he’ll wake up on New Year’s Day 2010 without any concern for the loss of ideals, rights and liberties. If the NAU happens

George Jr. was sent to meet with Mexico’s President Felipe Calderon and Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper, more than once. Mind you, amidst all it’s secretive encounters, the NAU initiative is now more obvious, and known to be engineered by a group called SPP, Security and Prosperity Partnership.

In light of the medionic language romancing citizens for decades now; there is a disturbing percentage whom are actually conditioned to respond positively to the word ‘security’ – airport security, Homeland Security, safety and security.

Here is the harsh truth my fellow citizens: Security is not found in the arms of your government.

It is essential that this understanding be communicated to All Countries, particularly those in the OECD. If unified, consolidated blocs of economic and legal power determine the strategies of its member states, then we are looking the rear view mirror in the eye.

Kingdoms and fiefdoms lasted only so long before tyranny induced those being ruled to unite and overthrow that which was oppressing them. There are many (?) who would keenly and competently argue that SPP and NAU are good for the U.S. and for the world. Check out how the SPP attempts to dispel myth versus fact. Any citizen with a modicum of intelligence and insight will probably feel their skin crawl in a vain effort of the SPP to sound convincing about their version of what is fact.

I’d like to hear these points, this logic, this debate. It seems that the crashing U.S. economy is part of the necessary steps to introduce the new currency.

The Amero, Ladies and Gentlemen, will be set up to solve the economic and monetary crisis. I’d like to be wrong on this one.

It is this writer’s belief that the responsibility, and ultimately the freedom of citizenry relies on the willingness to speak out, stand firm, keep questioning, and to keep thinking. These are the ways we will determine what is good and right for our speck of a planet amidst this grand universe.

Thanks for listening. Tune in tomorrow, we live in interesting times.

Until soon…

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Welcome to Brave New World News.

Events in politics, business, eco-nomics, culture and editorial expression to help enlighten our global citizens. (As opposed to pacifying, numbing and de-sensitizing human beings)

Condi Rice was here during the weekend, in New Zealand spouting the words of “21st century ally” to NZ Prime Minister Helen Clark and National Party hopeful John Key. Then yesterday, in the afternoon, on Radio New Zealand National, on a programme equivalent to Talk of the Nation on NPR in America, the commentators alluded to the fact Her Honourable Ms. Clark seemingly sees right through the manipulations and implications of aligning with an imperialistic bully.

Quite frankly Ladies and Gentlemen, from seven thousand miles away, I see this as if the Cheney/Bush/Carlyle Group is the dark side of the Force, and Ron Paul, Helen Clark, Kevin Rudd, Ann Richards, Mario Cuomo, Bill Bradley, and a few other voices and leaders scattered throughout recent history are the Jedi. This may be construed as an over-simplified analogy or metaphor, however, this writer has had enough of double entendre, political spin, euphemistic phrase conditioning and all the other silly games played by corporate media.

Today we have special coverage asking questions about Carlyle Group.

Their list of gentlemen (women seem to hold positions of marketing, business development, administration, support) involved with the management of the group reads like an issue of Barron’s, Wall Street Journal, Fortune 500 and Forbes. Know who’s listed?

Middle East

The whole list of one-time and former associates and affiliates at wikipedia.org is here

The following is written on the website for Carlyle Group:

“Carlyle is a private partnership, which means that it is owned by a group of individuals, most of whom are Managing Directors at Carlyle, and two institutional investors. CalPERS, the California Public Employees Retirement Systems, owns approximately 5 percent, and Mubadala Development Company, a strategic investment and development company headquartered in Abu Dhabi, owns 7.5 percent. The companies and real estate in which Carlyle invests are owned by the funds that made the investments.”

“While open to opportunities wherever they can be found, Carlyle focuses on sectors in which it has demonstrated expertise: aerospace & defense, automotive & transportation, consumer & retail, energy & power, financial services, healthcare, industrial, infrastructure, real estate, technology & business services and telecommunications & media…”

“Carlyle’s conservative investment philosophy and disciplined investment process has generated extraordinary returns for its investors. Since its founding in 1987, the firm has invested $43.0 billion in 774 transactions. More than 1,200 investors from 71 countries entrust Carlyle with their capital and their reputations. As one means of aligning its own interests with those of its Limited Partner investors, Carlyle has committed more than $3.9 billion of its own capital to its funds.”

Their areas of expertise and interest pretty much cover all industries which would have a direct effect on the economies of whole countries.

Let’s do the math 1200 investors divided by 71 countries = 16.9 investors on average per country.

Global citizens awake. Who would those 3, 9, 17, or 32 be in each country?

The names, positions held, inter-connections are blatant, quite incestuous really.

However, in their FAQ section, you will find these statements:

4. Who are your investors?

This writer would like to remind the reader that Global Vision is greatly enhanced by the involvement of former Prime Ministers and Presidents – who better to express the trends so money is invested according to such exponential gains? Conservative investment philosophy shows that 66% of their fund is ‘Buyout’and 16% is Leveraged Finance. In my simple assessment, that would be 82% of extreme wealth essentially controlling what they invest in.

Carlyle’s investors are public and private institutional investors and high net worth individuals. Carlyle does not disclose information about its investors.

5. How is Carlyle different from other private equity firms?

Carlyle’s global presence and local market knowledge sets us apart from other private equity firms. We have Global Vision : Local Insight – Global because Carlyle operates 60 funds in 21 countries; Local because our more than 500 investment professionals work in their home countries. Carlyle is also different because of its conservative investment philosophy; rather than swing for the fences with every investment, we strive for consistency, hitting singles, doubles, and triples with far fewer strike-outs. Carlyle investment professionals also invest their own money alongside our investors, so when we say we treat our investors’ money like our own, we mean it.

Stay with us and watch this pattern take shape. <short, pleasant station break>

And we are back, discussing news that no one else will. This may not bode well for wide viewing interest; however, it is our aim to educate, to motivate thinking and the desire to question.

Here’s an example: Le Figaro, France’s printed bastion of published right wing thought followed this course of ownership:

In 1999 the Carlyle Group obtained a 40% stake in the paper, which it later sold in March of 2002. As of 2004, Le Figaro is controlled by Serge Dassault, a conservative businessman and politician best known for running the aircraft manufacturer Dassault Aviation, which he inherited from his father, its founder, Marcel (1892–1986).

Please take notice of which INDUSTRY Monsieur Dassault was from, and now connect the dot to the notation about the expertise in aerospace and defence that Carlyle purports to rely upon for investment. A very convenient chain of association.

In 20-21 years, Carlyle has managed to accumulate $82 billion in managed assets and funds. An awesome feat, then again they’ve had help from some very key principals and directors along the way. Their inception in 1987 was one year before George Bush Sr took residence in the Oval Office. Quite timely.

People of world, if you read this report, it is only a sketch, some might accusingly point out it’s an etch-a-sketch of how the Military Industrial Complex is protecting its lucrative interests and increasing global control. This leads to the enquiry of, “why did Dwight D. Eisenhower warn the American public of the MIC?”

He described the Cold War saying: “We face a hostile ideology global in scope, atheistic in character, ruthless in purpose and insidious in method…” and warned about what he saw as unjustified government spending proposals and continued with a warning that “we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex… Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.”

Was he not describing the role of powerful U.S. industries manipulating the post-war economies around the world?

We encourage interaction, taking responsibility, learning.

We hope you will espouse your views and comments.

Thank you for tuning in.

Brave New World News – when truth needs to be heard.

Here’s to Evolution – the name defines the concept.

This writer supports Ron Paul for U.S. President

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Yesterday’s news is just the beginning.

“Australian Financial Crisis” to follow.

It is expected that other countries still trading with and printing their own currency will follow Australia, such as New Zealand, Cook Islands, Fiji in order to introduce a unified bloc currency.

Then More Good News after 10

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/07/25/2314957.htm?section=justin

Financial calamities are seemingly real because centralised banks around the globe are playing a new game to induce panic. Medionic frenzy is my word to define it. Even newsreaders* are trained in how to effectively use their voice to relay the messages which dumb down our ability to decipher newsworthy versus news pithy. Turn it off. Just say no!

The idea is to not panic, please avoid knee-jerk reactions of fear and victimization. Of becoming numbed by the repetition. Your instinct, insight and intuition will guide you to the exit. Please follow their instructions and you won’t get lost or trampled. Civilisation will return tomorrow with a new episode.

Will any one be able to ask Kevin Rudd to comment here?

Till soon, W

*News journalists are now kept hidden from the masses in the event they impart knowledge and or truth

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Greetings from Aotearoa, life has been full of change and Brave New World in the City has been neglected once again. I do have a worthy post, though – this was sent from a Kiwi friend living in Pennsylvania. If you saw Bill Moyers on PBS this weekend, you will have seen his interview with William Greider. If not, then do give a read. These are the topics, the issues, the knowledge media needs to impart. Thankfully Bill Moyers returned to television, a sane, clear voice to help balance the medionic propaganda of network news. We now receive satellite transmissions of some PBS programming in New Zealand, being aired on Triangle TV, channel 50 on Saturn cable. Till soon, W

July 18, 2008

BILL MOYERS: With me now is one of America’s leading chroniclers of money, power, and politics, who says what’s happening is the disgrace of Wall Street, its excesses paid for by people like those in Cleveland and millions like them around the country.

William Greider has spent forty years examining how powerful institutions affect ordinary people. Once a top editor of THE WASHINGTON POST, a columnist for ROLLING STONE, and now National Affairs Correspondent for THE NATION, he has produced a series of best-selling books: SECRETS OF THE TEMPLE: HOW THE FEDERAL RESERVE RUNS THE COUNTRY, ONE WORLD, READY OR NOT: THE MANIC LOGIC OF GLOBAL CAPITALISM, WHO WILL TELL THE PEOPLE: THE BETRAYAL OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY, and this one, THE SOUL OF CAPITALISM. He’s working on a new book with the title: COME HOME, AMERICA.

Good to see you in person.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Thanks Bill.

BILL MOYERS: What were you thinking as you saw that report from Cleveland?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Made me angry all over again, even though I know the story. And then I thought, “This is usury.” This is a living example of what the Bible prohibited, which is the sin of usury. Most Americans have never heard of it probably.

BILL MOYERS: Usury?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Usury, to be clear about it, is rich people taking advantage of poor people by lending them money on terms that are sure to make them fail. All three of the great religions, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, had a moral prohibition against usury because they recognized that society can’t function like that. People of great wealth and their institutions like banks naturally have the power to overwhelm people of lesser means. And you can’t allow that in a decent society. It won’t survive.

BILL MOYERS: Where were the gatekeepers? Where were the watchdogs? Why did it take the Fed so long to put an end to-

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well-

BILL MOYERS: -predatory practices?

WILLIAM GREIDER: To make the story overly crude, Congress repealed the law against usury. It was done in 1980 by a Democratic Congress, Democratic President. And, of course, the Republicans all piled on and voted for it. And that was the first stroke, only the first of many, in which they stripped away the regulatory laws from the financial system and from banking.

And that allowed the free market modernized gimmicks of one kind or another, all these things we’re now reading about, to flourish. And that’s where we are. I mean, the gatekeepers said to the banking industry and to the financial industry, “We don’t think federal control or regulation is good for you, so we’re, therefore, liberating you to do your own thing.”

BILL MOYERS: So why did they do that in 1980? I mean, there was, of course, the rise of the backlash to regulation from 40 years of Democratic rule-

WILLIAM GREIDER: The-

BILL MOYERS: -there was the rise, the arrival of the conservatives with their free market ideology.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Right, right.

BILL MOYERS: What was the issue?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, the driver then, and it was a powerful driver, was inflation. And through the ’70s, for lots of reasons inflation, which tends to undermine the value of financial wealth and money, was out of control. The Federal Reserve had lost control of it, not entirely its fault. But that set up a political climate that said the government is not working and that wasn’t wrong at the moment. Let’s get the government out of the way.

And that was very appealing as framed by Ronald Reagan and other conservatives. But I think it’s fair to say most Democrats yielded to it against whatever their original instincts were because of political necessity. And then the third dimension, maybe the most important, was that you had this very powerful industrial sector, that is banking and finance, that wanted and had pushed for years to get out from under the regulatory controls, limits on interest rates, the law against usury, the merger of commercial banks with investment banks, which had been prohibited in the New Deal because it caused the disaster of 1929.

I can go on and on. But you see the pattern. And the point I keep trying to make to people is that history learned the hard way that you do need prudential controls on industries like banking ’cause they’re so central to everybody’s well being.

BILL MOYERS: Left to their own devices, they go too far?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Yeah. They will use their power to their own advantage. And that’s what we’re witnessing now, a kind of recklessness that was set free by political retreat and people, some of them were sincere. Some of them were just on the make. But here’s our great American tension. We want an economy that’s dynamic, that’s growing, puts more jobs out there for people to get, rising wages, all that good stuff. And at the same time, we want an economy that’s stable. And that means no inflation, steady as you go, so forth and so on.

And this is the, you know, this is the mortal condition. You’re not going to escape that tension. Government is a powerful intervener that tries, ought to try, to balance those two desires. For many years, the Federal Reserve served that role and tried to strike a balance.

BILL MOYERS: And then what happened?

WILLIAM GREIDER: During the last generation, 25, 30 years ago, the Federal Reserve, the central bank that regulates money and credit, tipped hard in one direction.

BILL MOYERS: Toward?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Crudely put, toward capital, in favor of capital and against labor. It not only hardened the value of money by suppressing inflation, but it participated very aggressively in the role of stripping away regulatory breaks on financial system and banks. Declined to enforce many of its own regulatory powers that exist in law. And meanwhile, sort of kept a foot on the brake about economic growth and full employment and all those good things that might help working people by encouraging rising wages.

BILL MOYERS: So at the same time the Fed was helping to keep wages down in order to keep inflation from escalating, its policies were, nonetheless, helping banks and investors to inflate the cost of their-

WILLIAM GREIDER: Right.

BILL MOYERS: -the value of their assets beyond reality-

WILLIAM GREIDER: That’s it.

BILL MOYERS: -right?

WILLIAM GREIDER: That’s it. At one point, writing in “The Nation,” I somewhat playfully and wickedly referred to Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, as the “one-eyed chairman.” He can see inflation and wages and goods and services, the prices that consumer prices, even when it doesn’t exist. And he’ll put his foot down on the brake. But he doesn’t see the inflation in the financial system at all.

And the inflation in the financial system is the value, the prices, of financial assets, most obviously stock, rose fantastically over 20, 25 years, two, three times the growth in the real underlying economy. Something’s wrong there, right? How do these financial assets, which supposedly reflect the economy, suddenly become worth three times more?

BILL MOYERS: Yes. How did they?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, now we’re back in the game, aren’t we? With deregulation, with the help of the Fed, and with the success of the Super Bull market, everybody’s animal spirits in the financial system became more animal. And they and they went for it, and they said, “If you’ll get this rule out of the way or you let us make this kind of weird little gimmicky paper innovation, we’ll do even better.”

BILL MOYERS: Yeah, you-

WILLIAM GREIDER: And you had this force rising up, driving things higher in the stock market while, in many sectors of the economy, if not everywhere, people are saying, “Gee, this doesn’t feel that good to us.” And particularly working people.

BILL MOYERS: You’ve written about a fantasy, an illusion that led to the housing bubble. You wrote about a fantasy that was sold, an illusion that led to the housing bubble. Whose interest was it to sell a fantasy?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, the merchants of financial paper, to put it bluntly. I mean, the illusion was that you could dismantle or disregard fairly old-time traditional rules of proper banking and stewardship and that that would definitely allow prices, profits, everything to go still higher. But that they could somehow dissolve the risk in that for the society, not just for the society but for themselves.

One example of that was what you heard about in the sub-prime mortgage thing. Who is holding this mortgage that’s been lent to these people who we know are going to fail ’cause their incomes just aren’t sufficient? Well, it’s kind of hard to say because this mortgage is designed as a securitized package of 1,000 mortgages. And you sell it in the financial market to investors all over the world.

And then they sell it to somebody else, and it moves round literally. So what you’ve done with this innovation is you’ve distanced the lender from the borrower. Each party, the guy who sold the mortgage, the bank, then the next, the guy who buys the bond, takes his returns upfront, sells it on, and you stripped away the responsibility for that lending. And that’s a pretty good microcosm of what happened generally in the financial system.

BILL MOYERS: How is it that these banks wind up holding the rotten mortgage securities that of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac?

WILLIAM GREIDER: There is a level of fraud here which shouldn’t be neglected that, I mean, people lied to their customers’ banks-

BILL MOYERS: -mortgage-

WILLIAM GREIDER: -banks, mortgage houses, lied to the people they were selling these bonds to. But as we heard, they also lied to the people who were borrowing the money. I mean, this is fraud with the conflicts of interest. There’s an investigation underway now with a number of the biggest banks stuck with all this bad paper, this rotten mortgage securities. Who can they sell them to?

The otherwise savvy investors around the world have gotten burned already, so they won’t touch them. I know. Let’s sell them to our customers. And so they’re literally taking the bonds out of their own portfolio as a bank and selling them to the banks’ closed customers. Now, that’s going to stop, too, because now everybody’s onto the secrets.

WILLIAM GREIDER: I think you can get lost in the mechanics of how all this works. And it’s pretty sometimes pretty dizzying stuff. I think the bigger message is that what some of our old folks knew turns out still to be true.

BILL MOYERS: Which is?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Which is the process of lending, borrowing, investing, all of those things, require a personal hands-on knowledge of what you’re doing but also a level of integrity that, put it bluntly, does not exist at this time in our financial system.

BILL MOYERS: You see a direct connection between what happened to those people in Cleveland and across the country and the cozy relationship that you’ve often written about between Wall Street and Washington?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Yeah. Yeah. The point I want to make, though, is that this is deeper than politician rolling over for his campaign contributor, the guys who finance the Democratic Party or the Republican Party. They do that, too. But they were sold a fantasy, an illusion, which sounded wonderful about how markets make better judgments than government and the public. And that liberating finance and business from prudential rules that society imposes upon them will produce a bigger, better economy and better returns for everyone.

All those fantasies have been destroyed by these events, I mean, wiped out. And if you think about it, as we go through the hard months ahead, America’s going to have to take some pain, right? In one form or another. The government’s going to have to probably ask for some sacrifices.

How do they do that when the American people have just seen the government rush in three days, five days or less, to bail out the biggest, most powerful institutions in the country? That is, the financial investment houses and banks and major banks.

BILL MOYERS: In your opinion, the bailout of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, good or bad?

WILLIAM GREIDER: I think it’s bad. I mean, I think the way they’re doing it is terrible. It’s not done in the public interest. The bailout is necessary. They are failing at the bailout. And I believe they’re failing because they haven’t gone far enough.

They need to start thinking of, okay, how do we save the folks? That is, the broad interests of the American people as a nation, as workers, as family, blah, blah, blah. And the way to deal with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and some others like it is to nationalize them. Make them agencies of the federal government. That’s what they were originally. And they performed for many years a really valuable service to housing markets.

They sort of re-circulated the capital and the mortgages and so forth. Make them a sub-agency of government. Let the shareholders of Fannie Mae and the rest eat their losses. They were playing risk taker shareholders. Let them suffer the consequences of their wrong bets. And go back to a more normal configuration.

Not a casino. No private shareholders. Look, the bailout of Fannie Mae that they’re proposing says, somewhat generously I think, we’ll put $300 billion on the table to buy the shares of stockholders in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. And just us saying that should give them a lot of confidence. Well, yeah, wouldn’t it if you’ve just had the federal government promise to buy your shares if you don’t want to hold them anymore.

BILL MOYERS: Maybe that’s why all the foreign investors rushed in yesterday to buy Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac-

WILLIAM GREIDER: It might have some connection, yes.

BILL MOYERS: -if they know the taxpayers are going to put the money in, they’ve got a pretty good-

WILLIAM GREIDER: They’ve got what you might call a no-lose proposition. And the other part of that, and this would be simple. You could pass this in three days. Restore the federal law against usury. That won’t have too many details to it at first. But it’ll be a general statement that the federal government is prohibiting the kind of outrageous predatory practices, which have become general in this country, of not just banks but other financial firms.

BILL MOYERS: Credit card companies and-

WILLIAM GREIDER: Credit card – yeah, it’s a long list. We know those abuses.

BILL MOYERS: Put some limits, some boundaries?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, eventually you have to draw very precise boundaries, I think, and restore some structure that says, okay, you can get a return of X on credit cards, but you can’t get a return of triple X, right? And that kind of regulation. And that’s not easy to draw. It takes a while.

But the first law that would just reassure the public, we’re against usury. Muslims are against it. Christians are against it. Jews are against it. And we’re going to develop a government laws that prohibited and penalized these institutions when they get caught doing it.

BILL MOYERS: Excessive interest, owned loans.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Excessive-

BILL MOYERS: That’s what you mean by usury?

WILLIAM GREIDER: That’s the narrowest meaning. But the larger meaning is wealthy people, whether they’re banks or individuals, ought not to be able to use their power, their wealth to exploit people who don’t have wealth, great wealth. That’s not too complicated. And I’m not being utopian here. I’m just saying that you can reestablish legal-slash-moral limits on the behavior of finance and their wealthy patrons. And if they don’t want to observe those rules then they need not apply for emergency loans at the Federal Reserve or the Treasury Department.

BILL MOYERS: In other words-

WILLIAM GREIDER: You see what I’m getting at? And-

BILL MOYERS: Yeah, in other words, so-

WILLIAM GREIDER: -and this is a-

BILL MOYERS: -if there’s a bailout, certain conditions on that bailout.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Absolutely.

BILL MOYERS: Not just a free pass.

WILLIAM GREIDER: And what they’ve done in the last year, now two or three times and they’re going to do more is to say, “Oh, my goodness, the biggest investment bank, houses are in trouble. We don’t usually lend directly to them. We only lend to big banks, but they’re in trouble, too. Let’s lend to both of them. Let’s open the windows and pour out the capital, the liquidity, and so forth.” And there wasn’t a day that where they paused to say, “What are we getting in return? That these guys promise not to fail?” You see what I’m getting at? It’s-

BILL MOYERS: I do.

WILLIAM GREIDER: -it’s a wildly grotesque transaction where the public guarantees the life of these firms, and there isn’t any effort that we know of to say, “And in return, you’re going to behave in the following ways for the next ten years or maybe forever. We’ll pass a law later that spells that out more clearly, but this is our starting demand.” And I suppose they would say, “Well, we don’t have time to do that. This is a crisis, blah, blah, blah.” I don’t buy that. I think that’s a way to avoid those questions is not even mention them.

BILL MOYERS: You have been writing for a long time now that America’s moving toward a corporate state. If we become one, can we exercise the self-correcting faculty that prevents us from hitting the iceberg out there?

WILLIAM GREIDER: One of the reasons I think politics is going to change fairly dramatically is that the Federal Reserve, accompanied by the Treasury Department and I think will be accompanied by the Congress, has crossed a very dangerous line in their bailout. They have essentially said, “We will put money on the table, taxpayers’ money on the table, for any financial institution or business that is too big to fail.” That is, if it fails, it’ll send dangerous ripples through the economy.

And we’ve got a list now of maybe 30, 40, depending on how you count them, that we will be there to save you. I regard that as profoundly dangerous for the American Republic because once you cross that line and you have this special club that’s privileged, that has benefits from government that nobody else can get, where do you stop it?

I mean, if I were running a big manufacturing company, I would have quickly run out and buy a subsidiary that’s a bank or a financial firm that looks like a bank. And I would then try to get myself on that list. Who wouldn’t? What’s going on right now it’s gotten a little attention – the union SEIU is fighting it, is these private equity firms, which are huge money pots of investors that take over and change corporations and come away with huge profits. The private equity firms are trying to buy into the banks and financial firms.

BILL MOYERS: And what would that mean?

WILLIAM GREIDER: That would mean that this private unregulated equity fund would be participating behind the door, so to speak, in the management of our regulated banks. But it would also, in a pinch, if it’s big enough, maybe have a tap into that federal guarantee that if you’re too big to fail, we’ll be there for you.

BILL MOYERS: Even if-

WILLIAM GREIDER: You see what I’m getting at? And-

BILL MOYERS: I do. This morning in the “New York Times” one of the big stories in the business section is the financial industry is organizing to stop Congress from trying to regulate excessive speculation on oil and energy. They don’t want this capacity for exploiting-

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well-

BILL MOYERS: -people’s needs.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, I could lay us alongside that the Securities and Exchange Commission, which, remember in olden days, was supposed to defend us innocent investors against the guys running corporations. And that’s why we have all these reports and so forth and so on. They announced this past week that they’re going to go after the short sellers in the stock market.

The short sellers are the guys who say these folks at the corporate headquarters are lying to you or the folks at Citigroup are still not telling the truth about their losses and liabilities. So you see what I’m getting at. It’s equivalent to saying we don’t want anybody bad mouthing us in the middle of this trouble. And we’ll try to penalize them if we can. Isn’t that contradictory to the public interest?

BILL MOYERS: Have we hit bottom?

WILLIAM GREIDER: I don’t think so. But I think the short answer is nobody knows. My sense is, partly because the rottenness, the bad assets and so forth and the inflated housing prices and all the other defaults have so much more to play out – I think they will then feed back, and are already, into real economic consequences for the general life of the economy.

BILL MOYERS: Meaning?

WILLIAM GREIDER: Well, people lose jobs. Unemployment will rise.

BILL MOYERS: Like Cleveland. Yeah-

WILLIAM GREIDER: And like, you know, a perhaps less vicious story because it’ll be more gradual than what’s happening in those neighborhoods in Cleveland. But then as that happens, the losses feed back into banks because they’ve got consumer loans, they’ve got car loans, they’ve got business loans. And even banks that have been more or less virtuous in their behavior will be impinged by that. So I’m not making some grandiose calamity prediction. I’m just saying we got a lot more pain to take in this society before this works out.

BILL MOYERS: Both parties have put the watchdogs to sleep, right?

WILLIAM GREIDER: A better metaphor, instead of putting them to sleep, would be castration.

WILLIAM GREIDER: I don’t know what you want, I mean-

BILL MOYERS: Both parties of complict-

WILLIAM GREIDER: Putting them to sleep is just a metaphor that stops me-

BILL MOYERS: Both parties have been complicit in tipping the balance of power to capital, right?

WILLIAM GREIDER: I’m afraid so. That’s right. I mean, if you go back over the last 20, 25 years, it was always portrayed as a cause of conservative Republicans, even right-wing Republicans. And that was, of course, true. But I think a majority of the Democrats were in collusion virtually every step of the way, and sometimes they led the way.

BILL MOYERS: Do you think Washington really knows what’s going on? Do you think they really understand what’s happening out there in Cleveland and places like that all over the country?

WILLIAM GREIDER: The short answer is, no, I’ve been in Washington as a citizen and resident for 40 years. And I’m still occasionally shocked by its ignorance of the rest of the country. And some of that is willful, of course. But some of it is just, it’s a very nice life in Washington. You get used to certain protective qualities.

We saw that recently with these political players, who got good mortgages. How do they do that? Well, we know how they did it. And in any case, Washington doesn’t yet see the depth of the problem.

If you ask me, well, who’s figured this out? Who understands, at least in general terms, where we are? The guys in Washington? The politicians and their governing policy advisors? Or the dimwitted public? I would say the public. And I think there’s a lot of evidence in that. You know, they keep seeing these polls where the public expresses doubt about this, about-

BILL MOYERS: Eighty-one percent of the people in the most recent polls say we’re heading in the wrong direction.

WILLIAM GREIDER: I call that an extreme consensus. Why do the newspapers not celebrate that? They’re always looking for consensus politics. Here’s the American public, they’ve got an eighty– you know, that’s extraordinary.

WILLIAM GREIDER: We have an opening in this crisis for, this is really going to sound grandiose. We have an opening in this crisis for a deep transformation in American politics. I don’t say it happens this year, next year, or it’s going to take a number of years. But we are in the shock of reality. And people get it everywhere and see the blood in the streets. And you tell them how this worked and who did what to whom, and that’s a basis for a new politics.

But it requires people – this is the hard part – to get out of their sort of passive resignation to, “Well, we follow the Democrats” or “we follow the Republicans” or “we let this group or that group tell us how to think” and engage among themselves in a much more serious role as citizens. And when, as they do that, they have to be willing to punish the political powers, in smart ways or crude ways, however they can, first, to get a place in the debate. But, secondly, to force the changing values of the system.

And I, this may be wishful, but I think in the next year, two years, five years, you’re going to see both political parties floundering. What do we believe about all this stuff? We’ve told folks this, you know, lovely story for 20, 25 years about the magic of the marketplace. Do we still want to kind of prop that up? That’s where they are now. They’re still trying to prop up the marketplace vision and make it work again. It’s over.

I think events will demonstrate that. So if they’re not willing to change then we need to change the politicians. And that’s all a bloody process and doesn’t happen quickly. But that’s why I’m optimistic.

BILL MOYERS: Bill Greider we look forward to your new book, the title of it will be-

WILLIAM GREIDER: “Come Home, America”

BILL MOYERS: And you come back to the Journal.

WILLIAM GREIDER: Thanks.

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Winter has been gusting and swirling through our idyllic city. I’ve been meaning to write more often, and haven’t. Then today, I received my monthly briefing from Trend Watching, and the ‘innovation avalanche’ is quite inspiring. Some of the trends indicate that a ‘What if’ from yesterday may be possible.

Here are examples of autonomy, greater self-governance blooming in the world:

Collective culture

Scottish Tennent’s Lager has launched Tennent’s Mutual, a new music venture that will ultimately result in a live music festival later this year in which fans select artists, debate locations for gigs and call the shots on ticket prices. To kick off the effort, Tennent’s created a start-up fund of GBP 150,000. Fans are given founder member status and the right to vote on the who-what-why-where of all decisions made and how the start-up money is invested. Ticket income, meanwhile, will be ploughed back into the central fund, which will be used to bankroll other live events.

Collective Action

The Point takes the notion of the tipping point—that point at which group action will produce a clear result and inevitable change—and applies it to organizing group efforts. Those who join a campaign pledge to take specific action—to boycott a company, for example, or donate funds toward a cause—but no one actually acts until the campaign reaches its preset tipping point, or number of pledged participants. When that point is reached, however, the action is triggered and participants make their donations, attend an event or boycott as planned.

Be inspired as often as you can, it’s soul food.

Till soon, W

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I haven’t written in a while and have accumulated a list of topics that continue to synchronise with life in Brave New World in the City. Also known as Wendy’s world in Wellington.

Brave New World, Aldous Huxley was a visionary.  In the 1920’s and 30’s he saw us as we are now, medicated on what he called Soma, which was patented as Prozac in later decades, an unbelievable profit centre for the pharmaceutical manufacturer. Did you know Mr. Aldous Huxley died on the same day as JFK? I think that’s why I have such a connection to his work, his thoughts and ideals…

My parents were very young when I was born 32 days later near the end of 1963, after such collective grief. I think I absorbed some of the deep sorrow for lost ideals, which in turn became part of my psyche.

Perhaps this is a reason why thoughts such as this visit my consciousness:

Stop the madness, just for a few minutes.

Please.

Take a vacation from the maniacal messages

being thrummed into our minds and beings.

Are we not worth more than this?

Do we evolve and advance our cultures and civilisations giving our valuable attention to medionic propaganda?

Last night I went to see a concert by Wellington Vector Orchestra called Music from the Gods. The programme was Mozart’s Jupiter, Stravinsky’s Apollo, and then Tchaikovsky’s Symphony # 1 with John Chen, pianist and magician. Marc Taddei is the Orchestra’s dynamic, gifted conductor, weaving the energy of the music into grand, symphonic experiences, for the audience and also for the musicians. It was the perfect way to spend two hours on a cold and rainy Saturday night, smartly dressed, honouring musical gifts from past and present.

In light of tightening economic waves across the globe, we still hold the resources, the ability to choose how we spend our money, our time, our attention. Do you want to participate in the evolution and advancement of our cultures? Is it worth your consideration?

Until tomorrow…

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Perhaps it is time to begin, from the beginning, in the days before Dumbledore, in a galaxy far, far away…

Myths and stories are essential to our evolution, information to educate us on deeper levels. Our media channels and sources need to do more to honour inherent intelligence. I’ll leave it there. For now.

When Ted Turner’s Cable News Network entered the living rooms of my generation, they actually reported on fascinating topics. They were independent of corporate interests, free to be innovative, and appealed to millions of people. News about the terra cotta soldiers in Xian, China becoming a UNESCO site in ’87, (kids this was before the internet), China was still behind the veil of what Mao created, and showing videos of this mysterious catacomb to the world for us, was mind-expanding.  A few, true political debates (not screaming Mimi’s entrenched in ideology) and discussions were aired, some interesting biographical perspectives of business leaders…All of this programming revealed a quality of content that populations hungered for, post Peter Finch in the film Network. Slowly, through commercialisation, which is only a euphemism for selling out quality; the greater revenue generation from advertising and then the merger with Time Warner, CNN experienced a dumbing-down because higher intentions were purchased by advertising masked as sponsorship. As most media companies do nowadays, they claim they’re unbiased, reliable, and produce shows about these topics. Does not one’s character speak for itself? What about the character of a media company?

Here’s a great adage – Put it on the fridge, teach it to your children and grandchildren

Watch your thoughts; they become words,

watch your words; they become actions,

watch your actions; they become habits;

watch your habits; they become character;

watch your character; it becomes your destiny.

Companies are characterised by the intentions of their goals and achievements, which is determined and executed by those who create and generate its purpose.

If a company is driving their business with the intention to solely profit, and they know how much money is required to meet a defined profit, why pursue the merciless and incessant quest for ever greater profits? What if the bottom line was based on how much it costs to remain successful, consistent, responsible, and interesting? Are these not also considered stellar qualities in a human’s character? …These, dear Reader are the components where “good begets good.”

And perhaps this would require complete privatization of commerce. Because, as we know, government and business make for wicked bed partners. The outcome cultivates torrid monetary affairs.

I am proposing that we learn the art of collaborative autonomy. (Maybe there’s a new governing paradigm in there too) There are billions of innovative global citizens, and sharing information is the highway, the bridge, the connective force to continue building our civilisations.

How do we disseminate, discern and discuss the information we want to take on? The future doesn’t need to be a Terminator in Brazil chasing Bladerunner. (Apologies for the trite cinematic puns)

This present, the right now will lead to our future. How we live now, and everyday builds the future realities.

Employ your imagination, blossom, and live in the present with an expanded awareness. It’s a small change, the only kind we ever need. Some of us fight against changing so methodically that bigger, sometimes more traumatic changes are necessary to jolt us from our static state, which is momentary fear.

Change can be scary, going through crap is crap while you go through it, then once it’s over, you look back and are usually just grateful you got to that point.

You know what? We don’t have to go through the muck to reach a rainbow. Ladies and Gentlemen, we don’t need war or embedded microchips to wake us up. Self-awareness is capable of leading the collective. It’s the symbiotic relationship of the macrocosm and the microcosm.

Our human evolution is on a threshold. And I believe there are several doors to choose from; it’s just a matter of first recognising that each of us has the right to choose which door suits us best. And for some, it may be the magic of Dumbledore.

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New Zealand Government being suckered into the global grid?

(perhaps a pseudo-headline from the fictitious Daily Chronicle?)

This morning, as all mornings, I wake up to Radio New Zealand National and you know what, Aotearoa? There’s loads of money to spend over the coming months. The government has a lot of money to spend, so it creates “schemes.” The carbon emissions scheme is going to cost businesses hundreds of millions of dollars. National wants to postpone, Labour wants it pushed through now. So by all means, let’s cripple the economy some more. You see, it won’t put funds back into the pockets of businesses, organisations or individuals – those entities that re-invest and fuel the cycle of cash flow. There is something not right in paradise.

Personally, I think the use of the word ‘scheme’ (rather than plan, initiative, or design) within New Zealand lawmaking circles is right on; and to enhance this point, the thesaurus includes conspiracy as an optional noun. Imagine a select group who gather to plot a course of action, behind closed doors, with an end result to fill coffers managed by the same group. At least Kiwis call the kettle black and use the word scheme where in other countries it is more euphemistically glossed over and sold via propaganda.

We are not subject to propaganda here as much as in other parts of the world, or are we? I’d like to think not.

Ladies and Gentlemen, the Earth is getting warmer. It’s a fact; it’s part of the geophysical cycle of the planet. Granted pouring cement, asphalt, and motorways that have become carparks do help to assist the speed and severity of the natural cycle. Please ask, “Why do we need a carbon tax?” “Why do governments require such massive control of economies?” This bothers me. Does it bother you?

Until I post again, please give it some thought…Today’s topic is monumental and whole blogs are dedicated to it. If we start in small ways, then we can change the bigger concerns. Till then, W

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Yesterday I received my monthly email from trendwatching.com and here are some of the highlights:

“When applying this ever-wider embrace to green products and services, the shift looks somewhat like this: we’ve gone from ECO-UGLY (ugly, over-priced, low-performance, unsavoury yet eco-friendly versions of the ‘real thing’) to ECO-CHIC (eco-friendly stuff that actually looks as nice and cool as the less sustainable originals) to now ECO-ICONIC:

ECO-ICONIC | “Eco-friendly goods and services sporting bold, iconic markers and design, helping their eco-conscious owners show off their eco-credentials to their peers.

As a person in business I can appreciate the subtleties of marketing. I even go so far on my company’s website to state: “Shopping online is the new retail theatre; from auctions to cyber stores. We ask, “Is your business ready for the new economics of the retail trade?”

If our collective consciousness is evolving, and as an optimist I believe it is, then, why continue to promote consumerism? Isn’t “being green” and “sustainable” just a different mask to sell you more of what you may already have and don’t need? Or, are there companies truly abiding by eco principles from production to packaging to profit?

More from the trendwatching briefing:

Per the above definition, ECO-ICONIC is not about all green products, it’s about those products that through their distinct appearance or stories actually show that they’re green, or at least invoke some curiosity from onlookers, and thus help their owners/users attract recognition from their peers. How ‘new’ is this? Well, just take a look around: a surprisingly high number of green products and services imagined and designed in a distant past when green was seen as a compromise, still try to hide their sustainable superiority by looking as much like ‘normal’, ‘non-green’ products as possible.

Now, ECO-ICONIC works both in the world of traditional status symbols (build a green brand/product, advertise the hell out of it and make it recognizable by the masses, which in turn makes it easy for buyers to get respect from strangers) and as part of the STATUS STORIES phenomenon, which involves providing buyers of little known/niche eco-brands with conversation starters and story details to get a status fix from their peers.

Here’s another what if, mio mondo.

What if status symbols stopped being important to us? Are they more than associative icons of purpose and meaning that just make us a bit needy? These burning questions fire in my head because I know we can survive quite nicely thank you, without these distracted standards. I’m just as guilty, brand consciousness, owner of an iPod & an iPod Nano, one is my house stereo and the other is my virtual world when walking around the city or riding the bus. I don’t like traffic noise, discordance. Sensitive ears. When I lived in Madrid and in NYC, I used to go to sleep with my walkman (it was the 80’s) to drown out the sirens and horns.

Getting off the track – so

Perhaps we need to look at what we own and determine what is truly necessary. Personally, I think the collective, current eco-nomics of our time, especially over the next three to five years is to learn how to live without debt. While I was at the bank yesterday, restructuring my mortgage, I read their “Economics Brief,” their assessment globally and how it’s affecting New Zealand. There was a very interesting point made about China’s economy which is reportedly expected to slow from 11% growth to about 9.4%, give or take a decimal point. The outlook for the OECD pales ashamedly in comparison.

Ladies and gentlemen, China is a nation of savers. Their masses are not in debt to centralised banking, MasterCard and finance companies. New Zealand has one of the poorest savings rates in the world, and I am just as guilty. I overspent on my house two years ago; however, it was based on knowing the property would increase in value. And it has and will continue to do so. Thankfully I can live here through this rough patch or rent it out. There isn’t much land in Wellington and since you can get to the St. James Theatre in a 15-minute walk, or Te Papa, our national museum along the waterfront in about 20, it’s a prime location. If the house sells in the next couple of months, someone else will make a larger profit in another 2 or 5 years, and that’s okay. That’s good. This is part of the cycle of money in a society.

Now back to China because I find this fascinating insofar as their citizens’ discipline to save. We have something to learn from them.

Maybe we need to let the Chinese teach us how to save. Clearly their discipline is commendable.

The environmental concern is also about China’s increased economic growth, which will mean more money to spend on consumables. And believe you me; the global corporate wizards are doing their utmost to effectively market to an audience of 1.3 billion sets of eyes and ears. I would also like to export some of New Zealand’s goodies to them. I’d like to imagine this happening without screaming status symbols, quality to last so we don’t need to buy new shoes every 3 months.

That’s just it. Do we need so much stuff? My friend Philea spoke about this months ago, as we discussed paring down. Why do we need more than two sets of sheets at any one given time? Do we, as women need 46 pairs of shoes? (of course my polyphrenic companion Carrie Bradshaw would be in an uproar 😉 Aren’t we able to live with less? About that time, trendwatching had mentioned the up and coming fashion of disposable clothing. This new wave attracting mostly those 25 and under. I haven’t followed it up nor heard much more about it. Hopefully that inane concept faltered and evaporated without leaving too much in the landfills.

Marketing your business because you provide a quality product or service and have good intentions is buried beneath icons and symbols and branding. Isn’t it possible for commerce to perpetuate without excessiveness? For trade and the “cycle of money” to exist without all the masks and distractions?

Later in the briefing, it states:

“…many consumers are deeply skeptical about large corporations claiming to go green, as very few companies are seen as honest to begin with. However, as stated before, a large enough eco-conscious audience now exists to make it worthwhile for brands to join the ECO-ICONIC fray. Just seek out the eco-minded middle classes around the world and you will be off to a good start. For the next 12 months, at least 😉

Not so sure if tongue in cheek, or a wink about the next 12 months is fully appropriate. Yet, this is a valid point. The global middle class is the engine of the cycle of money; they move things forward or stall the system.

To ask, can we make things work without indebtedness? Any economists, bankers, laymen, corporate wizard, anyone thinking who wishes to comment, please do so. Educate us. When we think more consciously, we’ll choose more wisely.

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As autumn air arrives from Antarctica, the days start and end earlier. Here in New Zealand, weather is a big topic of daily discussions and Wellington is no different; hence, my mention of the weather. Our winter days are markedly shorter and it is our season where we have the least public holidays. Hence, these are the seasons we work a lot down under.

I spent a breezy, cool weekend mostly outdoors and a couple of hours watching The Documentary Channel and a few hours playing a new digital game, easily addicted since it involves creating patterns. Yesterday I watched “Outfoxed,” staying on current theme for Brave New World in the City, which demonstrated Rupert Murdoch’s propaganda machine, Fox Network in its most unflattering light. I’ve never watched more than a minute of O’Reilly & his factors. Perhaps the same people who are able to sit and listen to him also carry the aptitude for watching reality programming. One of the gentlemen interviewed in Outfoxed, Rob McCormack, perceptively defined how in Soviet Russia the people knew they were being fed propaganda, they knew their information wasn’t trustworthy. In the U.S., citizens and other news corporations (!) absorb the panicked headlines fed by Fox News.

It has been said that more U.S. citizens are onto the propaganda mechanisms now than in ’01 and ’02, and the realist answers, “Right, and good. Finally. Only, what about all the people that are brainwashed and believe the propaganda as truth to this day?”

The documentary also pointed out what happened in November 2000, you know, with the U.S. election…that well-engineered plan to have Dick Cheney holding office and the strings that bind the Brave New World façade together. What I am about to write here has been written before, but I didn’t know this until yesterday. It was like another piece of the puzzle snapped into place. A first cousin of George W. Bush was conveniently working at Fox News, in charge of the voting stats tallied from research at exit polls around the country. (talk about abolishing theories that life is random!) The U.S. presidential race was too close to call; everyone knew that, nobody had a clear winner, even at midnight. Then in the middle of the night, about 2 a.m. George’s cousin relays (mis)information that the results show he is the clear winner, and the anchor proceeds to announce that George Bush is the apparent winner and the next U.S. President. Every other news company ran with the egg, too. In minutes no less. And that is how, ladies and gentlemen, George W. made it on the path to be appointed president in 2001.

It was also the opportunity for Mr. Dick Cheney and Mr. Karl Rove to align more closely with Mr. Murdoch and the Fox Network to advocate their agendas. Brilliant, really. Appalling, more so.

We are fortunate here, on the other side of the world. Our media hasn’t reached the levels of panic and fear induced by Fox and Clear Channel and the few others. I’ve added a new link, a single page called Editor Freedom which contains dozens of other sites. One might even call it fair and balanced.

Cohesively this leads us to the topic of FREEDOM. We as global citizens have the choice to maintain, lose, or acquire freedom. It is a choice of existence. And most importantly, it is the RESULT of RESPONSIBLE ACTION, RESPONSIBLE CHOICE. I had a teacher, J. Trenton Tully who drilled this lesson into us.

I did a quick search online and found the following definitions for freedom:

Emancipation of the person from slavery.
www.discoveringthestory.org/ugrr/glossary.asp

the condition of being free; the power to act or speak or think without externally imposed restraints

exemption: immunity from an obligation or duty
wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

A political condition that permits freedom of choice and action for individuals and also for individuals and groups to participate in the decisions and operation of the society and the political system.
www.canvasopedia.org/content/canvasopedia/dictionary.htm

In order for a Brave New World to exist, we need to examine what kind of world we want to live in and participate with, we as global citizens. There are some people completely apathetic, thoroughly seduced by the seemingly well-intentioned communications of security and safety. I ask, security and safety from what or whom? Large government? Greedy, malignant politicians? Centralised world banks wreaking havoc with money and food supplies?

Oh right, it is safety, security, and [border] protection from terrorists hailing from desert cities in the Middle East. Some dire predictions about the process of achieving “one world government” state that the people will allow it, that they shall willingly accept it. (Sidenote: Of course this could happen, especially if the people are completely conditioned to believe they are no longer safe and secure, where only a “militaristic” government will be able to promise to keep them out of harm’s way.) Fox News can’t tell you otherwise, only you can choose to believe otherwise.

Perhaps if you’ve made it to this point in today’s post you are imagining that I’m standing on a soapbox behind a pulpit. Maybe. It’s how you choose to see the picture. In my ideal world, expressed views and opinions give spice to the bland dishes mass media is serving to the populations. It’s our choice whether we ingest it, assimilate it, chew on it, spit it out, or recite it as gospel.

Thankfully, only months to go, after 7 long years. I’m not sure if the next “appointed” U.S. President will reinstate the many civil liberties lost. Maybe taking off our shoes and losing our right to carry a 500ml bottle of water to board a commercial airline won’t last. Maybe enough people, a critical mass needs to be responsible, to desire autonomy. Maybe we won’t succumb to believing propaganda as truth. Maybe the alarm will go off in time to wake us up.

Until soon…

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It is said that the masses have been hypnotised by the media. The medionic (a wendy word) machines of communications have supposedly conditioned the collective consciousness to consume, de-intellectualise through reality fantasies of the most, shall we say primal instincts? I never watched the OJ trial or any of the reality shows.

Admittedly, I have endured about 3 minutes of The Amazing Race once, and always wondered how can anyone sit through this stuff? Have you ever left a film or a theatre production that just wasn’t working for you? With only light recall, I believe I’ve walked out of 2 or 3 films and perhaps one play. Mind you, I had most likely wanted to get and up leave from several, but I endured. Is this what the collective does now with ever more frequency? Endure the painfully limited choice of enjoyable media until conditioning sets in and what is viewed actually changes with our so-called perspective to become bearable of our time, of our living space?

These are today’s ponderings. The spiritual New Year starts today, according to some mystery schools around the world. I’m pretty sure it has to do with the astronomical clock, not the Gregorian or Julian calendars. Which by the way, synchronistically, yesterday’s curious What if question was answered about an hour or so after the post. Just love when life happens this way. I did a search on Gregg Braden and The Zero Point, the last book of his that I’ve read. The surf brought me to the shores of Sweden where I listened to radio interviews on redicecreations.com and youtube. While at the latter, in the helpful “Related videos” menu I came across The Esoteric Agenda and started watching part 1 of 13. If you have seen Zeitgeist, enjoyed it, and had a shift of perspective; then you will appreciate some of the fine research that was put into this production. Of course it is not for everyone’s mindset, just like reality television isn’t compatible with mine.

Public knowledge is public power. Private knowledge is private power. Mr. Redstone and Mr. Murdoch influence the content of public knowledge and essentially own the channels of media to provide that knowledge. Hmmmm…..So does this follow the logical path that if public knowledge was elevated, educational (truly, with integrity and not standardised tests) and inspiring, would the result of public power follow with the same characteristics? Would the public be empowered to evolve toward greater autonomy? I think this dilemma, is it a dilemma? I think this dilemma of choice is about personal responsibility; also known as the “ability to respond.” We need to choose what goes in our heart, our mind and ultimately, our consciousness, our soul. It is our response-ability to acquire the type of knowledge that suits our being, because ultimately, it’s about our responsible use of the power that knowledge will bestow.

This may be getting a little heady. Simply mio mondo, choose what you will, no criticisms, just a request that you do make your choices with awareness.

Until tomorrow…

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buenas noches

May Day, the day when the world found out Hitler was dead, the eve of Beltane.

What if we hadn’t stopped living by astronomical cycles?

My “what if” pondering for today; mind you, it isn’t really a new thought. It’s just that during recent weeks there have been collective clues showing how the historical perspective is lengthening. We are realising a more encompassing world view of what was happening globally 2000, 5000 and 10,000 years ago. Look at what was happening only 14 years ago. Only 14 years ago the Internet was being touted as the Super Information Highway. Windows and AOL penetrated the techno savvy and open-minded. 1994 wasn’t all that long ago. Think about it. It is just that so much has happened, and so much has changed in 14 years, the rate of life has picked up measurably. What if we timed events by the sun and moon, and perhaps other planets? We abide by the seasons as a former agrarian society because the school year in both hemispheres was set up according to the harvest.

Learning and embracing new information is a choice. I have chosen to create this space even though I am not fond of the word blog. There is something lazy about it, the familiar phrase, ‘laying there like a log’ is the association my brain conjures up. As a word, blog simply doesn’t have an appealing sound to my poetic ear. However, it is part of our lexicon, so be it. On the positive, these steps have lead me to discover some amazing online sources of information, to check out youTube for enlightened information, and they are updated at least weekly in the “links,” over there on the right navigation bar. The newest one, Red Ice Creations was discovered while searching information about Gregg Braden beyond his website.

Recently I started to read Shirley MacLaine’s newest book, Sage-ing While Age-ing. I enjoy reading what she has to say, her insights; she skilfully uses wit and understanding to express them with clarity, and somehow the messages she has to deliver usually resonate for me. When I was 12 and 13 on spring holidays with my parents in Las Vegas, I saw her perform & there was a connection. I always thought one day I’d meet her. Then about 7 years later I did, albeit a brief introduction backstage when she performed a one-woman show on Broadway when she was celebrating 50. The new 40 was evolving, twenty-four years ago. It was the same time Tina Turner birthed her second self, it was 1984. They were new symbols of feminine wisdom and triumph, guiding my generation who were entering their 20’s to believe that age-ing is not on the clock. Life is all in the way you think about it, how you choose to live, how we self-perpetuate and evolve. How will we live the seasons of our lives?

I bid you good night.

Until tomorrow…

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