The Utopian Capitalist

An intermittently maintained placeholder for random clips, bits, observations, paranoid fantasies, links, quotes, and other stuff which would otherwise emailed randomly. Pseudonymous to respect the fiction of internet anonymity. Who am I? A somewhat disgruntled (not yet curmudgeonly) fellow, inconsistent, contrary, generally optimistic, still idealistic (some say naive) explorer of the world and its wonders. Sometimes it's hard to know what to do - is this Blog a mere substitute for real action?

Saturday, June 02, 2007

These Are the Fools Who Sold the Iraq War to the Bushite Idiots

January 26, 1998

The Honorable William J. Clinton
President of the United States
Washington, DC

Dear Mr. President:

We are writing you because we are convinced that current American policy toward Iraq is not succeeding, and that we may soon face a threat in the Middle East more serious than any we have known since the end of the Cold War. In your upcoming State of the Union Address, you have an opportunity to chart a clear and determined course for meeting this threat. We urge you to seize that opportunity, and to enunciate a new strategy that would secure the interests of the U.S. and our friends and allies around the world. That strategy should aim, above all, at the removal of Saddam Hussein’s regime from power. We stand ready to offer our full support in this difficult but necessary endeavor.

The policy of “containment” of Saddam Hussein has been steadily eroding over the past several months. As recent events have demonstrated, we can no longer depend on our partners in the Gulf War coalition to continue to uphold the sanctions or to punish Saddam when he blocks or evades UN inspections. Our ability to ensure that Saddam Hussein is not producing weapons of mass destruction, therefore, has substantially diminished. Even if full inspections were eventually to resume, which now seems highly unlikely, experience has shown that it is difficult if not impossible to monitor Iraq’s chemical and biological weapons production. The lengthy period during which the inspectors will have been unable to enter many Iraqi facilities has made it even less likely that they will be able to uncover all of Saddam’s secrets. As a result, in the not-too-distant future we will be unable to determine with any reasonable level of confidence whether Iraq does or does not possess such weapons.


Such uncertainty will, by itself, have a seriously destabilizing effect on the entire Middle East. It hardly needs to be added that if Saddam does acquire the capability to deliver weapons of mass destruction, as he is almost certain to do if we continue along the present course, the safety of American troops in the region, of our friends and allies like Israel and the moderate Arab states, and a significant portion of the world’s supply of oil will all be put at hazard. As you have rightly declared, Mr. President, the security of the world in the first part of the 21st century will be determined largely by how we handle this threat.


Given the magnitude of the threat, the current policy, which depends for its success upon the steadfastness of our coalition partners and upon the cooperation of Saddam Hussein, is dangerously inadequate. The only acceptable strategy is one that eliminates the possibility that Iraq will be able to use or threaten to use weapons of mass destruction. In the near term, this means a willingness to undertake military action as diplomacy is clearly failing. In the long term, it means removing Saddam Hussein and his regime from power. That now needs to become the aim of American foreign policy.

We urge you to articulate this aim, and to turn your Administration's attention to implementing a strategy for removing Saddam's regime from power. This will require a full complement of diplomatic, political and military efforts. Although we are fully aware of the dangers and difficulties in implementing this policy, we believe the dangers of failing to do so are far greater. We believe the U.S. has the authority under existing UN resolutions to take the necessary steps, including military steps, to protect our vital interests in the Gulf. In any case, American policy cannot continue to be crippled by a misguided insistence on unanimity in the UN Security Council.

We urge you to act decisively. If you act now to end the threat of weapons of mass destruction against the U.S. or its allies, you will be acting in the most fundamental national security interests of the country. If we accept a course of weakness and drift, we put our interests and our future at risk.

Sincerely,

Elliott Abrams Richard L. Armitage William J. Bennett

Jeffrey Bergner John Bolton Paula Dobriansky

Francis Fukuyama Robert Kagan Zalmay Khalilzad

William Kristol Richard Perle Peter W. Rodman

Donald Rumsfeld William Schneider, Jr. Vin Weber

Paul Wolfowitz R. James Woolsey Robert B. Zoellick

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Letter sent to Maria Cantwell on Education Funding

As your constituent, I'm writing to urge you to make sure that the penalty that strips financial aid from college students with drug convictions is repealed through the Higher Education Act reauthorization.

While the penalty is supposed to keep young people away from drugs, it actually does the opposite by keeping at-risk students from educating themselves. This is a cruel, and in my opinion, un-American permanent punishment for youthful indiscretions.

Besides making it more difficult for young people to better themselves, blocking access to education has harmful implications for society as a whole. College graduates are much more likely to become successful taxpaying citizens, while those who are kicked out of school are more likely to abuse drugs, become costly drains on the criminal justice system, and rely on expensive government assistance programs.

Education is one of the best means to reduce crime and drug abuse.

Fortunately, this year’s HEA reauthorization process presents a great opportunity to get rid of the harmful and unfair penalty once and for all. Please help tens of thousands of hardworking and determined individuals get back into school and on the path to success by making sure that the HEA bill includes language repealing the aid elimination penalty.

Thanks for your attention to this important issue. I will follow your vote on this issue with interest.

Note sent today to Harry Reid

Dear Mr. Reid,

Thank you for your forthright words speaking the truth about the unwinnable mess in Iraq. It's about time that someone in government stood up to the Bush regime's lies.

Please continue taking a hard line against what I consider the worst administration in the history of the Republic. They are an, again in my opinion, an active danger to the Republic and enemies to the Founders' ideals. They call themselves "conservatives" but in reality they are latter-day Tories, exercising unjust dominion in their lust for power and lucre.

Please keep up the good work, Sir!

Monday, April 23, 2007

The ancient Alchemists' dictum

Do, dare, and be silent


Hard for a talker and a trumpetmouthed fool.

US Customs Service Brownshirts

The lunatics have taken over the asylum. The worst authoritarian elements in American society are in positions of unassailable power. And the folks at the Blaine Peace Arch Crossing are among the worst, in my experience, combining stupidity, ignorance, petty abuse of authority, hostility, suspicion, and sheer meanness.

The spectacle of some middle class family from Portland returning from vacation in BC being interrogated with disrespect by some jumped up brownshirt is sad, sick, and infuriating.

And foreigners are treated much much worse. This is now the public face the USA shows to the world - paranoid, hostile, unutterably ignorant, and implacable in abusing petty authority.

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Eject the Tories

Where I live (Cascadia), the federal government does not represent the people, and looks more like an occupying army than a real government of the people. I don't know when exactly the federal government became a predator to the American people, but I think it's worse now than it's ever been. I'd go so far as to say that the Tories have retaken power. It took them over 200 years, but they have almost destroyed the Republic and all the ideals of the Founders. (Bush & Co. have just made it more apparent).

Jefferson (Thomas, you know, that dang liberal) said that there should be a revolution every twenty years because power tends to concentrate in the hands of interests opposed to those of the people. It's long long long overdue.

But it ain't a matter of party politics - the Tories have hijacked the Republican Party and they've hijacked the Democratic Party, too. Their very effective tactic is to divide and rule. "Conservatives" hate "liberals" because they've been trained to. "Liberals" hate "conservatives" because they've been trained, too.

The real enemy is a federal government run amuck. The Republicans claim to be the party to tame it and reduce it - but in the last 6 years, the federal government has grown more than it did under Clinton. And it's way more corrupt, mendacious, and secretive.

I don't know the solution - but hating "liberals" or "conservatives" doesn't seem to be part of it. A good start might be to get together and kick the whole bunch, Democrats and Republicans, out of office.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Globe & Mail Comment Editors Suck

Barton Lincoln Jonesboro, the second:

My post was also deleted. Apparently the editors are timid ciphers, pandering to the loud, quivering with fear of truth told with insult.

Shame! (if they are capable of it). Tepid Toronto milquetoasts.

Sapience, c'est quoi?

How does the word get associated with the image/sense of the thing sufficient to trigger an integrated action response?

And how does this association get broken when we want to retrieve the word? And come back to us only after conscious mental efforts fail?

Weird composite brain structure, relics (ontogeny recapitulating phylogeny)of successful accidents? Purposeful only in the flesh? Or deeper connected ethereal layers?

Friday, March 30, 2007

Heinlein on Dissent

A society that gets rid of all its troublemakers goes downhill.



-Robert A.Heinlein, science-fiction author (1907-1988)

The same applies to corporations.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Isolationism is Growing

I always look at the WSJ daily poll, and vote. It's not scientific, but it's usually interesting. Today's question: "What's the net effect of free trade on U.S. employment?". The results are fascinating:

1) It helps. 39%
2) It hurts. 47%
3) It's neutral 14%

An isolated USA thinks (a plurality of, you would assume, fairly sophisticated WSJ readers) that free trade is bad for American emnployment. (I suppose that this same plurality may not think this is a bad thing!)

Here's my take:

I can't believe a group of WSJ readers, a plurality of the poll, think that free trade is bad for US employment. Just on objective evidence, we've had 17 years of free trade, 17 years of pretty much full employment (practical full employment - there is a certain level of unemployment which is structural, due to market adjustments, movements, etc.).

I think this issue is a smokescreen - designed to take peoples' eye off the real issue - the concentration of wealth. (and provide a convenient scapegoat - those dang illegal immigrants!). This same 17 year boom has produced a vast increase in national wealth - but most (99%) of the population is NOT better off. Almost all the increase in wealth has accrued to the richest 1%.

This has been aided recently (post 2000) by a deliberate policy to tilt tax policy in favor of the wealthiest. Double whammy.

Greed, self-dealing, corrupted institutions, habitual lying - these are all symptoms of the rot at the top. Did we really have a revolution to create this country? What happened?

Friday, March 23, 2007

Drug Study Published in UK "Lancet"

LONDON — New “landmark” research finds that alcohol and tobacco are more dangerous than some illegal drugs like marijuana or Ecstasy and should be classified as such in legal systems, according to a new British study.

In research published Friday in The Lancet magazine, Professor David Nutt of Britain's Bristol University and colleagues proposed a new framework for the classification of harmful substances, based on the actual risks posed to society. Their ranking listed alcohol and tobacco among the top 10 most dangerous substances.

Prof. Nutt and his colleagues used three factors to determine the harm associated with any drug: the physical harm to the user, the drug's potential for addiction, and the impact on society of drug use. The researchers asked two groups of experts — psychiatrists specializing in addiction and legal or police officials with scientific or medical expertise — to assign scores to 20 different drugs, including heroin, cocaine, Ecstasy, amphetamines and LSD.

Prof. Nutt and his colleagues then calculated the drugs' overall rankings. In the end, the experts agreed with each other — but not with the existing British classification of dangerous substances.

Heroin and cocaine were ranked most dangerous, followed by barbiturates and street methadone. Alcohol was the fifth most harmful drug and tobacco the ninth most harmful. Cannabis came in 11th, and near the bottom of the list was Ecstasy.

According to existing British and U.S. drug policy, alcohol and tobacco are legal, while cannabis and Ecstasy are both illegal. Previous reports, including a study from a parliamentary committee last year, have questioned the scientific rationale for Britain's drug classification system.

“The current drug system is ill thought-out and arbitrary,” said Prof. Nutt, referring to the United Kingdom's practice of assigning drugs to three distinct divisions, ostensibly based on the drugs' potential for harm. “The exclusion of alcohol and tobacco from the Misuse of Drugs Act is, from a scientific perspective, arbitrary,” write Prof. Nutt and his colleagues in The Lancet.


Full Article

A couple of points:
1) Cannabis is medicine, good medicine, for a lot of human ailments. It's not for everyone! But properly used, it can help an alcoholic stay off the booze, for example, or mitigate an MS sufferer's symptoms, or help a depressive smile, or bring a terminal cancer patient's appetite back.
2) The "bad effects" of cannabis are ALL due to its continuing illegality. If it were legal, the criminal grow-ops would DISAPPEAR and be replaced by a regulated ag industry. Most people would grow their own in their own gardens, I think, but the mad geniuses would still produce ever better varieties, and there would still be a specialty market for the latest and best strains.
3) There is a lot of informal research being done on medicinal cannabis - but more scientific study is necessary. Unfortunately, the DEA in the US of A will not approve ANY studies, and the pharmaceutical industry has a vested interest in STOPPING studies of a drug which anyone can grow in their yard.

The gorilla in the room, unfortunately, is the increasingly oppressive policies of the US federal government, and their self-righteous application of extra-territoriality for their police state mentality. Canadian governments oppose the bully next door at their peril. Mr. Harper's mini-me to GW is one approach; Mr Chretien's passive resistance is another. (say what you like about Chretien - he kept Canada out of Iraq. Good for him! Harper thought invading Iraq was a good idea!). But the reality is that if the Canadian government took any steps to legalizing cannabis, it would create a very tense situation with the US feds. My own opinion is that we should legalize cannabis - but how many Canadian politicians have the intestinal fortitude to stand up to an isolated, wounded, but very powerful and mean neighbour?

Monday, February 12, 2007

From Freedom to Fascism

This is a link to an excellent video by Aaron Russo on the Federal Reserve, and other matters.
It starts out as an attack on the IRS as an instrument of fascism, but also uses other examples of creeping loss of freedom. It is NOT party-partisan. The issues identified should unite Democrats and Republicans, progressives and conservatives.

Saturday, February 10, 2007

Email sent to Senate Democratic Leader

Dear Senator Reid,

You recently said: "I think the American public's very satisfied with what's happening," said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. "We're on the right side of the angels here."

This message is to let you know that you are mistaken, as far as I and most of my friends and family are concerned. We are not at all happy with the Senate's ineffectiveness in ending the illegal invasion and occcupation of Iraq. We want you to directly and with highest priority stop the Bush Administration's prosecution of this Iraq atrocity. In addition, we want immediate investigations of Bush's lawless behavior, with an aim of impeachment.

If you do not do these things with all despatch and energy at your command, you will have failed this Republic and the people you represent. This administration is exercising unjust dominion in almost all areas of its authority. Not to oppose its evil acts is weak and wrong. Please stand up for right and do not compromise. We are counting on you.

Thursday, February 01, 2007

WSJ Question of the Day

Are Bush's policies helping or hurting the economy?


Results - 55% Help, 32% Hurt, 13% No difference.

WOW! Here's my response, which probably won't be posted:

55% say Bush's economic policies are helping? You people are delusional. To whit:
-an unnecessary war of aggression, prosecuted with 100% borrowed money;
-record deficits due to tax cuts for the wealthiest
-Unfunded programs mortgaging the future - Medicare drug giveaway, no child left untested, pork-barrel earmarks
-wholesale looting of the public treasure for and by private interests
-and spending cuts for all the programs which do good (forest service, national parks, renewable energy, EPA) and spending increases for authoritarian bads - prisons, persecutions, and surveillance.


And this blog is fake, the discussion "moderation" amounts to censorship.

(Why do I bother - the "moderator" won't post this anyway).

On Novelty as Necessity

There is wisdom in turning as often as possible from the familiar to the unfamiliar: it keeps the mind nimble, it kills prejudice, and it fosters humor.
-George Santayana, philosopher (1863-1952)

On Novelty as Necessity

There is wisdom in turning as often as possible from the familiar to the unfamiliar: it keeps the mind nimble, it kills prejudice, and it fosters humor.
-George Santayana, philosopher (1863-1952)

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

To A Deluded Bush War Supporter

Glad to see some sensible people posting in response to your ignorant dumbass "thoughts". I often wonder who it is who comprises the hard core 25-30% who would still say GW Bush was a great Pres as he was eating their children, and it is you. What a complete fool. The sad thing is that you actually appear to have attracted greater fools who agree with you. I have a suggestion - why don't the whole sorry gang of you go over to Iraq and hang out and admire Bush's handiwork? I'm sure they'll welcome you with open arms and garlands of flowers in a completely democratic way. Soon there will be a McDonald's in every Iraqi town, and every Friday night, the Sadr City Bulldogs will play the Fallujah Fighting Tigers to the roars of their football-loving fans.

What? Oh - you're scared to go? It's dangerous? Complete lawless deadly chaos? But we've been there over 3 years - and the "Mission" was accomplished when W strutted onto the CArrier "Photo-op". No - it can't be so!

Thursday, January 04, 2007

Why Politicians lie......

He who dares not offend cannot be honest.

-Thomas Paine, philosopher and writer (1737-1809)

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

On Evil

Evil is like a shadow - it has no real substance of its own, it is simply a lack of light. You cannot cause a shadow to disappear by trying to fight it, stamp on it, by railing against it, or any other form of emotional or physical resistance. In order to cause a shadow to disappear, you must shine light on it.

-Shakti Gawain, teacher and author (1948- )