"It is increasingly clear that the real threat lies not with the person crossing a border, working a warehouse shift, or marching in the street—but with the structure that enriches itself by sowing division and suppressing dissent." - Peter Bloom
"You Yanks don't consult the wisdom of democracy; you enable mobs." - Australian planner
Wednesday, July 10, 2024
Real Quotes From Hypothetical Gurus
by Caitlin Johnstone
“Being a guru is weird, man. I mean, how many different ways can you say ‘Hey you ever notice how everything just kinda is? Well, it just kinda is!’ But the words come anyway. Somehow they keep on coming.”
~ Hank “Bonesaw” Lucille
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“The most worthwhile spiritual teachings don’t actually teach you any new knowledge. Rather, they direct your attention to aspects of your own experience that you’d previously overlooked or hadn’t paid much attention to. They get you questioning your unquestioned assumptions about very fundamental components of your experience like your sense of self, your means of perception, and the workings of your own mind. The most skillful teachers therefore don’t require you to trust them or take anything they say on faith, because you can immediately examine everything they’re pointing your attention toward for yourself in your own experience.”
~ Margaret Tetherwood
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“Authentic spirituality is scarcely even recognizable as spirituality. It doesn’t give you new beliefs — it strips your old beliefs away. It doesn’t uplift you from the muck and mess of this world — it plunges you headfirst right into it. It doesn’t help you become a better person — it dispels the illusion that there was ever a person to begin with.”
~ Margaret Tetherwood
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“Beauty is just the experience of having truly seen something. If you’re not seeing beauty somewhere, you’re not really seeing what you’re looking at. Everything has beauty. The failure to recognize it lies always with the beholder.”
~ Quincy Harrington-Cho
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“Psychedelics are useful not for the hallucinations they give you but for the hallucinations they take away.”
~ Alice Cave
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“I’ve killed off so many Hanks along this crazy path. Angry Hank. Hank the victim. Hank the cage fighter. Tough guy Hank, and then spiritual guy Hank after him. One of the last ones to leave was Cool Hank, but he had to go, because, man, you really do not get to be cool on this path. You really, really don’t. Being radically truthful on every level leaves you raw and undisguised, right out in the open, in all your dorky awkwardness. If you really let old lady Truth have her way with you, you’ll never get to feel cool again. How could anyone be cool with their fuckin’ ribcage splayed open to the whole entire world?”
~ Hank “Bonesaw” Lucille
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“Love — the real kind — is simply having a deep and intimate ‘yes’ to something. If you have a deep and intimate ‘yes’ to everything about your partner, then you may say that you fully love your partner. If you have a deep and intimate ‘yes’ to everything about your own body and mind and all their expressions, then you may say that you fully love yourself. If you have a deep and intimate ‘yes’ to everything that arises in your experience of the world, then you may say that you are fully living in unconditional love.
“And really, what else is there? Why be in argument with anything that already is? You can work toward positive changes in our world while holding a deep and intimate ‘yes’ to everything that already is here and now. If you start an argument with the present moment, you’ve already lost the debate anyway. Unconditional love is just being real about reality, and then doing what comes naturally.”
~ Louisiana Fetterman
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“The human organism seemingly creates the ego out of a desire to feel in control of life, but the joke of it all is that the ego has never really existed, and that life is never, ever under control. There has never at any time been an actual self anywhere who could exert any kind of control over any of this; it’s just an imaginary construct that gets imbued with the power of belief out of the organism’s concern for safety and security, and then all your personal dramas and conflicts and anxieties and fears arose out of the contracted energy of that belief. But the whole thing was based on a complete fiction! That’s why awakening is so often immediately followed by laughter: because that whole mess never even happened. It was all an imaginary clown show for ghosts who never bought tickets.
“Other animals don’t have this problem. Because they don’t have the capacity for abstract thought, when those organisms experience frightening events in their lives they aren’t able to kind of pop their attention out of their bodies and enter a mental fantasy world starring an imaginary ‘me’ character to help them feel as though things are more manageable and controlled. So instead they just shake the fear out of their bodies and move on.
“The human organism can learn to do this too, but its immense capacity for abstract thought tends to get in the way. All that newly evolved brain matter has in many ways made humans quite stupid.”
~ “Andromeda”, as channeled by Cynthia M Scott
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“Time is a mirage.
Life is impersonal energy masquerading as personal experiences.
Reality is made of unknowing.
I am nothing but a welcome mat
for anything that could possibly be.”
~ Alice Cave
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“Enlightenment will cost you everything, but after you’ve paid the toll you realize that the big pile of cash you’d been protecting your entire life was just a bunch of worthless Monopoly board game money that whole time.”
~ Omshanti Ramananda Kowalski
Tuesday, July 9, 2024
7/9/24 Warren Mosler's Bloomberg Interview
Does Modern Monetary Theory recognizes fiscal limits? Mosler says "Yes!"
...rate cuts by central banks are deflationary because they deny the economy interest income... Increasing rates is inflationary if national debt is large. Ownership of government bonds is largely wealthy people, so their income increases with higher rates.
Saturday, July 6, 2024
7/6/24 Links
“It can’t be said often enough that the change in where the center was perceived to sit was not organic but the result of a well-funded, open-ended campaign codified by the Powell Memorandum of 1971, with effective propagandists like Milton Friedman as its vanguard.”
Consequences of the British Election - Ian Welsh. Excerpt:
- The grant to local governments dropped 60% from 2010 to 2020. They’re the ones who run most of the government: libraries, fire departments, council housing, roads, public transit and so on.
- 20% of libraries closed
- Spending on old people down 35% with one estimate saying this killed 45K people.
- Inflation adjusted wages are lower than in 2007, and the inflation numbers are certainly lower than reality.
- Rent and housing costs are way up.
- Twenty percent less people get cancer treatment on time.
- The UK now has the highest homelessness rates in the Western world.
- Gutted universities, one of the few world class industries left in Britain (and one which brings in a lot of foreign currency.)
…and, lest you believe Labour’s victory means some lefties won: Starmer’s role in Assange’s persecution
7/7/24 update about Labour (from nakedcapitalism.com):
Labour is not going to deliver Funding the Future
Keir Starmer Is Very Serious About the Status Quo In These Times
The Rejection of Starmerism Craig Murray
Friday, July 5, 2024
7/5/24 Links
A revolution in archaeology is transforming our picture of past populations and the scope of human freedoms - (Aeon) An archaeologist questions the conventional wisdom that empires were always the apogee of success.
Economics 101:Why introductory economics courses continued to teach zombie ideas from before economics became an empirical discipline
A perennial favorite: The Federal Budget Is Not Like a Household Budget: Here's Why
Raising Wages Does Not Make Businesses Close
(c) by Mark Dempsey
The cashier at a nearby store solemnly told me that a restaurant in her shopping center closed because California raised the minimum wage for fast food workers in April 2024. I was going to protest that labor wasn't the only reason restaurants close, and sure enough, a recent LA Times article (The fast-food industry claims the California minimum wage law is costing jobs. Its numbers are fake) by Michael Hitzik exposes that bit of deception now making the rounds.
Convincing workers to lobby against wage increases is as old as employment itself. After all, post-civil war landlords ginned up racism to divide-and-rule the tenant farmers, keeping them poor, desperate and tractable. But this latest exercise in cynical labor-baiting breaks new ground in the despicable tradition of crushing the poor.
Management relentlessly blames labor, too. In its press release announcing closure of dozens of California's Rubio's restaurants its management declared labor costs were the last straw in a terrible string of business-impairing incidents, including COVID. Examining Rubio's financial statements, however, draws a different conclusion. Private equity bought the chain, and encumbered the restaurants with a debt load that would not be sustainable if they paid workers a living wage. The debt load, not the labor costs, was the decider.
Many businesses like Starbucks have even claimed poverty when negotiating with their workers about wages, then spent more than the wage demands in stock buybacks. Conventional economics backs these kinds of claims, solemnly predicting increased unemployment if wages are raised. Rather than rely on this theoretical outcome, however, some economists have examined what actually happens when minimum wages rise, comparing the higher and lower wage jurisdictions. The result: no increase in unemployment accompanied the wage rise.
Polish economist Michal Kalecki wrote about what motivates businesses to engage in such deception in his 1943 paper Political Aspects of Full Employment. He observes that businesses know that well-paid employees provide a better customer base--the foundation of a more profitable business--but employers prefer "Labor Discipline" to that better economic outcome. Labor Discipline is the power to dominate workers. It sends the message that "You had better take whatever job is on offer, or suffer the indignities of poverty, even homelessness and starvation...and if you rebel, we'll put you in a cage."
Testifying to the effectiveness of the propaganda, currently, the US has five percent of the world's population, but 25% of its prisoners.
How about drones instead of fireworks?
This is amazing ππΊπΈpic.twitter.com/gwvcBSDydN
— Miti ππ️ (@Miti_Blue) July 5, 2024
Wednesday, July 3, 2024
Let's have a sense of proportion: COVID-19 fraud pales to insignificance compared to others
(c) by Mark Dempsey
The mainstream press continues to distract and misdirect public anger about fraud and misconduct, focusing on pinpricks while ignoring arterial bleeding. Here's an excerpt from a Chicago Tribune editorial headlined Monstrous COVID-19 fraud leaves taxpayers holding the bag*:
"It's sickening to consider how, in the midst of a crisis that was killing more than 1 million Americans and disrupting countless livelihoods, so many of our fellow citizens seized an opportunity to exploit relief efforts for personal gain."
Some foreign-sounding guy (Hadi Isbaih) practiced fraud in claiming COVID-19 relief payments. Why how like those foreigners!
Note: No mention of the CDC fraud (ignoring air quality as a COVID spread source) that actually did the killing. No mention of populations that continue to be at risk because air quality standards aren't promoted.
In financial terms, the COVID payment frauds are tiny when compared to the recent scandals, among them bank frauds like the subprime/derivatives meltdown of 2007-9--now called the "Global Financial Crisis" (the GFC). That was orders of magnitude larger, and favored an even more select group of fraudsters--Wall Street's financiers!
According to its own audit, during the GFC the US central bank extended credit to the Wall Street fraudsters amounting to between $16 and $29 trillion. The COVID relief fraud may amount to about 3% of the bank frauds. The result of those GFC fraudulent loans was 8 - 10 million foreclosures, and a massive loss of home ownership. And nobody went to jail! (Thanks Obama!)
Since then, Wall Street's private equity pirates picked up those foreclosed homes for bargain-basement prices and began raising rents. One study confirms that 58% of the current homeless populaton were the result of rents rising faster than wages.
This is a variation on the theme that Naomi Klein calls "disaster capitalism"--taking advantage of distress to make a profit. Klein describes it operating in the Iraq war(s). When the US invaded, French and Russian oil firms had contracts to develop the Iraqi oilfields. After that invasion, American firms somehow became favored.
A more recent bit of news reports the US central bank--the Federal Reserve--is paying 5.4% interest to banks for the reserves they have on deposit, yet ...
"megabanks aren’t passing along that generosity to their customers’ savings accounts, since those savings accounts continue to pay the preposterously low rate of 0.01 percent interest, despite 11 rate hikes by the Fed since 2022.
"A detail that goes missing in mainstream media reports on this generous payout by the Fed is that the Fed and banking system were able to survive for 95 years without the Fed paying any interest on bank reserves. The Fed began paying interest on reserves at a time when the megabanks on Wall Street were in the process of imploding during their self-inflicted financial crisis of 2008 [the GFC!] and needed every handout they could conjure up from the Fed...."
This next headline is self-explanatory: Tech Firms Prey on Poor Under Guise of Expanding Access to Financial Services. But it's those dang furriners!
The question that remains unasked is: Who can blame poor people from defrauding a system that preys on them when they're down? These stories are evidence that most mainstream media's reporting tactics amount to straining at a gnat while swallowing a camel. The editors express outrage about the gnats and ignore the camels altogether. And that is really what's sickening to consider.
*Published in the Sacramento Bee 7/1/24
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