Saturday, March 29, 2014

Day #4 - Drugs

Sure thing.  You knew it was coming.  What else could it be?

But here's something you DIDN'T know.  I have absolutely no intention to lecture you on the same five major drugs we've been beating down since the invention of the snuff-box.  As a matter of fact, I really don't intend to discuss drugs and the evils thereof...at all.  What I do intend to do is talk about are our attitudes where drugs are concerned, and what we're wanting to accomplish as opposed to the good those things are doing.  That's where the real problem lies.

You see, the thing I really love about America is just how absolutely two-faced people can be.  Parents especially.  Dad starts on you about the evils of Marijuana while he smokes his fifth cigarette in an hour and blows the smoke right into your face.  Mom gets on you about sniffing coke while she inhales a glass of straight vodka and pops a Valium.  But those aren't my REAL favorites.  No, my absolute favorites are all linked to the government.  Cigarette companies continue to flourish in our nation, while the government is campaigning and encouraging law and legislation to get us to quit.  They fight the "War on Drugs", yet leave the border wide open to Mexican immigrants (the direction a lot of our drugs come into the country.)  They jail, where they should be offering treatment.  But my number one favorite is that they completely cater to and fund every single pharmaceutical company in America, and hold almost no one responsible in these companies, when the drugs they produce harm, or even kill people.

Nothing, however, says it better than this cartoon that was sent to me once:


Ain't it the truth.  But I'm afraid I have to leave the pharmaceuticals to "Day 16".  That's something I'd like to cover then.

So we're back.  Let's go over our history with drugs, shall we?

In the 1800's, opiates were widely used and distributed as medicinal cure-alls and not regulated whatsoever. It was when these drugs were finally regularly abused that they became an issue and laws were passed.

In the 1950's, there were cases of marijuana use, but most of it was kept hush-hush.  When the 60's came, however, and well into the early to mid -70's, it was used a lot more, and people that had never tried it before were giving in.  Since they couldn't beat it or get the government to take it nearly as seriously as the more damaging ones, they resorted to dubbing it the "Gateway Drug"...the one that people start with, then supposedly move right on to the more serious ones.  *Personal Note*:  I don't see marijuana as the gateway drug...NICOTINE is more the case.  If you have no issues smoking cigarettes, then you usually end up trying marijuana as well.  It's about the smoking, not marijuana or it's effects.  At least not before you try it, anyway.

Cocaine, another biggie, went the same course.  Just about everybody snorted coke in the 70's...heck it was actually COOL!!  Then crack came along and messed that up.  Now it's embarrassing to say you've even tried it, and if you're stuck on it, well, you're just lost.

And of course, then came meth.  What fun.  All I have to say on that is, it's produced more wrecked homes than any of its predecessors.

Whether it's cigarettes, joints, pills, drinking, acid, opiates, meth; none of it ever starts out as something we want to take with us to the grave.  But there's always a reason that anyone, of any age, generally begins doing any of these things...and of those, there are only two, in my opinion that make any sense or would hold water with me, if I was the Judge of my own court.  One is peer pressure.  The other is rebellion.  Peer pressure, for most in their teens, is extremely difficult to overcome...or at least it used to be in my day and age.  I'm sure the same applies today, but just in a different fashion.  The most prevalent reason to me, though, is the rebellion concept.  It's all about rebelling in your teens.  Against your parents, against society, against the times, against what's happening in the world out there, and most of all, against the law.  Actually, all authority.  And the best way we figure to do that is to try all those things that we're not supposed to do...sex, drinking, smoking, drugs, etc.  We want to show THEM!!  We want to express, in our naive little ways, that we're adults, and we can make our own decisions and handle them.

Or maybe we want to upset our parents or authority figures on purpose.  We want to hurt them like they hurt us.  So we do the things they asked, lectured or ordered us NOT to do.  What we DON'T count on however, is the addiction to these things after we try them.  Then, when we turn to the people we love for help, they turn their backs on us, and you feel ashamed and depressed.  Pretty soon it becomes all you know, and you turn to doing things you would never have done before to get what you need.  And because you're so set on the reward, you mess up and get caught.  Then here's where we do wrong America.  When that person is caught, we don't try to help.  We slap them in irons and ship 'em off to the nearest prison.  Then after a few years, doing wrong and being in jail is all they know.  A good deal of serious addicts become life-long residents of our prison system.

OK, so how do we do things differently?  More effectively?  Well, that remains to be seen.  The war on drugs has been long, arduous, costly, trying, and, essentially, unsuccessful.  Every time we chop a head off of the monster that is smuggling, two grow back in its place.  Arrest a dealer?  Same deal.  We're turning our wheels here America.  What we're doing is evidently not working, and if it is, it's not working well.  It's time we come up with a better solution.

My thoughts on the matter are, education first, and legalization.  Not just of marijuana.  Of ALL drugs.  When we cut off the ingredients needed for production of a drug (which, like in the case of meth, are all everyday ingredients for the most part), raise the term served in jail, etc., all you're doing is causing new and novel ideas for getting high that are still legal.  Kids are turning to cough syrup, taking pills in excess...anything.  It was like marijuana's synthetic replacement, K-2.  Someone out there, one day, wanted a marijuana taste and effect that you could have that wasn't on the law books as being illegal, as yet.  Why?  C'mon you rocket scientists....marijuana was ILLEGAL!  K-2 is killing people, but if marijuana had been legal?  It would have NEVER EXISTED, and your kids would be kickin' it to this day.

You can't take the world we've had available to us before those things were abused, all off the shelves just because it's used to make drugs or use them to get high.  What happens when you take these items off the market (or regulate them...a big pain in the hiney-ho), is, they find an alternative ingredient or find something else to make into the needed high.  It's a lot like putting everything up 3 ft. when your son/daughter learns to walk.  It really doesn't solve the problem, it only puts it out of reach until they grow another foot.  Pretty soon, we'll have to lock everything up.  It's really ridiculous to do this America.  This is how drugs like meth came into existence!!  If Johnny Law hadn't been right there to slap handcuffs on you for the last drug you did, then someone else wouldn't have tried to mix battery acid and anhydrous and make it into a new drug to get high on.

Here's the deal everybody.  Everything you make illegal, or add stiffer fines to the law breakers concerning said illegal substance, it becomes rebellious to do it...thereby making it more attractive to try.  And once one of your peers try it, well, you do it too, just to stay cool.  Next thing you know, you're selling your car to get more and wondering what happened.  It doesn't have to be this way.  If you take out the no-no's, it tends to have the same affect as reverse psychology.  If it's not cool, or if it's not rebellious to do it (or against the law), then it takes all the fun out of it.  I'm positive, as sure as I'm sitting here, that if I hadn't stopped and thought "Boy, my mom's gonna HATE this!!" and smiled at the thought, that I wouldn't even have tried cigarettes, and I wouldn't be hooked on them today.  I even remember every time that she caught me with cigarettes and threw them away, giving me the longest lecture on the subject.  Every time that happened, I went out and bought more, privately knowing it would make her even madder and more adamant that I quit.  Next thing you know, I'm hooked, and I can't put them down.  I've tried to quit 4 or 5 times now, to no avail.

The only difference, really, between cigarettes and liquor and the myriad of other drugs out there, is that they're legal.  And they tried to make drinking an offense...and you see what happened.  It turned the same way our baddy drugs do today.  The mafia got involved, and crime rose, attempting to get illegal liquor back out there for the Americans already into it.  How do you think cartels came into existence?  BECAUSE cocaine and marijuana are ILLEGAL.  Legalize them, and you put the kingpins out of business, just like the repeal of prohibition put an end to the liquor crime wave.  Best of all, with my plan...you make everything legal.  All the addicts that refuse to get help and abuse the hell out of them die off, and a new smarter generation that's been exposed to the bad side of drugs in public (like in Paraguay) will never try them in the first place.

And speaking of Paraguay, how'd that go?  Well, after 10 years, it's going quite well, really.  the move towards help and recovery has tripled, and the new user number is dropping more all the time (teens, of course).  They took all the fun out of doing and trying them.  New cases of AIDS, the entire reason for Paraguay's radical shift in the war on drugs, dropped 17% in ten years.  Our cost to constantly keep drugs away from America is costing us tons of money and taxes, and is accomplishing NOTHING.  And jailing the offenders has more than doubled in the last 2 decades.  These people aren't learning anything, and neither are the ones that are still free.  It's all about the money.  For the customer, it's all about the thrill.  Take the thrill away, take away the threat of jail, make it available at your local shops, and pretty soon those guys are going to go out of business and choose college instead and live for an additional 20-30 years.  Think about it.  :-)

Friday, March 28, 2014

Day #3 - Capitalism



Day three of this series promises to be good.  Let's go, shall we?

I don't really have to say what Capitalism is, do I America?  Let's be honest, deep down in our greedy souls, we all know what this is.  Don't make me define it.  If you're still not ABSOLUTELY positive as to what capitalism entails, well...look around.  It isn't too hard to miss.  Heck, even that brownie on the corner selling lemonade has it lasered into her brain at a young age.

 Capitalism, not unlike Democracy, is all well and good.  It's been proven to be a good system.  It has, and could well again, work for us.  Only one thing I gotta think, here.  We just have to get rid of that pesky GREED thing!!  It's there...always Getting...in the WAY!!  It really messes everything up, ya Know?

Well, you know as well as I do America, that our Father (No, not THAT Father) the GOVERNMENT is greed supreme, and a heck of a tutor.  Our billion-dollar corps have learned about all they can, and learned it well.  They've been out of the nest for quite a while now, flying high all on their own and doing very well, of this there is no doubt.  And the trickle-down doesn't end there kids....noooo...those greed lessons have obviously been offered to the general public as well.  I remember one of our generations...I couldn't tell you which one, nor do I care, mostly, because if the label has been applied to that one, it's WRONG.  What did  they say??  The ME generation.  I'm sorry America, but there isn't a ME generation.  Oh, to be sure, there's most certainly a ME century...and it's the one we're in now.  Only the latter part of the 20th were we just getting started; it was most certainly a preview.  But this is it.  Scope out some simple things...greed is everyplace.  No one pays the price people ask for on Craigslist, or what an item is worth.  Answers to ads tend to always have a preclusion that entails offering a heck of a lot less...then we laugh, but we always file it away, just in case we can't sell it.  Oh, but when we go to buy those things!!  Sheesh.  I used to get $5 for used CD's back in the day.  Now I can't get 25 cents a piece for 'em.  DVD sets I paid over $100 for, I can't pawn for over $1 apiece.  I paid $2,010 for a brand new 4 poster bed...and a year later was lucky to get $800 for it.  The computer I bought for close to $800?  If it's out of box at all, I'm looking at $400 if I'm lucky, and I just bought it a month ago.

"Oh, c'mon now...it's not all that, is it?"  Nope.  Not yet anyway.  You see, under the S category of our sins, we have yet another, besides the one I plan to cover, when we get there.  What's that?  Socialism.  Oh, we're not socialist, we're capitalist.  Ohhhhh.  Really.

OK, so let's compare notes, shall we?  We, the people, are most certainly capitalists.  The government we have, however, is not.  Oh, it LOOKS like it is, but it's not.  That's a cover.  See, there are recognized signs that are widely approved, that indicate a move to socialism.  Fraudulent vote counts (Remember G.W.?  You really think we loved that man that much?  That we voted him in twice?  No way Jose.)  A President that ignores (and passes law that ignores) in place and nationally voted-upon legislation (G.W., again...and now Obama, at least 10 times worse).  A police state, and a cry going up from the public that this is happening (check out Youtube and copblock.com).  Media that sees this and reports it (see the same places).  This, even though a lot of you have no idea about it, is happening...NOW.  For example, did you know that we gave away our cold war military weapons and gear....to our LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT???  Yup.  Congress passed the law to do so back in 1994.  Here.  It's unreal.  Here's what worries me though.  Before, we were paying attention.  We could see what was happening.  Mostly because we had very little to distract us.  But not anymore...

NOW we have computers.  Laptops.  The internet.  Cell phones.  iPads/iPhones.  PS4's/Xboxes.  And games.  Every single item I just mentioned has CAMERAS, some front and back.  Oh my lord, at the very least, 3/4 of our free time is all about the games we play.  Slots.  Candy Crush.  You name it, we play it.  Everywhere.  On the bus.  At work, on break, at the doctor's office.  The other quarter of our free time, we're messaging.  It's nuts.  Oh yeah, I'm guilty.  I have tons of things to do, and it's actually hard work to quit playing or Facebooking long enough to do those things.  It's a wonder I've actually managed to make time to do this series at all.  Not unlike a coke habit, I've actually DREAMED ABOUT PLAYING THESE GAMES...that's not a lie.  And, the more we stare down, the less we see.  We're not paying attention.  So one of two majorly bad things are bound to happen here.  Either a country (not unlike China, who's been bursting at the seams and piling people on top of each other for a good century now) is gonna whomp in and take over, or our own government, when it sees it can get away with stuff, starts pulling the wool over our eyes and turning out the lights so we don't notice what's going on, then gets too big for it's britches and huddles all the power to the mount on which it sits.

So what does this all have to do with our sin of Capitalism you ask?  Should be obvious.  Can't believe I even have to explain it.  Corporations, hand in hand with the government, are turning us into socialists, using capitalism as a cover.  And we're not looking.  We don't pay attention to it anymore.  The time is ripe for some kind of takeover, and from what I understand, we might be in the middle of it right....this....minute.

I'm on level 190 of Candy Crush.  Tomorrow I might be in handcuffs, or, thanks to Socialist sign #4, I might just be a victim of "The Assassination of key public figures."  Only next week will tell.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Day #2 - Banks and Banking



Welcome back.  Today we'll be opening up a whole new can o' worms.  Today's deadly sin?  Banks and Banking.

Now, here's where I may get just a bit vague.  Then, when I'm more knowledgeable about the financial system and the way it works, I'll come back full circle and tear into it a lot better.  Until then, if it sounds like I'm just spouting things off that I know little or nothing about, then I probably am.

Anyhow, I digress.  Let's start with banks and banking in the most general fashion.  A bank, as it is loosely defined, is an establishment for the custody, loan, exchange or issue of money, for the extension of credit, and that facilitates the transfer of moneys.  Banks came into existence in the 14th century, and we have no one to blame but the Italians for their invention.  But, of course, our more modern banking processes were refined by none other than...yessir, you guessed it.  The country we tried so very hard to get away from (yet we adopted their method of law, as well as their banking policies), England.

In my opinion, there is no better waste of a good building on this earth than a building that sports a bank, especially with the advent of the digital age.  Now most of us just bank online...unless of course you're trying to get a loan.  Then we might just crawl away from the screen to go meet with our bankers.  To me, banking is not only a waste of your valuable time (something we have oh so little of these days), but with every fee they add to their service to us, my mattress looks better all the time.

There's a show on CNBC I strongly suggest you watch for a minimum of 3 full hours before you ever darken the door of another bank, or check their homepage, or deal with any other type of intermediary that handles your money:  American Greed.  America's deadly sin for day G? Oh yeah baby. The plan will most certainly be to hit that one with some serious fervor.  Financial laws in this country, which are lax, if not non-existent, do little or nothing to protect the rights of any type of investor.  No, the general rule in this country is "Buyer Beware"....and if you mess up?  Well, we'll most assuredly bring criminal charges against the wrong-doer involved, but as to your investment?  Good luck w/that."  Ponzi scheme after Ponzi scheme has crossed the desks of the FBI, and they're always quick to a bust.  Safeguards have been implemented in the financial world...signs to look for, et cetera, and yet they aren't meant as a storm warning alarm for investors, only for the people in the financial business.

No, private or noob investors (as they are when dealing with America's other exclusive clubs, i.e., The Law Lodge and the Masonic Medical clubs) are pretty naive to the scope, ease and frequency that financial fraud is executed with these days.  Anyone with the slightest charisma and half a brain can get away with millions of dollars if they properly set their paths to it. And we're not just talking about blue collar Mr. Smith investing the $2500 he somehow managed to save up over a five-year span; some of these people losing their money have hundreds of thousands and even millions to invest.  If they can't see a scam like this coming a mile down the road, poor Mr. Smith's future can't even be dim.  What does this say to me as an average consumer?  It screams out that people involved in financials are a jealous and self-centered lot (as well as a more and more greedy lot), and aren't afraid to rat out the people that are taking advantage of clients or cheating the system, but don't care one iota about you, the end-user consumer, or your investment...unless they're directly involved.  Otherwise, regulations would be a lot tougher to evade, and jail terms would be a whole lot stiffer, don't you think?  You'd have to believe that after this happened 20 times or so that they'd be able to quash these scam giants even before they THOUGHT about drawing out their first hundred thousand.  "Oh, he bought a helicopter with Mr. Little Guy's money you say?  And he won't let me take the wife and the kids for a ride?  Get the FBI on the phone, will you?  We'll see how he acts after rotting in Federal Prison for a few years."  No matter about Mr. Little Guy's money...he/she/they should have known it was a scam, as far as they're concerned.   Thank God for CNBC, or we'd still be throwing our nest-eggs freely down the toilet without a half an idea of what hit us.

I can't help but remember the days (geez, I'm getting eld) when I got my piddly 3.5% interest on my checking account, and the more whopping 5-6% on my savings account.  Now you get, what, 1.something percent?  ON YOUR SAVINGS!!  And nothing but since-added fee after fee for your checking/debit account.  See my articles concerning ROLLING OVER under my politics and law blog on Blogger.com.  Banks are the playground bullies these days, and we're the ones just taking the ongoing beatings!  Worse yet, when they over-extend themselves, or scam the working folk out of their money, then ask our government for a bailout?  Guess who pays to cover that?  YOU DO!  It might not be all at once, but you pay up for that in some other fashion, believe you me.  And it was YOUR MONEY THEY OVER-EXTENDED ON/WITH IN THE FIRST PLACE!!

Finally, I intend to wrap up our little discussion on these major financial whiz-kids with only one of the biggest plays on America that we ever rolled over on...our Federally Mandated Income Tax.  Wrought by none other than the banking industry, income tax came into our lives to stay in 1913.  The only reason it was ever considered in the first place was because the government was losing money due to alcohol prohibition.  To make up for it, the heads of our great nation got together with the financiers of the time and settled on charging us for part of the money that we earned honestly, with no small amount of blood, sweat and tears, and had all to ourselves, free and clear of any tax; the way it should have been, and should still be to this day.  Our state governments, of course, jumped all over it too, conscience be damned.  What did they care?  They made more than enough money, and if they didn't, they'd just raise their salaries to compensate.  Anyone who might have opposed this went for it anyway, because it was presented to them as a TEMPORARY solution to the government's money loss.  When they voted to amend the Constitution to fully implement it as a PERMANENT solution to many possible future issues that might arise, what did we Americans do?  Uh -huh...we ROLLED OVER!!  You can't tell me this was the only viable solution they could muster in their meetings.  They did it because they knew we'd swallow the need for it and someday open our wallets and give it up without even thinking about it, with the proper amount of brain-washing.

It was, by far, the easiest solution.  Why?  Because, by this time, we were sitting prettier that we had been for some time, and were well on our way to becoming the nation of rollovers we've been conditioned to be today.  This is why gas, oil and the prices of just about everything else is sky-high.  Doesn't have a single thing to do with inflation or the CPI (the Consumer Price Index) nor is it even supply and demand.  No kids, this is yet another example of good old governmental greed; which, just like anything else, is learned, taught, then passed down through the generations like a legacy.  I'd even go as far as to label it an influential model for our current American corporate moral compass.  I guarantee no company in this land of ours would have tried an "Enron" back in the days the income tax was implemented.  It was unheard of.  The heads of corporations in those days truly feared consumer backlash.  Corporate conscience and accountability are most certainly things of our once great past.  Nor does our law accurately cover us with the proper insurance when incidents like these occur.

If you want some well-thought out advice?  Look into the price of safes these days.  You and I both know you could justify a high-quality one of these in no time whatsoever, when pitted against the bank fees you pay over the course of even a few months.  Sure, you lose out on Federal Insurance, but look at how much money they get back to the victims of some of the biggies in nest-egg clean-outs.  How much of your money do you imagine you'll get in return as opposed to what you put in?  I'd look into that, if'n I were you.  I've heard tell, when the banking system of a well-known super-power was told that they would be going under soon enough? The financiers of their banks kept it quiet as long as was possible.  And when it went public, as you might well imagine, there was a rush of private citizens all running to their local banks to clean out their accounts, to no avail.  So it happened that Russia's banks went bye-bye a mere week or so ago.  The heads of those banks kept that information away from their clients ON PURPOSE!!  Do you believe, for one minute, that put in the same situation, our banks wouldn't do the same?  Think about it.  Such could be the extent of deadly sin #2.


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

America's 26 Deadly Sins - Day #1. Atheism

http://www.fairfaxunderground.com/forum/read/40/1275747.html

"There is a rumor going around that I have found god.  I think this is unlikely, because I have enough difficulty finding my keys, and there is empirical evidence that they exist."
- Terry Pratchett

Christianity, was only one of many living religions in the U.S., back in 1776.  Although primarily Christian-based, Americans during this time had been of the Puritan and Angelican faiths.  We as a people haven't, of late, or ever, decided on Christianity as our national religion.  A good portion of our founding fathers were religeous maybe, but there were atheists among those as well.  Ben Franklin.  George.  Because of that, I'm sure, did we actually decide that it would be whatever it is WE decided it would be.  What each of us believes, individually or as a group. Freedom of Religion.  It just so happens that we ended up having more citizens of the Christian belief than most of the others, since our primary influx happened to be mostly of the Great Britain, as well as other European, varieties.

During the time that defined our "Independence", the First Great Awakening, a movement which all but eliminated Angelican and Puritan tendancies we held dear from the motherland, England, was beginning to take place.  As we Americans swept West, the religeous views we brought over the ocean began to dissipate with it.  In our youth as a nation, when discussing our majority religion, Christianity has branched off (in our country as well, but in others, originally) to other sub-Christian categories, i.e.: Catholicism, Lutheran, Methodist, Evangelist, just to rattle off some of the main ones at its core.  In case you haven't noticed, however, each initial break-off also branched off into about a 1000 or so different little subsets too...and some of these aren't even subsets; but completely different takes on Christianity altogether.  The thing that bothers me though, that even though we seem to have so many different facets of our majority religion, we seem to be moving more and more towards Atheism.

Government, it was decided, shall not be part religious, nor shall religion be governmental.  The separation of church and state, if you will, is truly a novel idea.  Or is it?  It seems to work pretty well for Italy and it's primary branch of Christianity, Catholicism.  And, as a relative of mine noted, "In God We Trust", as well as "One Nation Under God" were add-ons we stuck into our schools (and onto our cash) when religion (namely Christianity) was at its peak in our country; mostly in the 50's, when we actually were more of a God-fearing nation.  Teaching it as something we need to know, these days, so that we can incorporate it into our lives - well, we just don't do that much anymore.

There are a lot of reasons for this, to be sure.  There are SO many different branches of Christianity; its as good as hopeless to think we could teach religion as a general class and cover it all.  There'd have to be a Religion II, III, IV...probably well into 100 classes.  OK, this is a granted then.  I get you.  Let's also note, that Christianity, albeit our majority religion, is not alone, in any sense.  There's Buddhism, Judaism,  Muslim, Mormon, and a host of others.  If you only teach Christianity, well, you're going to get a lot of input from other religions to contrast, as well as differing opinions in only the Christian way of thinking...and unless you're versed in each one, as a teacher, you're going to spend a lot of time in class arguing each and every one; so maybe it's best that it's out.

You may choose to argue, however, that if you knock religion out of the classroom altogether, you may encourage personal choice, sure, but the problem with this is, that this is where a lot of us learned life basics that shaped us.  Morals, general behavior, and social interaction, all which are taught best in classes concerning religion.  Well, although you might argue this, there is, actually a place where these ideals ARE taught..at our churches.  And I don't just mean a service, I mean a lot of churches have instructional classes meant to give us a good moral compass.  And, of course, if you don't feel this is doing enough for your kids, well, there's always private school, a lot of which are Christian in nature.

I'm thinking there are good reasons for the move to Atheism.  With the constant bombardment of so many conflicting religions, let alone facets or subsets of those religions, how does one choose without consequence?  So much consequence, even, that it just might be "Life" threatening.  Each one says the others are wrong...and they're right.  You're going to heaven...oh and you're not.  This law is right, if you follow it, you're good...if you break it, you're doomed.  I'm not surprised, when people (like myself, by the way) just throw up their hands and say "SCREW IT!!  Now, we're NOTHING!!"

Now, I'm no Atheist.  Nor am I Agnostic.  I am, however, of the opinion that there is only one built-in alarm system that's going to work for me.  My conscience.  This is what's in charge of my right and wrong meter.  If I do something right (or as America has instilled it in me, where right and wrong are concerned, anyway), I pat myself on the back and feel fabulous.  When I do something wrong, I beat myself over the head, all the while feeling as crappy as I can, until I either confess it or fix it.  As for "God", I'm scared to death to believe in any one, mostly because I'm afraid I'm going to be wrong.  So I believe in "The One", no name.  I have to.  There is somebody or something that did all this; being a world traveler, I just have to believe that.  When asked whether I prefer the evolution or the creation stories, I vote for creation.  By which "One", though, I think I'll leave that to be answered by the fanatics.  One of those, I'm sure, have it right.  I'll just ride the fence on it.  I feel that, if you are a good person, and do the right thing, well, you should be all right, whoever might be the "One" in charge.  Tossing good people out of Nirvana just because they chose to believe in something or someone else would be like throwing out good onions because you hate onions.  There's no good reason to do it.  I say, if nothing else, give them to someone else to use.  If they're bad, on the other hand, toss 'em, for sure!

Upon doing some research, I was able to come accross a few maps, dotted here and there, that map out our religeous preferences.  I chose to go with those that were provided by The Glenmary Research Center, back in 2000.  You cannot access their website any longer, for reasons unknown, but it appears that they were definately a better source for accurate religeous census back in that year.  The "Census", our governmental census, that is, evidently didn't delve deeply enough in their telephone interviews to accurately calculate these things, but, I think I'll let you decide.  Wiki, which was never acceptable as an accurate source when I attended Composition classes in 2010, shows the biggest concentration of actual Atheists as occupying the majority of the Northwest states in our country.  I believe those figures, no matter what the source, are inaccurate and under-rated at best.  Upon viewing the actual U.S. Census (2010), there are 11,815,000 people that refuse to answer any religious question posed to them.  That's a pretty big chunk o' undecideds if you were to ask me.  Also, the ASARB evidently has taken over researching religious affiliates across the U.S. from the Glenmary Research Center, and is more an authority of these figures these days.

Here, I'll give you the links to both the U.S. Census report concerning religion, as well as the site that now sports the Glenmary maps, as well as the ASARB's website:

http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0075.pdf

http://www.fairfaxunderground.com/forum/read/40/1275747.html

http://www.rcms2010.org/

Whether or not Atheism is a good thing can only be decided, based on one fact.  We believe.  We believe in things, and we believe in people.  We believe in our government (why, is still beyond me), and we believe in a lot of other different things.  We should not, however, not opt to believe in a God.  Believe in something or somebody, America.  If you don't, your thinking may just take a pretty dark path you might not like very much.  Gather enough Atheism in one place, and you may just start making up your own rules. Chaos will indeed reign.  No, I believe our moral compass has a "due North" showing on it somewhere, or it wouldn't be a compass at all.  If we don't follow it, we may just get lost.  Because of this, Atheism is most certainly, if not now, at a later date, the top of America's Deadly Sins list.  And not only because it begins with an "A".


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