Saturday, April 12, 2014
Day #18 - Racism
Ok, Day #18 promises to be a mountain a lot of us really don't want to climb. But, since I just rented all of this mountain-climbing gear, the least you can do is politely grin and bear it, right?
Onward then!! Annnnnd the lucky subject of the day IS: RACISM!!
Now, whenever one chooses to cover something as controversial as this, it's always good to start out with some facts, as well as some stats.
America is currently 67.3%, Non-Hispanic, Non-African American White. We have 12.4% non-white, non-hispanic blacks. We also house 16.2% Non-white, Non-Afro-American Hispanics. Confused? I am too, but neither here nor there...
A lot of things happened to me, along the course of my life, that should have defined me as a racist as early as seven. At the time, I was living in Englewood, a suburb of the great city of Los Angeles. Back in the day, even Los Angeles still had their bathrooms in the schools playgrounds open, even when the school was closed. A black kid, around 14, came up to me and said, "hey! I got a raven trapped in the bathroom...wanna see it?" Like the very naive kid I was, I flopped behind him to the bathroom, where, once we got inside, he grabbed me by the scruff of my collar, held me up against the wall with a switchblade up to my throat and said "Say black is beautiful 3 times, or I'll slice your throat open..." Man, you never saw a kid babble so fast. "Blackisbeautifulblackisbeautifulblackisbeautiful!!"...and thank God he let me go, or I may not have lived to be writing this wonderful blog, eh?
There were other times too, later in life. But one of my best friends from high school was black, and later I discovered the bonuses of dating black women...so it really never took a toll on me.
Add to that, you know, it wasn't til I was almost 30, that I learned that racism did not define simply white against black, like I thought it had up to that point. No, racism, as defined in Merriam-Webster is 1.) Poor treatment of or violence against people because of their race, and 2.) the belief that some races of people are better than others. So racism, then, can be practiced by any race against any other race, in essence. Whites can have a thing against Indians, and the Japanese can have a thing against the Chinese. However, it's not only limited to race, it could be a class within a given race...the rich Japanese may come up with a name for a subset that is decidedly poorer, then be racist against that faction.
And so I learned that racism is everywhere, and practiced by everybody. And you can't limit racism to any time, no, racism seems to run rampant, somebody against somebody, almost all the time. There seems to be very little you can do to fix it either.
Throughout our short history as a country, the primary racism was white against Afro-American, because, most definitely, of the slave laws. They were looked down on and discriminated against very nearly since the signing of the Declaration of Independence. It was all about social status then, Lords over surfs, and had been that way for some time; so when Lincoln abolished slavery, it was only natural that that same discrimination would continue on; only now it had to be about color rather than status, since their status had been abolished by law. It wasn't until nearly a century later that the law would again be examined to help further equalize the status of Afro-American to White...and even then it would never quite be right where the racism had originated, in the deep southern United States.
Today, racism of white against black isn't nearly so cut and dried, like it used to be...no, like it HAD to be during the slavery era. During the slavery era, Afro-Americans were not taught to read and write...it was yet another way they could keep the slaves in their places. If they learned to read and write, then they may just read some book about freedom, or about the equality of all human beings, or maybe refer to law, or some other material that might put ideas in their heads. So the slave owners kept their workers in the darkness of ignorance, to keep them from escaping.
No, racism of that type, thanks to amendments following the Emancipation Proclamation that slowly gave Afro-Americans the same rights that we had enjoyed for the better part of our time as a nation, was brought to general extinction. Racism of different origins then became the norm.
For instance, during the Vietnam war, soldiers were trained to hate "Charlie", a common name given to the people of North Vietnam, to make them verbally identifiable to anyone not in communication's range. It then became a generic name for anyone who wasn't fighting for our side...then, when the veterans of this war came back to America, "Charlie" came to stand for just about anyone of Asian decent, and was introduced to us on this side of the ocean. Although "Charlie" didn't stick as a group name (since no one coming to our land was an enemy), they did manage to pit us against the countless refugees that would follow the wars end, with a more general racist stigma. This is, of course, only one of many immigration periods America would endure over the decades...there were refugees of many wars in the 40's through the 90's in that century whose refugees would find solace here in America.
Then, as the wars slowed to a trickle, a new issue was recognized. Mexico, our neighbor to the south, was significantly poorer than America; they were paid ridiculously low wages, and their economy was less than ideal. So, whenever possible, citizens of Mexico would find a way to sneak over the border in hopes of being treated more like people, than they had experienced before, and find a way to not only get a piece of the American Dream we liked to talk about so much, but then, after getting established, find another way to get the rest of their family over the border illegally as well. And since our identification system at the time was pretty easy to get by (licenses didn't have pictures on them back in the early 70's, and social security cards weren't required to get employment). If you were ever asked to show an I.D., you most likely were only asked to show one, and most places that offered employment seldom even asked you to fill out an application; I-9's and the like hadn't even been introduced. There wasn't enough of a problem back then.
Then, as more and more people were caught coming over the border from Mexico to America, Laws changed and penalties stiffened, and the INS became bigger and tougher on the flow. Later, additional forms to fill out (as well as asking for a 2nd, and sometimes even a third I.D.) became more common, to slow the march of phony identification. Pictures were added to I.D.'s and the design on them became more complex, not unlike the design complication of our currency, in order to foil counterfeiters. The fight to keep the border secure was a battle that never stopped.
Then, when 9/11 hit the nation, our borders (in favor of borders parallel to where we thought terrorists might enter) and the people trying to secure them were relaxed. Although we still have our major U.S./Mexico checkpoints along our major thoroughfares, the "Border Patrol", in charge of securing the spots that were weak along the border, was reduced. It appears to have made an impact.
Our Hispanic population is now higher than any other minority. There are major problems with these additions to our population. For one, because laborers were paid so miserably when working in Mexico, anything they received for their work done in America was easily more substantial, whether or not it was less than our minimum wage. When employers began to notice this, they took to hiring more Mexican workers in the hopes of saving on payroll expenses. This began to significantly lower the amount of jobs available to our citizens in certain demographic areas.
Also, there was the fact that 90% or better of these immigrants did not speak a lick of English. Interpreters were needed to communicate orders between bosses and workers, and, for example, also became needed in state agencies, in relation to welfare, law enforcement, immigration, our courts...and the list just increased from there. Not a lot of resources were spent increasing an immigrants understanding of our native language, at the time, let alone the fact that most immigrants then were here illegally. Then, as time went on, and the problem became worse, the Hispanic population, which used to be limited mostly to the border areas, warmer climates and certain states, now was over-crowding and spread out over the nation over time. I can accurately describe the situation here in my home state...I've never been in any other state enough to know what their situations were prior to this decade and the last. I have however lived here long enough to physically notice the changes made here in our capital city.
For one, phone menus, which, since their invention, never used to give any other option to a caller but English. Now, it's rare to hear one that doesn't offer the option of Spanish. The south side of our city, which was strictly Italian back in the first decade I lived here, the 70's, has since turned primarily Spanish, and the neighborhood that used to be all Spanish to begin with has almost doubled in size. Spanish stores and now, even major marketplaces are cropping up daily all over the city, and bi-lingual jobs here are at an all time high. We only used to have one Spanish Channel. Now I think there's 5 or better, almost enough to warrant starting their own cable company. The problems that used to be a lot smaller, such as cheap laborers, are becoming a lot more noticeable, and are more likely to be cracked down on, because of the increase in complaints on this matter.
The ultimate outcome of all of this new unfamiliarity in relation to immigrants has bred a new type of racism: Statistics easily show that white America will indeed become the minority population by 2045. America was always known as a country that took in your poor, your huddled masses...this has never been in dispute. Almost everyone here is descended from different European, as well as Afro-American lineages. The problem becomes mutated however, when one country by itself seemingly pours right into another, whether that reason is because either of their oppressive government, or their poor economic condition, for example, it really doesn't matter There has to be limits. Of course, if we're able to, we should always help our neighbors in need, especially if we were somehow involved in causing their plight. But the transplanting of nearly an entire nation over into our own is ripe for trouble and needs more control. If given the choice of the two highest buildings in America to be blown to bits causing the deaths of 3000 Americans, and 100,000 economy-crushing immigrants coming into America illegally, I'm afraid I'd have to choose the buildings folks. Sorry. Just saying, logically, it makes more sense.
Friday, April 11, 2014
Day #17 - Quality & the Quality of Life
Hey kids, it's that time again....another 2 parter. Couldn't just hold that sucka down to one subject, you know me.
Today we're gonna get a load of Quality and the Quality of our lives. They seem to, of course, go hand in hand...so it only makes good sense to do them together. Let's munch through those bones, all right?
When I refer to quality, it should be evident of which I speak. I'm talking, of course, about the quality in what we make, what we export, and what we import. Our quality of food; products - organic and not so much, and what we build and construct. These things speak volumes of us and of our time/generation.
I cover this a lot. I have another blog entitled "The American Consumer" on this site, and although I haven't had the time really to add to it, there's something there now that talks about an intangible area of the all-encompassing area of quality...service.
The saddest thing concerning our country today is that we are failing. Not in just tangible products, but in intangible as well. Cars used to last forever, and if they didn't, we knew what to do to fix them. Now we aren't even allowed under the hood, except to top up the fluids. Anything else we touch voids any skeleton of a warranty that might have been in place. Computers used to be up-gradable by the common consumer...today, if you go out and buy a larger hard drive, you can't even put it into a laptop, mostly due to the manufacturer, and Bill Gates. Bill has made it so you can't purchase a copy of Windows without paying almost $500...and if you change the hard drive, the manufacturer says that you aren't able to load just any old operating system on them, because of compatibility issues. What changed? Didn't used to be that way. Greed, my friends, that's what happened. HP used to be my favorite laptop, but now they've put something called Smart Protect on it, making it impossible to install any drivers on your new and bigger hard drive. You have to purchase a loaded hard drive from THEM instead, to upgrade it, at twice to three times the cost of the blank hard drives you can buy in the store. If laptops weren't so dirt-cheap, I would have gotten rid of mine forever a long time ago.
And, thanks to our demands for things that cost less, it's widely excepted that everything will go out in a little over a year. Parts are produced at less cost at the expense of their durability...and we're OK with that. Me? I'd personally like to pay more and have them last a hell of a lot longer. These days I find myself more and more cussing and cursing every little thing that falls apart in my hands, because now I have to replace it...AGAIN...and I just bought it last month.
Worse yet, sometimes products are falling apart within minutes of my taking them out of the box. Anything I used to buy, back in the 70's and 80's (even these weren't exactly what I would call our finest product decades) I was sure would last at the minimum of 6 months. Now I can't guarantee things will last more than a day or two. The return times for these products...even the expensive ones, like TV's and computers, is now 14 days...when it used be as much as 90. This says loads for what our manufacturers expect from us in relation to the products we buy. What they say nowadays, precisely, is buyer beware. Good luck with that. "Sorry to empty your wallets, but tough T-cups pal."
Moving along to what I consider to be our LOWEST score in the world, is our current method of service, whether face to face or over the phone. Our larger corporations blow us off and let us fly off, knowing full well that, if they lose us? More will come. "Screw you! Just as you and I were talking we had 200 more sign up!' What they don't think through on though, is that we sign up with them because of their established good name, the knowledge of their *former* exceptional customer service, and their durability in our economy. Oh you bet we sign up in droves! But once we figure out how gone to hell your service has gotten, well, we'll leave in those same droves. It's all about the money. Once they have you? Service is out the window. Customer service reps are no longer polite, empathetic or sympathetic to your plight, they're just there as a token, because it's expected. If you're brave enough to endure the tiresome selection making of choices in the automated systems, taking on the attitudes of the reps is your next hurdle...and probably your last with that company. And if the customer service is handled overseas? You can expect even less pleasantry; and these particular reps are trained to make sure you accomplish very little by calling. What are you going to do anyway, fly to India to confront your indifferent rep? Not likely.
Which, of course brings us to our quality of life. What were those things again? You remember...OH YEAH...Life. Liberty. The Pursuit of Happiness...Yeah, I remember hearing about that once. Never seen one..but I might recognize one if I ever did.
Life is always iffy anyway, and with cops shooting unarmed people on a daily basis, more and more, and thanks to us having to have our big American noses in the middle of everybody's wars, my life doesn't appear to have the value it once did.
And liberty? Our most precious possession? The more socialist this country becomes, I doubt that to stand much longer as an inalienable right.
And finally, there's the pursuit of Happiness. Let's do a short test of that. For one, I know I'm never all that happy with things that break on a regular basis. 2. I know happiness to be in short supply after I spend $31,000 on the average new car and it ends up on the side of the road just as the speedometer hits 100,002.3. I'm know I'm pretty much devoid of all happiness when my computer ends up crashed and incapacitated on day 366. Seems to me I need to find somewhere else to pursue my happiness, or maybe I'm not pursuing it as far as where they've moved the finish line to.
Thank GOD, THIS day's over...Tomorrow promised great things. Stay tuned.
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Day #16 - Pharmaceuticals and the Companies That Produce Them
Man....I just gotta say it. Twitter is my hero. Thanks to them, I now have 35 followers to this blog. Thank GOD for the internet and all it entails. There might be hope for this world as yet.
Whoah....Day 16. Crazy, right? Not nearly as crazy as today's beef, however...easily the #1 problem I have with America to this date.
Whoah....Day 16. Crazy, right? Not nearly as crazy as today's beef, however...easily the #1 problem I have with America to this date.
I love this shot, at the pharm companies our government keeps throwing money into. They won't legalize something as stupid and commonplace in our society as marijuana, but will throw more dangerous unneeded and addictive drugs like these at us, no problem.
What''s really going on here kids? Mother nature gives us green and we spit in it's face, but man-made and dangerous pills are OK?? Are we INSANE?
No doubt in my mind. Pharm Companies and the geniuses that run and promote them are targets at best. Pull out the long-range missiles that you're allowed to arsenal, thanks to the NRA, and let's take our best shots NOW, before they infect yet another generation.
Here's my favorite thing though...we let these people keep running!! After years of studies that have vegetated or killed off some people. After knowing full well what these drugs have been known to do to us. After seeing lawyer's commercials time and time again on every station talking about lawsuits against these pills and their manufacturers. After we see commercial after commercial that says "Here's a drug for your depression...but it may cause cancer, AIDS, violent seizures, and ultimately...death."...and we still ask for them, let them be prescribed to us, and gladly gulp them down when we take them, whether with meal or not! OMG!! WE ARE insane!!
Keep in mind, people (or re-read, PLEASE), Day #13 - Mental Health. We aren't sick, at least not the majority of us. We have been duped by these companies, the government, our healthcare system, our psychiatrists, etc. into believing that everything we go through in our daily lives is due to some type of mental illness!! These are NOT illnesses, they are normal everyday different behaviors...things that make each of us unique!!
I think I've said more than enough about this. Other articles in this series expand on it enough.
Quit making these companies rich, and never let your doctor set you up with an arsenal of pills to keep you alive, or normal. These drugs, often taken, will screw us up to where we need others to fix what the first pills did to us. Get a clue!! Especially, if you're trying to stay alive. If it takes their pills to keep us alive, you weren't meant to be.
Day 16 has gone on long enough...onward!! :D
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Day #15 - Obama
It's my plan, today, to ruffle some feathers. And piss people off. And wake people up.
It has occurred to me, as I've been writing, that the possibility that America's 26 deadly sins may have to either change to America's 52 deadly sins, or it might be that America's 26 deadly since may have a baby called America's 26 more deadly sins, or something. I'm not sure. Politics and Law may also be discontinued and incorporated into this one. I have yet to decide. Dear readers, I really appreciate your views into both, and considering the fact that I've not advertised, 500+ views on both combined in just 2 months is beyond my wildest expectations. I have noticed, America, that no one has commented...on ANY of it!! I insist everyone!! Please! Comment! I need and want to know how you feel!!
No sense in the dilly-dally today kids. Time to get it on!!
Obama. You hear so much. Conspiracy theories abound. I'm usually a "blow it off", or a "let it slide off" kind of guy, but the evidence is getting way too strong to ignore.
The man is a contradiction to everything America. I feel it's my duty to warn you, at least about the things being brought against the man, so that you can judge for yourself.
Number one, you've been hearing, I'm sure, about rumors that Obama plans to over-ride the Amendment controlling the terms a president can serve in office. Two. In some fashion, whether directly, or through a figurehead, our beloved Obama wants a third term in office. Here's his plan..which he' actually been working with since day one.
I'm sure you've read my "Move to Fascism" list, right?? If not, here it is again, and here are all the comparisons, where Mr. O, our beloved President, are concerned.
http://prorev.com/fascisthints.htm
1. Your president ignores or bypasses law that is put in place by our legislature. CHECK. The man's trying to beat FDR's former record for Executive Orders. Then there's the fact that he is oh so obviously bucking for term 3.
2. Massive warrant-less searches. check, Check and double CHECK!! See Copblock.org, and thefreethoughtproject.com under badge abuse. Plenty of this going on.
3. Your President and other governmental officials regularly lie to you....I don't think there's any need to refer to any kind of proof here. CHEEEEEECK.
4. Fraudulent Election Counts. CHECKKKKKK. Since the beginning of time, I'm sure. Then there's the aforementioned Bush Fiasco back in 2000, if you're really in need of a good example.
5. Governmental monitoring of phone calls, emails, letters....Only need to say 4 words. Homeland Security, FBI, CIA...CHECK!!
6. Secret Courts. Nuff said. CHECK!
7. A government subservient to it's major large corporations (Tobacco, pharmaceutical, AIG...need I say more?). CHECK
8. Use of torture on prisoners. Once again, copblock.org. CHECK
9. A court system that supports the use of unconstitutional powers by the President. See check #2. CHECK!
10. Massive spying on private citizens, especially those involved in political decent....CHECK. What did you really think all the cameras we have every place are for anyway? Then of course, there was our recent IRS debacle.
And that's just the first ten signs, America. Open the list and do the math yourselves...Pretty soon, we'll be spouting off "Heil Obama!", if this keeps up.
First he gives away...everything. More kickbacks...incentives...."The Stimulus"...money....phones, and more. Then he appeals to poor people with things like free cell phones for everyone...bigger welfare payouts....and there's more to come. He wants demi-god status. He's going for a popular vote, and, by the time 2016 rolls out, he believes he'll be so wildly popular, we'll insist he remain another term. How? By pulling a Roosevelt, only on the Democrat side. Our economy sucks, and has sucked for some time now, so long, we ache to have it good again. Right now, and for years, we've been sitting on what could well be the biggest oil and natural gas reserves we have had since oil was first ushered in as our savior, back in Teddy Roosevelt's day. That's how Teddy got popular. He ushered in a golden age during his presidency, making him the clear choice for another term. And Franklin? Same thing. Both of those golden ages combined don't come even remotely close to what we're sitting on now. As we speak, Mr. Obama has, sitting on his desk, 8 additional contracts for the export of the oil and natural gas we've been aware of but hoarding, to the world. Only one at this time is currently able to do so legally. He's holding on to them at the moment, because when he issues those out, there will be, like nothing we've ever seen, an age of total prosperity. Jobs will be everywhere, and money will be plentiful. We will LOVE the man, especially our poor. People that have NEVER voted before will be signing up by the droves. Oh, Mr. Obama is SMART!! All that shale drilling, and vertical drilling. Look how long that's been going on now. You don't really believe it's all been for nothing. They've turned up a bigger oil reserve, the likes we've never seen.
Oh, I intend to call the man out, however. I'll reveal his plan to as many as I can, trust me there.
And when we do put him over the top? He'll know he has the power to do whatever he wants, then. We'll be SCREWED. Government, the way it is now, will be unstoppable.
Then, there's the fact that the man is oblivious....to everything...at least that's the way he's portraying himself. And accountability? He doesn't believe in it. He doesn't stick his neck out for anything, or anybody. This man is serious trouble America. Oh, you don't have to believe me. One of two things will happen in our remaining time with Mr. President Obama. Either the dollar will crash as a controlling world currency, or we'll be making more money than we know what to do with. Oh, I intend to call the man out, however. I'll reveal his plan to as many as I can, trust me there. Mark my words. On to day #16. Gonna be a good one kids!
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Day #14 - (The) NRA
As I'm sure you know, the very first thing I'm going to do is refer you elsewhere. This is one of my very favorite subjects, and I've referred to it over and over again.
Under "The Law....itself!! Part Duex," where you can easily gather my general opinion of the NRA and the 2nd Amendment for yourselves, but also here in this series as well, where I begin slamming both as early as Day #10 - Justice, American Style. Not that I won't be repeating any part of either of these references, I probably will be. Or at least a reasonable facsimile thereof.
So, here we go kids. The National Rifle Association...the name itself only reinforces my cry for Constitutional (in addition to the groups that arose from said piece of paper) Revamp, not unlike about everything else I've been yipping about; in both this series and my other major blog; where bringing our Constitution up to modern day terms and sentences (yes, and words too, I haven't left anyone else out, have I? Syllabals? Verbs? Nouns? You all good, or what?), is becoming a much needed and massively overdue necessity.
In my personal opinion, the National Rifle Association should have elevated or re-invented itself as the National Gun Association...However, that would invite obvious mispronunciation (more of the "On Purpose" type, I'm sure) of the acronym, if you take a minute to reach out and catch that drift. If you can't, here it is, spelled out in black and white - The NGA. Say it out loud. You'll get it eventually. Really, you don't even have to do that, just stare at the letters long enough...it nearly jumps off of the page. Not a good plan. Not without a slew of race-rioting.
Besides, the NRA simply trips off of your tongue, doesn't it? And yet, there are other acronyms that are decisively easier on the eyes...the NHA (Handgun), the NPA (Pistol) or the all-encompassing type, and probably the best choices of all the aforementioned, the NWA (Weapon), or the NFA (Firearms.)
So now that we've covered all of that nonsense, let's move right on to the sense portion of the article, shall we?
I refuse to blah-de-blah the core of our 2nd Amendment. Every one of us has a pretty good idea what it says. The right to hold and bear arms...or is it the right to arm bears? They seem equally inter-changeable, since they both seem to make about the same amount of sense, anyway. The NRA's position on this is very obvious and very clear. We Americans have the right to have weaponry, up to a point, up to a kind of limited force, and up to and including the very obvious intent of the 3rd Amendment, which is the Amendment I like to call "The Forgotten Amendment." If someone hadn't stared so long at the 2nd Amendment, it would have probably been forgotten as well, considering the two were tied very closely together. But somebody looked at it too long, liked what they were reading, and pushed it down the throats of the rest of America at the time, and more so nowadays. No one talks about Amendment 3, because it's outdated, and applied to the times, very closely, as does the 2nd. The 2nd, however is important, because it gives us the right to own guns!!!! The 3rd however, doesn't give us anything, so it's boring and not of consequence. OK. Whatever you say then.
No, according to the NRA, guns are not only a fundamental right, but an imperative and crucial right....like the right to breath. To listen to them, we wouldn't SURVIVE without firearms. That it's not exercising your rights as an American...or really that it's as good as UN-American to NOT own a gun. According to these fanatics, there needs to be at least one in every home, or you'll be SORRRRRRYYYY!!
It angers me terribly to hear this kind of stuff, for truly. Because of guns, obviously, we have a real murder problem 'round these parts. We Americans are a very trigger happy bunch. And our law enforcement isn't much better, and a gruesome step above those yahoos is the military, an even more trigger happy bunch. The days of shoot first and ask questions later, as it was back in the days we look down on, the days of the wild wild west, is on the comeback. That was a lawless bunch wasn't it? Hate to tell ya folks, we may have become more civil since then, but we seem to be creeping back into an expanded and improved upon version of those same days. I'm sure all of us have heard of drive-bys, this sort of behavior rather mimics the gun-fighting right out in the street at noon...the only difference is that it's done more at midnight and usually happens between lots of people, instead of one on one. The intention is pretty much the same, it's kill to get your point across. Sounds like a modern wild wild west to me. Instead of rustler gangs we now have street gangs. The similarities to a lawless society is pretty scary.
Back then the sheriff was pretty much allowed to do whatever he had to, right down to gun-fighting himself to keep the peace...check mark on that one as well...our modern day jackboots like to think they're allowed to do whatever they want to keep the peace as well, up to and including killing people without a single expected right honored.
I'm not going to go either way on this subject at the moment. On the one hand, guns are a problem, of this there is absolutely no doubt, the numbers of murders every year in our country speaks for itself. On the other hand, the purpose of the 2nd Amendment, in its pristine condition was put in place to keep government in its place. But really, where do we draw the lines? We want to keep our sights set on our government, in case they, or their enforcers get too tyrannical. However, we want to keep the violent gun-related crime rate out of the history books.
The NRA does represent a lot of good in our country...they train our police forces, promote safety where firearms are considered, and do a good job of protecting one of our more important rights. They also promote self-defense measures and protect our hunting rights. The group has firm belief that guns deter crime. But if we didn't have as many guns, we wouldn't need to be trained in the safety of them, and crime would be diminished massively if guns weren't so readily available. Police forces seem to be making more of a move towards a police state, more than they seem to be worried about the "Protect and Serve" mottoes they sport on just about every police vehicle. I don't think I'm quite as thrilled with their being well-trained of late, that's for sure. Again, I refuse to directly lean any certain way here, but it's obvious that what the NRA promotes, unfortunately, also appears to promote a massive numbers of killing and other crimes we suffer at the hands of guns daily. For now, therefore, I'd have to say that supporting the 2nd Amendment produces more ill these days, and seems to outweigh thinking it's a wonderful and swell right to have, and serves us well. So I'm sorry gun rights advocates, I'm afraid I have to decline on joining your ranks today...even in the event another darker and less safe day occurs. The day I'll be happy for our right to bear arms will be the days they call martial law in effect, in our states or our nation...and to be honest, I don't really see those days as too far off. So for today, and quite possibly awhile to come, the 2nd Amendment, gun rights, and the NRA must remain in my list of deadly sins.
Last, but not least by any means, let's not soon forget that one of the four people whose hands you're forcing guns into suffers from some sort of mental illness, hmmm? See Yesterday's Post!!
Day #14? Spent. Toast. History. See all of you manana. :D
Monday, April 7, 2014
Day #13 - Mental Health
This one is primarily to be covered in just a few days, on Day #16 - Pharmaceuticals, but never fear, you know I have more than enough ammunition for both days.
Our mental health in this country is reaching critical levels, according to those who say it is. The stability of the average American, according to the mental health industry, is in serious doubt. Stress is at more than record levels, for one. Thank God we have tons of outlets to reduce it, or we'd more than likely be, the lot of us, in the middle of a massive stroke and heart attack epidemic. Thanks to all of our phones, tablets, gaming consoles, laptops, desktops and more, we can just launch an Angry Bird, Crush a Candy, match veggies, throw virtual balls of paper at virtual garbage cans, toss Papa Pears at buckets, and Bejewel Jewels to alleviate it, or we'd be in pretty bad shape. Of course, Candy Crush has been known to stress me out more than normal everyday issues sometimes. I've already tossed and broken more mice this year than all my other years of owning computers combined.
Anyway!! Some of these are the ones that tend to scare me:
1. Depression. Funny how this by itself is almost now an epidemic. More people (about 9.5 percent) are diagnosed with what we'll call a "Mood disorder", every year. Wow. NOTE: this baby promised to be the LEADING cause of mental disorders in the very near future.
2. ADD/ADHD/ODD/ETC. 11% of children who are 4-17 years of age. Again, I say, wow. Used to be that "Kids will be Kids"...now, they have ADD.
3. Bi-Polar Disorder - 2.6% of 25 and older.
4. Chemical Imbalance - 10%, 6 yrs. of age and older.
5. Altzheimers and Dementia - 1 in 3 seniors. Every 67 seconds someone is diagnosed with these. 33%!!!
6. Dysthymic - 1.5%
7. Schizophrenia - 1.1%
8. Anxiety Disorder - 18.8% over 18 yrs. old.
9. Panic Disorder - 2.7% over 18
10. PTSD - 3.5% over 18
11. Generalized Anxiety Disorder - 3.1% over 18
12. Social Phobia - 6.8 percent over 18
13. OCD - 1.0%
14. Agoraphobia - 0.8%
15. Specific Phobias - 8.7%
16. Eating Disorders - 4.8%
17. Autism and Aspberger's....Undeterminable
18. Anti-social personality disorders - 1.0 percent (I'd say this figure is widely debatable)
19. Avoidant Personality Disorder - 5.2%
20. Borderline Personality Disorder - 1.6% (I'm thinking they needed just "One more category" here so they could pin us down with a nice even round number of mental disorders...sheesh.)
Crazy huh? No, no, I didn't mean you. And there's even more of these. I barely scratched the lottery ticket.
According to the experts, America, we as its citizens suffer at a rate of 26.2%, as far as diagnosed mental disorders, or 1 in 4. What's wrong with this picture? Hmmmmmmm..........
OK, let's look at the fact that Pharmaceutical companies practically own this country. The American average of pills we take for....whatever!!...13 pills per person, PER DAY. 13!! Count 'em. 1, 2, 3, 4,....13!!!!!! Unfreekin'believable. You're lucky to find 2 aspirin in my hands, America, in a given month. Seriously? If it gets to the point where I have to take an arsenal of pills to keep going in this crummy thing called life in this crummy country? I plan to jump off of the nearest killing spot I can find. 1....out of 4....no wonder we have police brutality problem! 1 out of 4 cops are CRAZY!!
And you know, I gotta say it. The more people that you tell that they're nutso, the more are gonna believe it. Oh, first, they'll take their pills. Then they'll stop, and because of their dependency on these pills to be normal, and because doctors are telling them they'll be normal taking these pills...well, when they go off of these medications, that either might, more so, be the cause of a misdiagnosis, a mistake in dosage, or just plain "Pushin' the pill for the pharmaceutical companies? Next thing ya know, they're shooting up the local mall. And we wonder what the hell happened. "How could this happen...??" Isn't it obvious America?
Crazy. Crazy my keester!! You're not crazy. At least the better part of you diagnosed that way, anyway. It's just another point of view!!!!!! Another way of thinking. There's nothing wrong with you! 40 years ago, there was very little mental diagnosis. Funny how things change. If you're diagnosed, and treated with a handful of pills, you can very much blame the pills you're taking, more than the way you used to be before your diagnosis, believe it.
Can't believe I made it!! Halfway...Oh, but the best is yet to arrive. Heck, I might have to do ANOTHER 26, because I keep thinking of more subjects every letter I pass. Day 14 promises to be just as wunnerful.
Can't believe I made it!! Halfway...Oh, but the best is yet to arrive. Heck, I might have to do ANOTHER 26, because I keep thinking of more subjects every letter I pass. Day 14 promises to be just as wunnerful.
Labels:
ADD,
Agoraphobia,
Altzheimers,
America's Deadly Sins,
Anxiety,
Autism,
Avoidant,
Bi-Polar,
Eating Disorders,
Healthcare,
Imbalance,
Mental Health,
OCD,
Panic,
Pharmaceuticals,
PTSD,
Schizophrenia,
Stress
Day #12 - Lawyers
Yeah, sure. I've done stuff on lawyers, a plenty. However, I'm more than happy to repeat, reiterate, recap and re-define my feelings on the matter.
As a student of Pre-Law, I've been able to take in quite a bit about the way a lawyer's (as well as a student's) mind works. Now I almost wish I hadn't. Let me give you a bit of insight as to what these people go through, in studying for the profession.
I attended a community college to do this, so really, I haven't truly experienced what most students of law do. I did, however, practically live at the Drake University Law Library, during the course of this program, mostly because the community college didn't carry a sufficient law library, itself. The field is highly competitive among the students at Drake, where the program is much more seriously taken. They even have desks there, with reserved signs, where the part of them they leave there is quite visible. It's my firm belief that these people eat, sleep, breath, drink and are intravenously fed the law. I know this to be fact for at least the first year of the four or better years that they spend there. They'd have to be. I easily spent a third of MY life there, so they've gotta be there for at least half or better of their lives.
Again, they'd have to be. First off, they have to learn an entire new language...and another half. The legal dictionary they live by is easily as huge as the Mirriam-Webster's Unabridged. That's one. Then there's Latin. That's the half. And that's not the worst of it.
2nd, they have to understand every word, phrase and ideal of law. 3rd, and totally separate, they have to learn how to write the stuff. Memos and briefs are the lawyer's bread and butter, and notating and annotation, their life's blood. 4th, they have to research, find, then analyze just about everything they're digesting. This is NO easy task. The area of law they wish to practice is a moot point, they have to learn ALL areas. Then when you finish, you can juggle the choices. That's after you take what's probably one of the hardest tests taken by anyone in college. The Bar Exam. If you plan to practice in one of our states, then you have to take the Bar test offered by that state. If you plan to practice in 2 or more, you have to take each individual state's Bar exam, covering the laws of those states as well as your primary practice state. If you plan to practice internationally....well, you get the picture, I'm sure.
Last but certainly not least, they have to know where to locate anything legally related, almost instantly, in order to properly research it. Oh sure, some of it is computerized and organized in this fashion...but 85% of it is still in dusty volumes all over the country in humongous legal libraries. The sheer volume of law in our country is all documented and categorized in treatises (books), periodicals, encyclopedias, dictionaries, law reviews, digests and other law collaborates. And when asked, you have to know just which case the statute is quoted, on what page of what chapter in what section of the volume of the law collection or publication you have to lay your fingers on, or you're just screwed. Up to this point is where I not only empathize, but sympathize with a lawyer-to-be's plight. After that is where that sympathy ends, however.
I'm not sure what happens exactly between law student and lawyer. I never got that far...nor did I care to. Somewhere along the line, your soul is evidently ripped from your body. Maybe the Bar Exam is meant to drive them mad; or quite possibly some Arch-Sorcerer, a representative from the Legal Branch of the Judicial Brethren of Contracts, arises from the depths of their fraternities and casts some evil spell on them as a reward for passing the same; or maybe they're forced to drink blood cursed by Kali-Mah, as their hearts are ripped from their chests by their personal shamen...I don't think I'd care to debate the issue. But somehow, regardless of how straight they might have followed their paths during the course of their studies, or maybe went in with great and good intentions of doing charity pro bono work in their hometowns...they always come out on the other side as something other-worldly....and EVIL. They come out of their dorms spouting their newly learned language (and a half) like it's the first one they learned as a child. Evangelists are even envious of these former legal tenderfoots. English, pushed away into the recesses of the back lower left lobe of their hippo-campuses, becomes a distant memory, and if you listen closely you can hear their parents weeping and sobbing loudly in the background at the lost innocence of the child they once knew, as they graduate.
Now they exhume the law, and everything it stands for. They're now part of a secret society that no longer has to wonder about the complex system we Americans ought to understand, but don't, because we just don't belong. This new being, this Law-Yer, he/she knows the secrets of the universe now...they've been baptized in the holy light of Legality. We, as inferior "normal" citizens, are now doomed to roam in darkness for the rest of our days, because of the paths we chose in difference.
No, these newly-bred evildoers now serve the courts. Everything they talk about, whether with their scribes the paralegals or the masters they serve, the Judges, or their equals in the salt mines, the opposing attorneys, is in tongues, and, since they no longer bear human resemblance, or sound like one either, when we ask for our lawyer, it's tough to decide, after listening to both sides, if they're helping us, or the other side. All we can do now is completely put all of our faith in them to "try" and get us off the hook for what we've done, as well as empty our bank accounts to pay them - before, during and probably well after our trials.
Lawyers, on my list of America's deadly sins, easily rank at #3 on the "biggest problems in the country" list.. Lawyers abound by the thousands these days, and their numbers should soon equal 1 for every ten or so Americans, if the trend continues. Americans are so greedy these days (and of course, we can not only attribute this to the "bend-over backwards"customer policies practiced by almost every store-front in America, we can also thank the commercials lawyer's offices air just about every 30 seconds of commercial airtime sold on just about every channel you're able to receive) that suing someone, some company, or some new drug on the market's producer has easily surpassed barbecuing as the #1 American Pastime.
The sun has set on Day #12. Only 14 more to go :D
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