Category Archives: Food for Thought

March under one flag

Legends on the rise and fall of great societies permeate history with certain threads, like the demise of the common culture leading the list as one of the prime harbingers of “doom”.  Yes, that word “doom” comes to mind quite frequently,  presaging our presumed ineluctable fated demise.  Warning signs, both large and small, abound, blaring out endless streams of our culture and Judeo-Christian value system in full retreat to the relentless moral relativist message.

Some retreat for public relations reasons, like Wal-mart this past weekend (story here).  The EBT system  failed last Saturday in 17 states, leading to EBT recipients debit cards showing no limits.  News reports indicate that in several states Wal-mart stores were crammed with customers filling slews of shopping carts with groceries and “checking out”, swiping their EBT card, which they knew did not have the funds to cover the amount of groceries “purchased” (stolen).  The corollary would be long ago when people used personal checks more often and supposing you wrote a check for your purchases knowing you did not have money to cover the purchase.  There’s no difference besides the fact that media handlers will guide Wal-mart and the image of Wal-mart tracking down “poor people” for criminal prosecution over this blatant thievery might look like the giant retailer is picking on the little people.  Wal-mart will likely end up eating this loss and due to American social conditioning, way too many people will use moral relativism to guide their moral reasoning in the matter – saying things like “Wal-mart can afford it” or “Wal-mart screws over the little guy all the time so turn around is fair play”.  Sure, in this case some Wal-mart management in the affected states made the call to let the sales go through rather than stop the theft and they failed to follow the proper procedure in place to call Xerox when EBT cards aren’t working properly.

In this same above-mentioned scenario the more disturbing behavior is that of the crowds of people who flooded Wal-mart stores to steal food in broad daylight, with no moral hesitation.  The problem with government hand-outs is the people start beginning to believe these programs really are “entitlements” and thus they never spend a moment’s notice wondering about taking other people’s money as their own, nor do they worry about stealing food from Wal-mart.  Taking stuff that is not yours is stealing, no matter the twisted semantics used to rationalize it.  To delve further into this moral relativist hellish enslavement of the mind I urge you to read the article Justin linked in a comment here yesterday, “Contemporary Liberal Doublethink: Welfare = Self-Reliance”.  The thieves in this scenario won’t bother to “think or reason” about their thievery, no, these are pack animals – used to being led, with no will to think for themselves nor will they ponder things like civic duty, aspiring to become better human beings or much beyond their instant gratification.

PJ Media offered this truly excellent piece written by a writer who pens under the pseudonym, Bookworm, titled “The Surprising Reason Americans Are Vulnerable to Moral Relativism”, which although lengthy, definitely rates the time.  This writer posits that our American embrace of Anne Frank’s idealistic belief: “I still believe, in spite of everything, that people are truly good at heart.”, creates a syllogism as described in this passage:

“Thanks to those words, Americans accept that “people are truly good at heart.” This belief creates a syllogism, one that sees Americans claiming that it must be a lie when someone dares to claim that another group doesn’t meet certain moral absolutes. How can there be moral absolutes when all “people are truly good at heart”?”

The author goes on to explain why Anne Frank’s simple idealistic belief was not only wrong in her own personal life, where she perished in the Holocaust, but it is simply wrong for mankind, in general.   People aren’t truly good at heart – that part takes a great deal of civilizing effort, both in the home and in society in general, hence we used to call it “civil society”.  Aristotle offered his definition, “a shared set of norms and ethos, in which free citizens on an equal footing lived under the rule of law”, which puts us on firmer footing than most of the opining from American academics in recent decades.  We need that shared set of norms and ethos as the glue to hold our splintering, divided country together.  Cutting through the leftist doublethink presents a daunting challenge, but unless we commit to “winning the hearts and minds” of Americans on the importance of being “good citizens”, where “rights” rest right next to “civic duty”, we’ll continue to drift, creating an ever-widening no man’s land, rather than to use a military metaphor and which I use as my gravatar, “march under one flag”.  We must become a country under one flag again – we must become American citizens first, political partisans second.

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Minta’s Insightful Metaphor

An astute poster, Ms. Minta Marie Morze, commented:

It is the United States that is a house divided—America, itself, is a body of ideas that awaits the reawakening that can only come through the efforts of individuals who value it. It is like the effort that was involved in building one of the great cathedrals of Europe, requiring devoted labor and a farseeing vision. (And, as a metaphorical statement, compare the magnificent cathedrals of Europe with the one recently built near me in Los Angeles by Progressive minds—the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.)

Here’s a quick link to the LA cathedral mentioned.  Since this morning seems to be one of my quoting others days (much more inspiring, by far, than some of my own drivel), I’d like to jot down a few more quotes worth considering.   Taping up quotes –  on bulletin boards, in my locker as a teen, on my refrigerator and even cross stitching a quote for my husband to hang in his office years ago –  turned into a lifelong habit.  Ms Minta hit on the problem in America, it’s not only our politics which is divided, it’s our failure to strive for something higher and heaping praise on something much less, in most aspects of our lives.

The quote, which  my husband asked me to cross stitch and he framed, mattered to him as a leader in the US Army:

“Rank does not confer privilege or give power.  It imposes responsibility.”   – Peter Drucker

For me, being of a more daydreaming nature, the following two quotes keep me striving, no matter how many obstacles lie up ahead.

I am only one.
But still I am one.
I cannot do everything.
But still I can do something.
And because I cannot do everything
I will not refuse to do the something that I can do.

– Edward Everett Hale

For the cause that lacks assistance.
For the wrong that needs assistance.
For the future in the distance.

– George Linneaus Banks

Have a nice day everyone:-)

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The pansies smiling at you

Most of my posts end up with my admonitions or advice, but this one is about the death of a friend a year ago and how I realized that I sure wasn’t much of a friend to her.  I work in an ordinary blue collar job in retail and contrary to many people thinking this sort of job is beneath them, I actually like working there and find it interesting to talk to so many different people every day.  Many of my co-workers have worked their way up to being treasured friends.  Some, like my friend, Renate, who passed away, last year on October 3rd, well, our road to becoming friends started with a huge roadblock; Renate did not like me one iota and she let me know this every day for months.

When I began working in this store I started in the fabrics and crafts department, which was like my dream assignment.  There’s nothing better than being surrounded by fabric and craft stuff all day long.  My mind would teem with “project” ideas with each new day in there and I have a fabric collection to almost rival my book collection.  Of course, most of the customers in that department are regulars and you quickly get to know them and know what type of sewing or crafts they do.  Often, many of them will bring in their projects to show us or pull out their phone to show us pictures, which was an added bonus.  For a long time I ran that department and never wanted to move anywhere else in the store to work, but then from on high, I was asked repeatedly to move to the pharmacy and manage the over-the-counter pharmacy, which I absolutely hated.  Instead of my interesting fabrics and crafts customers, brimming full of project ideas, now my life centered on customers wanting to share all their aches, pains and even head lice problems………. yes, it took great courage not to step back whenever a customer asked where the head lice stuff was located.  The head lice customers were only rivaled by the customers wanting to share their bowel problem dilemmas with me.  Eventually, my managers came and asked me to move to lawn and garden, a much bigger area to handle, but I leaped at that, because at least plants don’t talk about their problems.

Lawn and garden is where I met Renate and boy, I quickly realized that my pharmacy issues were nothing compared to Renate.  Renate complained about everything in a heavily laced German accent, although she had moved to America in the early 1960s.  A diplomat might call her disposition feisty, but a more honest accounting would be she complained incessantly and cussed like a sailor.  She literally despised me and everything I told her, or anyone else in the department, to do, she offered up a blistering string of criticism and/or complaints.  I never argued with her.  Instead, I offered her my sunniest smile and would tell her, “I heard what you said Renate.  I am not deaf, but we are doing what I said.”  She would usually cuss under her breath, after telling me, “You don’t know nothing about lawn and garden!” or “You don’t know nothing about plants!  And off she would storm.

One day I noticed a problem with my gerbera daisies and I knew that a few drops of Dawn dishwashing liquid in a spray bottle of water would fix that problem and I talked to the previous lawn and garden department manager and she said that was fine to spray them with that.  I had gotten a small bottle of Dawn dishwashing liquid and a spray bottle, when Renate spied me.  She charged up to me and asked what I intended to do with that.  As often happens, I was called away from my area and before I could say more than that I wanted to mix some Dawn with water and spray the gerbera daisies, Renate grabbed the Dawn and spray bottle out of my hands.  I didn’t raise my voice, just asked her calmly if she knew how much Dawn to mix in a bottle of water.  She angrily spouted, “I know what I’m doing!” and off she stormed.  When I returned to my area about an hour later, Renate was cussing and fuming.  The spray bottle was clogged up and as I approached my gerbera daisies, they were glimmering an eerie blue, with globs of Dawn smothering them, but even more alarming were the puddles of blue Dawn under my plant tables.  All I thought was, “this is going to be one holy hell of a mess to clean up!”, but watching Renate standing there trying to spray almost straight Dawn dishwashing liquid out of that spray bottle had me laughing hysterically.

The guys in my department helped clean up that mess and we disposed of those gerbara daisies.  I learned my lesson on retail plants – if there’s something wrong with them – dispose of them quickly.  When I could stop laughing, I pulled Renate aside and we talked and I told her that from now on we were going to communicate.  I told her that her blustery German ways don’t intimidate me in the least, because I’m PA Dutch and they’re bossy Germans too.  I related that I am used to Germans bossing me around, because there are plenty of them in my family, to include my late mother, who made my drill sergeants look mellow.  Then I told her that I have been gardening since I could walk and I do know a good bit about plants.  She seemed to mull that over for a bit, but from that day forward she treated me like her daughter and she became my most ardent champion.  And I learned to overlook a lot of her cussing and complaining and better yet learned to like her.  Often among gardeners you find people who love plants more than people and Renate struck me as one of those.  She particularly loved pansies and when the pansies arrived in the Fall, her face would light up, as she would delicately turn a bloom upward and say, “See, just look in the middle, they’re smiling at you!”  While I love flowers, my nature must be much less poetic, because I sure never could see a smile in a pansy.

Time passed and I moved to another position and I saw Renate more in passing, but I still would try to find some time to chat with her.  She always told me how much she missed me and then she’d want to show me the flowers on the patio.  I had noticed that the last year she seemed to complain about pain often and some days she would walk very slow, but she did show up for work everyday.  Then late last summer I heard she was out sick and I saw her a few times in the store, buying groceries or picking up medicine.  She seemed like her same feisty self, with her complaints still heavily peppered with expletives.

One day another lawn and garden worker approached me and told me I needed to do something, because she didn’t know what to do.  She had picked up some groceries for Renate and taken them over to her house.  This worker told me how ill Renate was and how ill her husband was too and she said the house was not fit for them to live in.  Dilemmas, dilemmas, because while I respect people’s right to privacy, at some point there’s a line where making sure elderly people are safe seems to warrant intervening.  A lifetime of distrust for government, propelled me to decide first to try and visit Renate and see for myself if the situation was as dire as described.  When I called her house, her husband told me she was at the emergency room and he didn’t know when she would be home.  I called later that afternoon and no one answered.  Several other calls went unanswered and then I contacted the lady who had told me about this situation.  She informed me Renate had been admitted to a hospital in a nearby city.  To add to the tragedy,  Renate’s young neighbors had taken her husband to the hospital to visit and his lung collapsed while visiting, so he also was in the hospital.

I phoned Renate for a couple days and chatted, until I could find time to visit her in the hospital.  The hospital gown practically swallowed her up, but she still roared with her usual force.  She began by telling me how glad she was that I came to see her and then she looked at me and said, “Ain’t that some shit!  They told me I’ve got lung cancer and it’s spread to my liver.  I’ve got less than a week to live.”  We talked and her main worry was about her husband and what would happen to him.

Many people from work went to visit her, which cheered her a great deal, but within a few days she got transferred to a hospice facility.  The day she passed away, I walked out on the patio and pansies had just arrived.  I bought a container and transplanted them into a smiley mug and it seemed like my lucky day with the gifting fairy smiling upon me, because I found a lovely card with pansies on it too.  This hospice facility has the most caring, wonderful staff imaginable and mere words can’t do justice.  Renate’s face lit up when she saw the pansies and sure enough, she said,”Look, they’re smiling at you!”  She seemed to have shrunk even more and she struggled to draw each breath.  Her room felt like an ice box and I inquired if she was cold or wanted the covers pulled up.  I felt her bare arms and they were cold, but she told me it was easier to breathe with it cold.  Her hair was matted from lying on pillows for days, so I asked a staff member for a comb or brush to fix her hair.  She could lift her head and I combed out her hair and she told me it felt much better.  She held my hand for hours and we talked here and there.  At one point, she opened her eyes and she told me, “I’m ready to die.”  When I finally left, I knew she might not be with us another day and I cried as I drove home.  She passed away during the night.

Other people, like the young couple who lived next door to her, had tried to help her for a long time and this dilemma of elderly people needing assistance, but resisting help certainly is not a unique problem.  The lady at work who took her groceries took her food numerous times.  I’ve thought many times in the past year, I sure should have done more to help her.  Combing her hair and taking her some pansies as she lay dying seems pretty paltry.  Renate, who ofttimes was described as “that rude old German woman”, but whose face turned soft and dreamy as she gazed upon her beloved pansies.  Yes, I hope I will look closer, do more for my friends and see the pansies smiling at me.

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Sunday – day off from politics

Trying to spend a politics free Sunday here.  Ventured out to buy some groceries and encountered only one screaming moppet as I quickly moved up and down the aisles.  Initially, as usual, I intended to buy only a few things and ended up with almost a full cart of stuff, such is the habit of buying food for a family with kids, even though the kids are grown up and gone.  Oh, well, why keep a large chest freezer around and a large side-by-side fridge/freezer if you’re not going to fill them up, right?  Beef stew and either some cornbread or biscuits for supper tonight, depending which I settle on as the stew cooks.

Since the few people who read my blog seem to be men, here’s a website I wonder if any of you have checked out – Pinterest.  I just love it and am quickly closing in on my 2,000th pin.  Recipes, crafts, decorating, sewing, and so much more.  Yes, it’s wonderful. I find so many things to express my personality………..

angel

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G. Murphy Donovan’s good hygiene primer:-)

G. Murphy Donovan writes frequently on intelligence matters and I often think of him as the George Will of the intelligence gurus – often way over my head, where I have to keep my dictionary nearby to look up some of the words, lol.  Well, who knew he could be funny as hell, but this August piece he wrote, The Legacy of Tribes in the New English Review had me laughing out loud.

You’re in store for gems like, “A serious Jew even bathes his chickens. Indeed, after a Kosher chicken gets naked, it is immersed in a salt bath; very hygienic and very tasty too. The mythic qualities of chicken soup are a function of salt, hygiene, and heat. Consider all those cultural contrasts with Arab neighbors. A real, as opposed to a ritual, bath is often the difference between winners and losers.”  Now, to set the tribal record straight, the Jews aren’t the only ones to subject their poultry to a salt bath, because PA Dutch farm women have been doing that for centuries too.  According to the female elders amongst my PA Dutch clan, it’s considered settled science that the salt draws all the impurities and blood out of the bird, resulting in better tasting poultry.  Who am I to question what obviously works based on successful PA Dutch cooking for centuries?  And now I learn this is a wise Jewish tribal practice too, who knew, it’s such a small world after all…

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My Lucky Rabbit

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My kitten rug my Pop bought for me in a local PA diner.

In several posts I’ve talked about my father, whom we called “Pop”.  He had a 10th grade education and started out in road construction, operating heavy equipment.  In time, he worked his way up to supervisory positions in a construction company.  Often on weekends he would take a couple of us kids along to see his latest road construction projects.  I always loved those little trips, because first we’d have breakfast at a local diner (a PA iconic fixture).  My Pop knew everyone, so I loved listening to all the conversations.  One time some salesman came into the diner and had a bunch of rugs with various pictures on them (sorry no Elvis ones back then) and my eyes lit up when they struck upon this small rug with a row of cute kittens on it.  I didn’t even utter a word, but Pop told the salesmen he wanted the one with the kittens on it.  I still have that rug.  He often came home with small gifts for my sisters and brothers and he always played it off like it was no big deal and he just happened to come across this.  He loved to fish and he bought fishing poles and little tackle boxes, worm bait boxes, minnow buckets, etc. for us.  He even patiently tried to teach me to cast my line, but being a leftie, mishaps often followed my aimless casts.  My hook only occasionally landed in the water.  One time it ended up in Pam’s curly hair and her Dad and Pop spent several minutes trying to extract that hook without pulling out a chunk of her scalp.  Pop didn’t yell or lecture me, no, he moved me several yards upstream and told me it was safer to give me more room to practice.

Sometimes amazing things happen and as for me, well, this story made me a believer in miracles.  It’s a short story about how Pop brought my dead pet rabbit back to life.  We had lots of pets.  Let me rephrase that, my brothers and sisters had some pets, but I had lots of pets.  Today, the pop psychology terminology to describe my behavior would be “pet hoarding”, but back then I thought I just loved animals.  I carted home numerous strays and unwanted pets.  Luck followed me, as some of my pet acquisitions could have been problematic, like the time a boy brought three mice to school for a science project in a small aquarium and then said he didn’t want them.  I felt like fortune had smiled on me that day.  My Mom’s immediate concern was the odds of those three multiplying,  but it turned out that they were all male mice.

We had lots of rabbits over the years and many of them were very tame.  We would have them out in the yard hopping around. One summer my favorite rabbit suddenly became ill and he couldn’t hold his head up.  My Mom thought he had a neurological problem and  he had been out in the front yard frequently, so she wondered if the recent insecticide spraying might be the cause.   Pop took my rabbit along with him to work one day and Mom told me that he had to get rid of my rabbit, because he was suffering so much.  I cried for days, but gradually I accepted the loss.

Almost a year later Pop came home from work one day and he had a surprise for me – my rabbit, alive and healthy.  Pop said that the day he took my rabbit along to work to dispose of, he stopped at the diner for breakfast and the man sitting next to him started talking.  This man had some sort of job with the PA wildlife commission.  Pop said when he explained the situation with my rabbit and how he couldn’t hold his head up, this man said he would take my rabbit to the state lab where they were doing research.  This man contacted my father and returned my rabbit, fully restored to health.  I’ve often heard people talk about the fancy things their fathers bought for them – like a new car, but so far none of those things tops Pop bringing my rabbit back to life.

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Selwyn Duke On Female Breadwinners – worth reading

Unlike Matt Drudge, I always ramble on and on about articles I read, which I feel should be shared – he just posts a catchy headline to grab your attention.  Selwyn Duke writes many biting, hard-hitting conservative pieces, where he just says it like it is.  His latest piece in The American Thinker (from which I was banned from posting comments – really I was for being pushy about my criticisms of Sarah Palin, whom they love at their website – true story, lol) is definitely thought-provoking….or just provoking if you’re a feminist.  The American Thinker offers lots of smart commentary and even though I’m still banned from posting comments, I love their website anyway. (okay, my comments were pretty harsh about Sarah Palin, there I admit it).   Back to the point here, Selwyn tackles the feminist myths about how great it is that so many women are now the primary breadwinners in the family (truly way too many of them are the only breadwinner, but don’t let that fact take the shine off of the march forward for women).  His latest article is titled “Rise in Female Breadwinners Means America Is a Loser.

Feminist-indoctrinated women, of both the political left and right, react just as he states, arguing based on their emotional investment in the girl power upbringing in America.  I know how easy it is to be sucked into that grand delusion, where we applaud every female who gets to be the “first” to blaze the trail into new career fields, while our American children, particularly boys, become social misfits, diagnosed with dubious psychological ailments and drugged at alarmingly young ages rather than promoting steady, consistent parenting to promote a safe, secure home environment where children can flourish – in that patriarchal evil  environ called a traditional family with a mother and a father.    The trajectory for young black males is a national disgrace, where due to the collapse of the traditional family, fatherless homes, and single mothers struggling to raise their kids in a mostly poverty-level environment,  an alarming number of young black males seem destined for a life marked by criminality and spending time behind bars.  The large numbers of young black men who fall through the cracks should alarm everyone – so much wasted potential and wasted lives where the deck seems stacked against these males from birth.

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Story of the Week: The Day I Sprouted Wings

Here’s a great short story about the first black man to become a licensed pilot in the United States in the 1920s.  James Herman Banning ran his own small auto repair shop in Iowa and his heart’s desire was to learn to fly.  He didn’t go whining to the government about being a victim or expect anyone to help him achieve his dream.  He watched the newspapers for government sales of old airplane parts and gradually built his own airplane in his cow pasture.  This in one of those truly inspirational American self-reliance stories of what an individual can do if he breaks free of a defeatist mindset.

Story of the Week: The Day I Sprouted Wings.

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The Mom World Peace Solution

For decades I’ve read about foreign policy, military strategy and history.  Of course, being around the US Army my entire adult life helped me form my world view, which runs toward believing in a strong national defense.  The question “why war” captivated my imagination long ago when I was assigned to a Pershing missile unit and first learned about being a Cold War Warrior.  Grenada shaped that question to looking for a road to Peace and I’ve spent years pondering this question.  Is there actually a road to Peace or are we destined to endless  wars?   In the for what it’s worth department, here’s my opinion.

If the world had leaders who could find their way toward trusting a little more and agreeing on some common ground – situations like Syria wouldn’t linger.  I talk about how we don’t have a dog in that fight and that’s true – but really the death of thousands to senseless violence hurts us all in the long run – another intractable cycle of virulent hate and factional fighting. 

If we had groups of kids fighting like that, we would step in and separate them, take away their weapons and tell them they need to sit in time out until they can learn to play nice.  In situations like this where the sides fighting are varied and irrational – our world “leaders” only big internal debate is about giving these out of control factions more weapons – so they can wreak more havoc.  We wouldn’t even consider this with kids and yet with the least-developed, least stable states – that’s our answer – give them more sophisticated weapons and then we really think we can control these rogue states that we armed to the teeth?  Would you trust kids who haven’t mastered some self control and demonstrated some maturity with your car keys?  But we talk about trusting them with advanced weaponry?  We have North Korea with nuclear weapons, with the nuts in Iran close behind, for crying out loud.

The leaders would have to agree on some ways to stop the slaughter of so many people and actually help some stable civil institutions emerge under the watchful eye of a united front of world leaders.  But the world leaders are always playing these elaborate games to one up each other and lying so much to each other in the pursuit of playing high stakes diplomacy that the entire world system is built upon the shaky house of cards called lying.  Distrust is the foundation of all our international institutions. 

It would take time and many failures to change that fundamental lack of trust, but good leaders have got to pave the way toward that goal, by gradually embarking on cooperating on some issues and getting a few wins in the building trust department. For instance when one of my sons went to Russia for a study abroad program, he stayed with one family at first where he didn’t feel comfortable, so he was put in a hotel until they located another family for him.  Finally they placed him in the home of a retired Soviet Army officer and my gut reaction after all those years embracing the Cold Warrior mentality – was relief.  I believed a Soviet Army officer would have an orderly, disciplined home and live by good principles.  He and his wife treated my son like part of their family and my son still talks about “my host father” all the time.

The world can’t change overnight, but with a commitment to dealing with people (as flawed as they are) and having some courageous world leaders take some steps toward building trust and acting in unison to quell some of these bad situations like Syria, with the senseless slaughter – over time we could have more wins in positive cooperation and helping people and less violence – bringing people toward more peaceful coexistence benefits everyone. 

A strong national defense remains vital though – because the strong really must protect the weak.  I believe the “world order” could change for the better and I don’t understand why people accept this belief that this is the way it’s always been, so this is the way it has to be.  People are flawed – sure, they lie a lot, and that leads to all these other bad things – but we sure don’t have to set up our international institutions based on the lowest common denominator – how about raising the bar some and setting some ideals worth striving for? 

The UN turned out to be a cesspool of lying and so fraught with corruption that it sure as hell hasn’t provided an avenue, so maybe if we had just a handful or so of world leaders willing to begin the change and embarking on a few trial problems, as honest brokers – changing course could inch forward.  Wouldn’t that be “change you can believe in”? (lol)

In the case of Syria, President Obama continues to drag his feet on action.  Aside from some clandestine support to the opposition (of which Benghazi was probably part of some gunrunning operation), he has remained indecisive.  Now, John McCain upped the ante a bit by entering Syria and meeting with a Syrian rebel force (here) and he’s pushing for us to unilaterally jump into this hot mess. 

The Russians and Chinese, in Cold War default mode, are aiding Assad, so we’re stuck in the same old pattern.  Now, I sure don’t support the US independently taking on the role of world policeman and until we can get the world leaders to step outside their traditional geopolitical mindset – yes, we are doomed to endless  wars.  Men, who thought up all these elaborate theories for war, only think about more force to have one side win.  Truly, for the Russians, Chinese or the United States, is some rebel band leading Syria going to be much better than Assad?  

The rationale offered by people like McCain is that if we arm these rebels, they can topple Assad and end the fighting.  That’s a nice bit of wishful thinking.  There’s no political leadership behind these rebel groups, just bands of rampaging, angry men.  The hope that amongst them is some George Washington at the end of the road, to unite and build a functioning democratic state requires a degree of delusional thinking that escapes me.

Certainly the tragedy in Syria leaves one wishing for a way to end the fighting quickly.  However, handing more weapons to poorly led, rampaging bands of rebels with little military finesse and a lot of rage seems a recipe for more horrific violence, not less. 

The world needs real leadership where the strongest countries should agree to provide a united front and force some calm and work at disarming rather than funneling in more and more advanced weaponry.  Once the irrational actors are neutralized, then rational actors in places like Syria should come to the table and work at political solutions.  This is the Mom world peace solution – take away the dangerous toys from the kids who can’t play nice and who haven’t mastered some self-control.  No fancy one-world government solution or new complicated political theory or even some religion- just common sense. 

The road to Peace is built, brick by brick, by building trust among leaders (people). 

As with most human endeavors the answers are simple, but that sure doesn’t make them easy.   Trust is one of the hardest things for people to achieve – definitely much harder than devising a theory like “mutually assured destruction”.  Only men could think up that one, believe me!  A Mom sure never would – she’d take away the weapons from the misbehaving, immature kids on the world stage and put them in time out until they learned to play nice;-)

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Remember the cost of freedom

memorial day

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May 25, 2013 · 5:04 pm