Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2008

The Number One Concern Is The Economy

Huh?

The number one concern of American voters was Iraq.

Now it's the economy.

Not to be suspicious, but have you noticed that whenever the government wants to distract the American voter from an issue, the media starts broadcasting massive missives on another pressing topic?

What are they trying to distract us from now?

Suddenly, Bush's "war" isn't the top of the news, it's all about the economy. Gas prices, the stock market, food prices going up, the tomato/salmonella thing (look people, someone was using uncomposted chicken poop as fertilizer, WASH your veggies!), and the usual assortment of murders and crime.

I can't figure where this would help the Republicans, unless it's a ploy to distract us from something else that's even worse.

Of course, as Dad says, the news is all about the bad, and if the media can't find something bad to report, it'll make something up.

Or dredge something up from the past.

Speaking of, did you see that the news was actually reporting the anniversary of the OJ Simpson slow chase in Los Angeles? Like we really care about it??? Man, it really must've been a slow news day to bring that one up.

Or, being a tad paranoid, was it yet another chance to bring up the topic, "rich Black man did crime and got away with it", thereby making all rich Black men look bad? In fact, making ALL Black men look like they have the potential for violence?

Yes, you may think that my thoughts are a little on the paranoid side.

Well, our government has proven time and time again that there is NO hesitation to lie to the American public. Just this past week, it was reported that a POW from the Korean War was buried in China. Despite all previous declarations by our government and China that all POWs were returned and none were buried in China.

Me? Paranoid? Hmmmm.....

Maybe.

Then again, maybe I have a better nose for BS than the average American.

(Oh, and that UFO/Roswell/Area 51 thing, puleeze people, the government tested many, many experimental planes, some of which were triangle shaped. Check out the book World's Worst Aircraft by Bill Yenne and then tell me about funny shaped unidentified flying objects. Don't buy into everything you read. Even if I say it!!)

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Alas, Babylon

Why am I writing about a novel written in 1959, before the Civil Rights movement, before desegregation, before the Cold War ended, before we could even think of peace with Russia and China?

Pat Frank's classic novel, Alas Babylon, in some ways seems outdated, and yet in others, it hits too close to home.

Politics of the Middle East, spy satellites, nuclear weapons -- sound familiar?

We sometimes forget how far we have come.

The novel still calls our Brothers and Sisters of Color "Negros". The water fountain was still labeled "White" and "Colored". People were still concerned about "Negros" bringing down property values. A man of color was still not considered a man in the white dominated society.

Today, we have a Black man running for President. Most of us are aware that the difference between our Brothers and Sisters and ourselves are merely outward appearances. We are all concerned about our kids, crime, finances, survival.

In the novel, in the end a woman is President. Why? Because "the most junior of government departments and a woman" is the only one that survives the nuclear war, because she was on an inspection tour.

Today, a woman runs for President. Not a default position, but as a fully accepted political candidate.

In the novel, men and women, white and Black, pull together to survive.

Today, do we pull together, or do we pull apart?

If, God forbid, we actually had a nuclear strike or some horrible natural disaster, could we survive, not just as a nation, but as humanity?

In the novel, they do survive. Without electricity, without telephones, without even radios, they survive. The United States survives.

In real life, in 2008, we're without power for three days and our lives are in chaos.

I question, what will we do if, God forbid, the worst ever happens?

Perhaps I think too much. Perhaps I worry too much.

But I know one thing. My father always told us, "Proper prior planning prevents piss poor performance."

Who is planning?

Who?

I worry because it seems like we live for the moment. Too much credit, too many bills, too little saved and stored for emergencies. Even during the recent power outages, I had to go and get batteries and ice, and I actually do have a plan. Well, sort of a plan. But I don't have any money set aside or enough non-perishables stored to last more than a week or two.

And so I worry, while the satellite dish is bringing in some inane show the kids are watching, the ceiling fan is whirling, the icemaker drops another chunk of ice into a glass, the computer is humming away as I type this.

What would we do if we really did have to take care of ourselves for not just a couple of days, but for a year, years, a lifetime? No electricity, no computers, no banks, no cars, no stores, no law?

What would we do?

Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank c. 1959 -- Think about it...