The American Dream

Posted September 30th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

The original colonies were created for economic gain, religious freedom and a method to deal with criminals.   America was founded as a result of tyrannical rule of the King of England.   Pioneers and homesteaders spread across the continent for many of the same reasons, displacing/killing native Americans and others along the way.  The Civil War came about, again, for many of the same reasons.  The North and South had economic and political differences that forced a wedge between the nation.  Slavery was important, but not the driving force.  African Americans fought for the right to vote after the Civil War and received it as part of the 15th Amendment.  The Industrial Revolution describes a period of technological advancement that gave people an opportunity to improve their lot in life while creating an upper economic “class”.  Women fought for their right to vote and received it in 1919.  The US was relatively an isolationist nation until WW1.  It takes 3 years before President Wilson brings America into the war and only after Germany offers Mexico the SouthWest US in exchange.  While supporting Britain, it still takes 2 years and Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor before the US enters WW2.  In the ’50s & ’60s, citizens fight for civil rights while a President focuses us to go to the moon and play a calculated part in the Cold War fighting communism on a world scale.  This results in building successful and failed democracies, establishing strong and less than effective allies, tying ourselves to oil rich nations.  The ’70s bring about great disollutionment with goverment due to Vietnam, Watergate, Iran, terrorism and hostages, energy shortages and failed economic plans.  

Let’s stop there before we get into too much current politics…

I’m not a historian and what I laid out is riddled with holes and fallacies.  But there is a theme there… The American Dream.  A struggle for improvement.  Our progress is wrought with tragic mistakes, but filled with hope.

 

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Declaration of Independence

Our founding fathers were onto something.  They established a nation where the basic idea is that everyone has the right to work hard and improve their lot in life.  They promised an equal playing field and built the foundations to make it more equal.  It’s a constantly evolving struggle.
What was never promised was wealth, farm, house, property… Citizens have the right to pursuit these without discrimination based on race, sex, age or other physical characteristic, but that just leveled the playing field.  Individuals have to fight, struggle, work, earn these trappings.
The government has lost it’s way by trying to guarantee “inexpensive, affordable” housing for everyone.  Yes, everyone should have a place to live.  Should everyone have a house?  if they can afford one, sure.  Should everyone have a huge salary?  if they can earn one, sure.  
People have gotten complacent.  My brother and I were raised by a single mother.  At one point, she went on welfare.  We lived in apartments and spent our summers and school breaks with our grandparents while our mother worked whatever jobs she could get.  When I graduated high school,  I knew better jobs would only come through a degree.  I joined the Army Reserve and worked my way through college at a minimum wage job.  There were no real jobs where I lived, so I moved several states away.  I started at the bottom in a company and worked my way up, gaining experience along the way.  My wife and I bought a starter house we could afford.  We made improvements and upgraded when we had equity, again, to something we could afford (not just now, but in 10 years) with an eye towards paying it off someday.  We worked and paid cash for cars, not always buying new, but what we could afford and needed.  Now that our kids are in school, my wife is back pursuing her degree so she can get a decent job.  We are slowly putting money away for our kids’ education, weddings and retirement.
I understand that I am a white male and do not suffer from racial, sexist prejudice.  But I also know that those prejudice do not exist everywhere in the United States.  I am not an automotive worker who put in 25 years in a plant only to be laid off while jobs went overseas.  Well, I am an IT manager who lost his job when it went overseas.  There are other jobs in this country.  Maybe not where you live, but you can move.  I don’t doubt that the prejudice you face everyday is real, but you can move to a place it doesn’t exist or isn’t so prevalent.
You have choices.  You can stay where you are at and fight/create opportunity where there wasn’t any or you can move to a place with more opportunity.  I respect either choice.  There are even times when it’s good to rely on the government to help you through a bad spot.  I respect the courage to ask for help.
The government was not founded to guarantee property or economic status to people.  It is not a crutch to prop people up.  The government creates the situation for citizens to pursue the American dream, but can not guarantee it to you.  That’s up to you.

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Celebrities and Politics Part 2

Posted September 11th, 2008 under , , , ,

I’m sure you saw it, but Matt Damon thought you all could benefit from his wisdom as a paid pretender (actor) to call out Governor Palin.

  • First, Damon spews the same “exaggerations” about actuaries tables citing a 1 out of 3 chance Senator McCain won’t survive his first term.  The same Politico article his people fed him that states this contradicts it’s own reporting and provides closer insight into the facts.
  • He slams Gov Palin for her belief in some form of intelligent design and implies she will force creationism into public schools.  I think she may even believe that God flooded the earth, Eve came from a rib and God’s son died for our sins.  She has a track record of keeping her beliefs separate from her office.  She has stated her father was a high school science teacher and regularly discussed faith and science.  The point she has tried to make is one about freedom of debate.  If a child asks a question in school, talk about it, don’t shut it down.  In none of her past government positions has she made any effort to modify education curriculums.
  • Damon questions her ability to stand up to Vladimir Putin, when Obama is unable to understand the dynamics of the UN when he asks that the Georgia conflict be handled with sanctions from the UN Security Council forgetting that Russia is a veto-holding member of the UN Security Council.  The differences between Palin and Obama are that Palin has McCain to lean on while Obama has no one and Obama has equal experience (but lacks obvious good judgement or panel of experts to couch him).
  • He then finishes by mocking her for only being a mayor and using “folksy” sayings.  I would describe these as “Americanisms”, but I guess a college dropout like Damon who grew up in the elite city of Cambridge would know better than me.
Then there is Wil Wheaton.  I like his blog, tweets and general commentary on geekdom, but every now and then he throws out these accusations like McCain is a liar and has no honor.  Well, according to Gallup, most of you don’t agree.  I have no issue with the statement as long as he supports it, which he doesn’t.  He throws it out there and his band of followers blindly accept it.
So, do I have an issue with celebrities getting political?  No, it’s their right.  Do I have a problem with celebrities using their position and following to throw out slander, accusations and general misinformation?  Damn straight.  In my opinion, part of the money I pay for movie tickets, watching ads, buying books comes with an expectation of honesty and responsibility.  State your opinion.  Support your political candidate, but do it with a higher level of ethics, candor and responsibility than your average innerweb hate monger.

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Remembering 9/11

Posted September 11th, 2008 under ,

I was in the cafeteria at AOL in Columbus when it came onto NBC.  Jim Fournier and I stood watching the events unfold.  It was stunning.  I still can’t think back on it without feeling tightness in my chest and a combination of sadness and rage wash over me.  

I don’t want revenge for these people.  That’s not what America is about.  I want security… I want the world to see our strength as a people.  I want America to stand tall and prevent this from happening again not only to our people, but to any other people in this world.  Whether it’s the bombing of an embassy, a hospital, a car or the World Trade Center, this is wrong.  This is not about faith or politics.  This is right or wrong.  This is about defending the weak.  America has not always done the right thing.  We have not always been proactive and decisive.  We have not always tracked evil down regardless of who harbors it.  But we can and we should.  As a great president has said in the past, “talk lightly and carry a big stick”, we must be prepared to defend the innocent not for us, but for our children and their children.  That will be the memorial for the thousands to millions of people who have been killed by terrorists, dictators and murderers.

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