The Neon Wilderness

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

I Want My Moon Men
More to come this weekend. Leave comments - make me jump with joy. Also the budget for NASA is around $18 billion per year, ive been thinking about this all day, millions of people in this country who are hungry, people still living in FEMA trailers, no universal health care, huge deficit, and we're spending $18 billion on NASA? why? whats the deal?, like I still dont see any moon colonies or moon men or anything, or like a cure for cancer from these guys, what the hell are we wasting our tax dollars on this shit for? I mean the only thing I ever heard of coming form NASA missions or research and stuff is that stupid tempurpedic mattress (above), wtf?, we seriously need to reevaluate our spending priorities, that stupid bed isn't worth $18 billion.


Sunday, December 03, 2006




wow, pretty much sums it all up, enough said
Tobacco Road
Jeez Thomas Jefferson wouldn't like this at all.
Trouble brewing according to the NYT, seems like another group of anti free-trade America haters is making noise, this time its the farmers, produce farmers to be exact. Apparently faced with tough, if not staggering competition from freed-trade imports, especially China, produce farmers from California to Florida have joined together and are asking for government subsidies, for the first time, ever, at the tune of around $1 billion dollars, the farmers I guess haven't heard of the whole invisible hand or whatever. Things are definitely looking bleak, take garlic growers as an example,
"California growers once dominated the garlic industry in the United States, but imports from China and Hong Kong have increased from less than 1 million pounds in 2000 to 112 million pounds last year. This year, for the first time, more Chinese garlic will be sold in the United States than California produces, Commerce Department figures show."
It gets worse
"Other specialty crop groups are also struggling with foreign competition, in particular from China, which has geared its agriculture industry towards labor-intensive, higher-value fruits and vegetables. China has begun to dominate everything from apples to onions. Chinese exports have also eaten into American growers’ share of markets in Japan and Hong Kong for items like broccoli and lettuce."
Wow, first we lost all the manufacturing jobs, now the farms, huh...well, worry not my fellow Americans, still plenty of good jobs they cant export, like ...Wal Mart cashier, and um...chimney sweep, and I think they still pay for plasma at the blood bank. Besides, all this completion only goes to benefit the consumer, it helps you Mr. Average American in the form of lower prices on your favorite products, or well...it would, you know if you could afford them, if you weren't working that shitty job at Walgreen's or whatever since the factory shut down and the farm foreclosed.
READ MORE
NYT "Imports Spurring Push to Subsidize Produce"
Laissez-Faire Is French For Fuck You Poor People
Article from CEPR about free trade, good and concise. Basically breaks it down as winners and losers of free trade (I've added a few of my own);
Winners'
Doctors
Corporations
Monocle Salesmen
Rich People
Lawyer's
Lexus Dealerships
Losers
Just about everyone else


yikes, don't agree that unbridled free trade is a good thing? well then your a stupid, uneducated isolationist, and maybe a racist too. Besides increased wage inequality and poverty means shorter lines at Starbucks for the elites, so thats something good in all of this.
READ MORE
CEPR "
Free Trade Arithmetic for Progressives"



From Best Buy, Pioneer 60" Flat Screen Plasma HDTV only $6499.99 on sale NOW for only a mere $6173.99 !! 4 year service plan only a minuscule $899.99 !!

WTF, I mean seriously who needs this shit? who buys this? I mean are there really people looking at the 50" Pioneer for $3799.99 and saying, "yeh, its nice, but its only 50 inches" Jesus, get a library card or something, freaking psychos.


People For And Against Free Trade/Globalization And Why

For
Libertarians: Hahaha I'm so rich ha ha ha

CEO's: With the increased profits ill be able to afford a bigger yacht!

Ogres/trolls: Just in general

NYT columnists: Because its not like his job is ever going anywhere, its not as if they are gonna say something like "I'm sorry Tom but we found this guy in Columbia that will write your column for a sack of rice"

Fat people: Lower tariffs means cheaper European chocolates.

Adam Smith: Invisible hand Bitches!

Economists: I mean it looks good on paper, and besides its not as if they can ever outsource my job to Vietnam. Survival of the fittest baby!

Ayn Rand: You ever read Atlas Shrugged?

Politicians/Elected Representatives : More corporate profits mean more kickbacks! Ching Ching!

People who have lots and lots of stock: Oink!

Idiots: Them: With free trade that TV at Best Buy is cheaper!
Me: Yeh, but since with free trade/globalization your working at a job that pays an average of 21% less and shouldering more of your health care costs you wont be able to afford it.
Them: But the TV will be cheaper, right?
Against
Former Union Workers: You know Frank, this Wal-Mart shit doesn't seem to pay as much as the plant did, you know, before it closed and all.

Dad's: With disappearing borders, suddenly some real competition for that "World's Greatest Dad" title.

Pretty Much Every American : Hey, remember when we could afford rent AND food?

Cute Puppies: That's right, they hate free trade too.








Pure Evil ?
Take Two Aspirin's And Go To Hell
Article in Washington Post about sick leave, paid and unpaid, most people don't think about sick leave, it's simply understood that if your sick or say a child is sick or injured you can pick up the phone and call in sick, simple as that, but for 3 out of 4 low wage workers its not so simple, 3 out of 4 lack any type of paid sick leave, so if you get sick or injured you either a) come to work anyway or b) stay out home, lose a days wages and possibly your job. Pretty screwed up huh?, especially when you take into account that in other countries paid sick leave isn't a privilege of the elite but a basic human right, "A 2004 Harvard University study reported that 139 countries provide paid leave for short- or long-term illnesses. And 117 of those nations guarantee workers a week or more of paid sick days per year", wow, that doesn't make the old US of A look so hot, being one of the countries that doesn't offer sick leave and all, I guess we get lumped together with Haiti and Estonia or some shit, I guess in the US we're just a little tougher then those pussy European countries, if we get a leg amputated the night before we're still in the office at 8 the next morning, wow, makes your chest just swell with pride, well hopefully that's pride.
Some More Fun Facts:
Courtesy of the Harvard Project On Global Working Families
-139 countries provide paid leave for short- or long-term illnesses, with 117 providing a week or more annually. The U.S. provides only unpaid leave for serious illnesses through the FMLA, which does not cover all workers.
- 163 countries around the world offer guaranteed paid leave to women in connection with childbirth. The U.S. does not.
-At least 96 countries around the world in all geographic regions and at all economic levels mandate paid annual leave. The U.S. does not require employers to provide paid annual leave.
-40 countries have government-mandated evening and night wage premiums. The U.S. does not.
- At least 98 countries require employers to provide a mandatory day of rest: a period of at least 24 hours off each week. The U.S. does not guarantee workers this weekly break.
-At least 84 countries have laws that fix the maximum length of the work week. The U.S. does not have a maximum length of the work week or a limit on mandatory overtime per week.
-The U.S. is tied with Ecuador and Suriname for 39th in enrollment in early childhood care and education for 3–5 year olds. Nearly all European countries perform better. A wide range of developing and transitioning countries had higher enrollment rates than the U.S., despite being poorer.
-The only other industrialized country which does not have paid maternity or parental leave for women, Australia, guarantees a full year of unpaid leave to all women in the country. In contrast, the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) in the U.S. provides only 12 weeks of unpaid leave to approximately half of mothers in the U.S. and nothing for the remainder.
- At least 37 countries have policies guaranteeing parents some type of paid leave specifically for when their children are ill. Of these countries, two-thirds guarantee more than a week of paid leave, and more than one-third guarantee 11 or more days. Not us.
- 42 countries guarantee leave for major family events; in 37 of these countries, the leave is paid. Not us.
...wow...thats some bullshit huh? probably makes the libertarians happy, freaking libertarians.
READ MORE
Washington Post "Caught the Flu, but No Sick Leave"
Report From Harvard "THE WORK, FAMILY, AND EQUITY INDEX"

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Savage Inequalities
NYT Magazine piece on the whole No Child Left Behind mess and the persistent inequalities in our nations schools and children. I personally don't believe race plays a role in standardized test score results or on the kind of education a child receives, I believe it's only really a question of money, namely how much a child's parents have, which is why I am glad this piece focuses more on economic disparities and their tragic results. Heres a thought, maybe using local property taxes to fund schools isn't such a great idea.
READ MORE
NYT "What It Takes to Make a Student"
With Free Trade: Your Pretty Much Fucked
Article from Lou Dobbs on free trade by the numbers, and a call on our newly elected Democratic majority to start putting on the brakes to a system that's out of control.
READ MORE
Lou Dobbs "New Congress Must Show Courage"
East Of Eden
Article in LA Times about skid row, its citizens, and the lives they try to eke out there.
READ MORE
LA Times "A fragile fabric on skid row"
My First Time
I was 15 when I started working for Checker's, it was my first real paying job, which posed a problem, I didn't, not had I ever had a bank account, I was wary of banks and assumed that I would be ineligible from joining one or even cashing my checks at one plus banks kind of intimidated me, Eric, one of my friends at work suggested that I go to the check cashing store just up the street, he along with almost every one else at the store used it, so on payday I walked with Eric to the check cashing store, the place was small, about the size of a bodega, at the back of the store were three women who sat on stools behind a big bulletproof window with speakers for talking (two of the women spoke English, one woman always spoke Spanish), and revolving drawers for exchanging checks for cash, after receiving your money you could, at the same window buy stuff from the store, pay bills, buy stamps, wire money via western union, get a payday loan, set up a cell phone or beeper contract, and buy envelopes, between the back where the women sat and the front where me and Eric walked it were lots and lots of shelves and display cases everything even the shelves were under lock and key behind a kind of plexiglas, filled with lighters, cigarettes, cell phones, knives, watches, sunglasses, beepers, jewelry, bottle openers, and all sorts of other similar goods, the prices for all the stuff seemed high but I couldn't be sure not having anything to really compare it to, there was a fee to cash my check, and another fee if I wanted to pay bills there, but there was no use complaining, what other option did I have, when we left me and Eric went a few stores down to the bar, we bought 2 Hurricane's for $2.00 each for 40oz. bottles, and sit outside ad drink it, since the bar didn't have a problem selling me the beer but usually wanted me to leave right after I bought it since I was a minor.

“To stand in silence when they should be protesting makes cowards out of men” -Abraham Lincoln
Behind The Counter
One of the NYT American Album pieces, this one about Gloria Castillo, 22, who works the night shift at Burger King. Gloria, a married, mother of two, feels as if her life isn't going anywhere, and maybe never will, stuck in neutral, paycheck to paycheck, just treading water, getting older, stuck, trapped, quiet desperation. It's sad, one line in particular stuck with me,
"Gloria Castillo stares out the open window, allowing the wet air to blow inside. “I got dreams,” she says. “I’m a human being.”She looks at the crummy little house across the parking lot with peeling paint. “That would be good too, a little house. I don’t want much.”
heavy stuff. I used to work in fast food, started when I was 15 working at Checkers (aka Rally's), I worked in fast food for four years, Checkers, Wendy's, McDonald's, until when I was 19 I got a job at K-mart, it seemed like such a step up. Fast Food is the hardest job I ever had, it really was, not physically, and definitely not intellectually, but it was hard, unless you've done it you couldn't possible understand, its hard being 19 and meeting a girl, she tells you that she's in her sophomore year at Drexel and then asks what you do, its hard putting on that uniform every morning, its hard having people treat you like dirt, an untouchable, the lowest of the low, its hard trying to pay bills with minimum wage, its hard being worried all the time about the rent or medical bills, its hard when people treat you like your stupid, and your so hard on yourself, we live in a society where a person is judged and judges himself based on their job, you feel like you've failed, every day you stand there behind a counter and ask yourself "where did I go wrong", " every time someone yells at you or you cash your check you say "I wish I had done better in school", you feel trapped, like there's no way out, you feel like this is as good as its ever to get, you watch the tv and see the billboards and feel as if the American dream has passed you by, you blame yourself, you hate yourself.
Class Matters
Article in NYT that got my blood boiling, apparently West Virginia along with a handful of other states has started a program that "rewards" patients in the states Medicaid (health care for the poor) program who are responsible with extra benefits and goodies, such as medicine and mental health counseling, I'm serious, okay so the way it works is this, West Virginia in an effort to save money on health care costs has instituted a new policy for the states Medicaid recipients, basically anyone on Medicaid
"will be asked to sign a pledge “to do my best to stay healthy,” to attend “health improvement programs as directed,” to have routine checkups and screenings, to keep appointments, to take medicine as prescribed and to go to emergency rooms only for real emergencies"
In terms of what happens if you do or do not sign the pledge and follow the guidelines
"Those signing and abiding by the agreement (or their children, who account for a majority of Medicaid patients here) will receive “enhanced benefits” including mental health counseling, long-term diabetes management and cardiac rehabilitation, and prescription drugs and home health visits as needed, as well as antismoking and antiobesity classes. Those who do not sign will get federally required basic services but be limited to four prescriptions a month, for example, and will not receive the other enhanced benefits...In future years, those who comply fully will get further benefits (“like a Marriott rewards plan,” Ms. Atkins said), their nature to be determined but perhaps including orthodontics or other dental services."
I'm serious.
...wow...

Soulless, morally reprehensible, medically unethical, godless, and just plain evil.
The legislators in West Virginia, and all those that helped push through this law and supported it and those like it across the country should all be ashamed, they should be so ashamed. I mean really what the fuck is wrong with these people? who thinks this is a good idea? who thinks denying medication to the poor is a good thing?, or that dental services and diabetes treatment are a special perk? these are people, these are human beings, how dare you. Treating the poor like dogs, telling the that they have to sign a pledge promising to not skip appointments, to follow the rules, to be healthy... basically i guess saying that poor people are irresponsible, lazy, and stupid, that they need to be forced to act as adults, that they need to be treated as if they were children. And then if a person has a little to much pride, dignity, or independence to sign this bullshit pledge you punish them? you deprive them of medication, mental health counseling, dental care etc? are you serious, so basically medical care is less of a an essential human right and more of a carrot in which to dangle in front of the donkey, more of a privilege, less of a right. If a wall street banker is 300 lbs and smokes, it doesn't matter, he has great medical care, the best, if a poor person is 300 lbs and smokes, he is scolded and lectured like a poorly behaved child, and then denied medical care.
Someone once said something to the effect that a society can best be judged by how it treats it's neediest citizens. What do you think this program and those like it say about America?, about all of us, about me, about you?
READ MORE
NYT "Medicaid Plan Prods Patients Toward Health"
SEE ALSO
NYT "Pay For Good Behavior?"


"We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the vitriolic words and actions of the bad people, but for the appalling silence of the good people." -Martin Luther King Jr.

This land is your land This land is my land
From California to the New York island;
From the red wood forest to the Gulf Stream waters
This land was made for you and Me.



As I was walking that ribbon of highway,
I saw above me that endless skyway:
I saw below me that golden valley:
This land was made for you and me.



I've roamed and rambled and I followed my footsteps
To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts;
And all around me a voice was sounding:
This land was made for you and me.



When the sun came shining, and I was strolling,
And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling,
As the fog was lifting a voice was chanting:
This land was made for you and me.



As I went walking I saw a sign there
And on the sign it said "No Trespassing."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.



In the shadow of the steeple I saw my people,
By the relief office I seen my people;
As they stood there hungry, I stood there asking
Is this land made for you and me?



Nobody living can ever stop me,
As I go walking that freedom highway;
Nobody living can ever make me turn back
This land was made for you and me.


-This Land Is Your Land


Woody Guthrie

The Neon Wilderness
From Dollars & Sense Magazine comes a piece by Howard Karger about Americas fringe economy for the poor and what a big and very profitable business its become. The fringe economy Karger explains is a wide range of businesses
"that engage in financially predatory relationships with lowincome or heavily indebted consumers by charging excessive interest rates, superhigh fees, or exorbitant prices for goods or services" which include "payday lenders, pawnshops, check-cashers, tax refund lenders, rent-to-own stores, and "buy-here/pay-here" used car lots. The fringe economy also includes credit card companies that charge excessive late payment or over-the-creditlimit penalties; cell phone providers that force less creditworthy customers into expensive prepaid plans; and subprime mortgage lenders that gouge prospective homeowners".
The article then details the profits and revenues of these fringe economy vultures, the numbers are nothing short of extraordinary, billions upon billions, all based on the idea of robbing, exploiting, and cheating the most economically vulnerable of our society, what a country.
READ MORE
Dollars & Sense "America's Growing Fringe Economy"

Sunday, November 26, 2006


“Those who produce should have, but we know that those who produce the most - that is, those who work hardest, and at the most difficult and most menial tasks, have the least.” - Euene Debs
American Hero
Walter Reuther
One time head of the UAW and one of the most influential labor leaders in American history. Reuther fought for every American not just auto workers, influencing presidents and policies, a leader in the American civil rights movement, a man who believed that a just and equitable society was possible, but you had to fight for it.
READ MORE
Wikipedia article
Time 100 article
Wayne State University
Just got a holiday flyer in the mail from these guys, really like the "American Dream Starts here" slogan, not to mention the whole supporting the troops stuff, very patriotic, because if there is one thing the troops and actually every American needs this holiday season its easy financing terms for "custom wheels"

In Touch With The Common Man
From Yahoo News, all about how our elected representatives don't really seem to be very representative of us, "The wealth of the incoming class will hardly raise eyebrows in the Senate, where about half of the current 100 members are also millionaires and the average net worth is $8.9 million, according to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics in Washington. By contrast, less than 1% of the U.S. population has a net worth of $1 million or more". The Piece also informs us that in 2006 a Senator is paid $165,200 a year, wow, thats not too shabby, especially since half of all Americans make less then $33,000 per year, plus those Senators get that nice health care too, its a hell of a racket. So to summarize, half of all Senators are millionaires, they make $165,200 a year, and Congress was unable or unwilling to pass a minimum wage raise this summer. I honestly believe that if the members of Congress feel, as they have apparently felt since 1997 (last time there was a minimum wage increase) that $5.15 an hour is acceptable, that it's a living wage, then they should have to live on it, I mean why not, nowhere is it written that we have to pay these guys $165,000, thats our tax dollars they pay them, shouldn't we have a say?, in the same period that Congress has refused to raise the minimum wage they have given themselves $28,000 in pay increases1, where is the outrage? Its no wonder it seems like those in Congress don't care about average Americans, they don't, why would they?
READ MORE
Yahoo News "Meet Senator Millionaire"

“The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them.”
Making it easier to look for the Union label, ShopUnionMade.org
"Every Man A King, But No One Wears A Crown."
Article in NYT about the gaining momentum of the economic populism movement in the US. Groups such as the EPI and the AFL-CIO are coming together and gaining strength, and apparently clashing with more moderate democrat groups such as the Hamilton Project, as to what direction the democratic party and America as a whole should be moving in. The article also discusses the fact that since the dems hold only a small majority in congress and because the President has veto power, probably no real change is going to be coming down the pipeline, even the minimum wage hike to $7.25 by 2009 has been and will continue to be an uphill battle, I guess this is the downside of checks and balances. Sometimes I wonder how these congressmen can look themselves in the mirror, or look an American worker in the eye, all the promises they made out on the campaign trail, all the big talk, apparently isn't going to amount to much more then two dollars more an hour and lower interest rates on student loans...I understand about fighting the battles that you can win, but it doesn't seem like the democrats are fighting much at all, people say thats just the way it is, that change is slow, but I look back to the 1930 Congressional elections and the subsequent 1932 presidential election of FDR and all the big changes (e.g. Social Security) that can happen when those in congress and in the white house are willing to take on the big challenges. I wish there was a congressmen today who stood up and took on the big fights of universal health care, income inequality, free trade etc, all those things you stirred people up with on the campaign trail, instead of worrying about reelection and your campaign coffers, I wish there was a congressman who at least stood up and said what he believed and actually fought for it, thats why we vote, we vote for an elected representative to act as our voice, to act as the voice of the people, and any Congressman who does anything less is a coward and not fit to be a congressman, as a country we face big problems, we need big changes and bold leaders.
READ MORE
NYT "Here Come the Economic Populists"

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Why No One Believes Anymore
Article in NYT about Congress and drug companies and collusion, basically drug companies worried that with the Dems running congress, new laws cutting down on their profiteering could be on the horizon, so to preempt this the drug companies are working hard to cozy up to the new guys, because I mean god forbid people in this country might be able to afford you know...medicine. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. This shit makes me sick, if we really are the greatest country on earth, maybe we should start acting like it.

READ MORE
NYT "Drug Industry Is on Defensive as Power Shifts"
Coming Up For Air
Article from the CS Monitor about doing something different this Black Friday, nothing, at least buying nothing. Americans are drowning in debt, we collectively owe $800 billion in credit card debt, 1/3 of households have over $10,000 in credit card debt1, health care costs are soaring, job insecurity is a major concern, the hosing market isn't looking too hot, etc etc, essentially we have less and less money and more and money worries, so maybe this isn't the best time to go out and buy electronics, we should save our money, for ourselves, for our children, pay bills, pay debt, put it away, anything is better then throwing it away on plasma TVs or PS3's, we don't need this stuff, and whats more we cant afford it, don't get bilked this year.
READ MORE
CS Monitor "Getting The Better Of Black Friday"


Seriously, What Is Wrong With These People
Keep reading all these articles about people starting their traditional black Friday shopping early, like right after thanksgiving dinner, so rather then spend time with family and friends, people are apparently opting for CompUSA or COSTCO or something, I mean cant people take a day off, a day without buying shit you probably didn't really need and spending money, yeh sure you might save like $30 on some camera, but did you really need the camera, why not save your money, stay home, and spend time with family, for one day at least. Life is short.
I'm Not Worried, Still Plenty of Good Jobs They Cant Export
BBC article about US/Columbia trade deal, the biggest in the Western hemisphere since Nafta (and that worked out awesome), according to
John Veroneau the US Deputy Trade Representative, the deal "will deepen and strengthen our trade ties by providing new opportunities for US businesses", I bet it will.
READ MORE
BBC "US and Columbia sign trade deal"
Even The Canadians Think We're A Mess
Article in the Toronto Star about the ever growing income divide in the United States, what a mess, I wonder what the emigration policy over there is.
READ MORE
Toronto Star "Need increases as CEO salaries take off in U.S."

The Heart Of The Matter
Two from Lou Dobbs, stone thrower and boat rocker, telling it like it is, and making us face what we don't want to, on CNN of all places. I like Lou Dobbs, he has gotten alot of bad press lately, people accuse him of being an economic protectionist/isolationist, whats wrong with that?
open your eyes, look around, take a trip to Flint, Michigan or Philadelphia or just about any American city and see just how wonderful free trade is, go talk to the former auto worker employed at Wal-Mart or the Union man out of work, and ask how NAFTA and programs/policies like it worked out for them, half the country makes less then $33,000 a year, 35 million classified as having "low food security" (hungry), most people I know cant afford health care, even less have pensions, and I have no idea how I will ever afford college, open your eyes, things arent going well at all.
READ MORE
Lou Dobbs "Populist tide has elitists running scared"
"
I'm a populist, deal with it"
For Whom The Bell Tolls
Article from the Economist about whether or not economic populism is on the rise in America, and what the Democratic sweep of Congress will bring.
READ MORE
Economist "Fanfare for the common man"
The Corrections
Senator-elect Jim Webb wrote an article last week in the WSJ, Webb takes on the unmentionables five letter word, the economy, the growing economic divide, globalization, everything his fellow congressmen are to cowardly or unwilling to take on. Obviously Webb, although the most junior of Senators knows what to many in Congress have chosen to forget, namely that the job of an elected member of Congress is above all else to represent the people, all the people and not just the prosperous few.
READ MORE
Truthout "Class Struggle"

"An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailment of all republics." - Plutarch
"Behind Every Great Fortune Is A Crime."
NYT piece on income inequality in Manhattan, specifically the inequality between the the Wall Street types and everyone else.
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NYT "Income Soars on Wall St., Widening Gap"