"Notes and Quotes"

One machine can do the work of fifty ordinary men. No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man. - Elbert Hubbard

Friday, September 10, 2010

I'm Fed Up



SEPTEMBER 10, 2010
by MarDivPhoto

This is a series of observations of things that have come to the point of really giving me concern about our society today. But before you dismiss me as just another angry old guy doing a lot of general complaining about the modern world that has passed me by, you might want to consider that a great many good things were done for this country through the hard work and sacrifice of many millions of people who are now old and more than a little discontent. At least some of us had intelligence, common sense, and a long series of educational experiences, so it’s quite possible that some of what I have say could have value.

Yes, I'm officially semi-ancient at 67, started my working career at age 8 helping my older brother with his paper route (225 daily, 600 Sunday, this was serious, getting up at 4AM on Sunday in order to be done in time for the last Mass). Worked through high school, and in college, and every summer vacation, as quite a few did in those days. We didn't know we needed that summertime jaunt to Europe to round out our character, or that we should take a year off after college to travel the world before joining the workforce. We already knew a lot about who we were, and what we wanted to do.

I was and remain passionate about racial and gender equality and loved JFK and his inaugural address. Even though my various history courses had made clear mention of the many imperfections in US actions and policies since 1776, I still believed we were a great nation, truly exceptional in at least a few ways.

After all, my grandparents had come here, through the system of the time, filling out the paperwork, sweltering in steerage, standing in line at Ellis Island and answering all the questions. They didn't speak much English at first, and were certainly subject to the prejudices and discrimination that most new groups of immigrants faced; yet they had worked hard and prospered, and got their children and grandchildren a much better life, many more opportunities, than we'd have had in the old country.

But now I'm really getting fed up.

I'm fed up with people who are walking hair triggers, waiting eagerly for someone to say something that they can choose to interpret as a slight against their particular in-group, whether denoted by race, gender, religion, or any other characteristic. Our national motto is "E Pluribus Unum", Out of Many, One. This is how our Founders finally got 13 different and often fractious colonies to come together, in the idea that it is smarter and more effective to concentrate on those things which bind us together rather than those which separate us. And that the critical lubricants for human interaction are courtesy and tolerance, so that it is in all our interest to practice those traits willingly and consciously. When that doesn't happen and people insist on concentrating on differences and resentments, well, that's how Yugoslavia descended into hell after Tito died, that's how Rwanda slid into genocide, that's how a number of countries are plagued with seemingly eternal unrest and violence.

In like manner, I'm fed up with the subgroup of immigrants who come to this country, but not to really become Americans and assimilate to some reasonable extent to the society as it existed here before they came. Instead, some insist on not only maintaining every bit of the culture and customs of their birth land, but also that this society must tolerate, support, and honor those customs no matter how foreign they are to us. In effect, they demand the right to transport their way of life here, and their true loyalties are to that way of life, that homeland, while they live a better life here than they ever could there, by taking full advantage of every facet of our society. All who came here in the past found it possible to maintain their cultures within the framework of our laws and social contract; you can find Italian, Greek, Polish, German, Cuban, Vietnamese, etc, neighborhoods scattered throughout our cities. In these places the people celebrate their native holidays, food, and social customs, without any conflict with the rest of society, and without any demands for special treatment. Anyone who has a heart they keep closed against America should go and live where their heart really belongs.

I'm fed up with high IQ people from big name schools sliding into class arrogance, in which they are sure they are smarter than everyone else, and in fact better than others, like the nobility of the Middle Ages. I'm fed up with how they act when they get into power of any sort, but most especially political power, where they make casual decisions about what is good for all the rest of us, regardless of either what we the people say or what can be shown to make good sense.

I'm fed up with that fraction of professors who have their own form of elitism, and who believe it's their right to condition their students into particular points of view, rather than educate them objectively and give them the tools to find and analyze data to come up with their own point of view. I'm fed up with the arrogant righteousness of such egoists, so cocksure that they are like little messiahs delivering a new gospel to the young minds who come into their classrooms.

I'm fed up with all the people who believe that somehow they truly deserve to make money in obscene amounts, through ridiculous compensation plans, insane bonus arrangements, and incredible perks. Especially when they become the fox in charge of the henhouse, so to speak, as upper level managers who can contribute greatly themselves to their capacity to legally loot the institution.

I'm fed up with politicians who believe their first and major mission in office is to do whatever it takes to get elected again and again, who play every game with trading votes, getting or going along with perks, pork, earmarks, set asides. Or the tactic of burying in one kind of legislative bill subtopics that have nothing to do with the focus of the bill, and which would never survive being debated on the floor when the public heard what they were. I'm particularly fed up with the hypocrisy of their self-serving statements about subjects like retirement and health care when they have the most generous retirement plan in the nation and have already exempted themselves and their staffs from the new Health Care system so they can stay on that plan anywhere while working and when they retire.

I'm fed up with the major teachers' union, which is far more about political activism and protecting mediocrity than anything to do with helping teachers do their jobs better; and with other major unions, whose unabashed greed to get their membership extremely generous compensation to the detriment of both industry and the public continues to make things more expensive for all the rest of us and also make us less competitive internationally.

I'm fed up with the ACLU, which used to do a great deal of good work for people and causes that needed help, but now seems to be highly focused on promoting secularism to a ridiculous degree, based on the false assumption that separation of church and state implies an adversarial relationship.

I'm fed up with the bankruptcy of most of our major media, who have given in almost totally to sensationalism (if it bleed, it leads), advocacy journalism (an oxymoron), shallowness in coverage, and the terribly frequent insertion of slant and bias into how events are reported. I'm fed up with double standards, where how much coverage of a crime or controversial event changes radically depends on whether it's one group (race, religion, etc) who is the apparent victim as opposed to a contrasting group of the same genus. What's sauce for the goose should be precisely the same sauce for the gander.

I'm fed up with how some teach US History as a litany of every bad or questionable practice ever known in our society, from the unfair treatment of the native Americans through slavery, limited voting rights, institutionalized chauvinism, exploitation of immigrants, racism, homophobia, extinction of species, and ignorance/arrogance in regard to other cultures. That it's inappropriate to make moral judgments freely on people of very different times, or that all such practices were not invented here and in fact were the general rule in the rest of the world (and still are in many places) never gets taught in the texts or by many educators. The simple truths that we were the first nation founded on the principle that all humans are created equal and with God-given rights, and that our society's real story is one of continuous progress towards humanitarian ideals, do not get taught anywhere near enough. Here is still where overall, people have the most freedom and best opportunities in life, as the unceasing flow of immigrants demonstrates. But when citizens do not appreciate their own society, the fabric of that society weakens and unravels in time, to the long term detriment of all.

I'm fed up with the near universal use of ad hominem attacks on people that others don't like and/or have disagreement with. The near-instant resort to charges or even just suggestions of racism/sexism/religious extremism/homophobia/Nazism/primitivism that has become the everyday practice of many activist groups is a cheap shot and a disservice to everyone. And it dilutes the effectiveness of any such charges when the situation actually justifies them.

I'm fed up with umbrella parenting, where little Johnny or Janie are protected and privileged by Mom & Dad as little princes and princesses, taken everywhere, given everything, always praised, seldom if ever disciplined, and endlessly told how special they are. So when the kid finally has to deal with a real world situation, most often a class in school where they don't perform well and get that C or worse, the parents descend on the teacher and administrators like wounded banshees protecting their infant, and threaten the principal or Board of Education with a lawsuit. This is a perfect formula for producing permanent adolescents, who "know" the world revolves around them and have a built-in sense of entitlement. They will go through life with no sense of responsibility to anyone or anything else, focused heavily on their own pleasures and privileges.

Of course, the other side of this is how fed up I am with the school administrators and teachers who fold on some things, like grade inflation so that an A now covers every level of achievement from medium to outstanding, and a B means the student really didn't do very much. And yet they remain utterly rigid on other things, like "zero tolerance" policies that end up sending small boys home for bringing a 2-inch high plastic soldier with a half-inch rifle to school, or for scribbles made on notepaper while riding on the school bus that include the rough outline of a pistol. There is the banning of games where there is competition and scoring, so there's no more kickball at recess, as if the children will never, ever have to face the reality of a world where there is competition and winners and losers.

And I'm certainly fed up with the promotion of litigiousness in our society, with the constant ads on TV and in magazines from lawyers telling people that they are owed money for whatever they think happened to them, and that they need to come get legal help to get that money. People have been paid serious money for spilling coffee on themselves, misusing power tools stupidly, for injuries they really caused themselves, for dissatisfaction with how some medical procedure came out even though the medical professionals involved really did nothing wrong, for alleged connections between some experience and a health problem that in fact is common among the population. No other society in the world has anything like the level of tort lawsuits that we have, and while certainly some are justified, very many are not and really only serve to cost all of us in both money and loss of services, while making a small class of attorneys extremely wealthy.

I'm fed up above all with the creation and growth of the all powerful, faceless, arbitrary bureaucracy. We can all agree that making the 5 year old kick off her little rubber flip-flops and walk barefoot to get through airport security is utterly senseless and nonproductive, but there is no way to protest TSA policies or influence some sort of revision. Everyone has a story or two of utter frustration trying to deal with some federal, state, or local bureau, and how eventually they had to accept their own powerlessness and just endure the situation.

Perhaps I should say lastly that I'm fed up with the kind of thinking that will have some people read this, and immediately conclude that really I am simply too negative, too judgmental, and probably have Nazi tendencies myself. Actually, I am grateful for every day I've spent as an American, I believe totally in freedom and tolerance for all. I love this nation and its founding principles more than life. I want all who follow me to revel in the same freedom and opportunities I have had. I wish everyone in this land could wake up in the morning first and foremost as an American, with respect and deep consideration for all other Americans, and full appreciation of all the wondrous benefits we have inherited from those who came before and struggled, suffered, and sometimes died to achieve and protect them. What I protest and intend to work against any way I can are the various tendencies now evident in our society which undercut the freedoms and practices which have brought so many, so far, throughout our history to the present. God Bless America.

PS- if any reader disagrees in part or large part or totally with my views, hey, that's OK. It's a free country and I would defend to the death your right to your own views. But if you really think this country is a bad one and its history shameful, the question becomes, why are you still here? Unlike in some other countries, here you may at any time pack your bags and depart to wherever you believe there is more virtue. Bon voyage.

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"Notes and Quotes" Archive

  • **“Nothing can destroy a government more quickly than its failure to observe its own laws, or worse, its disregard of the charter of its own existence.” – Justice Tom C. Clark (1899-1977) US Attorney General, 1945-1949
  • **"If the Constitution no longer matters, then the federal government no longer exists. The same document that restricts the federal government is also the document that created them and gives them their authority. Either it is in effect, or it is not." Gary Henderson
  • **"The hottest places in Hell are reserved for those who, in the time of moral crisis, maintain their neutrality." Dante
  • **“When anyone gets something for nothing, someone else gets nothing for something.” -Anonymous
  • ** "My desire to be well-informed is currently at odds with my desire to remain sane" Author unknown
  • ** “There is nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.” — Peter F. Drucker
  • ** “If getting employer benefits without paying union dues is BAD, why is getting government benefits without paying taxes GOOD?”
  • ** “It's not that ‘the rich’ aren't paying their ‘fair share,’ it's that America isn't. A majority of the electorate has voted itself a size of government it's not willing to pay for.” - Mark Steyn
  • ** "One of the penalties of not participating in politics is that you will be governed by your inferiors." ~ Plato
  • **"Fathom the hypocrisy of a Government that requires every citizen to prove they are insured...but not everyone must prove they are a citizen."
  • **If it matters, measure it: How do you know how much you’ve slipped or improved in an area unless you measure it? How do you take something “to the next level” if you don’t know what level you’re already at? How do you set concrete goals without a sense of where you are and where you want to go? If the success of your venture depends on it, you need to find a way to measure it.
  • **The man who doesn't read good books has no advantage over the man who can't read them. - Mark Twain
  • **Political correctness is an approved form of censorship.  Based on emotional appeals at the expense of reason, political correctness mandates that inconvenient truths or facts be swept under the carpet.  Or else. Free speech, guaranteed to all Americans under the First Amendment, is on its way to becoming moot.  The political, media, and intellectual elites who control the terms of national debate and the rules of civil society have succeeded in censoring opposing views, limiting debate, and demonizing dissent.  Perception is on its way to becoming our new reality. Nancy Morgan
  • **Ronald Reagan once defined an economist as somebody who sees something working in real life and wondering if it will work in theory.
  • **"Fathom the odd hypocrisy that Obama wants every citizen to prove they are insured, but they don't have to prove they are citizens." ~ Ben Stein
  • **“America is the greatest, freest and most decent society in existence. It is an oasis of goodness in a desert of cynicism and barbarism. This country, once an experiment unique in the world, is now the last best hope for the world.”--Dinesh D'Souza
  • **No politician has any business talking about tax increases until ObamaCare is repealed. It’s the most comprehensively failed legislation of the modern era. Like a taxi that runs on plutonium, it’s costing us a fortune, and making us sick, even while it’s sitting there and doing nothing. Sold with fanciful promises and fraudulent cost estimates, it’s another expensive scheme to buy votes with taxpayer money, ending with a planned crisis the government will be only too happy to step in and “solve” by seizing even more of our wealth and liberty. Its passage stymied serious attempts at real improvements to our health-care system, including tort reform and allowing the interstate sale of insurance plans to increase competition. As with so many other delusional Big Government programs, the opportunity cost of passing ObamaCare, and passing up on reasonable plans that enhance individual liberty, rivals its staggering price tag. We’ll come trillions closer to a balanced budget by shredding it. -- Dr. Zero
  • **'If the Arabs put down their weapons today, there would be no more violence. If the Jews put down their weapons today, there would be no more Israel' -- Benjamin Netanyahu
  • ** This is almost unbelievable. Barack Obama is more concerned about Jews building homes in Jerusalem than about Iran building a nuclear weapon. --Ben Stein
  • ** I hope we have once again reminded people that man is not free unless government is limited. There's a clear cause and effect here that is as neat and predictable as a law of physics: as government expands, liberty contracts. --Ronald Reagan
  • ** "As an American I am not so shocked that Obama was given the Nobel Peace Prize without any accomplishments to his name, but that America gave him the White House based on the same credentials." - - Newt Gingrich
  • ** An ideal Federal government in our country wouldn't take much from you, do much for you, or get in your way . --John Hawkins
  • ** The banking crisis wasn't caused by a lack of regulation. It was caused by regulation that pushed banks to make bad loans. --John Hawkins
  • ** An ideal Federal government in our country wouldn't take much from you, do much for you, or get in your way . --John Hawkins
  • **Not too long ago, two friends of mine were talking to a Cuban refugee, a businessman who had escaped from Castro, and in the midst of his story one of my friends turned to the other and said, "We don't know how lucky we are." And the Cuban stopped and said, "How lucky you are? I had someplace to escape to." And in that sentence he told us the entire story. If we lose freedom here, there's no place to escape to. This is the last stand on earth.--Ronald Reagan
  • ** A final word on Tea Party numbers.  The Obama Inauguration left in its wake 100 tons of trash on the Mall that required herculean efforts by the District and the Park Service to clean up.  And it devastated the grass surfaces of the Mall that necessitated budgeting millions of dollars to repair.  Saturday’s Teapartyers left behind a west lawn and Mall that could be used for the U.S.Open.   The sparse trash that was left was neatly stashed in and closely around the too few receptacles provided.  And police reported zero arrests.-- William Campenni
  • ** There is no distinctly Native American criminal class...save Congress. --Mark Twain
  • ** What this country needs are more unemployed politicians. --Edward Langley
  • ** To be born a U.S. citizen is, as Cecil Rhodes once said of England, to win first prize in the lottery of life.
  • **"Free speech does not include the right to deceive". --Author unknown
  • ** Although racism certainly exists in this country, it has become blessedly rare and marginalized. Some of the best evidence you can find for that is Barack Obama's election as President. Only in a country as colorblind as America could a black man easily win the Presidency when 75% of the votes were cast by white Americans. --John Hawkins
  • **I think we need a Constitutional Amendment that says: 1.  Congressional salaries are tied to increased jobs, per capita income and increased GDP. 2.  Any raise for any member must be approved by a super majority in his/her home district or state. --Tom Hall
  • **There is a certain irony in an administration denouncing ordinary Americans who get together to express what they believe and to confront authority, when that administration is led by a man who began his career as a community organizer, whose job, as I understand it, is to take ordinary Americans, get them together to express what they believe, and express demands against the authorities. So it's unbelievably hypocritical. And, of course, as we just heard, this only happens when you have a conservative protest. It is called a mob. If it's a liberal protest, it is called grassroots expressing themselves. -- Charles Krauthammer
  • **Government does not solve problems... it subsidizes them! --Ronald Reagan
  • **When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President -- I'm beginning to believe it.’ - Clarence Darrow
  • **The liberals will give free medical care to illegal aliens who are on welfare but will deny it to American citizens who have worked all their lives and made their contributions to American society.-- Charles Hakes
  • ** Medicare is a huge, single-payer, government-run program. It ought to provide the perfect environment for experimentation. If more-efficient government management can slash health-care costs by addressing all these problems, why not start with Medicare? Let's see what "better management" looks like applied to Medicare before we roll it out to the rest of the country. -- Virginia Postrel
  • ** You can lead a man to Congress, but you can’t make him think. -- Milton Berle
  • **We do not see things as they are. We see them as we are. --The Talmud
  • **You can lead a man to Congress, but you can’t make him think. -- Milton Berle
  • **We're getting too much lip service and not enough action from the Obama administration on nuclear power, and the impression is being left that we can run this big, complex country on electricity from the wind, the sun and the earth. ...Climate change may be the inconvenient problem, but nuclear power is the inconvenient answer. -- Lamar Alexander
  • **The government may very well come up with a health insurance product that is cheaper (to the consumer) and more effective than those offered in the private sector. Think about this though ... Could that possibly be because the government will be under no pressure whatsoever to make a profit on its health insurance? When you can operate at a loss indefinitely you have no problem undercutting your competitors. When you can call on endless government subsidies you can run anyone you chose out of business. -- Neal Boortz
  • **I'd like to quote from an e-mail I recently received from a reader named J. Pyle. In response to a piece I had written ridiculing the state of higher education, he wrote: "I remember when 'Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies' meant trying to figure out what's wrong with those people. In fact, if your child is majoring in something that ends in 'Studies,' you better not turn their bedroom into a den, because that one is coming home after college." --Bert Prelutsky
  • **People are gushing over the late Michael Jackson. I suppose they will honor him on a postage stamp, in a new “Famous Child Molesters” series, to go with Elvis from the “Famous Drug Abusers” stamp series. Meanwhile, men and women dying to protect an America pass with little but perfunctory notice. One wonders, in the black hours of the night, if this nation deserves protecting. -- Robert Hall
  • **I sincerely hope that when the president goes in for his annual check-up, the doctors at Bethesda will do a brain scan. Surely something must be terribly wrong with a man who seems to be far more concerned with a Jew building a house in Israel than with Muslims building a nuclear bomb in Iran. --Bert Prelutsky
  • **"Even if the majority agrees on an idiotic idea, it is still an idiotic idea." Sam Levenson
  • **The most hilarious thing about the Democrats' attempt to engulf the health care industry in the inky blackness of the federal government is their primary selling point: that a government takeover will actually lead to reduced costs. How's that plan working out with Medicare so far? Oh yeah, it's on track to bankrupt the entire country. So let's expand that -- what could go wrong? Well, besides all the features that usually come along with socialized medicine: reduced quality of care, long wait times for operations, and allowing old people to die in order to cut costs. Obamacare would lead to health care with the compassion of the IRS, the competence of FEMA, and the well staffed work force of our border patrol at a much higher cost, but on the upside, you won't live as long, so you'll have less time to complain about it. -- John Hawkins
  • **President Obama wants greater transparency from businesses, banks, the government — everyone except the union movement. This clearly benefits the union leaders, who will become less accountable to their members. But it’s hardly the change Obama promised to bring to Washington. — James Sherk
  • **Being politically correct is, unfortunately, not the same thing as being correct politically.-- Bert Prelutsky
  • **If increased government spending with borrowed or newly created money is a "stimulus," then the Weimar Republic should have been stimulated to unprecedented prosperity, instead of runaway inflation and widespread economic desperation that ultimately brought Adolf Hitler to power. -- Thomas Sowell
  • **“The big mistake of Republican leadership is thinking that going through the motions of listening to their ‘base’ is the same thing as actually listening to the base. They keep trying to drag us to where they think we should be instead of joining us where we are.” -- John Hawkins
  • ** Torturing prisoners should never be our policy, both because it's immoral and because it's usually ineffective. But it's madness to declare that there can never be exceptions. Forget the argument about the "ticking bomb" and the terrorist who might have information that could save numerous lives. Let's make it personal. Whether you're left, right or in between, ask yourself this yes-or-no question: If torturing a known terrorist would save the life of the person you love most in the world, would you approve it? If your answer is "no," you're not a moral paragon. You're an abomination. And please make your position clear to your husband or wife, mother or father, son or daughter. Just tell 'em, "Sorry, honey, but I'd rather see you dead than mistreat a terrorist. It's a moral issue with me. --Ralph Peters
  • **The man who loves other countries as much as his own stands on a level with the man who loves other women as much as he loves his own wife. -- Teddy Roosevelt
  • **The prudent capitalist will never adventure his capital... if there exists a state of uncertainty as to whether the Government will repeal tomorrow what it has enacted today. -- William Henry Harrison
  • **The price of a postage stamp has gone up to 44 cents. The government says they had to raise the price because fewer people are using the mail these days. That's government thinking for you — "Hey nobody's buying our products . . . let's raise the price!" --Jay Leno
  • **If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand. -- Milton Friedman
  • **Since torture doesn’t work but waterboarding did work on KSM, doesn’t that prove that waterboarding isn’t torture?
  • **"The world is controlled by those who show up." --George Allen
  • **John Maynard Keynes, responded to a challenge about his changing views, saying, “When the facts change, I change my opinion. What do you do, sir?”