Living You

•October 25, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Its so hard to live the way I want to live, naturally, without any limitations on my creative essence of being.  I want to cut the strings of the consumeristic reality that is currently over extending its reaches across the world.  Why were we not taught to grow our own food and fend for ourselves in school? Or how to use what resources we have available to us, without harming the balance of natural law?  The few subjects that I remember taking in school are Math, English (Writers Craft), Art, Family Studies, Religion, Geography, French, Gym, Social Studies, Business… pretty much, classes that were thought to be benificial to our development in a consumer world.  Always a focus on what job you would need to be working towards in order to become a part of society and live a “normal life”.    No other opportunities were brought up, no mention of a different lifestyle other than the vague reference to pioneer life in History class, or tidbits of other “Third World” cultures in Geography class.

We are conditioned to be consumer socialists from the get-go but in tradition it is the Capitalists that rule. Even starting your own business to “be-your-own-boss” feeds the Capitalist agenda to dominate the world through money.  

Why do we have to choose for them who we want to be?  Why do we have to work and live for them?  News flash,

 

You don’t.

 

 

 

 

But they make it so hard not to.  It is an upwards struggle towards the Light.

Still dropping those bombs.

•September 11, 2008 • Leave a Comment

I recently came across some information that I found quite outstanding.  Guess how many different times the US has bombed another country since World War Two?  Over 20!!!  That means there have been over 20 different times that the military complex and the corporate elite have decided they were justified to drop bombs in other civilized countries.  In fact, here is a list so that you can research it if you like:

China 1945-46

Korea 1950-53

China 1950-53

Guatemala 1954

Indonesia 1958

Cuba 1959-60

Guatemala 1960

Congo 1964

Peru 1965

Laos 1964-73

Vietnam 1961-73

Cambodia 1969-70

Guatemala 1967-69

Grenada 1983

Libya 1986

El Salvador 1980’s

Nicaragua 1980’s

Panama 1989

Iraq 1991

Sudan 1998

Afghanistan 1998

Yugoslavia 1999

Iraq 2001-2008

Afghanistan 2001-2008

Now, out of all these instances… guess how many times these incidents produced a peaceful, democratic, or human rights respecting government?  ZERO!!!  Thats right people… so why were these countries bombed?? Could it have been for Business?  Trade? Nationalism?  To corporatize the drug industry?  There is a big bright light shining down on the American Empire today and it’s saying “We ARE Waking Up! We CAN See Whats Really Going On!” =)

Billions for Bombs

•August 22, 2008 • Leave a Comment

If they get their way, the new military-industrial behemoths will receive billions more in the years to come. The Clinton administration’s five-year budget plan for the Pentagon calls for a 50% increase in weapons procurement, from $44 billion per year now to over $63 billion per year by 2003 (see Figure 1). On issue after issue—from expanding NATO, to deploying the Star Wars missile defense system, to rolling back restrictions on arms sales to repressive regimes — the arms industry has launched a concerted lobbying campaign aimed at increasing military spending and arms exports. These initiatives are driven by profit and pork barrel politics, not by an objective assessment of how best to defend the United States in the post-cold war period. 

 

Source

Why haven’t people clued in yet?  When are people going to stand up and let them know we’re not going to take it anymore!  Protests aren’t the answer, we need change from the inside out. We need a new radical movement to usurp the tyrants and institute a new way of life through our own standing politics. 

 

 

“Temper”

We want peace without 
Patriot missiles, 
Blown to bits are civilian targets, 
Parade! Laugh! Rejoice! Sing! 
We are the victors of…nothing, 
Spend more money on a war, 
Your people starving, turned to whores, 
Slaves of the chosen one paying millions for each bomb, 

Country without a race , 
Formed from people you disgrace , 
White right conservative might , 
Killers of Kennedy’s with no fright , 
The American way! 

Freedom cried the marching man, 
Flags ripped out of their black hands , 
Beaten! Slain! Tortured! Killed! 
Their only mistake was being born here , 
Invade countries just for oil , 
Send your troops all down to boil , 
Iraq! Grenada! Nam and Chile! 
Truman doctrine our own way , 

Country without a race , 
Formed from people you disgrace , 
White right conservative might , 
Killers of Kennedy’s with no fright , 
The American way! 

The Government here can suck my balls , 
Policing the world in overalls , 
Armed rebellion minority , 
Disrespected race, colored mind , 
Crazed loonies all walk the streets , 
Missing children on milk cartons , 
Mother selling child for crack , 
Mr. President check your back , 

Country without a race , 
Formed from people you disgrace, 
White right conservative might , 
Killers of Kennedy’s with no fright , 
The American way! 
The American way! 
The American way!

-System of a Down-

 

 

 

 

Why We Fight… Eisenhowers’s warning never heeded!

•August 19, 2008 • Leave a Comment

I read a post on a forum I frequent claiming America was the most violent nation in the world.  It made me think about Eisenhower’s Military-Industrial Complex Speech and a film called Why We fight. If you’ve never heard of it here is a synopsis:

Why We Fight describes the rise and maintenance of the United States military-industrial complex and its fifty-year involvement with the wars led by the United States to date, especially its 2003 Invasion of Iraq. In every decade since World War II, the American public were told a lie, in order for the Government (incumbent Administration) to take them to war, in order to fuel the military-industrial economy maintaining American political dominance in the world. Interviewed about this matter, are politician John McCain, political scientist and former-CIA analyst Chalmers Johnson, politician Richard Perle, reporter William Kristol, writer Gore Vidal, and public policy expert Joseph Cirincione. Why We Fight documents the consequences of said foreign policy with the stories of a Vietnam War veteran whose son was killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks, and who then asked the military to write the name of his dead son on any bomb to be dropped in Iraq; an that of a twenty-three-year-old New Yorker who enlists in the United States Army because he is poor and in debt, his decision impelled by his mother’s death; and a military explosives scientist who arrived to the U.S. as a refugee girl from Vietnam in 1975.

 

 

and here are a few of many people involved and interviewed in the film:

 

Politicians

Senator John McCain Elected to the United States Senate in 1986, he is a former U.S. Navy pilot and Vietnam prisoner of war.

Civilians

Joseph Cirincione, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace A senior associate and Director of the Non-Proliferation Project, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C., he is a writer, lecturer, and expert commentator on weapons proliferation and national security matters for the news media.

Gwynne Dyer, Military Historian He is a military historian, writer, and journalist who has worked for the Canadian, British, and American militaries. He published books, articles, information papers, and a radio series, about international affairs.

Susan Eisenhower, Grand-daughter of President Eisenhower Journalist, writer, and news expert, she is a senior fellow at, and the Eisenhower Institute’s director of programs. She is serving a third appointment to the Committee on International Security and Arms Control (CISAC) of the National Academy of Sciences.

John Eisenhower, Son of President Eisenhower, Military Historian A military historian member of White House staff during his father’s administration. He is a retired Brigadier General (AUS) and served as U.S. ambassador to Belgium, 1969 and 1971.

Chalmers Johnson, Central Intelligence Agency 1967-1973, Political Scientist With a fifty-year career in foreign policy, he is President of the Japan Policy Research Institute. An academic at the University of California, he has written many articles and books.

Frank “Chuck” Spinney, Retired Military Analyst An Air Force colonel’s son, he is a Lehigh University-schooled mechanical engineer (class of 1967), and worked in the U.S.A.F., in Ohio, before working in the Pentagon’s Office of Program Analysis and Evaluation in 1977. He became a harsh critic of the Pentagon, later known as the “Conscience of the Pentagon”, when he attacked the spiraling spending increase in the report “Defense facts of life”, published in 1982, later known as the “Spinney Report”, which earned a cover on “Time” magazine.

Gore Vidal, Author of Imperial America Writer, playwright, screen writer, novelist, and essayist, he has written books on American foreign policy explaining the American empire.

Military participants

‘Fuji’ and ‘Tooms’ U.S.A.F. stealth aeroplane fighter pilots ‘Fuji’ and ‘Tooms’ dropped the first bombs on Baghdad city, starting the Iraq War in 2003. They saw they were unaware that flawed intelligence guided their bombs, until months later, when they heard of a missed-directed bombing strike and the significant, consequent human collateral damage.

Karen Kwiatkowski A retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Colonel whose duties included working as a Pentagon desk officer, and for the National Security Agency.

James G. Roche, Secretary of the Air Force As the twentieth Secretary of the U.S. Air Force, he is responsible for its efficient functioning, policy formulation and implementation of the orders and instructions decided by the president and the secretary of defense.

 

Source for above quotes:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_We_Fight_(2005_film) 

Movie Preview:

http://www.sonyclassics.com/whywefight/

 

Basically the film uses Eisenhowers speech as a warning while trying to explain whats gone wrong within the American government and to show how the military-industrial complex works. The debate would be, do you think bringing back up Eisenhower’s warning is a little too late? Or do you feel that it is irrelevant. Here is the warning from the late-presidents speech:

 

 

A vital element in keeping the peace is our military establishment. Our arms must be mighty, ready for instant action, so that no potential aggressor may be tempted to risk his own destruction. Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peacetime, or indeed by the fighting men of World War II or Korea. Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United States corporations. This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total influence — economic, political, even spiritual — is felt in every city, every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society. In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the militaryindustrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together.

 

 

 

So it Begins

•August 7, 2008 • 2 Comments

At least for me :)  I’m breaking free.  Tomorrow I begin the process of becoming rid of my debt.  I don’t think I will ever be able to apply for any loan or credit card without feeling the same way again. At least now I know how the system works and I can protect myself from it at all costs.  I don’t want my daughter to grow up thinking that her self worth is a credit score or that  the most important thing in life is saving money instead of enjoying what she can while she can.  My new motto should be Work to Live – not live to work.

I can’t belive how blind I have been all these years.  How I got so sucked up into it all.  The best way to describe how I feel right now is through an Eddie Vedder song called SOCIETY.  

Oh it’s a mystery to me.
We have a greed, with which we have agreed…
and you think you have to want more than you need…
until you have it all, you won’t be free.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.

When you want more than you have, you think you need…
and when you think more then you want, your thoughts begin to bleed.
I think I need to find a bigger place…
cause when you have more than you think, you need more space.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.
Society, crazy indeed…
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.

There’s those thinkin’ more or less, less is more,
but if less is more, how you keepin’ score?
It means for every point you make, your level drops.
Kinda like you’re startin’ from the top…
and you can’t do that.

Society, you’re a crazy breed.
I hope you’re not lonely, without me.
Society, crazy indeed…
I hope you’re not lonely, without me
Society, have mercy on me.
I hope you’re not angry, if I disagree.
Society, crazy indeed.
I hope you’re not lonely…
without me.

 

Where do we start?

•July 30, 2008 • Leave a Comment

What if there was a petition sent to your local parliament to free people from unjust taxes and cancel all the national and public debts which are constantly growing due to compound interest, would you sign it?  Maybe then the local government would actually start to consider that they DO have the power to make the world a better place, that the Federal Government has already been reimbursed several times over through interest, that they can enact legislations to stop borrowing money and create the money needed for the country themselves, interest free, as the Constitution gives it the right and duty to do so.

Is it so impossible to imagine?

What ever happened to Rage Against the Machine?

•July 28, 2008 • Leave a Comment

What, you didn’t know?  Yes the are back!!!  These guys know what’s going on in the world :) :)  They will move you with their “mass militant poetry”. 

They want you to try to keep in mind that the

so called facts are fraud
They want us to allege and pledge
And bow down to their God
Lost the culture, the culture lost
Spun our minds and through time
Ignorance has taken over
Yo, we gotta take the power back!

Take the power back!! Yes, it’s so simple… yet we’ve made it so hard to comprehend. Visit their site for tour dates and to read about their monthly Freedom Fighter’s.  http://www.ratm.com/

It’s time to innovate. Let’s all file for Bankruptcy.

•July 25, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Let me start where most of you probably are… and if you’re anything like me, chances are you need money.  So you begin to look around at your life to see what it is that really matters to you.  Usually, in times of misfortune, materialistic things suddenly become less meaningful.  So, you start selling items you don’t need here and there to try and make some extra cash.  But no matter how much money you manage to make, it seems as though you can never quite get ahead.  Sound familiar yet?

So then you focus on how you are making your money.  It’s got to be the job, right?  Obviously you’re just not making enough money.  Even though you went through school and maybe got a degree or two… and you have a job you’re reasonably good at and may even enjoy.  But honestly, do you really think it will make a difference if you re-direct your career and find a better paying job?  It could.  But would it be worth your time and effort?  If you are unhappy with what you are doing, then yes maybe this would be the route to start with, but in the mean time you would still be struggling to pay your bills.  Those don’t go away while you are trying to figure things out… or do they???  They could!    

Let’s talk about all the good reasons to go bankrupt.  First off, its as easy as opening a new account with a local bank or credit union… switching over your direct deposit information and then, get this… just stop paying all your bills.  Thats right, and you can even keep your house and your car if you so choose.  Or you can walk away from an owned home and find a cheaper place to rent while going through this easy legal 9 month process.   You can keep your furniture, your clothes, your toys and pretty much everything else you’ve accumulated over the years.   All it takes is finding a lawyer you can trust.

Laugh if you will, but not all lawyers are bad.  Some really do want to help people any way they can.  The fee is pretty minimal, and if you owe between 10 – 50 thousand dollars, you’ll know what it could mean to knock off up to 95% of your debt.  Another perk, a good law firm will let you take your time to pay them their fee and will accommodate your payment levels according to how much money you are making month by month.  

Another reason it would be a great idea to file for bankruptcy would be because it would be a great way to stick it to the man.  Who’s the man?  The man!!  The bankers and higher level government who would like to have control over all finances and policies in the world.  You may have never heard this opinion before but believe me when I say there are millions who think it.  Maybe you have too many things going on in your own life or are too distracted or comfortable in your living room in front of your television or computer.  If you think the people in control of the important global decisions happening in the world today care one way or another that you are struggling to pay your bills, you may one day become elegantly disappointed.

Beleive me, not one financial system in place cares why you cannot pay your bills.  Don’t let them fool you. They will have very nice people working for them of course, because they too are just trying to make an honest living, and probably don’t really understand the entire global picture about a civilization living off of credit.  But hopefully if you’ve read this far, you’re about to get a quick introduction.

Its called social credit.  How many credit cards applications have ended up in your mailbox without request? How many pre-approved loans have you been offered by shady companies who don’t even have internet banking?  Do you know why they do this?  They are just waiting for your need to arise.  Eventually some people will need more money than they have, wether its for legitimate emergencies or a perfect vacation, compulsive spending or buying a new car.  So what happens when your needs outweigh your income?  You borrow.  You borrow credit, fake money created by men interested only in controlling your life.  You may think you are a free citizen but its hard to feel the squeeze when you’ve got all your other senses occupied and are making enough money not to care about whose actually in charge and how the system works.  

Now is your chance to find out.

work in progress…

•July 25, 2008 • Leave a Comment

I am eventually going to start using this site to share my opinions about how the world operates through interesting information I find on the internet.  It may take a bit of tweaking at first until I get a feel for how this site is used.  And I may not be the best updater because entertaining a 6 month old takes up most of my time.  But I do hope to get to know this community better and I look forward to reading your material as well as I hope you read mine.  Lets get enlightened, through questioning ourselves and what we perceive reality to be :)