Aliens!

REH

----- Original Message -----
From: "Harry Pollard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 01, 2002 3:19 PM
Subject: RE: To survive or not to survive.


> Arthur,
>
> You are probably too right about this.
>
>  From where outside will succor come?
>
> Harry
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
> Arthur wrote:
>
> >Ray said,
> >
> >But whatever happens,  it would be wonderful if our economists and
futurists
> >on this list would come up with some ideas that could interest the rest
of
> >us beyond the tattered 19th century Industrial models.    Maybe we could
get
> >a Science Fiction writer but with the exception of the "Pollinators of
Eden"
> >and a couple of Roger Zelazny's novels, everything else including my
beloved
> >Frank Herbert and Harlan Ellison are inferior to Orwell and Huxley.
> >Where is this "Future of Work"  folks?    Does it have a future?   or are
we
> >at the end of our imagination here?    Where are your Bergs and your
> >Schoenbergs to scare the pants off of the banal and mediocre?    How
about a
> >Boulez or a Stockhausen?    Instead even the "slight" Britten is
frightening
> >to most.     With such taste how can we possibly imagine anything but the
> >ordinary in the work life of the future?     I haven't seen a decent
Nobel
> >winner in 50 years.   Mediocrity has captured the minds of the West and
it
> >won't let go.    Today, we don't even ask ourselves why Paris, a 19th
> >century city with the first decent toilet, is still the most beautiful
city
> >in the world and the most idealistic.    Otherwise why would all of our
rich
> >folks insist on living there half the year?     The Czars loved Paris as
> >well.
> >
> >Arthur replies,
> >
> >Many economists have come up with ideas.   You should realize that
> >economists in government and business are the handmaidens of the
> >establishment.  Academics are more and more in the same situation (the
world
> >of the consultant!!)  Every once in a while someone comes up with an
idea,
> >and to the extent that it threatens existing distributions of income and
> >power it is either not listened to, taken seriously or denounced.
> >
> >Change will have to come from outside. Some sort of political change
which
> >enables the consideration of new ways of looking the economy.  Economists
> >will then rush forward to justify, with models and mathematics the new
> >agenda.  Sad to say and sorry to say this, but seems to be the case.
> >
> >
> >
> >Hi Brad,
> >
> >
> >I said:
> > > [snip]
> > > > The Soviet Union
> > > > did many things better than us and they had a terrible agricultural
> >dilemma
> > > > in their growing cycle and weather.    China does not share that
> > > > disadvantage.
> > > [snip]
> > > > It is also crucial that we not believe that Capitalism is the sole
> >reason
> > > > that we won the Cold War and the Soviet System collapsed.    That we
> > > > seriously examine the differences in their work structure and
> >incorporate
> > > > their successes if we are going to survive the collapse of the
> >Industrial
> > > > Era's old age and out of date answers to completely new situations
that
> > > > Capitalists never faced before.
> > > [snip]
> > > > I would also say that Brad's observation about his friend in the
post "
> >The
> > > > [mis]adventures of private property under capitalism (case study)"
is
> >just
> > > > another example of such systemic confusion in Capitalism.
> > > [snip]
> >
> >
> >You said:
> >
> > > Ray: Are you citing my [IMO alas not original or unique...] story as:
> > > (1) What I describe in the story being an example of the systemic
> > > confusion in Capitalism, or (2) My interpretation of what I
> > > describe in the story being an example of the systemic confusion
> > > (i.e., are you asserting that I am systemically confused?), or (3)
> > > both #1 and #2, or (4) other?
> >
> >I said:
> >
> >Number 1.   no you are not systemically confused unless there is
something
> >you're not sharing with us.
> >
> >(snip)
> >
> >
> > > I agree that it is a very good article.
> > > > September 29, 2002
> > > > Contradictions of a Superpower
> > > > By ROBERT WRIGHT
> > > [snip]
> > > > But the report's [ i.e., Bush's security manifesto's(?)]
> > > > biggest failing may lie in ignoring radicalism's
> > > > intersection with another kind of technology. It is information
> >technology -
> > > > satellite TV, Web sites, e-mail, cell phones - that with growing
> >efficiency
> > > > will convert amorphous hatred of the United States into the
organized
> > > > radicalism that can employ weapons of mass destruction.
> > > > Thus the global diffusion of technology means American policies that
> > > > generate hatred "on the street" abroad will be more and more likely
to
> >lead
> > > > to terrorism.
> > > [snip]
> >
> >
> >You said:
> > > Again, I think the article is very good, but I think it
> > > might be relevant to consider here that Mr. Atta and his
> > > 19 or so comrades gravely disrupted the United States, inflicting
> > > at least $40 billion damage for a $500,000 investment WITHOUT
> > > USING ANY "WMD" AT ALL!  Similarly, the U.S.S. Cole was knocked
> > > out of service for 18 months with repair costs in the
> > > several $100 million range by a dinghy loaded with
> > > non-WMD explosives.  And, in Mr. Atta's case, he used our own
> > > resources to hurt us (we not only have lots of
> > > commercial jetliners, but we also have lots of WMD's here in the
United
> > > States!).
> >
> >I say:
> >
> >This is what guerilla operations alway do.   It cost one million dollars
per
> >Indian for the US to win the Indian wars in the 1880s which took three
years
> >against an enemy they could find but wouldn't stand still and fight since
we
> >were defending our way of life, families and our very existance.   One of
> >the things that is always made a big deal of in Capitalist propoganda is
the
> >large mansions i.e. palaces, of the enemies.   It was an eye opening trip
> >for Reagan to go to Russia and visit the Hermitage which was put up not
by
> >the Communists but the Czars.    Nancy even said:  It is no wonder you
had a
> >revolution considering the grotesque wealth compared to the common
people.
> >One could also ask if the Czars had continued what kind of space program,
> >housing, educational or health programs they would have had for the
children
> >of those peasants.     You could ask the same about the mini-Democratic
> >government that preceded the Bolshiviks.    Many things are said and
> >projected but it should be noted that the poverty rate in this country
> >currently is greater than in the Soviet Union when we were in the Cold
War.
> >(NYTimes last week.)
> >
> >As for those castles, mansions or palaces, as in the local Moslem
countries,
> >I'm sure that the locals would rather have better housing and a lower
infant
> >mortality rate but I am also sure that their identity is wrapped up in
such
> >big projects as mentioned just as ours was wrapped up in the Trade
Towers.
> >It will take as much money relatively for them to replace their identity
in
> >their leaders as it does us in ours.   I realize this is not a popular or
> >even Democratic view but I do believe it is accurate psychologically.
We
> >have people who are non-logical to say the least in their allegiances and
> >alliances where the only answer lies in their psychological
indentification
> >of self and their sense of what it takes to be secure.    In fact we are
> >suffering a non-logical breakdown in the marketplace at present where it
> >would make more sense to stop, think and plan as well as put the crooks
in
> >jail but we insist upon civil rights for the wealthy crooks while
> >incarcerating the lower class guerellas forever in Cuba on evidence that
is
> >evidentily so poor that they won't even let us see it.    One of the
crooks
> >is the Secretary of the Army where the appearance of evil is not enough
to
> >incarcerate him in spite of the fact that he is in charge of the largest
> >fighting force in the history of the world.   Another is the Vice
President
> >of the United States who evidently makes Spiro Agnew look like a
provencial
> >Angel.   And then there is the President who stole the election with the
> >help of his brother, in spite of  some of the protestations on the list.
> >But how can you live in California and pay that exorbitant electric bill
> >last year and not know that the Texans had screwed you?
> >
> >
> >You said:
> > > Our enemies may not need weapons of
> > > mass destruction to destroy us: Please do not forget that
> > > a big reason the Bush administration did not pay much
> > > attention to AlQaeda in 2001 was that the Bush administration
> > > was busy protecting us from rogue nation ICBMs!  Maybe
> > > our focus on weapons of mass destruction needs to be placed in
> > > a broader context of
> > > attention to the factors of human intelligence and human commitment
> > > to a cause.
> >
> >
> >I would agree with the latter but not the former.   I think the Bush
> >administration is basically compromised and incompetent.    I think it is
> >grounded in their experience in the sector where I make my living, the
> >private sector.   A place filled with companies that act like and are
larger
> >than many socialist countries but who would never support a nation acting
> >like or to them either here or abroad as they act themselves in favor of
> >their "landed class" i.e. stockholders.    These are the people who
prefer
> >pundits to scholars and then wonder why Democrats don't come out to
perform
> >in their coliseum.
> >
> >Think of NAFTA which is skewed in favor of companies and against
> >Democracies.      I suspect that the future will hold one of three
things.
> >1. Either greater abuse and tyranny from those companies world wide or 2.
> >that Capitalism will be defeated by the megalithic giant of China with
their
> >unique cultural structure, or 3. That there will be a fifth way emerge
that
> >is either an amalgam of the previous four or a totally new system.
> >
> >When we talk theory it usually comes down to the market version of
whether
> >the rejection of "fast food" means that we all shouldn't eat instead of
> >making the food better.    These wonderful theories about the Middle East
> >seem inexperienced except in the tabloids.   The people who know
> >Palestinians, live in Israel or who work with Jews and Palestinians seem
> >quiet on much of this and when they do speak it becomes a time for
battering
> >their knowledge instead of asking questions and proving one's National
> >superiority rather than a discussion relating to how economists,
futurists
> >and professionals could help the situation.
> >
> >I think Karen has supplied an intelligence simply by asking questions
that
> >many of we men were unable to supply and it is a pleasure that Devorah
and
> >Selma are speaking out.    But the itch of the ideals about work and how
> >people grow their culture without being destroyed by the battering ram of
> >Western Business or the fundamentalist idiocy of the Middle Eastern
Desert
> >Religions have not even been scratched.     Note, I am talking about the
> >religious version of the 18th and 19th century economic philosophers who
> >have committed genocide and murdered whole professions with impunity that
> >didn't fit into their systems.   I am not speaking of the progressives
who
> >value the past, live in the present and work to imagine a future where
both
> >can exist under the rubric of "Heritage and Cooperation."     I care
little
> >for the couch whether Freud or Procrustes.
> >
> >But whatever happens,  it would be wonderful if our economists and
futurists
> >on this list would come up with some ideas that could interest the rest
of
> >us beyond the tattered 19th century Industrial models.    Maybe we could
get
> >a Science Fiction writer but with the exception of the "Pollinators of
Eden"
> >and a couple of Roger Zelazny's novels, everything else including my
beloved
> >Frank Herbert and Harlan Ellison are inferior to Orwell and Huxley.
> >Where is this "Future of Work"  folks?    Does it have a future?   or are
we
> >at the end of our imagination here?    Where are your Bergs and your
> >Schoenbergs to scare the pants off of the banal and mediocre?    How
about a
> >Boulez or a Stockhausen?    Instead even the "slight" Britten is
frightening
> >to most.     With such taste how can we possibly imagine anything but the
> >ordinary in the work life of the future?     I haven't seen a decent
Nobel
> >winner in 50 years.   Mediocrity has captured the minds of the West and
it
> >won't let go.    Today, we don't even ask ourselves why Paris, a 19th
> >century city with the first decent toilet, is still the most beautiful
city
> >in the world and the most idealistic.    Otherwise why would all of our
rich
> >folks insist on living there half the year?     The Czars loved Paris as
> >well.
> >
> >"How do you like your blue-eyed boy now Mr. Death?" (cummings)
> >
> >Ray Evans Harrell
> >
> >
> >---
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>
> ******************************
> Harry Pollard
> Henry George School of LA
> Box 655
> Tujunga  CA  91042
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Tel: (818) 352-4141
> Fax: (818) 353-2242
> *******************************
>
>


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