Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economics. Show all posts

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Oh, Shit!



Expert: Has The Next Financial Crisis Already Begun?

by Weiss Ratings 


The early stages of what will be the most severe and painful financial crisis in U.S. history is now underway.

That’s according to a top analyst with The Edelson Institute — the financial think-tank with a remarkably accurate track record for calling major economic shifts.

They called the gold rally in 1999 (before the metal soared 533%) and the top of the gold market in September of 2011.

They also called the stock market crash in 1987 as well as the real estate crash in 2007.

Their secret to spotting major reversals ahead of the crowd is a proven system that was developed by a little-known presidential advisor after the Great Depression. It has since predicted every major market move for the last 50 years with incredible accuracy.

And today it’s foreshadowing one of the worst financial crises we’ve ever seen. The Dow’s recent 2,000-point plunge was just a taste of what lies ahead.


No fewer than three of the most powerful economic waves in existence are now converging in a way that hasn’t been seen since 1929.

And they are warning of a great unraveling that is about to explode into the headlines.

Cycle #1 shows that businesses will hoard cash ... create fewer jobs ... and stop reinvesting in business growth. And by doing so, will help drag the economy to a near-standstill.

Cycle #2 indicates that consumers, shaken by weak job growth and plunging household income will pull back too, leading to slower business formation and slower inventory turnover.

Cycle #3—which predicted both the Great Depression and the 2008 Great Recession—shows a coming period of massive economic pain including an ever-weaker economy, chronic unemployment, soaring interest rates, massive defaults on public and private debt and more.

Sound familiar? It should, because the evidence is clear that we have already entered the early stages of these unstoppable cycles.


Our government, our economy and our way of life are living on borrowed time. For most, the changes will be catastrophic.

Only those who prepare now will have a prayer of protecting their loved ones, let alone preserving their wealth or their quality of life.

The very first step is to see these cycles—the most powerful forces in the economic universe—for yourself. So we’ve just posted a special briefing gives you the full story.

You will get a detailed explanation of how they work, and see for yourself the data that shows the coming collapse. Plus, you will discover the simple, practical steps you can take now to get your family and your finances through the crisis ahead.

You can get immediate access to this important research free of charge here.



Monday, January 15, 2018

Towards a Solution


Màat Petrova releasing or letting go.




"Economic expansion cannot alone do the job of improving the employment situation of Negroes. It provides the base for improvement, but other things must be constructed upon it, especially if the tragic situation of youth is to be solved. In a booming economy Negro youth are afflicted with unemployment as though in an economic crisis. They are the explosive outsiders of the American expansion."

~ Martin Luther King Jr. / "Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community" p207 ©1968, based on the original 1967 edition


2 old women armed and strengthened by each other.


Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Be Active to Change



Defining Culture
www.afropunk.com 


"This country's economic power was built & solidified through free labor and White supremacy. Every single Black person who has ever lived has encountered the residual fragments of this legacy. Every social, economic and political foundation in this country is based at least in part on the history of slavery. How are we supposed to shut the fuck up about it?" - NegusWhoRead (Nov. 30, 2016)




Charlize Theron was Esquire Magazine's Sexiest Woman of the Year choice for 2007.


"When Esquire named the sexiest woman in the world in 2007, they knew what they were up to. When they then decided to pay someone to take photos of her wearing nothing but an undershirt and a pair of panties, they must have had a stroke of genius. Showing off her fantastic figure in almost all of its glory, this image is definitely one that epitomizes everything that makes Charlize so sexy. Look at those glorious legs, that supple skin, her beautiful hair, and how striking the one eye we can make out is. This is the type of woman who served as the inspiration for the tales of yore. This is the type of woman men went to war for and woman wanted to be with. This is the type of woman that we knew we could no longer ignore and completely deserved to have a list like this one focused on her. Finally, that is the type of photo that absolutely demands to be placed in the top spot on a list like this one." ~ Matthew Thomas for Entertainment



Botswanan photographers capture the female form in nature ‘Women, Basadi’ photo series:



Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Money behind the idea of freedom. . .


Economic protest.



Kapernick lost his Beats by Dre endorsement and Marshall lost his Air Academy Federal Credit Union deal.

Now the real challenge is: Are we as a forsaken minority community actually going to boycott stuff we are truly linked to and involved in for a greater good and cause? After all.... Are white folks actually the ones buying Beats by Dre head gear??
#FoodForThought 


- Chris Wee-Woo

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Corporatocracy”. The Lifestyles of an “Economic Hit Man”

the Economic Hit Man

An Interview with John Perkins




Economic hit men (EHMs) are highly paid professionals who cheat countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars. They funnel money from the World Bank, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and other foreign “aid” organizations into the coffers of huge corporations and the pockets of a few wealthy families who control the planet’s natural resources. Their tools include fraudulent financial reports, rigged elections, payoffs, extortion, sex, and murder. They play a game as old as empire, but one that has taken on new and terrifying dimensions during this time of globalization. I should know; I was an EHM. — John Perkins, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (2004)
Across several books, John Perkins exposes the lifestyles of the economic hit men. They inhabit a stateless global archipelago of privilege—a collection of private schools, tax havens, and gated residential communities with little or no connection to the outside world. They are people to whom nations are as meaningless as they are to the global corporations and to the international aristocracy they serve.
The system of contemporary capitalist globalization operates for the exclusive benefit of a global plutocracy that has no national boundaries or loyalties. Oligarchy, a word that has been applied exclusively to the modern-day capitalist barons of Russia, is no less real in the triad of the United States, Japan, and Europe.
The operation of this global system and its current financial architecture is as far as it could possibly be from the fairytale version of “free market” liberal democracy glorified in standard economic textbooks and the mainstream media. That is the reality that John Perkins’sConfessions of an Economic Hit Man has driven home for so many readers since it appeared in 2004. I spoke with him in September 2012.
Ravi Bhandari (RB): As a fellow former EHM, pushing for the privatization of land in Nepal through the World Bank’s market-led land reform of the 1990s, I feel that your work has helped to give me, like countless others around the world, a better understanding of the disastrous consequences of our actions on the vast majority of the people and the planet. Since you wrote the famous opening paragraph, quoted above, in Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, many people throughout the world have been shocked to learn about the operations of EHMs and how globalization works in the real world. Were you surprised by the impact of the book?
John Perkins (JP): The public interest aroused by Confessions was not by any means a forgone conclusion. I spent a great deal of time working up the courage to try to publish it. By late 2003, the manuscript had been circulated to many publishers—and I had almost given up on ever seeing the book in print. Despite praising it as “riveting,” “eloquently written,” “an important exposé,” and “a story that must be told,” publisher after publisher—twenty-nine, in fact—rejected it. My literary agent and I concluded that it was just too anti-corporatocracy. [A word introduced to most readers inConfessions, “corporatocracy” refers to the powerful group of people who run the world’s biggest corporations, the most powerful governments, and history’s first truly global empire. —Bhandari] The major publishing houses, we concluded, were too intimidated by, or perhaps too beholden to, the corporate elite.
Finally, Berrett-Koehler, a relatively small publishing house, took it on. Almost instantly it hit the bestseller lists. But despite all the success the book had, an important element was still missing. The major U.S. media refused to discuss Confessions or the fact that, because of it, terms such as “EHM” and “corporatocracy” were now appearing on college syllabi. It is interesting that a book entitled Confessions of an Economic Hit Man earned its author an international peace prize. I was recently awarded the Lennon Ono Grant for Peace—mainly because of that book but also recognizing my work on protecting the rainforests and indigenous peoples in Latin America. Fighting the global corporatocracy has led me most recently to Iceland and Ireland, where I have encouraged the voters to refuse to pay back the debt that the big banks claim they owe. READ MORE



...as a wealthy woman


Monday, September 24, 2012

business of PRISON practice of SLAVERY




 "I read an article: "Private Prison Management Company Seeks Guaranteed 90% OccupancyFrom State". It is chilling. It is also a reality of American economic theory and practice and it is key to understanding American foreign policy, and our approach to race, and domestic issues. The United States cannot muster the moral outrage over this because of the deep roots and need for the survival of the institution of slavery. Our fundamental axiom: the acquisition of things and accumulation of money has the nation in bondage! Deep within our souls lurk demons we divert our attention from with frivolous distractions, and news bites we hold and cherish, as if they are the Truth, and Knowledge can be contained, and Power is one dimensional; while Death circulates around us with its smells, its murky countenance, and indiscriminate preferences..." - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories 9.23.12










Tuesday, September 11, 2012

DO SOMETHING!!

The Battle field is set, The war for Justice and the America way of life have lost a major battle, as Laws were passed that directly hurt women, hurt the poor, low income and what’s left of the middle class. Drug test for benefits, women rights to care, cuts in unemployment benefits all target low income families and blame the 90% for failure of the 10% to earn more riches.

Reagan started Trickle Down Economics: Benefits to the Rich which trickle down to the poor. Back then it worked as rich got richer the trickle affect reached the poor until the rich stop creating jobs for the poor and created ways to make more money without creating new jobs! Now after almost 40 years of "Trickle Down Economics" America is Economically Broken, as the rich have gotten richer and the poor have gotten poorer. In the 1930's after "The Great Depression" welfare benefits were designed to help and bring aid to American families hit hard by the fall of our economy. It was not developed for black families as they would have you think. Welfare was designed to help aid American families through hard economic times, as a Bailout Plan for those who suffered income lost to feed and house the poor. Now GA Government has shown its hand - this is an all out attack on the poor. Join us in this fight today, get off the sofa cut off the TV news and start making the News. This is your city, your community and this is your part of the American Dream. DO SOMETHING! - Lionel Gantt (March 9, 2012)

Monday, January 3, 2011

SLAVERY SALES


This is a June 17, 2010 file photograph released by the Mississippi Department of Corrections of Gladys Scott who, along with her sister Jamie Scott had their life sentences for robbery suspended Wednesday, Dec. 29, 2010 by Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour. The two women were convicted in 1994 for their roles in an armed robbery that netted $11. Barbour said in a news release that 36-year-old Gladys Scott's release is conditioned on her donating one of her kidneys to her sister, who now requires daily dialysis
Kidney parole condition raises ethical questions

By HOLBROOK MOHR, Associated Press

"The pros and cons of this decision raise, in my mind, the contradictions of the penal system. If prisoners are slaves according to the Constitution, and their bodies are cannon fodder, and a profitable mechanism to acquire wealth can they not barter their lives, and time, and profit?" - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories

Monday, November 22, 2010

DEMISE: the conservative contribution to America

Eva Longoria's exquisite form in dark purple gown !!


Slaying a Herd of Sacred Cows

November 17, 2010

Here we go again! The chairmen of the presidential, bipartisan deficit commission recently offered President Obama a slew of sacred cows to be sacrificed on the altar of fiscal responsibility. What makes this abomination of desolation so hypocritical is that former Clinton White House Chief of Staff, Erskine Bowles, and former senator, Alan Simpson (R-Wyo), have hatched a plan to send tax payers to the rescue…again, to save the country from the consequences of nearly 25 years of Conservative rule since 1980. And by the way, I am soliciting suggests for a new label to replace “Conservative.” It has become increasingly difficult to define conservatism. One of the bedrock principles of conservatism has been fiscal restraint; however, this pragmatic approach was killed long ago by President Ronald Reagan.

Reagan, the consummate performer, convinced his goose-stepping followers that trickle-down would benefit the entire country. But what trickle down did was place the nation on a spending binge that nearly caused a global, economic meltdown. To be sure, Reagan’s fiscal policies did not cause the mortgage crisis, the gas crisis, the near insolvency of the U.S, automobile industry, and the banking crisis, but it was the trigger that set the entire nation on a pork-feast at the hyper-deficit trough. If we consider what happened to America economically during the eight years of the Reagan Revolution, it amazes me that anyone who calls themselves a Conservative (there I go with that word again) can still pay homage to his legacy.

When Reagan succeeded President Jimmy Carter in 1981, the public debt was $998 billion, or two notches south of $1 trillion; however, when Reagan passed the baton to George H.W. Bush, the debt had exploded to nearly $3 trillion. This is a staggering demonstration of financial mismanagement. To place this level of reckless disregard in its proper perspective, one must consider that in eight years, Reagan tripled what it took the country 204 years to accrue in deficit spending. This is astonishing! Yet, former President Ronal Reagan is still revered in nearly mythological proportions. In fact, I understand that there is a move by Conservatives (there I go with that word again) to nominate him for a posthumous Nobel Prize.

There are three certainties in life: Death, taxes, and the requirement that every GOP leader genuflect before the portrait of Ronald Reagan that hangs in the headquarters of the Republican National Committee. Why? Because Reagan was the first president to demonstrate that you can overspend beyond your wildest imagination if you could convince the country that an enemy was looming: Reagan, of course, had the former Soviet Union; H.W. Bush had Saddam; and Dubya had bin Laden. Now watch very carefully, because the hands are indeed quicker than the eyes – During the 20-year reign of the Republican presidents since 1980, the United States has spent nearly $8 trillion on defense…you still watching?

· Russia disintegrated without firing one single bullet in self defense;
· Saddam was held up in a hole the size of my walk-in closet; and
· The last I heard, Osama bin Laden was last seen walking through the streets of Anacostia.

Did you see that?

This entire performance took place; not because of the trillions that were spent, but in spite of the trillions it cost the American taxpayers. According to one analysis of global defense spending, the U.S. spends more money on defense than the rest of the world combined. The United States spends nearly 57 percent of all military expenditures world-wide. The runner up to this dubious honor and the bronze medal winner go to China and Russia respectively with a combined military spending of $115 billion, or 10 percent of total global military expenditures. America’s closest NATO ally, France, spends about $45 billion per year, or four percent of the total global military expenditures.

Simple mathematics shows me that NATO is getting a free ride at the expense of the tax payers in this country. So let me make sure I have this right: The presidential deficit commission is recommending the elimination of the sacred mortgage deduction; increasing the age of retirement under Social Security; eliminating “all the expensive and popular deductions,” which almost certainly means cafeteria plans, charitable contributions and childcare deductions; programs to assist the poor would be drastically cut back; and an increase in the amount of income subject to Social Security taxes. To be fair, the Commission is also recommending a $100 billion cut in defense spending, but if we assume that the Military Industrial Complex will just roll over and play dead while the surgeon cuts, this would simply reduce America’s percentage of global defense spending from 57 percent to 48 percent.

But as the old saying goes, “Talk is cheap.” Therefore, in addition to my criticism of the plundering of the American treasury, I offer this recommendation: Let’s go back to where the Conservatives (oops, there I go again) ran off the track during the Reagan administration, and reduce military spending to those 1981 levels. This would erase nearly $400 billion in spending overnight, but here is the good part: The $317 billion defense budget during Reagan’s first year is still three times more spending than China and Russia combined, but what it does additionally is require NATO to shoulder more of the burden for living in a relatively safe world.

Although I do not subscribe to Marxism; I must say that Marx’s case on the misunderstood power of the working class is profound. Now that I’ve made my point, here is the overriding issue: Will you sit back and permit your congressional leaders to take the crumbs that Reagan gave you in trickle down, or will you make your political leaders accountable for the decisions that they make? Perhaps demanding that this nation’s vaunted, overpriced military capture bin Laden would be a great first step. With this nation’s almost surreal intelligence apparatus, unless bin Laden is communicating with carrier pigeon, surely we should have captured him by now…if that was a national priority. However, what seems to be most important to our leaders today is to push back the gains, benefits and amenities afforded to the working class over the last 75 years and not the capture of Osama bin Laden.

And unless a chorus of opposition is heard, over the next few years, the citizenry will be scratching their collective heads, wondering how their politicians did it to them again. Well, here is the memo: It is called forgetting the past. –David R. Tolson, author, scholar

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Indian reservations on both U.S. borders become drug pipelines

Bear Buffalo Hawk shield

Like any young man on the Tohono O'odham Indian reservation on the border with Mexico, Clayton Antone can reel off the going rate for smuggling a load of marijuana into the U.S.

"You get $2,000 for a 45-minute drive," Antone said.

The Mexican and Canadian shiny pick-up trucks and late-model SUVs outside the homes of unemployed Indians on the reservation suggest that some have acted on the math.

Traffickers in Mexico and Canada increasingly are using Indian reservations along the borders as conduits for bringing marijuana, Ecstasy and other illicit drugs into the U.S. The drug gangs take advantage of weak and underfunded tribal police forces and the remoteness of tribal lands, and they find that high unemployment rates and resentment of federal law enforcement agencies make some young native Americans ready allies.

Drug seizures on the tribal lands have risen sharply. In 2005, law enforcement agents made 292 seizures totaling 67 tons of marijuana. By 2009, they tallied 1,066 seizures totaling more than 159 tons.

Cocaine also is moving in. On June 11, the U.S. attorney for Arizona indicted nine Tohono people on trafficking charges, ending a five-month probe in which undercover agents made 39 buys totaling over 250 grams of cocaine.

The U.S. Justice Department is closely watching on two reservations where it says the problems are most acute: the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation in upstate New York and the Tohono O'odham Reservation in Arizona.

As much as 20 percent of all the high-potency marijuana grown in Canada each year is smuggled through the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation, according to the National Drug Intelligence Center's 2010 drug threat assessment report.

Drug gangs smuggle 5 percent to 10 percent of all the marijuana produced in Mexico through the Tohono O'odham Reservation in Arizona, it adds.

The Mohawk reservation includes about 20 miles, or half a percent of the 3,987-mile U.S. border with Canada (not including Alaska), while the Tohono O'odham tribal lands take up about 75 miles, or 4 percent of the 1,933-mile border with Mexico.

The Tohono O'odham Police Department employs some 65 officers, yet they must cover a sprawling Sonoran Desert reservation the size of Connecticut. Roads are good, but communities are far apart.

"It takes an officer at least two hours to respond in some cases, depending on the locale," said Timothy Joaquin, a tribal council member on the security committee that oversees public safety issues.

Compounding problems, the tribal population is only 27,000 — really a large extended family. Those involved in the drug trade aren't distant neighbors but a friend's cousin, or one's own relative, and loyalty runs deep.

"I know people who actually go to Mexico and bring the drugs across," said Antone, who works at the Tribal Youth Council, which helps young people find jobs, and he doesn't condone the smuggling he sees around him. "Everybody knows who's doing it."

Those involved know the back roads and trails better than do the Border Patrol agents who police the reservation for illegal migrants and smugglers. They're also familiar with when the agents take breaks, change shifts and use sniffer dogs at the checkpoints on the three roads leading out of the tribal area.

Tohono smugglers send spotters out to the Border Patrol checkpoints to see when it's safe to pass along the route.

"They'll send the message, 'There's no K-9. Come on through,'" Antone said.

Joaquin, the council member, said a trip around tribal land suggests that something doesn't quite add up.

"You think, 'how can somebody who's not employed afford such a good vehicle?'" he said.

At one village, Al-Jek, less than a mile from the border, where a special type of fencing allows the passage of livestock and people but not vehicles, Angelita Castillo said a few hamlets are deeply involved, such as nearby Pisinemo.

"Some of us who are here, we try to keep away from it," Castillo said.

The trafficking is in people as well as drugs, and the Tohono O'odham reservation pays dearly. Mexican migrants leave trash strewn across the desert, break into homes in search of food, receive treatment at the tribal health services clinic and impose a burden on tribal police. The tribe has paid for autopsies for more than 50 migrants found dead on its land.

"They find tons of trash that these individuals leave behind, backpacks and clothes. They've stolen so many bicycles," said Frances G. Antone, a member of the Tohono legislative council who's distantly related to Clayton Antone.

Legal experts say Washington bears some blame for what has happened.

"The quality of law enforcement on all tribal lands is generally weak," said Kevin Washburn, the dean of the University of New Mexico law school in Albuquerque. "It is primarily a federal responsibility, and the federal government's commitment has been weak.

Roughly 2,500 miles northeast, severe environmental pollution and economic dislocation have afflicted the 22-square-mile St. Regis Mohawk Reservation in upstate New York.

"The Mohawks basically had their traditional economies destroyed by General Motors and Alcoa polluting the land with PCBs," said David Stoddard, a spokesman for the tribal government.

Three foundries and plants that the companies operated, beginning in the 1950s, have become Superfund sites to clean up polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, a contaminant that's gotten into mothers' milk on the reservation.

Each year, federal agents say, as much as a billion dollars of hydroponically grown marijuana and other drugs move through the reservation, which straddles the St. Lawrence Seaway. Some drugs, particularly cocaine, are smuggled north.

"Multiple tons of high-potency marijuana are smuggled through the St. Regis Mohawk Reservation each week by Native American (drug trafficking organizations)," the drug threat assessment report said.

In warmer weather, smugglers use speedboats and Jet Skis to zip across the river, turning to snowmobiles when the river ices over in winter. Montreal is a 90-minute drive, while New York City is a straight shot down Interstate 87. Amid new busts on the reservation, Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., proposed last December that 10 years be added to the term of any drug trafficker if they use Indian lands. The proposal hasn't yet become law. -Bear Warrior

Source: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/



photo: Native American Elders & Warriors

Indian reservations on both U.S. borders become drug pipelines 3

"I've been fortunate to have traveled many places to develop a basic understanding, which really becomes complex when you include all of the First Nations. The situations that compel Native people to engage in such commerce cannot simply be explained or rationalize solely from a european perspective. Speaking for myself, I would characterize that the experiment of greed called America needs to come to an end. Just as an alcoholic in arrogant denial needs to hit bottom to realize what they have wasted.


When I say America, I refer to a government focused upon control and greed. When I hear someone say tribal leaders, I automatically assume they are talking about those created by the government, not the traditional leaders. The ability to truly govern, as our inherent right, is greatly compromised to the extent that these so-called tribal leaders, despite their intentions often concedes to the dictates of the government. There is a serious degree of misunderstanding that we have no reason to not partake of the "American Pie". Yes, we can assimilate, and many have to the extent they have bought into the genocidal mentality that we all should be Americans. However, as Winona LaDuke so simply stated, "We don't want a piece of the same pie. We want a different Pie!"


That is a voice of one who has not accepted her status as being conquered, and it echo's the voice's of many, including myself. Until a majority of the public awaken from their complacency and political apathy, and we as First nation can begin to manifest ourselves in solidarity, we are still a ways off from achieving any sense of equality. Our only source of empowerment is through our prayers for balance to be restored. We cannot allow the sea of negativity that surrounds us to become our anchors. We have to keep moving forward." - Ben Carnes

Mohawk traditional village

"When I spoke of the Mohawk Tribal Government I meant the one that partly represents the interests of the nation but also represents the federal government as an arm of their law enforcement and also gave up a lot of sovereignty in exchange for a casino in Akwesasne that does not bring in lots of money for the tribe. I have a long association with the Mohawk people that spans about 40 years. I once participated in a longhouse tobacco ceremony at Racketts point in Akwesasne and I was at OKA. I have many longtime friends there and probably know more about what is going on more than most any other non-Mohawk. I have friends who I know are good men but the fact that pot coming in from Canada is, once it is smuggled across the border sold for huge amounts of money in NYC and elsewhere tempted lots of people who because of the geographical location of the nation found out they could make thousands of dollars for a nights work. They are good men and should not be in prison. I hope you will not think I don't know what I am talking about and I love the Mohawk people and would gladly die to help them if it came to it." - John Penley
 
"I suspected that you did since you are in NY state and your political views indicates that you would be somewhat familiar. My point was more to many others who feel that only the government created tribal councils system are "legitimate" extensions of the First nations, when they are in actuality an extension of the US government. I often have debates with my own people who tell me that I am an American when to do so is a form of self-deception to my beliefs. I also adhere to the spirit of free will in which people will have to make up their own mind. That is all that I have ever done, even when I was a spokesperson for Leonard Peltier. The FBI has accused me of deceiving the public, when I only tell them the facts of the case and quite often, if not consistently, encourage them to check out the facts for themselves.


I'm sure that we sure some of the same friends from Akwesasne, and possibly a few other places. I've shared my experiences with many others in my travels about the confederacy and the Great Law as a means of rebuilding our nations that have been crippled by the governments policies from treaty making to acts of congress.


The process of assimilation has altered us from our perceptions of other humans as relatives, to one of nationalism, has resulted in an indoctrination to where we call our relatives, illegal immigrants, is so repugnant to me. It is a system of divide and conquer that has been practiced for centuries and refined through many public institutions. So if a Mohawk chooses to remain home on the reservation, it is their right to remain at home and survive in the best way that he can.


The law being considered to add 10 more years in prison, is a essentially a law to punish one for being Native. Which is nothing new since we have had to deal with the code of religious offenses in the 1800's, long hair in schools and prisons to this day. So we have been engaged in a struggle to survive, and there is no law that will ever make us stop." - Ben Carnes

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Mothers of Africa


"The restoration of Africa is fundamental and crucial to the continuation of this planet, and the stability of governments, cultures, and economies. Ignorance of this houses suicidal thoughts that feed no one." -Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of the Drum

Mother Earth in moonlight

Monday, February 8, 2010

The Jew as Money Lender

Sermon delivered March 11, 2005, by Rabbi Barry H. Block

Next month, my family will gather to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of my grandfather, Irvin Shlenker, of blessed memory. My grandfather died when I was eight years old, so I did not have the opportunity to know him well. Even at that young age, though, I knew that Irvin Shlenker was a legendary figure in the Houston Jewish community. He seems to have been President of just about every Houston Jewish institution, and to have been the first Jewish person to lead several organizations in the wider community.


Professionally, my grandfather was bank president. However, I have been told that he was far too generous and soft-hearted for the tastes of the bank Board. It's not entirely clear to me whether he occasionally lent the bank's money, without appropriate approval, or whether he would lend his own money when the Board said “no.” At the very least, he often talked the Board into making loans against their better judgment.

In the years following my grandfather's death, when I was still a child, I was occasionally approached by older Jewish folks with thick accents. They would tell me that they could never have made it in America, had my grandfather not believed in them and given them their start. One man, a Holocaust survivor who went on to become a very successful furrier, continues to contact me and other family members, more than three decades after my grandfather's death, to tell us what a difference my grandfather made in his life. Irvin Shlenker lent him money when nobody else would do so.

Whether he was familiar with the teaching or not, my grandfather regularly performed what Rabbi Moses Maimonides declared to be the highest form of tzedakah, or righteous giving: He helped other people to help themselves. The truth be told, though, none of the recipients of my grandfather's loans has ever credited him with an act of charity. None has ever suggested that Irvin Shlenker, the banker, didn't charge interest on those loans. Yes, they say he would accept slower payments when times were tough. Yes, I've heard that he wasn't always right when he believed a person would succeed with the loan, so either he or the bank wouldn't always be repaid. But yes, too, he always charged interest.

Each year, on Yom Kippur afternoon, our own congregation's recognized authority in finance, our Past President Mickey Roth, reads the holiness code, from Leviticus 19. When he offers the verse commanding that laborers be paid on the same day of their work, Mickey opines that the Torah acknowledges the time value of money. Delayed wages aren't worth as much as salaries paid in a timely fashion. The fact that a dollar today is worth more than a dollar next year is the basis for charging interest on loans.

Other evidence from the Torah, though, suggests that God abhors the idea of charging interest, and that our ancestors might not have been so aware of money's time value.

Tonight we observe Shabbat Shekalim, the Sabbath on which we read that section you just heard from Exodus 30, about the poll tax our ancient ancestors paid at the Temple. Although this passage really doesn't have to do with giving or lending, here in San Antonio, Shabbat Shekalim has become the customary annual occasion to remember the good work of the Hebrew Free Loan Society.

The idea of interest-free loans, given by Jews to Jews, comes from a passage in Deuteronomy: “You shall not lend on interest to your countryman . . . You may charge interest to a foreigner, but not to your countryman, that the Lord, your God, may bless you . . .” In this context, the distinction between “countryman” and “foreigner” is correctly interpreted as meaning that interest may not be charged to fellow Jews, but only to gentiles.

My grandfather, then, would seem to have been less righteous than the furrier suggests, and certainly not scrupulous in his observance of Torah.

As we study our ancient Rabbis' understandings of the commandment not to charge interest to fellow Jews, though, we begin to realize that the kinds of loans they contemplated were very different from the loans on which most of us pay interest. In the ancient mind, loans were to be offered to those who were in desperate need, who did not have food to eat or a roof over their heads. A loan was indeed a form of tzedakah, of righteous charitable giving, for the lender, even if repaid, would sacrifice the time value of the money lent. In many cases, the lender might not actually have expected to be repaid. However, the borrower could accept this kind of tzedakah, head held high, with the intention, often fulfilled, of repaying the loan.

Only in modern times have people really come to understand that money has time value. Therefore, charging interest for loans was considered to be immoral, as though one were charging for tzedakah, until the last couple of hundred years. Today, of course, banking is a perfectly legitimate and honorable way to make a living. People take loans, on interest, because we want to buy things, like a house, which we can't afford to purchase in cash. Also, businesses take loans in order to get a start or to expand. Without access to capital, loaned on interest, people would not be able to achieve their fondest dreams or their most noble goals in life.

The same was true during the Middle Ages, long before anybody acknowledged the fact of the time value of money. Feudal lords, for example, needed money to plant their crops, at a season when they might not have much cash on hand. At the same period of time, Jews were generally not permitted to own or work the land, which was really the only way to support a family back then. With regret, Jews often turned to the practice of lending money to gentiles on interest. The Torah permitted the practice, but Jewish money lenders knew that their business was viewed as less than noble. Moreover, the practice of money lending often cast Jews in a bad light, in the eyes of their Christian neighbors. Too many times in our history, Jewish people were persecuted, even murdered or expelled from their homes, when the Christians to whom they lent money could not repay the loans. Even more often, when wealthy medieval lords faced an economic crunch, they continued to live high on the hog, while their serfs suffered. When the poor workers would begin to rebel, they would be told not to blame the wealthy Christian land owners, but rather that the fault rested with supposedly greedy Jewish money lenders. Inevitably, a pogrom would ensue, as understandably angry serfs, their rage displaced, would attack the Jewish village. Tragically, these violent outbreaks of anti-Semitism were not isolated and did not end in the pre-modern era. Hitler, too, utilized calumnies against Jewish bankers to stir up anti-Semitism among his people and to justify genocide.

The Jewish people need not be ashamed of our history as money lenders to gentiles in medieval Europe. The oppressors offered our ancestors very few legitimate methods of earning a living, and in fact needed Jewish money lenders. In some times, and in some places, Jews were highly valued and greatly respected by European nobles who knew they could not achieve their goals and feed their people without borrowing money on interest from Jews.

We may delight, too, in our tradition of loaning money without interest to those in need. Our local Hebrew Free Loan Society continues to do that good work today. Surely, as individuals, we may well want to extend that method of tzedakah to needy people of every race and nation. Loans, more than gifts, offer great dignity to the recipient, whether or not interest is charged.

Whenever we run across a person who may need assistance, be that person a Jew or not, let us remember the wisdom of Maimonides, even as I recall the example of my grandfather, of blessed memory. When we help another person to become self-sufficient, sustaining that person's dignity, we engage in the highest form of tzedakah, the greatest level of righteousness.

Amen.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

an AMERICAN PILE OF SHIT


There was a Pied Piper who said: “We live in the greatest country in the world. Help me change it!”
And the people said, “Change is good!”
Then he said, “We are going to tax the rich fat-cats,”…
And the people said “Sock it to them, and redistribute their wealth.”
And the people said, “Show me the money!”
And then he said, “Redistribution of wealth is good for everybody”
And Joe the plumber said, are you kidding me?”
And Joe’s personal records were hacked and publicized.
And one lone reporter asked, “Isn’t that Marxist policy?”
And she was banished from the kingdom!
Then someone asked, “With no foreign relations experience, how will you deal with radical terrorists?”
And the Pied Piper said, “Simple. I’ll sit down and talk with them and show them how nice we really are and they’ll forget that they ever wanted to kill us all!”
Then the Pied Piper said, “I’ll give 95% of you lower taxes.”
And one, lone voice said, “But 40% of us don’t pay ANY taxes.”

So the Pied Piper said, “Then I’ll give you some of the taxes the fat-cats pay!”
And the people said, “Show me the money!”
Then the Pied Piper said, “I’ll tax your Capital Gains when you sell your homes!”
And the people yawned and the slumping housing market collapsed.
And he said, “I’ll mandate employer- funded health care for EVERY worker and raise the minimum wage.”
And the people said, “Gim’me some of that!”
Then he said, “I’ll penalize employers who ship jobs overseas.”
And the people said, “Where’s my rebate check?”
Then the Pied Piper actually said, “I’ll bankrupt the coal industry and electricity rates will skyrocket!”


And the people said, “Coal is dirty, coal is evil, no more coal! But we don’t care for that part about higher electric rates.” So the Pied Piper said, “Not to worry. If your rebate isn’t enough to cover your expenses, we’ll bail you out. Just sign up with ACORN and your troubles are over!” Then he said, “Illegal immigrants feel scorned and slighted. Let’s grant them amnesty, Social Security, free education, free lunches, free medical care, bi-lingual signs and guaranteed housing.”



And the people said, “Ole`! Bravo!” And they made him King!


And so it came to pass that employers, facing spiraling costs and ever-higher taxes, raised their prices and laid off workers. Others simply gave up and went out of business and the economy slowed even further. Then the Pied Piper said, “I am the Messiah and I’m here to save you! We’ll just print more money so everyone will have enough!” But our foreign trading partners said, “Wait a minute. Your dollar isn’t worth what it was. You’ll have to pay more.”


And the people said, “Wait a minute. That’s not fair!”


And the world said, “Neither are these other, idiotic programs you’ve embraced. You’ve become a Socialist state and a second-rate power. Now you’ll play by our rules!”
And the people said, “What have we done?”
But it was too late.
If you think this is a fairy tale, open your eyes and ears. It’s happening RIGHT NOW! -Author unknown


photo by Apparition Photography

Thursday, January 7, 2010

ATHLETE



 Dangling in front of young gifted athletes are promises uttered by promoters who only see profit, and ratings, and fans who feign admiration for them, and cast them aside at the slighest provocation sometimes, or other times when the feeling passes on to the next batch.  Players are commodities.  How they are in their lives matters only to those who love them. If we love our children as much as we claim it behooves us to learn how to guide their spirits until they are able to walk the path they agreed to walk before they were born.  But how is that possible if we are not on the path we are supposed to be upon? -Gregory E. Woods

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

ELDER TALK: TIGER WOODS




I disagree. I include myself among the masses who know nothing of Tiger Woods' inner life. Marriage is a revelatory arrangement. It is a covenant altered over the span of the globe, and history by the understanding of each tribe or culture's relationship with the Earth energies of their homeland, and their understanding of the Creative forces of the Creator. Marriage primarily serves two masters: economics and intimacy. This brother and sister relationship has had to submit itself to laws that contain the fiery passions of our need for intimacy, and vulnerability, and the economic realities of surviving, and in wealthy countries, like the United States, living above and beyond mere existence.

Most of Tiger Woods’ detractors are coming out of the woodwork, cowardly, because they have found a weakness within the giant, the impeccable giant they fear because the level of impeccability developed within Tiger Woods lies dormant within average people. Everyone who has trained their minds, bodies, spirits, and molded their emotions into a mature state recognize the fragility of being too comfortable with their strengths. Weakness is part of every giant, and every weakness requires observation, and work, and weakness requires a sacred space to develop into strength. Where does a man like Tiger Woods go for sanctuary? Who creates sacred place for him? Who provides a spiritual covering for him? Who can he confide in exposing the deeper chambers of his being without a Delilah showing his weakness to the jowls of the raging beasts outside of his domain?

The greatest challenge as an American celebrity is privacy, and the deep level of disrespect accorded them by average under-achievers who call themselves fans. Tiger Woods’ fan base is composed of a life-force fed by a business that feeds gossips, and into the minds of people who worship mediocrity speculation replaces objectivity, compassion, understanding, and in the end a better soul is not nourished into its higher destiny.

Black Americans have profound trouble in the arena of identity. African-American, the title worn fought a hard battle to be accepted by a people defined by a color, a subservient mentality, and a deep sense of not belonging. Deep into dysfunctional relationships with white Americans there has not been a pause taken advantage of to access the soul loss of a people who despise any blood allegiance of Black Americans who recognize their Native-American, Asian, White, Brazilian or any other bloodlines. It is a bitter truth. And for Black American’s to stand on the world stage and condemn Tiger Woods for not having black lovers is the high definition of a jacked-up paradigm, a testament of soul loss, and the clearest indicator of our inability to become a major world player of power.

Our criticism of Tiger Woods is revelatory, and places us beneath the butt of countless jokes behind our backs, and in the eye of insightful criticism on the world stage. –Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories


Elders Gathering in Greenland 2009