My State Of The Union Address

REGARDING THE TRUE STATE OF THE UNION

What are we going to do?

What are we going to do?

Our country is populated by masses who are reacting as best they can to forces they do not understand, and largely do not wish to understand. It is far easier to hope for the best, dismiss the most alarming cries of warning, and trust those powerful who have proven, consistently and for at least a century, unworthy of trust. It is far easier to get away with whatever they can, just as the system does. The people are selectively held accountable far more easily and far more often than the system is.

The presidency is the office of a puppet-figurehead. The congress is a group of citizens who both avoid and misuse knowledge to retain what power and wealth they possess. They are consistently misinformed and misrepresented by the other branches of government. The most powerful force, the most powerful and influential “branch of governing power” in the country is not a branch of government at all, for if it were, it would be far too accountable to the people: the cartel of private banks, domestic and foreign, including the one that controls the entire wealth of this nation, and has now for at least one hundred years.

There is no question that these forces, using government, are prepared to “protect” us from all threats by controlling us, through whatever means necessary, including force of overwhelming soldiery and arms. There is no question that they have lied, misinformed, covered up their machinations, withheld vital information,, and misrepresented their “constituencies.” There is no question that they have planned to unite with the powerful of the world to attempt control the world and all its peoples. There is no question that they have murdered, attacked the innocent, attacked their own people, and manipulated the will of the people, sometimes staging elections that no more result in the people's choice than mass suicide would. There is no question that those who control the most information and the greatest number of weapons and their operators are prepared to use them against any and all who would object to their control.

Ours is very, very far from a free people in a free country.

We must recognize that freedom, control of our own destinies, is worth every and any sacrifice. How is it that we no longer believe that? How is it that we do not see how enslaved we have become to a system that finally leaves us with nothing but a legacy of such enslavement? The phenomenon of the gradually-heated frog is the most reasonable answer.


REGARDING AN ORDERLY TRANSITION TO A TRADITIONAL AMERICAN GOVERNMENT

Republicans tell the people that they are more able to take care of themselves than they really are. Democrats tell the people that they are less able to do so. Republicans reason that a small group of them should therefore do as they please with their power and let the rest of us sink or swim. Democrats reason that a large group of them should therefore do as they please with their power and make the rest of us sink or swim. Other groups have been unable to gain enough collective power to overcome these extremes in favor of a true government of, by, and for the people.

There is no reason the people could not regain control of their government. There is every reason they would not want to, because of several things they tend to believe. It is a society of self-interest from the most powerful man in the world (whoever that is) down to the most depraved and deprived man. Yet there are many who somehow retain a sense of social morality and responsibility. It is these who must recognize the current need for a truly benign (if at all possible) and benevolent (by all means) transition to a society of relative goodness.

Cancerous beliefs within our society have grown both naturally and with the careful cultivation of the self-interested powerful over half or more of our short history. Among them are that the system, as it is, is either interested in or capable of protecting the interests of the people. Another is that the system is so powerful that any attempts at changing it substantially would be met with overwhelming and deadly force. The deadly part is all too true; the overwhelming part all too false. They are far outnumbered, and the military is populated by people who do not want to kill themselves or their neighbors. Unfortunately, it is led by people who are into the power trip and a vague notion of “the national security” and “the national interest.”

So far, military personnel on the domestic front lines seek to be proper by obeying orders about which they are often uneasy. When they have ended up doing the unthinkable under orders, whatever their personal motives, we seldom hear from them in the aftermath. Our collective beliefs as a people, military and others, must change to be more commensurate with those upon which our nation was founded.

I am reminded of a quote from a movie, given among other comments by a blogger named “Pudge” in this April, 2009 entry:

There's a great line by Mel Gibson in The Patriot, during the Revolution: "why would I trade one tyrant 3,000 miles away for 3,000 tyrants one mile away?" (Unfortunately, today, a better comparison would be "3,000 tyrants 3,000 miles away.") Gibson's character -- based on Francis Marion, from whom my father's middle name came -- continued, "An elected legislature can trample a man's rights as easily as a king can."
Even if you have representation, that doesn't make you free. You can have all the representation in the world and it doesn't matter if you aren't free. Freedom is actually being able to do as you please, and a legislature -- be it Parliament or Congress -- that is destructive to that end should be altered or abolished by the People.
Some people don't care about being free. Some people just want to be taken care of. They can be bought off with cheap tea. We can't.”

Surely a transition, even an orderly transition, to a new system that is more attuned to both the local and national will of the people is possible. Surely such a transition is desirable. There can be no more sacrifice, loss, pain, suffering, threat from outside, bloodshed, or chaos in it than what we have already paid as a nation, and usually for far less precious a payoff. Surely these sacrifices were worthy only in the name of freedom. And surely one requirement of such a transition is the ability and will of the common people of the nation to defend themselves, and whatever constitution they adopt, “against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”
Will those who are, and who seek to be in control, allow an orderly transition? Perhaps, but only (1) if they have no other choice, and (2) if sufficient generations remain dedicated to the goal. More likely, when one considers history, true change can only come about through violence. Since military technology makes it possible for a handful of soldiers to eradicate hundreds of thousands or more, the American people must be realistic and courageous enough to risk and accept tremendous loss of life in a fight for their freedom.