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Dobharchú

offline 142 friends
joined on 11/27/04
last updated 04/09/08
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My Testimonials

March 8, 2008
The bestest brother ever!! Not just my brother becuase we share the same genetic source but because we are kindred spirits. His wonderful sense of adventure, fun and endless imagination took me on many wonderful trips while on loooong family road trips. Love you always!!
June 15, 2007
Otter is a super-nice, laid back Papa of Papa's. He is endlessly in love with his kids and I love to watch his family blossom like spring flowers. I'd say all sorts of nice things about Jody, too, but this isn't here profile. Jody's a rock-solid lady!
March 16, 2005
One of the most honorale, loving, men i've ever met, when I'm lost he helps me to find my way (even if its just a swift kick in kazoo followed by a shot a whiskey).....Not a hard man to know and trust. And funnneeee
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Blood

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My FaerieWorlds Family

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My Friends

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ALIVE!!!

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Freagarthach the Answerer

This is my next tattoo. Just the sword, not the whole thing.
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Enter my mind (Please wipe your feet)

Gender
Male
Age
38
Location
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I was Gaffer on this video

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I was Best Boy Grip on this.

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I was Best Boy Electric on this

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Otter Tracks (my blog)

I found this article in the new issue of Conscious Choice (Seattle) It struck a very deep cord with me and shows the root of so much that is wrong with our country.

seattle.consciouschoice.com/2007....html

September 2007
The Good($) Life
What’s the economy for, anyway?
By John de Graaf

Not long ago, I talked with one of the world’s richest people. One day, one transaction alone earned him hundreds of millions of dollars. A compassionate man, he was troubled. “Since the Bush tax cuts I pay a smaller percentage of my income in taxes than my secretary does,” he said. “I think that’s wrong.”

I think he’s right.

I first met Selena Allen last year. She had a sad story to tell. A mother of two from Kent, Washington, Selena and her husband work tag-team shifts because they can’t afford full-time childcare. They earn barely enough to pay the bills for a modest house and lifestyle, even though both work forty-hour weeks and Selena is a college graduate.

But the worst part of the story was that when Selena’s second son was born premature, she had to leave him in the hospital and return to work three days after giving birth. With no paid maternity leave, she could only afford to take one month off with him and wanted to do that when he came home.

She was choked up, her brown eyes watering, when she told me about it. I was too. Working on my most recent film, The Motherhood Manifesto, I found that Selena’s story wasn’t exceptional.

In the August 2007 issue of National Geographic, there’s a map of the world. It shows who gets paid childbirth leave and who doesn’t. We don’t. What’s most shocking is that all but five countries in the world guarantee paid childbirth leave, at least for mothers. And the United States, the richest of all, doesn’t.

Short Americans

Recently, another article caught my eye. It seems a Princeton University study has discovered that Americans are getting shorter. Shorter? Well, not in absolute terms, but compared to Europeans. Half a century ago, we Americans were the world’s tallest people. Now we’re shorter than most Europeans, more than two inches shorter than the Dutch or the Danes. In every European country, people have been growing faster than we are, and the study controls for the effects of immigration or racial diversity.

So who cares? After all, I’m short myself. Napoleon was short. But the article explains that average height is a powerful indicator of the social health of a society. It tells you how well infants are provided for. So it figures that the Dutch and the Danes also rank on top in a study of child welfare in industrial countries released last February by UNICEF. The U.S., by contrast, ranks 20th of 21 nations studied. Whoa!

America the Short? Next to last in child welfare? Are we talking trends here? What’s going on?

Remember that big sign that James Carville posted in Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign war room: “It’s the economy, stupid!?”

He should have said, “It’s a stupid economy.”

Constrasting Economic Policies

For most of the past 35 years, the United States has pursued an ideologically-driven economic strategy markedly different from that of nearly all western European nations.

From 1932 until 1972, the United States used government policies to increase economic opportunities for the poor, the middle-class, women and minorities. Wages kept pace with increases in productivity.

But since then, and especially since Ronald Reagan declared that “government cannot be the solution because government is the problem,” we’ve followed a different path, toward what has sometimes been described as “market fundamentalism.” Increasingly, in the name of “personal responsibility,” our policies require more and more Americans to provide privately for their own economic security. For most of us, the “ownership society,” emphasizing privatization, de-regulation and massive tax cuts for the wealthy, is really a you’re on your ownership society. We’ve cut taxes dramatically for wealthier Americans, privatized and de-regulated large sections of the economy.

But to make America better, President Bush tells us, we must do even more of these things, making tax cuts for the wealthy permanent and abolishing the estate tax, for example.

By contrast, most northern and western European countries have followed a different path they call “the social contract.” To work well, they argue, markets need strong rules, an activist government and powerful protections for the rights of workers and consumers. For the most part, the Europeans have continued to strengthen their social safety nets, offering increasingly generous unemployment compensation, old age pensions, paid family leave, long vacations and other benefits such as universal health care.

Who Comes Out On Top?

Two different approaches. It seems fair to ask which one has worked better.

And that question leads to another, more fundamental one: What’s the economy for, anyway? How much stock can we take in the Dow Jones? Is the Gross Domestic Product the measure of happiness? Is the good life the goods life?

If so, then our way seems a winner. U.S. per capita GDP (the value of all goods and services sold on the market each year) is still 30 percent higher than the average in Western Europe, just as it was a generation ago. We’ve got bigger homes (and more storage lockers for what doesn’t fit into them), bigger cars and more high-definition televisions.

But what if we measure success by the happiness, health, fairness and security economies provide for their people?

Lately, I’ve been comparing statistical data, trying to see how countries are doing when it comes to health, quality of life, justice and sustainability (see sidebar).

They show that since conservative policies like tax cuts for the rich have triumphed, Americans’ quality of life, economic security and environmental sustainability have all declined in comparison to Europe.

Wealthy, But Not Healthy

We used to be among the more egalitarian and healthy nations, for example. But now, our rich-poor gap has become the widest chasm in the industrial world, with the majority of economic gains over the past generation going to the top 10 percent of the population. The Republican economic revolution has produced a gush-up instead of the promised “trickle-down.” A new study, supported in part by the conservative American Enterprise Institute and Heritage Foundation, finds that Americans actually have only about one-half to one-third as much chance as Europeans of escaping low-income lives and rising to the top.

As Michael Moore makes clear in his powerful new film, Sicko, Americans are now far less healthy than Europeans, despite spending twice as much for healthcare per person. In fact, we spend nearly half the world’s total health care budget, an amount that will reach 20 percent of our GDP by 2010 — with worse outcomes than anywhere in Western Europe.

Amazingly, all of that spending counts as a plus when it comes to GDP. But the healthy leisure that Europeans enjoy — lingering meals and café conversations, long walks and bike rides — count only as wasted time, adding not a single point to the GDP. La dolce vita, by that measure, is for losers.

Which countries come out on top in quality of life measures? It’s the Nordic and northern continental European nations, those that combine a strong social safety net with shorter working hours, high but progressive tax rates and strong environmental regulations.

But those high-tax European economies are bad for business, right? Actually, it turns out that the Economist magazine ranks Denmark, Finland and the Netherlands as having a better business environment than the U.S., even though all three pay higher wages and have far stronger social safety nets. American business leaders know you can make money in Europe. They invest four times as much each year in Germany than they do in China and more in Belgium than in India.

The conservative revolution is a proven failure and the working definition of insanity is to keep doing the same things hoping for a different result.

If we want to build societies that really work, we need to ask, “What’s the economy for, anyway?” And then we need to separate the real results from the myths, shed a little of our American hubris and start looking at how other countries are actually edging us out by providing policies that succeed. That way lies a happier, healthier, more just and sustainable world.

John de Graaf is the co-producer of the popular PBS special Affluenza and co-author of Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic. He is President of the Take Back Your Time campaign (timeday.org) and organizer of the upcoming What’s The Economy For Anyway? conference in Washington DC., October 5-7.
Mon, September 17, 2007 - 10:38 AM permalink - 2 comments
 
I'm almost One year old and they haven't sold me to the gypsies yet!
Tue, April 17, 2007 - 4:41 PM permalink - 6 comments
 
I am the Sun card. The light of the Sun reveals all. The Sun is joyful and bright, without fear or reservation. The childish nature of the Sun allows you to play and feel free. Exploration can truly take place in the light of day when nothing is hidden. The Sun's rays fill you with energy so that you may live life to its fullest, milking pleasure out of each day. Such joy and energy can bring wealth and physical pleasure. To shine in the light of day is to have confidence, to soak up its rays is to feel the freedom of a child.

22248 other people got this result!
This quiz has been taken 163474 times.
14% of people had this result.
quizilla.com/users/Koshari/quizzes/
Fri, April 14, 2006 - 2:44 PM permalink - 0 comments
 
This last Friday, Octavia Butler, local author and the only Science Fiction writer to ever recieve the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Genius Grant, died suddenly from a head wound recieved in a fall outside her Lake Forest Park home. Her most recognized work is probably "Kindred," a time travel story taking a young black woman from the present day back to the pre-civil war South. But what I will always remember her for is the "Parable" series. These books, "Parable of the Sower" and "Parabel of the Talents" truely changed my life and the way I interacted with everything and everyone in it. And just for the profound way that these books touched me, will I say nothing more of them except that most everyone should read them and the rest MUST read them. I leave you with a small but appropriate taste of her work.

From "Parable of the Talents"

From EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING

Darkness
Gives shape to the light
As light
Shapes the darkness.
Death
Gives shape to life
As life
Shapes death.
The universe
And God
Share this wholeness,
Each
Defining the other.
God
Gives shape to the universe
As the universe
Shapes God.

FROM Memories of Other Worlds
By Taylor Franklin Bankole

I have read that the period of upheaval that journalists have begun to refer to as "the Apocalypse" or more commonly, more bitterly, "the Pox" lasted from 2015 through 2030—a decade and a half of chaos. This is untrue. The Pox has been a much longer torment. It began well before 2015, perhaps even before the turn of the millennium. It has not ended.

I have also read that the Pox was caused by accidentally coinciding climatic, economic, and sociological crises. It would be more honest to say that the Pox was caused by our own refusal to deal with obvious problems in those areas. We caused the problems: then we sat and watched as they grew into crises. I have heard people deny this, but I was born in 1970. I have seen enough to know that it is true. I have watched education become more a privilege of the rich than the basic necessity that it must be if civilized society is to survive. I have watched as convenience, profit, and inertia excused greater and more dangerous environmental degradation. I have watched poverty, hunger, and disease become inevitable for more and more people.

Overall, the Pox has had the effect of an installment-plan World War III. In fact, there were several small, bloody shooting wars going on around the world during the Pox. These were stupid affairs—wastes of life and treasure. They were fought, ostensibly, to defend against vicious foreign enemies. All too often, they were actually fought because inadequate leaders did not know what else to do. Such leaders knew that they could depend on fear, suspicion, hatred, need, and greed to arouse patriotic support for war.

Amid all this, somehow, the United States of America suffered a major nonmilitary defeat. It lost no important war, yet it did not survive the Pox. Perhaps it simply lost sight of what it once intended to be, then blundered aimlessly until it exhausted itself.

What is left of it now, what it has become, I do not know.
Tue, February 28, 2006 - 2:57 AM permalink - 5 comments
 
The last time I posted, I was feeling pretty damn sorry for my self. But amazingly, the universe does have ears! Soon after I posted I got a job on a small film which led to a job on a bigger film which led to a job on a BIGGER film. >!CoughToriSpelling'sinitCough!< Now, our problems have switched from, "We're broke and you're out of work hanging out on the net all day!" to "You work so damn much, we never get to see you!" Well, I'm leaving to go on location in Astoria for two weeks and the film biz slows down in the winter around here. So, by the time I get back and sleep till noon three days in a row, everything should balance out.(for a wile) Here's hoping.
Mon, October 10, 2005 - 5:20 PM permalink - 4 comments
 
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members » Dobharchú link to this profile: http://people.tribe.net/otter