Saturday, March 12, 2011

Eating Our Own Tails

I was watching Cheyenne at the beach the other day where she found a leathery piece of something dead and nasty and very tasty. My theory in these situations is to let chewing dogs chew, after all she is a dog and it is in her nature to hunt and chew and she might as well be a happy dog. Besides, putting my hand into her slavering jaw with all that smelly dead stuff is out of the question.This business of chewing stuff to pieces put me in mind unaccountably of our own economic situation and more especially the fate of cafeteria workers in the local school district, or all people. The schools' superintendent announced unilaterally he is privatizing the cafeterias and putting them out to bid by July 1st. And in fact teams of hungry cafeteria corporations have been seen prowling various schools eager to sop up the service. The school board then announced that the superintendent had violated protocol by not consulting them ahead of time, but shows no sign of stopping the process. Here's the really funny thing- the cafeteria service turned a profit of a quarter million dollars last year! The theory is that the 47 workers may get rehired by the private contractor with a pay cut and no benefits, this despite their profitability. I don't get the point of killing jobs especially in a small isolated communities like Key West. Wayne was talking to me the other day about where he sees the US economy going and he sees us all at a crossroads. We can either follow the path of tearing down all jobs and wages and destroying benefits, or we consider aspiring to raise wages and benefits to at least the levels of the public sector unions. Which incidentally is not a wage scale that will make you wealthy. The question is: if the private sector prefers to pay dividends over paying a living wage, who benefits? If there is no secure retirement, how does the younger generation get a foot in the employment door? If we have no health benefits, if insurance companies can deny us at will, how do we build financial security for ourselves and our families? I guess my question in the end, is what is the point of it all if corporations don't do their part for the common good? And at the same time they do their damnedest to kill off locally based small businesses that are rooted in our communities. What is the good of that? I find it amazing that in all the debate about budget cuts there is never a mention of military expenses in maintaining war and death in the Far East. Empires have collapsed repeatedly in their efforts to subdue the Afghans and none have succeeded. It has to be pure hubris for our leadership to think that can do what non have done since Timur Leng marched through there. And he came and went without doing too much nation building, smart man. We meanwhile spend billions on these wars and shut down social services at home as though our own people are worth less than a wrecked Afghan village. And all this with no public debate. Talk about eating our own tails!On the business of eating our own tails I read with interest the proposal that Arizona's Republican Governor be recalled. Among her many sins she proposed cutting state medical funding to the tune of 51 million dollars to balance the budget. That went over like a lead balloon among needy Republicans who suddenly felt the need for government hand outs to pay for meds to stay alive over the esoteric political posture of supporting budget cuts. This recall effort leads me to believe budget cutting is going to be a tricky proposition in a nation not quite ready for the realities of personal sacrifice for the greater good. In Florida our wild eyed governor has lost the backing of his Republican party legislative majority who are extremely skittish about cutting taxes to the tune of billions when the budget deficit needs to be made whole. A deficit of four billion in a budget of 70 billion doesn't seem that bad really, especially considering Florida's state pension system is the most financially sound in the nation... but the sheeple don't want to hear that so demonic budget cutting plans continue to be aired. Closing state tax loopholes would do the job but who wants sound common sense when demagoguery is on tap?The situation Up North seems so much worse in so many ways considering how high property taxes are already in states like Illinois and New Jersey. In Florida we pay one sixth the taxes, there is no personal income tax and sales taxes are less than 8 percent. So you'd think there would be some room to maintain services in the state. Quite aside form the fact we don't need to buy heating oil in the winter to survive. But we face cuts across the board, and I suppose in our era of no leadership, short sightedness and lack of vision we should expect nothing more. And yet when we look back at the Great Depression of the 20th century our forebears used the crisis to invest heavily in public works and create jobs. It's fashionable today to criticize the Works Progress Administration but you don't have to look far to see the benefits even today- roads, waterways, public art work and in Key West the benefits of the government sponsored tourist trade are still felt. It would have been nice to see those trillions poured down the rat hole of unregulated finance spent to give Americans work in creating a better future for us and the fact that my wistfulness sounds so esoteric is measure of how cynical we have become in that doing good and doing the right thing seem so alien. And so it goes. I was out with some rather more gregarious friends than myself and they got into a conversation about, of all things cement buildings. The gist of the conversation was the habit locally of those who prefer building using seawater to mix cement thus creating cement buildings that rust out the iron rebar and split in spectacular style. All to save money buying expensive and increasingly scarce fresh water. A classic example of eating one's own tail.Human nature makes no sense to one observing from the outside, yet each of us knows that taking stupid short cuts, trying to save a penny foolishly, putting one over on the competition is what life is all about. We just seem to be taking it to an exasperated level. The drive to the bottom seems to be wrecking all hope of sustaining a middle class, as we demonize unions, benefits and pensions. We read in a BBC report that (free) preventative care leads to better overall health in the UK as opposed to the US. That this country is far wealthier is cold comfort as the gap between the extremely wealthy and everyone else widens immeasurably.That's as may be but for the 75,000 of us that call the Keys home we have better weather and some really nice dog walks. I spent the afternoon ruminating on the fallibility of human nature, my dog chewed the fat and thought her own thoughts and didn't share either fat or thoughts.We went home, my dog and I. She looked happy, I was ruminative. The more I see people, the more I like dogs.

11 comments:

Christopher Shepherd said...

Forgive one for stating the obvious: There is absolutely nothing that can be cut that will close the deficit that is not a mandatory entitlement (Social Security, Medicare). There are no amount of tax cuts that will close the deficit (tax raises, on the other hand, could help tremendously). Any politician who claims otherwise (and I presently count at least 538 at the federal level), is unwilling to grab this third rail of politics and is only using "the deficit" as an excuse to serve her or his whimsy.

Assuming you know all this, what's keeping you on dry land? The urge to sail away is great.

Orin said...

I too, wonder why those who wrap themselves in the flag are so intent on destroying America, but we are seeing the results of a generation-long Republican war on... well, everyone who's not an oligarch.

One of my scooter friends met and married a nice Canadian man and moved with her daughter (a really neat kid) to Toronto. They have obtained Canadian Green Cards, and I'm guessing they could become citizens in due course.

When I last saw her, she talked about moving back to the U.S. once her hubby retires. "Why in the HELL would you want to do that?!" I said. "You've ESCAPED! You could live anywhere in the Commonwealth once you become citizens!"

We're living a 21st century version of the fall of the Roman Empire. I can only hope what happened in Tunisia and Egypt, and what's happening now in Libya, will happen here. Or else, that I don't live to see Newt Gingrich become president. We're REALLY screwed if that happens...

__Orin
Scootin' Old Skool

Conchscooter said...

The thing for me is that my wife and I don't have children. We live in apleasant climate and so far we have jobs and health insurance (though whata struggle that is) and frankly it is more interesting than I expected watching an Empire implode form the inside. Even though I could go back and live in Europe it is not a place where you can start a new life in your 50's with anything like the ease you can change careers in the US. If my wife's health could take it and we had had the skills to be accepted in Canada that would be a good place to raise children i think. Watching our schools shrivel and lisytening to the crazy rhetoric of our leaders I wonder what world children born today are being born into.

Anonymous said...

I find your perspective interesting - but do not share your pessimism, as we've repeatedly shown remarkable resilience as a species and as a nation.

The core issue, in my opinion is our take/make/waste open cycle - it is not sustainable, and our metrics for measuring the human condition (Gross Domestic Product) along with referring to us as Consumers, not citizens along with the fallacy of a generation achieving more than its predecessors - it's a recipe for major ickiness unless we mend our ways.

the had part is to come to grips with the fact we've been living beyond our means - and no amount of technological wizardry will furnish a happy ending. We have to get off consumer crack (which cannot be managed socially, Mr. Sheen) and discover one can be happy sitting on a old wooden bench doing absolutely nothing other than watching the sky change color.

Start now.

use it up
wear it out
make it do.

Parsimonious on Fleming,

Chuck.

The Florida Blogger said...

I don't know about the letting the dogs chew thing. My wallet hurts from the times (plural) I've let my English Bulldog chew on something she shouldn't have been chewing on. Just saying...

Conchscooter said...

Chuck- I agree but learning to be like (stereotypical) Korean or Greek
fishermen is going to take some practice in Peoria.
The national debate needs to start with a serious evaluation of how we spend what we do have. Do we prefer shareholders to workers? Do we want retirement or do we want a European model of unemployment till 30 with kids living at home?
Is it okay to have a Gini coefficient tghe equivalent of Argentina, worse than Russia and far behind Scandinavia? Would we be better off without an Empire?
The trouble is we've not been taught todebate , just to shout.

Conchscooter said...

As to my dog chewing found food - I like freaking people out about that. I've never been one to dictate to my dog what she can chew and yes sometimes she goes out on the deck and heaves,and yes anything can go wrong ( bear in mind I commute by motorcycle in a world of distracted drivers) but when you come round to my house my dog is relaxed and fat and happy becuase she gets to be a dog a coupel of times a time, not a house pet. Stress builds in all of us when we live unnatural lives. But I appreciate I am in a minority.

Anonymous said...

Dude-

You're just stressing about all the drunk-ass idiot breakers in town impinging your chi. take a deep breath and have a tea...

I see this as a self-correcting thing; people will realize more stuff does not equate more happiness when they can't afford it - and they don't die for lack of the latest doohickey from Steve Jobs.

Healthcare is another issue - again, self-correcting when the AARP entitlement generation takes a dirt nap, and someone finally figures out that every other industrialized nation in the world makes young healthy folks pay in so's to take care of the old and enfeebled.

Once my kids are off my insurance - I'm outta here. There are places in this world which are nice, they're warm, with better quality of life and better healthcare for less (gasp!) than what we have. I've told my kids to do same...leave. One looks to be heading to Vacouver, the other Tokyo.

I'd live more naturally, but I'd get arrested for riding my bike naked.

Sunning on Fleming,

Chuck.

Anonymous said...

Photo of Cheyenne in the rear
seat of the car...one happy dog.

Give the dog a rub around the ears and scratch her belly for this Canadian who likes animals.

My neighbor's large coon cat named Charlie is spending this damp weekend with me, and as usual, has taken up full residence on my desk.

Means the laptop computer is
in use in lieu of the large iMac.

Still there's something about
pets that describes their owners!

Cheers,

Fron Southern Ontario

Conchscooter said...

I don't want to leave! I don't want to live in Thailand! Bugger...
Bryce dog is petted (buit she got annoyed because she's busy chewing a sanitary raw hide).

Anonymous said...

You may be fine where you are - assuming you get a proper motorcycle (italian) and a gondoliers license in the net ten years.

bollocks.

accept the things you cannot change; influence those you may.

Philosophical on Fleming,

Chuck.