Archive for August, 2007

How to Defeat the Insidious Green Monster

Friday, August 31st, 2007

by Michael Masterson

“The envious man thinks that if his neighbor breaks a leg, he will be able to walk better himself.” - Helmut Schoeck

ETR reader Greg A. wants to know how to deal with “family or friends that seem to want you to fail… if a great break in your plan to future success happens, and you tell everyone the good news, and half of them act bitter and discouraging.”

Unfortunately, envy is about as commonplace as crabgrass, though not as easy to spot. But you can defeat it - once you learn how to recognize it.

As you become more successful, the people who know you will change in two ways. First, they will begin to think of you as smarter than they do now. Second, they will sometimes resent your good fortune.

You will probably notice the first - your new intellectual status. Friends will seek your advice and treat it seriously. Siblings will come to you for help. Colleagues and competitors will nod in studied contemplation when you make an offhand remark about business. (Well, not always - but it will happen. And you’re probably going to like it.)

You won’t notice - at least most of the time - the resentment your accomplishments will stir up. You may be kidded now and then about your financial status. You may hear self-deprecatory comparisons. (”It isn’t big money to you, but…”) Every once in a great while, you’ll be stung by a zinger. I remember being lambasted for my penchant for expensive cigar lighters (”You think you’re too good for a Bic?”) and denounced for my tax bracket (”People like you can afford to pay 41 percent, so they should”).

You may be shocked to learn how widespread envy is. In fact, it may floor you to discover that some of your closest relations - partners, family members, and old friends - bear the greatest resentment.

Envy damages the person who feels it, but it can hurt the person envied too. Not the envy itself, but the actions and lack of action that can result from it. And most people - both the enviers and the envied - aren’t even aware of it.

I am always surprised when I discover that someone is envious of me, because I have never felt envious of others. How is it that I, a man who has admitted to many other sins in my lifetime, managed to be free of this one? Because, to feel envy, you must:

    1. Want something that someone else has
    2. Feel that you can’t easily get that thing yourself

If either of those feelings is absent, it’s pretty much impossible to be envious.

Let’s say, for example, that Ralph gets a nice new boat. When you see his boat, you decide that you want one too. If you have the resources, you buy a boat of your own - one that’s perhaps a little nicer than Ralph’s. But if, for whatever reason, you can’t buy one, you start to feel a certain amount of dissatisfaction. And, before long, that turns to envy.

Let’s go back to Greg, the ETR reader I mentioned at the beginning of this essay who wants to know how to deal with people who envy his success. In his case, he is just starting to be successful - while his friends aren’t. I’m guessing that because he has stopped doing whatever unproductive things he was doing before that prevented him from achieving his goals, his friends feel that he has betrayed them. They liked him just the way he was - unfulfilled and burdened by bad habits.

When he dropped his bad habits, it was as if he were dropping them. Greg is like the alcoholic who joins AA and leaves his barfly friends behind. They know he is doing something that is considered to be “good,” but it feels “bad” to them.

If they were smart, Greg’s friends would emulate him. But it’s easier to be envious - and even to hope that Greg ends up failing miserably.

When you think like that, you do yourself a double injustice.

  • First, you accept limitations that you don’t really have.
  • Second, you spoil a good relationship.
  • Several times in my career, acquaintances, colleagues, and even friends have done things or said things or failed to do or say things because it was clear that they envied my success. For the most part, I’ve tried not to pay too much attention to this. But I can’t ignore the fact that there are people out there who don’t like me . . . simply because they don’t have the things that I have. As a result, I’ve learned to make certain adjustments to my behavior that seem to help.

    Based on my experience, here’s what I suggest you do:
    [ see Book IX, on Friendship, in "The Ethics" by Aristotle ]

    • Don’t talk too much about your success. Don’t, for example, talk about awards you’ve won, famous people you’ve met, or how much money you’ve made.
    • If the subject comes up, make a concerted effort to diminish your own role and praise others.
    • Eschew the trappings of success - the fancy cars, the expensive watches, anything that’s ostentatious.
    • Most important, be interested in other people - in what they are doing and what successes they are having. Focus attention away from yourself, even while you work on achieving more of your own goals.

    This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

    The NAFTA Superhighway
    Facts behind the conspiracy theory

    Thursday, August 16th, 2007

    by Christopher Hayes

    When completed, the highway will run from Mexico City to Toronto, slicing through the heartland like a dagger sunk into a heifer at the loins and pulled clean to the throat. It will be four football fields wide, an expansive gully of concrete, noise and exhaust, swelled with cars, trucks, trains and pipelines carrying water, wires and God knows what else. Through towns large and small it will run, plowing under family farms, subdevelopments, acres of wilderness. Equipped with high-tech electronic customs monitors, freight from China, offloaded into nonunionized Mexican ports, will travel north, crossing the border with nary a speed bump, bound for Kansas City, where the cheap goods manufactured in booming Far East factories will embark on the final leg of their journey into the nation’s Wal-Marts.

    And this NAFTA Superhighway, as it is called, is just the beginning, the first stage of a long, silent coup aimed at supplanting the sovereign United States with a multinational North American Union.

    Even as this plot unfolds in slow motion, the mainstream media are silent; politicians are in denial. Yet word is getting out. Like samizdat, info about the highway has circulated in niche media platforms old and new, on right-wing websites like WorldNetDaily, in the pages of low-circulation magazines like the John Birch Society’s The New American and increasingly on the letters to the editor page of local newspapers.

    “Construction of the NAFTA highway from Laredo, Texas to Canada is now underway,” read a letter in the February 13 San Gabriel Valley Tribune. “Spain will own most of the toll roads that connect to the superhighway. Mexico will own and operate the Kansas City Smart Port. And NAFTA tribunal, not the U.S. Supreme Court, will have the final word in trade disputes. Will the last person please take down the flag?” There are many more where that came from. “The superhighway has the potential to cripple the West Coast economy, as well as posing an enormous security breach at our border,” read a letter from the January 7 San Francisco Chronicle. “So far, there has been no public participation or debate on this important issue. Public participation and debate must begin now.”

    In some senses it has. Prompted by angry phone calls and e-mail from their constituents, local legislators are beginning to take action. In February the Montana state legislature voted 95 to 5 for a resolution opposing “the North American Free Trade Agreement Superhighway System” as well as “any effort to implement a trinational political, government entity among the United States, Canada, and Mexico.” Similar resolutions have been introduced in eighteen other states as well as the House of Representatives, where H. Con Res. 40 has attracted, as of this writing, twenty-seven co-sponsors. Republican presidential candidates in Iowa and New Hampshire now routinely face hostile questions about the highway at candidate forums. Citing a spokesperson for the Romney campaign, the Concord Monitor reports that “the road comes up at town meetings second only to immigration policy.”

    Grassroots movement exposes elite conspiracy and forces politicians to respond: It would be a heartening story but for one small detail.

    There’s no such thing as a proposed NAFTA Superhighway.

    Though opposition to the nonexistent highway is the cause célèbre of many a paranoiac, the myth upon which it rests was not fabricated out of whole cloth. Rather, it has been sewn together from scraps of fact.

    Take, for instance, North America’s SuperCorridor Organization (NASCO), a trinational coalition of businesses and state and local transportation agencies that, in its own words, focuses “on maximizing the efficiency of our existing transportation infrastructure to support international trade.” Headquartered in borrowed office space in a Dallas law firm, the organization, which has a full-time staff of three, advocates for increased public expenditure along the main north-south Interstate routes, including new high-tech freight-tracking technology and expedited border crossings. It has had some success, landing federal money to pilot cargo management technologies and winning praise from the Bush Administration. Speaking at a NASCO conference in Texas in 2004, then-Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta congratulated the organization for its efforts. “The people in this room have vision,” Mineta said. “Thinking ahead, thinking long term, you began to make aggressive plans to develop . . . this vital artery in our national transportation system through which so much of the NAFTA traffic flows. It flows across our nation’s busiest southern border crossing in Laredo; over North America’s busiest commercial crossing, the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit; and through Duluth and Pembina, North Dakota, and all the places in between.”

    A few years ago NASCO put on its home page a map of the United States that more or less traced the flow that Mineta describes: Drawn in bright blue, the trade route begins in Monterrey, Mexico, runs up I-35 and branches out after Kansas City, along I-29 toward Winnipeg and I-94 toward Detroit and Toronto. The colorful, cartoonlike image seemed to show right out in the open just where NASCO and its confederates planned to build the NAFTA Superhighway. It began zipping around the Internet.

    The organization soon found itself besieged with angry phone calls and letters. “I think the rumor going around was that this map was a blueprint and it was drawn to scale,” says NASCO executive director Tiffany Melvin. (Given the size of the route markings, that would have heralded highways fifty miles wide.) Ever since the map went live, NASCO has spent a considerable amount of time attempting to refute charges like those made by right-wing nationalist Jerome Corsi, whose recent book The Late Great USA devotes several pages to excoriating NASCO for being part of the vanguard of the highway and the coming North American Union. Until recently, NASCO’s website contained the following FAQs:

    Is NASCO a part of a secret conspiracy?

    • Absolutely not . . . We welcome the opportunity to share information about our organization. . . .
    • Will the NAFTA Superhighway be four football fields wide?
    • There is no new, proposed NAFTA Superhighway. . . .
    • Is the map on the website an approved plan for the proposed NAFTA Superhighway?
    • There is no proposed NAFTA Superhighway. . . . The map is not a plan or blueprint of any kind. . . . They are EXISTING highways.
    • The Trans Texas Corridor is the first section of the proposed, new NAFTA Superhighway. . . .
    • There is no proposed, new NAFTA Superhighway.

    But NASCO is just one part of what Corsi and his ilk view as a grand conspiracy. There’s also a federal initiative called the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), which they portray as a Trojan horse packed with globalists scheming to form a European Union-style governing body to manage the entire continent. The reactions of those in SPP to this characterization seem to range from bemusement to alarm. “There is no NAFTA Superhighway,” Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Market Access and Compliance David Bohigian told me emphatically over the phone. Initiated in 2005, the SPP is a relatively mundane formal bureaucratic dialogue, he says. Working groups, staffed by midlevel officials from all three countries, figure out how to better synchronize customs enforcement, security protocols and regulatory frameworks among the countries. “Simple stuff like, for instance, in the US we sell baby food in several different sizes; in Canada, it’s just two different sizes.”

    Another star in the constellation of North American Union conspiracies is the Mexican deep-water port of Lázaro Cárdenas. Located on the Pacific coast of the state of Michoacan, the port is undergoing a bonanza of investment and upgrades. According to a 2005 article in Latin Trade, the port is adding a terminal that could provide enough capacity to process nearly all of the cargo that comes into Mexico, making it “the logical trade route connecting the United States and Asia,” in the words of the Mexican officials overseeing its overhaul. Since it’s the only Mexican port deep enough to handle Super Panamax container ships from China - the most efficient means of shipping products across the Pacific - it’s an attractive alternative to the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which are unionized and increasingly congested. (More than 80 percent of Asian imports come in through these two ports.)

    Of course, if cargo switches from Los Angeles to Lázaro Cárdenas, more and more manufactured goods will have to travel through Mexico to reach their US destination, and there will be a significant uptick in the northbound overland traffic. The Kansas City Southern Railroad company is already betting on that eventuality, spending millions of dollars to purchase the rail routes that run from the port up to Kansas City. At the same time, a business improvement group called Kansas City SmartPort, whose members include the local chamber of commerce, is pushing for Kansas City, which is already a transportation hub, to transform itself fully into a “smart port,” a kind of intermodal transportation and cargo center. The group recently advocated a pilot program that would place a Mexican customs official in Kansas City to inspect Mexico-bound freight, relieving bottlenecks at the border. The notion of a Mexican customs official on American soil fired the imaginations of those already disposed to see a North American Union on the horizon, and SmartPort staff have been fending off angry inquiries ever since.

    In his essay “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” Richard Hofstadter famously sketched the contours of the American tradition of folk conspiracy - a tradition that has, at different times, seen its enemy in Masons, Jesuits, immigrants, Jews and Eastern bankers. There’s certainly a strong continuity between that tradition and the populist/nationalist ire that drives the NAFTA highway myth. Hofstadter’s original essay was motivated in part by the activities of the John Birch Society, which today is one of the leading purveyors of the highway myth.

    But there’s something more.

    The myth of the NAFTA Superhighway persists and grows because it taps into deeply felt anxieties about the dizzying dislocations of twenty-first-century global capitalism: a nativist suspicion of Mexico’s designs on US sovereignty, a longing for national identity, the fear of terrorism and porous borders, a growing distrust of the privatizing agenda of a government happy to sell off the people’s assets to the highest bidder and a contempt for the postnational agenda of Davos-style neoliberalism. Indeed, the image of the highway, with its Chinese goods whizzing across the border borne by Mexican truckers on a privatized, foreign-operated road, is almost mundane in its plausibility. If there was a NAFTA highway, you could bet that Tom Friedman would be for it - what could be more flattening than miles of concrete paved across the continent? - and Lou Dobbs would be zealously opposed. In fact, Dobbs has devoted a segment of his show to the highway, its nonexistence notwithstanding. “These three countries moving ahead their governments without authorization from the American people, without Congressional approval,” he said. “This is as straightforward an attack on national sovereignty as there could be outside of war.”

    Though the story of the highway has been seeded and watered in the fertile soil of the nationalist right wing - promoted by Birchers and Corsi, co-author of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth’s book about John Kerry - it also stretches across ideological and partisan lines. Like immigration and the Dubai ports deal, it divides the Republican coalition against itself, pitting the capitalists against the nationalists. And more than a few on the center-left have voiced criticisms as well: Teamsters president James Hoffa wrote in a column last year that “Bush is quietly moving forward with plans . . . for what’s known as a NAFTA superhighway - a combination of existing and new roads that would create a north-south corridor from Mexico to Canada. . . . It would allow global conglomerates to capitalize by exploiting cheap labor and nonexistent work rules and avoiding potential security enhancements at U.S. ports.” Democratic Congresswoman Nancy Boyda, from eastern Kansas, invoked its specter early and often in her improbably successful 2006 campaign against Republican incumbent Jim Ryun. A campaign circular inserted in local newspapers warned that “if built, this ‘Super Corridor’ would be a quarter-mile wide and longer than the Great Wall of China.” Boyda told me that her attacks on the highway “hit a real nerve because enough people had the same concerns.”

    What might at first have been a niche obsession has bled, slowly but surely, toward the mainstream. “The biggest problem of these conspiracy theorists,” says Robert Pastor, a professor of international relations at American University and a leading proponent of increased North American integration, “is that they are having an effect on the entire debate.”

    Add up all the above ingredients - NASCO, SPP, Lázaro Cárdenas, the Kansas City SmartPort, the planned pilot program allowing Mexican truckers to drive on US roads - and you still don’t have a superhighway four football fields wide connecting the entire continent. Which is why understanding the persistence of the NAFTA highway legend requires spending some time in Texas, where Governor Rick Perry and his longtime consigliere, Texas Department of Transportation commissioner Ric Williamson, are proposing the $185 billion Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC), 4,000 miles of highway, rail and freight corridors, the first of which would run up from the border through the heavily populated eastern part of the state. Plans for the TTC call for it to be up to four football fields wide at points, paving over as much as half a million acres of Texas countryside. The first section will be built and operated by a foreign enterprise, and when completed it would likely be the largest privatized toll road in the country.

    And unlike the NAFTA highway, the Trans-Texas Corridor is very, very real.

    In 2003, amid a dramatic drawn-out battle over a legally questionable GOP redistricting plan, the Texas state legislature passed House Bill 3588. At 311 pages, it’s unlikely that many of those who voted for the bill had actually read it (and many have come to regret their vote), but it received not a single opposing vote. The bill granted the Texas Transportation Commission wide latitude to pursue a long-term plan to build a series of corridors throughout the state that would carry passenger and commercial traffic and contain extra right-of-way for rail, pipelines and electric wires.

    What first triggered opposition was that under the plan, the new TTC roads would have tolls, something relatively novel in Texas. The state’s Department of Transportation–known as TxDot–pointed out that the state’s gasoline tax, which pays for road construction and maintenance, hadn’t been raised since 1991, while population and commercial traffic were growing at a dizzying pace. Tolls, the governor and his allies argued, were the only solution. (Many TTC opponents propose raising the gasoline tax and indexing it to inflation.)

    But opposition quickly spread, from those in metro areas concerned about the cost of their daily commute to ranchers angry that their land might fall under the TTC hatchet. According to Chris Steinbach, chief of staff for rural Brenham’s Republican State Representative Lois Kolkhorst, when people in the district heard about the plan they responded by asking, “‘Why would you want to do that?’ It was a real front porch, rocking chair kind of question.”

    Meanwhile David and Linda Stall, a Republican couple from Fayetteville, Texas, began actively organizing opposition to the proposal. As early as 2004, they started bringing friends out to local TxDot hearings and launched the website Corridor Watch. By the time the 2006 gubernatorial election rolled around, a wild four-way race with incumbent Rick Perry pitted against three challengers, the TTC had become one of the most controversial issues of the campaign. Perry was re-elected with 39 percent of the vote, but with all three of his opponents campaigning passionately against the TTC, it was hardly a popular endorsement of the plan.

    What was once scattered resistance is now a full-fledged rebellion. The Stalls have pushed through a plank in the state’s GOP platform opposing the corridor, which means the governor is now at odds with the official position of his own party. In March thousands of Texans from across the state attended an anti-TTC rally on the Capitol steps, and liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans came together to co-sponsor a moratorium on the plan. It passed the House and Senate, only to be vetoed by Governor Perry. (A considerably weaker version was ultimately signed into law.)

    Perry’s continued support of the TTC in the face of mounting opposition is more than just a political liability; it’s begun to resemble Bush’s Iraq policy in its obstinate indifference to public opinion. This, along with the fact that the federal government sent a letter to the state warning it not to pass a moratorium on the project, has fueled conspiracy speculations about what the real goal of the TTC is. Kelly Taylor, a John Birch Society member and Austin-based freelance contributor to its magazine, has been working hard to connect the dots between the TTC and the NAFTA Superhighway. “It first surfaced because it was a local toll issue,” she told me over coffee. “That, in and of itself, was alarming enough–all the corrupt politics that happened to make it come about. Then we thought, Wait a minute, something’s not right here, this is bigger than just a local toll issue.”

    Taylor may represent a certain fringe of the anti-TTC efforts (her name prompted some eye-rolling among other activists), but there’s a whole lot of cross-pollination between local concerns about the TTC and the growing North American Union mythology. When I asked David McQuade Leibowitz, a Democratic State Representative from San Antonio, why the governor was so determined to build the TTC, he put his boots up on his desk, leaned back in his chair and said, “I think Texas is the first link in the highway to run from South America to Canada. One nation under God. We see bits and pieces of it. We don’t see it all. It makes us cringe and sick to our stomachs.”

    Texas Transportation commissioner Ric Williamson is one of those Texas personalities who seem almost self-consciously to will themselves toward caricature. One Democratic staffer in the Capitol casually referred to him as Darth Vader; Texas Monthly recently called him “the most hated person in Texas.” Owner of a natural gas production company before becoming a state legislator in 1985, he has lately been reincarnated as a transit policy wonk, a role he plays as a cross between mid-twentieth-century road builder Robert Moses and J.R. Ewing from “Dallas”: the planner as good old boy. He does not suffer from a lack of confidence. “We’re the greatest state agency you’ll ever interview,” he told me at one point. With his good friend Governor Perry hemorrhaging political capital, it’s fallen to Williamson to advocate for the corridor and draw fire from its opponents.

    At first the press contact for TxDot told me Williamson wouldn’t be available, but after I informed her I’d lined up dozens of interviews with TTC opponents, she called me back a week before my trip to Texas for this article to set up an interview. When I was ushered into Williamson’s office, he was in the midst of a discussion with one of the four staffers who flanked him. At my appearance in the doorway, he made no move to acknowledge my presence other than slightly pulling out the chair next to him, where, apparently, I was to sit.

    Williamson’s case is straightforward: The state needs a whole lot of new roads it can’t pay for. The sheer population growth in Texas, particularly in the urbanized area in the eastern part of the state that contains San Antonio, Dallas, Houston and Austin, combined with the projected increase in commercial traffic, has precipitated what Williamson says is an impending crisis. The TTC would provide the necessary increase in capacity at the low, low price the state can afford. “Our view is, you can run from the corridor if you want to,” he told me, smiling, “but that’s eventually what we’ll build. Because that’s where the fricking people live!” At that he shot up to walk over to a map of the state hanging on one wall, patting my shoulder with paternal authority as he passed. “It’s so logical to me it drives me nuts.”

    He’s right about the challenges the state faces, but it’s a long jump from the diagnosis to the cure. Opponents of the plan point out that, as conceived, the corridor will run parallel to the existing Interstate, possibly far from the same cities where it’s supposed to relieve congestion. (TxDot says state law will require the roads to connect to Interstates, which connect to cities.) On top of that, the current plan employs a novel privatized financing mechanism that has many crying foul.

    Under a comprehensive development agreement (CDA) signed in March 2005, the Spanish concern Cintra (in partnership with Texas-based Zachry Corp.) will pay the state for the right to develop the roads along the corridor, where it will be able to collect tolls and establish facilities within the right-of-way for fifty years. This kind of road-building deal is commonplace in other parts of the world, often in places where government lacks the ready capital necessary to develop large infrastructure projects. It’s called a BOT, for build, operate, transfer. Until recently it was unheard of in the United States.

    The arrangement has been heavily criticized for a number of reasons. The CDA includes a noncompete clause that could conceivably prevent the state from building necessary roads in the future because they would “compete” with a stretch of the privatized TTC. It’s also expensive. A recent state auditor’s report estimated the cost for just the first section of the corridor at $105 billion. TxDot portrays the deal as a clever way of getting the private sector to pay for public roads, but eventually the total cost of the project, plus a layer of profit for Cintra-Zachry, will be coming out of the pockets of Texas drivers. Finally, the timeline for development of the project, which will be constructed piecemeal, is based on which sections of the corridor Cintra has identified as “self-performing,” according to Williamson–in other words, those sections that contain a high enough volume of toll-paying passengers that they will turn a profit.

    Williamson argues that the state simply has no choice. Or, as he put it to one reporter, “If you aggressively invite the private sector to be your partner, you can’t tell them where to build the road.” But this seems, to put it mildly, pretty ass-backward. The point of transportation planning is to provide the infrastructure for people to move efficiently, safely and quickly from point A to point B, not to maximize the profits of some conglomerate that managed to win a state contract. You wouldn’t want to place, say, fire stations across a city using the same logic that guides the placement of Starbucks. But that’s more or less the way the TTC is unfolding.

    “I always think of the corridor as a payday loan,” said Kolkhorst’s chief of staff Chris Steinbach. “You’re going to get a little money up front, but you’re losing the long-term gain you’re charged by the people to oversee.” As he said this I noticed his computer’s screensaver, which featured an image of the Texas Capitol dome with a bright red banner Photoshopped in that read Everything Must Go!

    The privatized nature of the road got folks the angriest

    In my conversations with people in Texas, it seemed that the privatized nature of the road was what got folks the angriest. Bad enough that drivers would face tolls, that ranchers would have their land cut out from under them, but all for the financial gain of a foreign company? “If you liked the Dubai ports deal, you’ll love my TTC land grab,” taunts an animated Rick Perry on one anti-TTC website. The cartoon goes on to portray Cintra as conquistadors clad in armor riding in to steal Texans’ treasure.

    “What really drives this is economic,” activist Terri Hall told me. “It’s about the money. We’re talking about obscene levels of profit, someone literally being like the robber barons of old. And this is one thing that government actually does well, build and maintain roads.”

    Hall is an unlikely defender of the public sphere. A conservative Republican and an evangelical Christian who home-schools her six children, she first got interested in road policy when TxDot announced plans to toll the road near her house, which runs into San Antonio. Outraged, she brought it up with her local State Rep, and when that didn’t work, she began organizing. She founded the San Antonio Toll Party (like the Boston Tea Party, she notes) by pamphleting at intersections and calling friends. “It’s really like the old days, during the American Revolution . . . just fellow citizens trying together to effect change.”

    Hall soon became part of the broader anti-TTC effort, and though she originally thought she was just fighting a corrupt local government, she’s come to view her battle in a much broader context. “There are big-time control issues,” she said. “Someone is really jockeying around to control some things here in America. It explains the open borders, it explains our immigration issues, it explains our free-trade issues, what it’s doing to the middle class.

    “It really all started with NAFTA,” she continued. “There’ve been people like Robert Pastor and the Council on Foreign Relations. All these secretive groups.” She laughed nervously and apologetically. “It sounds like a conspiracy. But I do know there are people who have tried for a long time to go to this global governance. They see there’s a way to make it all happen by going to the heads of state and doing it in a secretive way so they can do it without a nasty little thing called accountability. So they won’t have to listen to what We the People want.”

    Hall had arranged to meet me in the San Antonio exurbs, in a home design center that doubled as a cafe. Outside, a thunderstorm lashed the windows with rain. As she spoke, her newborn son propped next to her swaddled and napping, it occurred to me that she was living the twenty-first-century version of the American dream. She and her husband had moved to Texas from California in pursuit of cheap housing, open space and a place to raise their family. Their web-design business was successful; their children healthy. Why, I found myself thinking, was she so upset about a road?

    Ric Williamson must often ask himself the same thing. Just as the White House was blindsided by the opposition to the Dubai ports deal, just as NASCO was shocked to find that a simple schematic map attracted angry phone calls, just as the Commerce Department was shocked to find a simple bureaucratic dialogue the subject of outrage, so too have Perry and Williamson seemed ambushed by the zealous opposition of people like Hall.

    But what people like Williamson don’t seem to understand is how disempowered people feel in the face of a neoliberal order whose direction they cannot influence. For corporatists within both parties (Williamson, it should be noted, was a Democrat while in the Statehouse), selling port security or road concessions to a multinational is inevitable, logical, obvious. To thousands of average citizens in Texas and elsewhere, it’s madness or, worse, treason. Both the actual TTC and the mythical NAFTA Superhighway represent a certain kind of future for America, one in which the crony capitalism of oil-rich Texas expands to fill every last crevice of the public sector’s role, eclipsing the relevance of the national government as both the provider of public goods and the unified embodiment of a sovereign people.

    For Williamson, this is progress; for Hall, it’s an outrage and a tragedy. “We have so little control over our own government,” she told me, the alienation audible in her voice, thunder punishing the air outside. “We are really the last beacon of freedom in the world - the land of the free and home of the brave - and we’re letting it slip away from under our noses.”

    From The Nation, August 27, 2007
    posted August 9, 2007

    Chief Scientist Revises Global Warming Data

    Sunday, August 12th, 2007

    The Goddard Institute for Space Science, a bureau of NASA, has revised the global warming data for the 20th century. There are two significant stories in this situation. First, that the revision has been necessary, due to some faulty statistical techniques related to the Y2K hoax of the past decade.

    Second, and more important, is the error had been apparently covered up by GSIS, which compiled the data under the leadership of well known global warming theorist James Hansen. Hansen has worked as a paid employee of Al Gore’s political machine, which is leading the radical authoritarian movement to limit man made carbon emissions, and thus to restrict economic growth.

    It appears the trend toward warmer years in the past decade is not true.

    According to the new data from GISS, the new ranking of the hottest 10 years in the 20th century is as follows:

    • #1 1934 ( Half of the 10 hottest years were prior to World War II )
    • #2 1998 This year used to be called “warmest in history”
    • #3 1921 ( Only three ”hottest” years in the past decade )
    • #4 2006 This formerly “warmest” year demoted too
    • #5 1931
    • #6 1999 ( This is not a trend !!! )
    • #7 1953
    • #8 1990
    • #9 1938
    • #10 1939

    Political Science?

    The newly revised data are a result of the hard work of Canadian statistician Steven McIntyre. He was looking at the temperature records. He knows the collected data go through a “filter” process, meant to correct for any known problems. For instance, the well known heat island effect has to be taken into account so the records aren’t artificially inflated. Adjustment of data is a common practice in all government agencies.

    But McIntyre, who does statistics professionally, noticed a special computational problem that seemed to creep into things in January 2000 for the first time. He wondered about this, so he contacted the Goddard Institute for Space Science - under the leadership of James Hansen. Hansen is known for being one of the more strident voices predicting disaster from warming.

    James Hansen

    GISS didn’t want an outsider to look at their data adjustment methods. McIntyre wanted to see what formulas were being used to adjust the data before releasing it. GISS (Hansen?) told him that he couldn’t have the formulas. It turns out, they did have something to hide, protecting Hansen from some embarrassment. Or, maybe Steven McIntyre has exposed an attempt at fraud (e.g. just like the “hockey stick” tale, and the “Medieval warm period” disappearance from the ICCC reports)?

    After being refused, McIntryre took the data that did publicly exist and started working his way backwards through it. He discovered what appeared to be a “Y2K glitch” that distorted the results. He told GISS about this. They surrendered. With no publicity in the mainstream press, they revised the data for the last hundred years and now show different temperature records for the United States. Congratulations to Steve McIntyre!

    According to the new, accurate data, 1998 was not the hottest year - nor was 2006, which was even said at the time to have surpassed it. The “trend” is not even moving higher. The hottest year on record in the United States was actually 1934. 1998 was in second place, but third place belonged to 1921.

    The error had a very interesting impact on the data. The years of 1934, 1921, 1938 and 1939 were all adjusted upwards. Only 1931 remained unchanged. And the years 1998, 2006, 1999, 1953, and 1990 were all adjusted down. In fact 2001 fell off the top ten list entirely and was replaced with 1939.

    The error biased the data in support of the man-made global warming theory, which is exactly what John Hansen wants everyone to believe.

    It is now 2007. So that means this error has been impacting the debate, and public policy, for seven years. It has certainly helped shape public perceptions. Why did the error sit unnoticed for so many years?

    Al Gore believes it. It strengthened his faith.

    Religion or science? At least the Goddard Institute for Space Science seems no longer to be hiding their statistical errors, thanks to a real scientist, Steven McIntyre.

    Gays Become Just Another ‘Special Interest’

    Sunday, August 12th, 2007

    Having pandered to a labor union audience in Chicago on August 7, Tuesday night, the Democratic presidential field decamped to Los Angeles for a debate pitched to the interests of gay voters on the LOGO cable network Thursday (Aug.9) and broadcast several times.

    The Democratic Party has clearly decided to align itself with traditional gay lobbying groups and the affluent donor base they can deliver. But while the association has clear advantages, signs also suggest that a substantial part of the electorate may be uncomfortable if Democrats become too closely aligned with another politically correct pressure group.

    Three new statewide polls by Quinnipiac University in the key swing states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania found that a significant number of voters were likely to react to a high-profile endorsement of a candidate by gay groups by voting against that candidate.

    In Ohio, the mother of all swing states, 10% of voters say an endorsement by gay groups would make them more likely to support a candidate versus 34% who said such an endorsement would make them less likely (54% said such an endorsement wouldn’t matter).  A majority of the voters in each of the states opposes gay marriage, but at the same time more than half favor some type of legal recognition for gay couples.

    Troubling for Democrats, independent voters, much sought-after by both parties, essentially tracked with the rest of the population in viewing the endorsement of gay groups negatively.  Among independent voters, the numbers were 12% more likely and 28% less likely. The numbers in Pennsylvania and Florida roughly tracked those in Ohio.

    An anti-gay animus explains some of the hostility, but polling analysts say a general antipathy to special interest groups dominating American politics also plays a part.

    – John Fund, in Political Diary, August 9, 2007

    From LOGO TV studios in Los Angeles: When Biological Determinism Is PC

    If former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee has been most helped by his performances in the Republican presidential debates, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson continues to convince party insiders he simply isn’t ready for prime time.

    Mr. Richardson has delivered indifferent debate performances so far, but at last night’s gay-themed session in Los Angeles he managed to do a belly flop into treacherous political waters. Asked about whether being gay was a matter of biology or choice, Mr. Richardson - who previously has had to apologize for the use of a Spanish-language gay slur - wandered into a politically incorrect answer that left the largely gay audience treating him as if he were, well, a Republican.

    “It’s a choice,” he told the audience, then sunk into his armchair as listeners sat in shocked silence.

    “I’m not sure you understood the question,” singer Melissa Etheridge promptly upbraided him. But Mr. Richardson stumbled on with neither the confidence of someone who was saying what he really believed or the agility of a candidate who knows how to recover from a faux pas. “I’m not a scientist. I don’t see this as an issue of science or definition,” he said. “I don’t like to answer definitions like that, that perhaps are grounded in science or something else I don’t understand.” The crowd continued its stony silence.

    It didn’t take long for Richardson aides to try their own damage control operation. They issued a groveling statement in which Mr. Richardson says he doesn’t believe homosexuality is a matter of choice.

    But the damage is done. Mr. Richardson, already on probation for the anti-gay slur, will now be marked as someone “who doesn’t get it” by a key Democratic donor base. Chalk up his chances of getting the Democratic vice presidential nomination as fading fast.

    – John Fund, in Political Diary, August 10, 2007

    National Survey Shows Gays and Lesbians Outpace U.S.
    Average In Voting Participation

    A new national survey reveals that gay and lesbian consumers are far more likely to have voted in the last presidential and midterm elections than the population in general.

    Significant numbers of both gay men and lesbians also donated to a political party in the past year. The survey also found that despite significant social and political progress over the past decade, majorities of both gays and lesbians believe homosexuality will remain a “divisive” issue in ten years.

    The survey results are included in the Gay Consumer Index and Lesbian Consumer Index, precedent-setting national surveys of more than 12,000 gay Americans and 10,000 lesbian Americans conducted in spring 2007 and set to be released later this month by Community Marketing Inc.

    “The results of the Gay Consumer Index and Lesbian Consumer Index studies demonstrate that the political parties would be smart to pay attention to the issues that mean the most to gay and lesbian voters,” declared Tom Roth, president of Community Marketing Inc. “We have far more at stake than the average voter and we’re therefore far more engaged in the political process.”

    More than 92 percent of gay male respondents (92.5 percent) reported that they voted in the 2004 presidential election with nearly 84 percent (83.8 percent) reporting that they voted in the mid-term election in 2006. Results for lesbians were similar with nearly 91 percent (90.7 percent) of lesbian respondents reporting that they voted in the 2004 presidential election and 78 percent reporting that they voted in the mid-term election in 2006. In comparison, media reports estimate that 64 percent of the general population voted in the 2004 presidential election and just 40 percent of the general population voted in the 2006 mid-term election.

    Slightly more than 31 percent of lesbian respondents (31.1 percent) reported that they made a financial contribution to a political party in the past twelve months. Forty percent (40.1 percent) of gay male respondents reported that they made a financial contribution to a political party in the past twelve months.

    And finally, large majorities of gay male and lesbian respondents agreed with the statement that “homosexuality will still be a divisive issue in the USA in 10 years.” Slightly more than 73 percent (73.4 percent) of gay male and nearly 73 percent (72.9 percent) of lesbian respondents agreed with that statement. In general, larger numbers of older respondents agreed with this view than younger respondents with more gay male and lesbian Baby Boomers agreeing with the statement than gay males or lesbians born after 1980.

    from “Edge,” August 13, 2007

    Religious Doctors No More Likely to Care for Underserved Patients

    Friday, August 10th, 2007

    from the University of Chicago News Office

    Although most religious traditions call on the faithful to serve the poor, a large cross-sectional survey of U.S. physicians found that physicians who are more religious are slightly less likely to practice medicine among the underserved than physicians with no religious affiliation.

    In the July/August issue of the Annals of Family Medicine, researchers from the University of Chicago and Yale New Haven Hospital report that 31 percent of physicians who were more religious — as measured by “intrinsic religiosity” as well as frequency of attendance at religious services — practiced among the underserved, compared to 35 percent of physicians who described their religion as atheist, agnostic or none.

    “This came as both a surprise and a disappointment,” said study author Farr Curlin, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. “The Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist scriptures all urge physicians to care for the poor, and the great majority of religious physicians describe their practice of medicine as a calling. Yet we found that religious physicians were not more likely to report practice among the underserved than their secular colleagues.”

    Physicians have many compelling reasons to avoid spending the bulk of their time caring for the poor. It can mean forgoing professional prestige, free time and academic opportunities. It often comes with reduced salaries, decreased support staff and constant bureaucratic interference.

    But physicians who care for the underserved receive intangible rewards in exchange, such as a sense that they make a difference in society, have a positive impact on the lives of large groups of patients and have aligned their jobs with their altruistic aspirations.

    To find out which religious, spiritual and personal factors were most often present in doctors who care for the underserved, Curlin and colleagues surveyed 1,820 practicing physicians from all specialties; 1,144 (63%) responded.

    The survey contained questions about what the researchers called intrinsic religiosity — the extent to which individuals embrace their religion as the “master motive that guides and gives meaning to their life.” Physicians were asked if they agreed or disagreed with two statements: “I try hard to carry my religious beliefs over into all my other dealings in life,” and “My whole approach to life is based on my religion.” They were also asked how often they attended religious services.

    The survey also included questions about whether the physicians considered medicine a calling, whether their religious beliefs influence their practice of medicine, and whether the family in which they were raised emphasized helping those with few resources.

    The researchers found that 26 percent of physicians reported that their patient populations are considered underserved. These physicians tended to be younger and were more likely to report working in an academic health center and receiving loan repayment in exchange for working where they do. Physicians who receive educational loan repayment are often obliged to work in underserved communities.

    Physicians who strongly agreed that their religious beliefs influence their practice of medicine were more likely to report practice among the underserved. However, physicians who were more religious in general (as measured by their intrinsic religiosity or their frequency of attending religious services) were not more likely to practice among the underserved. Even the more religious physicians who reported that their families emphasized service to the poor and that, for them, the practice of medicine was a calling, were no more likely to practice among the underserved.

    Curlin and colleagues also noted that those who identified themselves as very spiritual, whether or not they were religious, were roughly twice as likely to care for the underserved as those who described their spirituality as low. “Part of this divergence between religion and spirituality can be traced to a rift between Christian denominations in the late-19th and early-20th centuries,” explained Curlin, who describes himself as an orthodox Christian in the Protestant tradition.

    About a hundred years ago, he said, many of the mainline and liberal Protestant churches began “to emphasize efforts to right social injustices, while the more conservative churches tended to stress doctrinal orthodoxy. Research indicates that those who consider themselves spiritual but not so religious are more likely to be formed in the more liberal denominations.”

    Policy makers and medical educators hoping to increase the physician supply for underserved populations should take these results into account cautiously, said the authors. “No one knows how to select medical students in a way that would actually increase the number of physicians eager to serve the underserved,” Curlin said, “but our findings suggest that admissions officials should ignore both the general religiousness of candidates and their professed sense of calling to medicine.”

    The Greenwall Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program funded this study. Additional authors include John Lantos and Marshall Chin of the University of Chicago and Lydia Dugdale of Yale New Haven Hospital.


    http://www-news.uchicago.edu/releases/07/070730.curlin.shtml

    Last modified at 11:58 AM CST on Tuesday, July 31, 2007

    University of Chicago News Office
    5801 South Ellis Avenue, 200
    Chicago, Illinois 60637-1473

    Free Markets Also Have Tough Negotiators

    Friday, August 10th, 2007

    This is a good thing, that foreign governments stand up against protectionist lobby groups in the United States. American congressmen, e.g. Senator Schumer (D-NY), have started to pander strongly to declining industries (e.g. those infected with the tapeworm of unionism). They accuse China of dishonesty with its fixed exchange rate. This claim about an undervalued exchange rate, and the demand it be changed, is a new form of financial protectionism. If China did it, American goods in China would be cheaper and Chinese goods sold in the United States would be more expensive - just like a tariff would do.

    The Chinese government has replied, forcefully. It can use the “threat” of dumping dollar asset Treasury bonds, affecting the exchange rate of the U.S. dollar as well as U.S. domestic interest rates, to forestall this stupid congressional advocacy. Such an action by China would possibly hurt them more than it would hurt the American economy, but it would hurt the American economy. It shows the cost of this American protectionism; those like Schumer only only say it would help “us” (see my essay, “What Do You Mean ‘Us,’ Mr. President?).

    I say, “Good for Chinese blowback.” It is in the best interests of the American people. It is too bad the American congress is on the wrong side of the issue, thanks to lobbying by that special interest (the tapeworm).

    Which is worse?

    (i) U.S. feudal labor unionist protectionism, or
    (ii) Chinese manipulated market policies?

    I think the Chinese represent my interests, producing and selling cheap goods in America, against the craven special-privilege seeking of labor union leaders In America, at the expense of all the rest of us.

    China Threatens ‘Nuclear Option’ of Dollar Sales

    by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

    The Chinese government has begun a concerted campaign of economic threats against the United States, hinting that it may liquidate its vast holding of US treasuries if Washington imposes trade sanctions to force a yuan revaluation.

    Two officials at leading Communist Party bodies have given interviews in recent days warning - for the first time - that Beijing may use its $1.33 trillion (£658bn) of foreign reserves as a political weapon to counter pressure from the US Congress.

    Shifts in Chinese policy are often announced through key think tanks and academies.

    Described as China’s “nuclear option” in the state media, such action could trigger a dollar crash at a time when the U.S. currency is already breaking down through historic support levels.

    It would also cause a spike in U.S. bond yields, hammering the U.S. housing market and perhaps tipping the economy into recession. It is estimated that China holds over $900 billion in a mix of U.S. bonds.

    Xia Bin, finance chief at the Development Research Centre (which has cabinet rank), kicked off what now appears to be government policy with a comment last week that Beijing’s foreign reserves should be used as a “bargaining chip” in talks with the U.S.

    “Of course, China doesn’t want any undesirable phenomenon in the global financial order,” he added.

    He Fan, an official at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, went even further today, letting it be known that Beijing had the power to set off a dollar collapse if it choose to do so.

    “China has accumulated a large sum of U.S. dollars. Such a big sum, of which a considerable portion is in U.S. treasury bonds, contributes a great deal to maintaining the position of the dollar as a reserve currency. Russia, Switzerland, and several other countries have reduced the amount of their dollar holdings.

    “China is unlikely to follow suit as long as the yuan’s exchange rate is stable against the dollar. The Chinese central bank will be forced to sell dollars once the yuan appreciated dramatically, which might lead to a mass depreciation of the dollar,” he told China Daily.

    The threats play into the presidential electoral campaign of Hillary Clinton, who has called for restrictive legislation to prevent America being “held hostage to economic decisions being made in Beijing, Shanghai, or Tokyo.”

    She said foreign control over 44 percent of the U.S. national debt had left America acutely vulnerable.

    Simon Derrick, a currency strategist at the Bank of New York Mellon, said the comments were a message to the U.S. Senate as Capitol Hill prepares legislation for the autumn session.

    “The words are alarming and unambiguous. This carries a clear political threat and could have very serious consequences at a time when the credit markets are already afraid of contagion from the subprime troubles,” he said.

    A bill drafted by a group of U.S. senators, and backed by the Senate Finance Committee, calls for trade tariffs against Chinese goods as retaliation for alleged currency manipulation.

    The [RMB] yuan has appreciated 9 percent against the [U.S.] dollar over the last two years under a crawling peg but it has failed to halt the rise of China’s trade surplus, which reached $26.9 billion in June.

    Henry Paulson, the U.S. Tresury Secretary, said any such sanctions would undermine American authority and “could trigger a global cycle of protectionist legislation.”

    Mr. Paulson is a China expert from his days as head of Goldman Sachs. He has opted for a softer form of diplomacy, but appeared to win few concession from Beijing on a unscheduled trip to China last week aimed at calming the waters.

    Last Updated: 1:41am BST August 9, 2007

    Racism? Ron Paul?

    Monday, August 6th, 2007

    Background detail: In about 1992, in one of a series of a regularly published newsletters about politics, a ghost writer made several [racist] remarks under Ron Paul’s name. Ron Paul took responsibility for the error stating that he failed to proof read the piece before it was published.

    I doubt the remarks in Ron Paul’s 1992 newsletter are actually “racist,” as if to infer there is some biological or psychological differences among [race] groups. We all know, in the first place, that “race” is a bogus category invented by the eugenics movement as it emerged from the 19th century. (What actually exist are cultural differences: different more/less successful adaptations to modern society - e.g. education - and small variances as documented by Murray & Herrnstein in The Bell Curve (1994).

    Murray & Herrnstein pretty well proved there are no significant differences, although their even presuming to look at the data created a firestorm of accusations about “racism.”

    The best discussion of this issue I know is Thomas Sowell’s Black Rednecks and White Liberals (2005), but Sowell makes very clear the issue is redneck culture. Redneck culture is very maladaptive to modern society. Many former African slaves in the USA (importantly: not Brazilian nor Caribbean) grew up absorbing and learning redneck culture from the white community. It is not any thing biological about people with African heritage.

    If Ron Paul was only reporting higher crime rates and broken family rates among the African American community, then Lyndon Johnson is more to blame.

    It is a fact that many African Americans are infected with the inferior Redneck culture. Not only candidates like Ron Paul should speak frankly about this contributing factor to (1) poverty, (2) poor school achievement, and (3) adverse social discrimination.

    Criticism of the “facts on the ground” is some kind of blind spot among Ron Paul’s critics.

    The Complex Life and Death of Pat Tillman

    Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

    from CLS

    Sometimes people say that after someone was born that the mold was broken. And broken molds are what come to mind as I try to grapple with the issues surrounding the killing of Pat Tillman. In Tillman’s case he was the one who broke the mold. Everything I learn about him defies conventional stereotypes.

    First, here was a man who was a football star. The stereotype for that is a dumb jock. But Tillman was nobody’s fool. He read widely and was interested in the world of ideas. He had an academic grade point average of just under 4.0 - almost perfect. He also challenged others about negative attitudes toward gay people. Again, not the typical sports player.

    Tillman played football and played it well. His last season of professional football earned him over $500,000. But the religious fanatics on 9/11 changed the course Tillman would take. Appalled at what he saw that day he decided to enlist in the US military. His country was under attack.

    He finished the season as he was obligated to do. He was offered a new contract worth $3.6 million. He told his agent “Don’t worry about me. I’m thinking about doing something else.� He had a higher loyalty. The team understood this since he had shown them the same loyalty. Previously the St. Louis Rams approached Tillman to play for them and had offered him $9 million. He refused the offer to stay with the Phoenix Cardinals instead. But after the attacks he felt his loyalty to country had to come first.

    Together, with his brother Kevin, who had turned down a chance to play professional baseball, Pat enlisted. The sport’s network ESPN wanted to give the Arthur Ashe Courage Award to the brothers. Neither of them chose to attend to accept it. Younger brother Richard appeared to tell the audience: “Pat and Kevin don’t think they are better than anyone else.�

    Even in death Tillman defied conventional thinking. For decades the believers have comforted themselves with the claim that there are no atheists in foxholes. Tillman died, as he lived, an unbeliever.

    A military chaplain spread the story of the last moments of Tillman’s life but he exaggerated the facts to make the atheist look cruel and mean. The chaplain, who was not there, claimed that Tillman insulted a fellow soldier for being religious. According to the chaplain’s story Tillman told a praying soldier to “shut your fucking mouth� and told the man he was “sniveling�. The soldier involved said this is untrue. He says he was praying and Tillman said: “Hey, O’Neal, why are you praying? God can’t help us now.�

    The soldier, Bryan O’Neil, says that “more or less put my mind straight about what was going on.� That is nothing like the smear spread by the chaplain. Apparently Tillman’s non theistic beliefs bother the military, as we shall see shortly.

    In this attack Tillman was killed. The US military told the world that he died under attack from evil terrorists. It was lie. Worse yet, the military knew it. Tillman was killed by someone in the US military.

    But Tillman was the poster boy for the Pentagon. He was the sports player who turned down millions to join the army. He was photogenic, smart and successful. And the military hoped that they could dupe lots of young kids into thinking the same sort of glamour will apply to them if they enlist. And now he was dead. And worse yet he was killed by the US military not by any enemy combatant.

    So they invented an attack that didn’t take place. Their goal was to turn the Tillman funeral into a military recruiting bonanza. And these men, including people at the highest levels of the military, lied to the Tillman family about what happened.

    But Tillman’s family weren’t buying what the government was selling. And they noticed discrepancies in the official myth invented by the brass. So they asked questions and got more lies in return. The web of deceit woven by the spinmeisters of the government started to unravel bit by bit. So the government went on the offensive. One military investigator started attacking the family.

    This vile investigator, Lt. Col Ralph Kauzlarich, didn’t want to do his job and investigate the facts. He wanted to sweep them under the rug. He bitched that investigators would have dropped the case long ago except Tillman was a celebrity and his parents refused to let the matter go. He says the whole incident was “an unfortunate accident� but that the family won’t drop the case “because of their religious beliefs.�

    What he means is that non-religious beliefs. Kauzlarich was on the warpath because the Tillman’s weren’t Christians. He discovered that when Tillman’s body was being brought back to the US that Tillman’s brother, and fellow soldier, objected when a chaplain was brought in to pray. That bothered Kauzlarich. And he was now convinced that the Tillman’s were trouble makers merely because they were not Christians. He told ESPN:

    When you die, I mean, there is supposedly a better life, right? Well, if you are an atheist and you don’t believe in anything, if you die, what is there to go to? Nothing. You are worm dirt. So for their son to die for nothing, and now he is no more — that is pretty hard to get your head around that. So I don’t know how an atheist thinks. I can only imagine that that would be pretty tough.

    He said the Tillman’s lack faith including “trust in the system� so he didn’t “think anything will make them happy . . . because they can’t bring their son back.�

    Pat’s mother, Mary, was offended. “Oh, it has nothing to do with the facts that this whole thing is shady. But it is because we are not Christians.� She said, “Pat may not have been what you call a Christian. He was about the best person I ever knew. I mean, he was just a good guy. He didn’t lie. He was very honest. He was very generous. He was very humble. I mean, he had an ego, but it was a healthy ego. It is like, everything those (people) are, he wasn’t.�

    Kauzlarich basically admitted that he doesn’t want to know who killed Pat Tillman. He said they probably could have discovered who had but he said: “I don’t think it really matters.� He told reporters: “I had no issue on not finding a specific person responsible for doing it.�

    Precisely what happened is unclear. There was bad planning, poorly trained soldiers, and mismanagement. There may have been more but we may never know. Certainly Tillman had concluded that the US government had lied about the war. He had become an opponent of the Iraqi invasion.

    Here was a man with the integrity to question professional football coaches about whether they harbored any antigay sentiments. He was not afraid to speak out. Did he? Did someone, perhaps offended by his opposition to the war, his atheism, or his social tolerance, decide that the incident was a perfect time to settle a score? Perhaps? But that is only conjecture. We don’t know because men like Kauzlarich decided it was best not to know.

    Immediately after the killing the cover up began. We discovered that someone destroyed Tillman’s personal journal. Why would they do that? Was there something in the journal that they didn’t want out? This would have been a cherished memento for the Tillman family. Instead it was destroyed. His uniform was destroyed as well. Investigations were not done and the military invented a false story to promote the glory of their war.

    Three days after the killing the soldiers who were there had a meeting. Immediately everyone was looking for excuses not causes. They talked about panic. And many of them immediately tried to blame Tillman for his own death. This only stopped when Bryan O’Neal spoke up. A witness that evening says O’Neal was barely holding back tears and was emotional shook up. He told the others, “The only reason I am standing here is because Pat Tillman saved my life.�

    So far we don’t know exactly what happened. All we know is what didn’t happen and that’s the original, official story released by the US government. The cover up has been shameless and blatant.

    Mary Tillman told the media that both the Left and the Right have tried to use Pat Tillman’s death for their own purposes. She dismisses both sides saying Pat’s thoughts were far more complex than either of those movements can understand. She said one couldn’t put his views in a box. Tillman appeared to be a paradox in so many ways. But the more I learn the more I have to admire him. The complexities of life don’t fit the Left-Right mold. Since Pat Tillman didn’t seem to fit anyone’s mould I think we should realize Mary Tillman is correct when she say’s Pat wasn’t someone who couldn’t be so easily stereotyped. And I admire that.

    Posted by Centre for Liberal Studies, August 01, 2007,
    http://snipurl.com/tillman