Posts Tagged ‘Responsibility’

Recovery.gov – Too Little Too Late

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Let me start by saying that I respect President Obama’s initiatives towards a more transparent government, especially the efforts to embrace technology in order to expand his outreach.  One of those efforts – Recovery.gov – is a website that is scheduled to detail the parameters of the forthcoming 2009 Economic Stimulus Act, specifically explaining to taxpayers where their dollars are being spent.

Ordinarily, we would have to find the text of the bill at the senate or house website, root through a bunch of legalese, and then attempt to translate it into intelligible language.  So Recovery.gov – assuming it will not be written in such dense language – is a great idea.  The only problem, however, is that the website currently has no information at all – the reason being that the bill has not yet passed.  Personally, I think we should be privy to the provisions of the bill before it passes.  That way we would have the opportunity to write to our senators and representatives and tell them whether or not we agree with those provisions.

Granted, the average citizen probably cannot grasp all the intricacies of American economics, and may not be poised to offer a detailed analysis of the bill, but we can certainly recognize – and oppose where necessary – those things that are obviously extraneous, like the tax cut for toy arrow makers that slipped into the previous stimulus bill.

So while I acknowledge the President’s efforts in reaching out to the public, I fear that Recovery.gov may be too little too late to allow us to truly engage in our democracy – something especially important when it comes to a bill a $900 billion price tag.

The Infallible Israel

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

My official position on the nation of Israel is that it should have never existed.  It is one of the more grotesque products of colonialism and has continued to stand as a blatant offense to nearly every other nation in the region.  That said, I do not think it is feasible, or even reasonable, to expect that it will go anywhere, neither by peaceably reverting to the state of Palestine, nor being removed by aggression.  It is about as unreasonable as expecting the United States to cede half of its territory back to the Native American tribes from whom the land was stolen.  It simply will never happen.

For the sake of peace, Israel will have to maintain its sovereignty as a nation, regardless of the conditions by which that sovereignty was acquired.  However, also for the sake of peace, something must change with regards to how Israel maintains that sovereignty.  It cannot continue to conduct its military operations and Apartheid-like practices unabated, with no accountability.

I fail to understand what seems to be the infallibility of Israel – how those voices who speak out against the country’s practices are either a quiet minority or a few violent pockets of militancy.  How is it that most of the world seems to offer either tacit approval or feign blissful ignorance as Israel has continued throughout its history to perpetrate a plethora of human rights violations and countless other offenses?

I could be wrong, and it may be that I simply cannot hear the voices speaking out against Israel because they are censored – i.e. simply not covered – by the media.  Either way, I wonder what exactly Israel would have to do before the mainstream voice becomes one of opposition to Israel rather than one of quiet complicity.