Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Mickey Mouse and Little Piggies

Alas, it’s not a fairy tale, but an overwhelming reality that day by day is dismantling the American Fairy Tale of shining progress.

Like the hero of the musical “Sorcerer’s Apprentice”, BP’s greed has not kept up with its capabilities, and now it can only run to and fro trying to stop the damage from the forces it has unleashed.

But that’s not all: the mouse BP calls its human employees “little piggies”, applying a cost/benefit analysis to the provision of safe as opposed to hazardous buildings for them to work in, oblivious to the fact that if the pigs decide to get together, they would be able to whip the mice into line.

Smarmy Democratic congressmen are starting to compare the president’s response to the Gulf Oil catastrophe to President Bush’s handling of Katrina. This is so unfair that it’s hard to believe: maybe they’re trying to take the wind out of any sails the Republicans might still have.

Senators who believe the congressional dome imbues them with special wisdom call for “the government” to take over the rescue of the Louisiana and Florida coasts: but as the Coast Guard talking head admitted yesterday, the government is not in possession of the necessary technology. In the words of the lady White House environmental advisor stuck with responding, it can only provide “the best brains”.

Meanwhile, no pundit can afford to state the obvious: we’ve gone from being the slaves of technology to being its victims.

After five decades of assuming that President Eisenhower’s warning about the military-industrial complex was mainly about the military, we now awaken to the fact that the industrial complex is perfectly capable of wrecking havoc on the world all on its own.

The Gulf oil disaster gives President Obama yet another sterling (sic) occasion to break with his handlers and chart a new course before it’s too late. Worse than the facts on the ground is the knowledge that this cannot happen. It calls for a wide-ranging discussion on the role of government in our times.

3 comments:

  1. Oh, Deena, I wish I could sit and talk with you about this. For me, it is the worse event in my lifetime. Nothing else compares to the horror taking place in the Gulf of Mexico. For the first time in my life I cannot watch a full news report on TV; I get physically sick.

    This post has pearls of wisdom and insight from beginning to end. Again, I find myself wishing that you wrote a national newspaper column tied to a major online news feed.

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  2. HI Lydia,

    Well, I wish I had a national column, too! How to get one? On the other hand, there are so many voices-in-the-wilderness.....

    At least once every day I wonder how I can go on living here, to the extent that this country is the bane of the world and we are unwilling participants in its actions.

    The reunion in Idaho isn't going to happen. I would love to see you. Please let me know if you have plans to come East.

    Deena

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  3. Good question...how does Deena Stryker get a national column? I figure if Bristol Palin can land a national speaking tour anything is possible. Please give consideration to using any and all contacts you have to move on the idea.

    I'm sorry you won't be in Idaho this year. We have a visitor from Philippines visiting in June (see my blog) and that week is also Michael's vacation week. The house must be painted outside....and on and on. I will go East, even for a short trip, if the budget would at all allow.

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