! Wake-up  World  Wake-up !
~ It's Time to Rise and Shine ~


We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality planet and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is the Aswer by means of Knowledge and Awareness!





Through a Glass Lightly 10 Hopeful Cracks in the Bush Facade 
By Bernard Weiner The Crisis Papers http//www.crisispapers.org/

Dec. 5, 2002 -- LOS ANGELES (crisispapers. org) -- Don't know about you, but 
I find myself caught right in the middle of the glass half- empty/half-full 
way of looking at our current political situation.

In my last piece ("Shining Our Light on the Shadow Forces Open Letter to 
the Fledgling Movement"), I talked about how things are going to get 
worse before they get worse, and then even more worse, and then things will 
start to get better. In my darker periods -- which these days is most of the 
time -- I still believe this, that what is about to come down from Bush&Co. 
in the next few years is going to be horrendous, both for Americans 
domestically and for those in the way of U. S. imperial moves abroad.

Domestically, due-process Constitutional protections, already in shreds 
thanks to Bush &Ashcroft, will nearly disappear. Big Brother government will 
invade our privacy in virtually every area of our lives, thanks to 
technological breakthroughs and the magic word "terrorists." More citizens 
will be yanked off to the American gulags, cut off from judicial review or 
even their attorneys. Internationally, Bush&Co. will continue to march 
forward belligerently, arrogantly and threateningly in their desire to bring 
"benevolent hegemony" to those areas of the world rich in minerals and 
energy sources, thus stirring up anti-U. S. rebellions and fueling more 
terrorism.

But rather than dwell on that awful picture, and what it presages for the 
future -- the glass half-empty scenario -- let's search for any hopeful 
signs that point to a way out of our current morass.

In this glass-half-full approach, consider these

1. Big Brotherism. A number of anti-big-government conservatives, appalled 
at the Constitutional excesses of the Bush Administration and its Big 
Brother approach to snooping on American citizens, have begun to rebel. A 
bit late, of course -- since many of them supported those very excesses in 
helping get the USA PATRIOT Act and the Homeland Security bill passed -- but 
better late than never.

It almost boggles the mind to read that such rightwing stalwarts as Dick 
Armey, Bob Barr, and Henry Hyde are about to join forces with the American 
Civil Liberties Union, as consultants, to try to rein in the police-state 
tactics of the Bush Administration. Politics does indeed put one in the sack 
with the strangest bedfellows. (Incidentally, the ACLU -- which is running 
TV ads in selected markets showing Ashcroft taking scissors to the 
Constitution -- reports that it is being inundated with new members, up 12% 
from last year at this time, and rising fast.)

In addition, such conservative/libertarian columnists as William Safire and 
Pat Buchanan likewise are taking frontal potshots at the excesses of this 
arrogant Administration and its approach to the Constitution. Good on them!

If the civil libertarian wing of the Democratic party, and the anti- war 
movement in general, are wise, they will welcome these lapsed brethren into 
the anti-Bush&Co. fold and try to utilize their conservative credentials to 
lure more such disaffected Republicans to the cause of restoring 
Constitutional balance and due-process to our polity. (I think the Democrats 
may have leaders with that kind of wisdom; I'm not sure about some of the 
segments of the anti-war movement, still locked into slogans and behaviors 
that are sure to alienate the great middle-class of Americans, without whom 
no political movement can make much progress.)

2. The Jeffords example. Given this relatively slight but growing 
conservative opposition to Bush&Co. excesses, there may be more leverage for 
leaning on such moderate GOP senators as Snowe, Collins, Specter and Chaffee 
to "do a Jeffords" and become Independents, thus blocking Bush&Co.'s total 
control of the U. S. Congress. It would be a miracle if some or all of them 
were to bolt the party -- those GOP moderates stand to benefit from the 
perks of being part of the winning side -- but if they did, it would make it 
easier for Democrats to head off the more egregious policies of the Bush 
Administration. Surely these GOP moderates are uneasy with (or even revolted 
by) some of those policies and, with enough pressure from inside and outside 
the Senate, they might be willing to consider such a patriotic move. There 
is talk amongst some Democrats of trying to lure them over by promising them 
key leadership positions and other blandishments -- not a bad strategy, if a 
bit obvious.

3. The Supreme Court. One can expect that some of the more outrageous 
provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act and the Homeland Security Act will make 
their way to the U. S. Supreme Court, perhaps as early as next year. Given 
the growing revolt by conservatives against the more extreme aspects of 
those bills with reference to civil liberties and privacy, it is possible 
that the Supreme Court, with a conservative majority, might rule that some 
of those provisions are unconstitutional. (One can imagine that Rehnquist, 
Scalia and Thomas would always rule for Bush&Co. -- they are, in a way, 
charter members of that Co. -- but Kennedy and O'Connor, a shade more 
moderate, might join the more liberal four on questions such as these. Let 
us not forget, many conservatives are worried about the martial-law-type 
precedents established under Bush that would still be in place were liberal 
Democratic administrations to retake the government some day.)

Already, we've seen several key court cases recently where Bush&Co. have had 
their hands slapped. An appeals court has ruled that the feds can not 
violate California law and turn over the oil-rich coastline to companies 
wishing to drill. And the judge hearing the case against Cheney's continuing 
refusal to make public who participated in shaping the Administration's 
energy policies once again has ordered him, in no uncertain terms, to turn 
over those papers and quickly. That's one courageous judge. (It's not clear 
what penalties could be exacted against Cheney if he chooses to ignore the 
court's order -- contempt-of-court proceedings are not likely, but it's 
conceivable they could be ordered; it's even possible that impeachment could 
loom somewhere down the line. But, once again, the true face of Bush&Co, 
arrogantly deciding for themselves what information should be seen by the 
American public will be made manifest, and electoral consequences could ensue.)

4. The Esquire Article. In case you haven't heard, a Bush Administration 
insider -- John DiIulio, who was Bush's head of the faith-based initiative 
program -- sent a long memo to Esquire writer Ron Susskind that takes a 
vivid peek behind the corrupt, power-hungry mob in the White House. Among 
his bombshells "There is no precedent in any modern White House for what is 
going on in this one a complete lack of a policy apparatus. What you've got 
is everything, and I mean everything, being run by the political arm. It's 
the reign of the Mayberry Machiavellis... On social policy and related 
issues, the lack of even basic policy knowledge, and only a casual interest 
in knowing more, was somewhat breathtaking..."

DiIulio made the obligatory public backtracking a few days ago, after coming 
under heavy fire from the Bushistas, but what he wrote stands as a most 
important critical attack, all the more effective because it's not from a 
Democratic heavy or an online progressive writer but from a conservative who 
continues to support Bush as a leader.

What he's saying is what many of us have been asserting for quite awhile 
that the extremist HardRight agenda is what is driving the Bush&Co. engine, 
not policy that is intelligently vetted in terms of what is good for the 
American people. And Karl Rove, the Rasputin behind the throne, runs that 
domestic 24/7 political operation -- just as Cheney runs the foreign policy 
wing, and probably much more.

In short, a major fissure has opened up in the Bush facade, and through it 
the American people can get a clearer view of the ambitious, power-hungry 
zealots in charge. Score one for our side.

5. "The Republican" charge. Chuck Baldwin writes in "The Republican," a 
newsletter for the GOP faithful "Back in August, columnist Paul Craig 
Roberts asked the question, 'Is a vote for Republicans a vote for a police 
state?' The answer seems to be a resounding yes! The Bush administration 
seems determined to turn our country into the most elaborate and 
sophisticated police state ever devised."

"Things are so bad," Baldwin goes on, "that outgoing house majority leader 
Dick Armey said that under Bush the [Justice Department] is 'out of 
control.' In fact, the conservative congressman is reported to be seriously 
considering taking a position with the ACLU in order to help fight the 
federal government's usurpation of constitutionally protected liberties. 
Does that mean one must leave the Republican Party in order to fight for 
liberty? Maybe so... The tyrannical tendencies of old King George III of 
England cannot hold a candle to the Machiavellian machinations of King 
George XLIII of the United States. Unfortunately, there are few Paul Reveres 
around to sound an alarm. Unless contemporary patriots act quickly, 
Republicans, not Democrats, will be the ones that ultimately dismantle our 
constitution and trample our liberties."

Again, this invective was not spewed by the partisan enemies of the Bush 
Administration, but by a fellow Republican, thoroughly angered by his 
realization that his beloved party has been hijacked by far- right 
extremists, hell bent for leather to turn this country into the exact 
opposite of what small-government conservatives have been supporting for 
decades. Grounds for hope.

6. Kissinger. This one is a bit convoluted, so hang with me here. It would 
appear on the surface that Bush appointing Kissinger to chair the 
blue-ribbon commission on how 9/11 happened means the results will be a 
whitewash for Bush&Co. The ex-Secretary of State &National Security Advisor 
-- with blood all over his hands for his policies, and notoriously secretive 
in defending all regimes from public scrutiny -- is regarded as a Bush toady 
who will see no evil and report no evil in terms of what the Bush 
Administration knew and when they knew it, and why they did nothing to 
protect American citizens from the coming terrorist attackers on 9/11.

But one friend suggests the following, and though it's hard to swallow, it 
is a possibility. The shorthand version is payback. Kissinger, in this 
reading, is not totally Bush's man. Kissinger, who is like an elephant that 
never forgets, may want to revenge himself on old enemies, most notably 
Rumsfeld and, perhaps subconsciously, even the Bush family. And so, with his 
own private resentments active, and with Democratic vice-chairman George 
Mitchell prodding him from the sidelines, Kissinger -- anxious to resurrect 
his image from that of potential war-criminal back to the days of the 
brilliant, courageous Nobel Prize-winning statesman -- may let some of the 
dirt reach the light of day.

If and when that smelly truth hits the fan, watch out! The American people, 
even in their terrorist-fright, would not take kindly to leaders who, to 
further their own political agenda, chose inaction in the face of knowledge 
of what was coming -- leading to 3000 innocent American civilians dying. Out 
of that kind of rage and disappointment are impeachment movements born.

7. Town Hall politics. Bush&Co. are trying to make war with Iraq an 
inevitability, a fait accompli, a juggernaut that supposedly can't be 
stopped by anyone, not allies, not the American citizenry. To accomplish 
this end domestically, they pushed the USA PATRIOT Act and the Homeland 
Security Act through Congress. But in town after town, city after city -- 22 
at last count, and 40 more pending -- municipal governments are voting not 
to recognize the validity of unconstitutional behavior on the part of the feds.

As Nat Hentoff reported about the growth of the work of these Bill of Rights 
Defense Committees, by and large these resolutions are similar to the one 
passed unanimously by the Northampton City Council on May 2, 2002, which 
required that

"Local law enforcement continue to preserve residents' freedom of speech, 
religion, assembly and privacy; rights to counsel and due process in 
judicial proceedings; and protection from unreasonable searches and seizures 
even if requested or authorized to infringe upon these rights by federal law 
enforcement acting under new powers granted by the USA Patriot Act or orders 
of the Executive Branch.

"Furthermore, Federal and state law enforcement officials acting within the 
City are asked to 'work in accordance with the policies of the Northampton 
Police Department . . . by not engaging in or permitting detentions without 
charges or [using] racial profiling in law enforcement.'

Also, "the U. S. Attorney's Office, the Office of the Federal Bureau of 
Investigation, and Massachusetts State police [are to] report to the 
Northampton Human Rights Commission regularly and publicly the extent to and 
manner in which they have acted under the USA Patriot Act, new Executive 
Orders, or COINTELPRO-type regulations." This includes "disclosing the names 
of the detainees held in western Massachusetts or any Northampton residents 
detained elsewhere."

This is grassroots democracy at its finest, telling the over-reaching 
Ashcrofts and Bushes that they've gone way beyond the line of legal, or even 
decent, human behavior. Not a good omen for Bush&Co. (Why not try to get 
something similar going in your town or city?)

8. Snoops in Bed. The U. S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case 
concerning the sodomy laws. The hopeful reasoning here goes something like 
this If the court holds that the Southern law making sodomy illegal is an 
unconstitutional invasion of privacy in the bedroom, the mad dog fanatics in 
the Bush base of fundamentalist Christians will be outraged and consider 
withdrawing support from Bush. If the court rules in favor of such laws -- 
which, remember, have reference to heterosexual as well as homosexual 
behavior in the bedroom -- there will be a mobilization within the 
libertarian right as well as in the incensed gay community to have Congress 
pass laws overturning the court's ruling. Bush will then have to take a 
stand on this hot issue, and whichever way he goes, it doesn't bode well for 
him in 2004.

9. The Bush "mandate." Bush&Co. spokesmen and supporters claimed after the 
results of the midterm elections were announced that they would continue to 
use their "mandate" given them by the voters in 2000 to push their programs 
through Congress. But there was no mandate in 2000 -- since the will of the 
voters, who chose Gore, was superceded by five members of the U. S. Supreme 
Court, who halted the counting of citizens' ballots and installed Bush into 
the White House -- and neither was there a mandate on November 5th of 2002.

Only 40% of eligible voters actually cast ballots, and just slightly more 
than half chose the GOP candidates. In other words, 21% of eligible American 
voters chose the GOP. A swing of a few thousand votes here, and another few 
thousand there, and the Democrats would be in control of the Congress. (I've 
written elsewhere about the possibility of vote-tampering in those key 
states where touch-screen voting was employed, with no paper ballots and no 
exit polls to check those results against.)

In short, even if one believes the election results were on the up- and-up, 
the victory for Bush&Co. was razor-thin. There is no "mandate" to do 
anything but govern from the middle, but, figuring this is their one chance 
to fashion the political scene for the next decade or two, Bush&Co. are 
pretending that they won a massive victory that permits them to push through 
their extreme greed-and- power agenda, and to hell with you.

10. The Sin of Pride. Finally, and following from the last one There is in 
the post-election behavior of Bush&Co. no humility, no concession to 
decency, only a mad dash for the goodies of profit and power. Domestically 
and internationally, there is little but the willingness, even an eagerness, 
to push anyone aside who gets in their way.

There is, in this behavior, what the ancient Greek dramatists called 
"hubris," a tempting of the gods, who are prone to visit bad things on the 
heads of those mortals who pretend they are like gods themselves. The 
punishment for those who evidence overbearing pride and arrogance is to be 
brought low by their own excesses, by their belief that they can get away 
with anything.

Pride goeth before the fall. Let it be so.

... snip... American Politics Journal Dec. 5, 2002

"When I despair, I remember that all through history, the way of truth and 
love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time 
they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall... Think of it... 
always." -- Mahatma Gandhi