Dear Mr. Bageant,
Thanks for the article on the global elite ("Somewhere a Banker Smiles"). I just wanted to add the
obvious -- that the global media corps will never, ever report on their
incestuous relationships. G.E. is the largest media company and the
largest defense contractor in the U.S. Murdoch's global neocon army
seems to have a direct line to every major candidate and politician.
These conglomerates control most of what people see as news and how
they view events. Massive power.
Continue reading "Dismayed by dismissal of 9/11 movement" »
Joe,
Regarding your essay Somewhere a Banker Smiles: The latest thing to hit
the stock market are these "dark pools of liquidity", high powered
investment groups who are seeking to buy some regional exchanges where
they can trade stocks away from the noisy floor of the public
exchanges. Well, they have always had their block trades. A block trade
crosses on the exchange, but is negotiately privately. A company
insider, let's say, calls his broker, who calls another to negotiate a
sale of his XYZ stock, because XYZ maybe only trades 10K a day, and if
he dumps the whole thing on the market by the time it all gets cleaned
up they will have dropped the price considerably.
Continue reading "Leadership becoming more conspiratorial" »
Hi Joe,
I am writing this in response to Edmund's interesting letter on today's
young people ("A coarsening of modern American culture"). I imagine Edmund is about my age and yours (I'm 56).
Remember we tend to romanticize the past in our case the 50's and 60's.
As to be dressing like slobs and acting like louts, teenagers have
always done this. Remember gangs in the 50's and hippies in the 60's.
I enjoyed my anti-social period.
Continue reading "300-pound kids are not going very far" »
Joe,
I'm sort of a newcomer to your writings, but from what I've read so
far, I think you're right on about so many things! I've noticed that
one theme running through much of what you write is the condition of
the working man in modern America, a subject which I have thought about
a great deal.
I come from a solidly working class background, both my mother and
father being children of immigrant parents. Neither finished high
school because they had to go out and help support the family during
the Great Depression. After World War II my father settled into a
modest-paying job in a shop doing custom metal work; my mother was a
housewife in a two-family house we shared with my uncle and aunt. We
had one very used car. Typical working-class 1950s setting. They both
scrimped and saved to put me through college. I became and engineer and
now live in a nice middle class suburb. While not living the full-blown
American Dream, I am not exactly hurting, either.
Continue reading "A coarsening of modern American culture" »
Heya Joe:
In response to the Vietnamese fan ("Reader says humor dilutes
seriousness"), I say: Don't apologise for clowning, mate! If you can
address the serious topics of these terrible times with a slit of a
grin, it shows you still have some lightness in your soul. Like the
bluesmen say, "Gotta laugh to keep from crying ..."
Bucko in Australia
------
True my friend!
But despite the cultural differences, the Vietnamese kid had a point.
We mix fact and humorous fiction because we cannot take the truth on
the chin. In daily life, when I am not depressed as hell, I like to
think I am a pretty upbeat, and often funny guy (especially when drunk,
I think, though opinion seems to vary on that one.)
Continue reading "Americans must sugar coat the truth" »
Hi Joe,
Please accept my gratitude. Your essays are like a key that frees me
from a prison of social censure and guides my perception to a higher
level. There is one question I’ve been asking myself for a long time:
Why is it that those who are extremely perceptive and eloquent in
seeing and expressing huge flaws in the existing social fabric, seem to
be unwilling or unable to build or reveal a specific cognitive
structure that would eliminate such flaws?
Continue reading "A German asks why change is so difficult" »
Dear Joe,
I've just discovered your web site and absolutely love it. It is nice to
know that there are someone who thinks deeply about things, realized
what is happening to himself, and understands that everyone is
responsible and accountable for his own actions. I just wish that
people can be reached without one resorting to humor, entertaining
headlines and exaggerations -- thus diluting the seriousness of one's
messages.
Continue reading "Reader says humor dilutes seriousness" »
Dear Joe,
I've just read "The masses have become lazy, fat and stupid" and I must
say that Kelly's letter is most depressing for the fact that he/she --
like many "self-made" people -- seems to remember "fearing every moment
that I wouldn't make tuition" and other terrors on the way up only as
things she heroically overcame rather than as points in her life when
some small change beyond her control might have brought the entire
dream crashing down.
Continue reading "Kissing asses and telling the right lies" »
Joe,
I just read your article Somewhere a Banker Smiles and all I could
think of was the old 1976 movie, Network -- especially, Ned Beatty's
CEO-character's prescient rant to the rebellious newsman Howard Beale:
You have meddled with the primal forces of nature, Mr. Beale, and I won't have it, is that clear?!
You think you have merely stopped a business deal -- that is not the
case! The Arabs have taken billions of dollars out of this country, and
now they must put it back. It is ebb and flow, tidal gravity, it is
ecological balance!
Continue reading "Am I getting through to you, Mr. Beale?" »