Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Missing - Our Best and Brightest

I knew from the time that I studied government in college that I wanted to run for public office. In order to be worthy of holding a position of public trust, I believed that my conduct in all things should be moral and ethical.

Today, that must seem to most voters like a really stupid idea. Candidates for major offices of state and nation seem to hold themselves to a very low standard. The idea that candidates for office owe the people they serve anything is now laughable. People with all sorts of shady pasts run for and are elected to public office.

It shouldn't be that way.

Frustrating as this is to voters, we can do something about it. Pick one thing that politicians of either party do that particularly annoys you, and resolve not to vote for the worst offender.

For me, I hate candidates who lie their way to election. Far too often, candidates hold one position during primary campaigns and then experience a miraculous conversion for the general election. I make it a point to consider all such conversions lies about one or the other of their positions. It doesn't matter which one. A person who would lie to gain power should never have his or her word trusted again.

These people who so disrespect the voters think there is nothing we can do about their incessant lying, except not vote. For them, lying is a win-win activity. Can it be good for democracy that this is a non-partisan activity?

You may find another more important turn off. But no matter. We are not helpless, and there is something better than sitting out this critical election that we can do. First, we can try to figure out which of our choices is less guilty of our most disliked failing. We can vote yet one more time for the lesser of two evils. Second. if that is to painful a choice to make, get a ballot, and leave it blank. Your vote won't be counted, but if enough people vote instead of staying home, analysts will notice that the percentages don't add up.

My favorite long term solution to unethical candidates would be a space on every ballot for None of the Above. That would allow us to do something significant with our vote. Imagine the shock of an election where None of the Above came in first. It wouldn't put a living person in office, but it would demonstrate to the real person that got the most votes, that he/she had been rejected by the voters,

I know that getting any such change in voting would be a hard fight. But in our ballots in MA, we have space to write in a choice. So I know of a couple of races where None of the Above is going to get my vote.


Monday, October 6, 2014

Market Basket Miracle

Businesses are run very differently now than when I was young. Then many businesses treated their workers and customers as a precious asset. Not so much anymore. Now both employees and customers are viewed as victims to be fleeced. The main reason to open a business is have a path to our wallets. Nothing matters but their profits.

Fortunately there are exceptions. One of them near me is Demoulas Market Basket where I can really stretch my food budget. Until this June, it was operated by Artie T., the grandson of the founder. He believed in treating his workers and customers with respect. And by doing so, he made a lot of money.

But not enough money to suit another members of his extended family Arthur S., also grandson of the founder. In June, Arthur S gained control of the company, and fired Artie T. Next A. S. replaced him with business types who would convert the chain to a profit-first model. This was a mistake.

Employees of the company went on strike. Since none of them were part of a union, this was a big risk. They didn't ask for better hours or more pay. They only wanted Artie T. back. So it was a strike to return their CEO. No strike like this has occurred in our country.

The new managers reacted with threats and firings. But the strike went on. Store shelves emptied and customers like me, went to other stores. I discovered just how much more I had to pay in the other grocery chains.

All through the hottest days of summer, the employees and customers held firm. We were all excited by the news that Artie T. had made an offer to buy our his cousin. But nothing happened. Hopes were dampened as promised completion of the deal didn't take place. Finally, the governors of Massachusetts and New Hampshire, where most of the stores were located, intervened and attempted to mediate between the cousins.

 On a Thursday afternoon, word came that a deal had been struck. Artie T. would own the business and return to run it. Every one rejoiced. Delivery trucks lined up outside the warehouses, workers flooded back to the stores to prepare for the return of the customers. When we first went back to our nearest store less than two days later, most of the usual products were at the ready. Empty parking lots filled with cars.

Artie T. visited many of his stores to personally thank his workers for their loyalty. He posted a message on the company website to thank customers for their loyalty. The last item to return to normal was the appearance of the weekly flyer in my mailbos. Business has been better than ever.

What a lovely example that business is about more than huge profits. Hopefully, Market Basket, and Artie T. will convince other businessmen that businesses based on generosity instead of greed can be very profitable.

Nice to make a bit of history.


Sunday, October 5, 2014

The Never Asked Question

One of the major issues of our day is whether or not our actions contribute to our changing climate. Whether or not you agree with the vast majority of the scientists doesn't change that. So our political leaders are naturally often asked about what they believe on the subject. The Radical Republicans always used to jump right in with their standard position which agrees with the hoaxers and not the scientists.

But with an election coming up soon, they have tested out a new answer to the question. "I"m not a scientist." End of subject. Well or course they aren't. But it is their job to create laws on the subject. It is their job to do some basic research on the subject, so they know at least as much as the average high school student.

Members of the press seem to bring the topic up with candidates when they get the chance. But when they get the current stupid answer, they appear totally satisfied. I keep watching and waiting for the logical follow up question about climate change. "What if you are wrong?

The stakes are very high. If the scientists are correct, there is precious little time for us to start to set our stewardship of the planet in a positive direction. If the Radical Republicans are wrong about climate change, their children and grandchildren will be saddled with huge expenses and few good options.

And so will ours.

So reporters it is past time to ask all candidates for office in this election about their ideas about climate change. Every time one of them claims that we are all causing our planet to warm, ask my follow up question. Playing dumb is not an acceptable excuse.

Saturday, October 4, 2014

A Month to Go

Lots of pundits have been reminding me today that there is just a month before we should all be heading to the polls to vote. No big issues for this election is the common pundit analysis. I don't know how any thoughtful person could come to that conclusion. Most people who don't plan to vote know that they should.

Here are a few little items. Defeating big money should be one huge item. Rich and powerful people need only one thing from us, every 2 years, that we allow them to con us either to vote for their well funded candidates or turning off politics altogether. I would urge everyone to rise in righteous anger. If we vote in large numbers, we defeat their power grab. Since the off-year election of 1962, no election has matched the 57% of voters who bothered that  year. Can't we do better than that?

Think about the minimum wage. Radical Republicans like to tell us that to raise it even a little would cost jobs. There is something very wrong with that idea. I always thought that employers hired only the number of people they actually needed. And no more than likely, they have the absolute minimum of employees that they can manage with. Businesses take care of their bottom lines first. A few statistics about the minimum wage. In 1960, which doesn't seem so long ago to me, the minimum wage was $1.25. Try living on that. But on the plus side, gas was about $.31 a gallon. Now gas prices don't figure in the cost of living, but as they rose in the 1970s, the price of everything we had to buy went up a lot as well. If the minimum wage had risen in proportion to the increased cost of gas, it would be over $14 today. How nice would that be?

The Radical Right always wails about the size of our government and too intrusive. That makes no more sense than most of what they want to inflict upon our country. They don't wan't government around to help ordinary people. After all, they don't pay Congressional Bills. Government grows because rich and powerful people want government to pass laws that benefit them. They don't want any government around to bother them, so for us government should be much smaller and therefore no hindrance to their plans. So the GOP echoes their complaints. Any help the government gives us ordinary folks is too big. No need for us to have clean air or water, or health care for our children. But the proof of the nonsense of the GOP whining about excessive government is that the first thing they do when they accidentally get elected is that they insert government into the lives of women, reducing rights to control our own lives. I was only a child when I realized that there were two sets of rule, one for men and one for women. It is the Radical Right that intends to keep it that way.

So no important policies at stake in this election? Please. Skip the pundits, TV ads, polls and think for yourselves.

Voting is always important, especially this year. So give our country your support and vote. Your future depends on it.