Tag California

Now That’s Thinking With Your Dipstick, Jimmy

I hate cars. Really, really hate ‘em. I’ve never had the slightest interest in cars, and nothing about the seemingly never-ending and always-expensive repairs and problems or the incredibly shady world of mechanics, car salesmen, insurance agents and anyone else even vaguely related to automobiles has ever done anything to convince me otherwise. They are an evil necessity at best. Just so you know where I’m coming from here.

A few weeks ago, Bridget went to a presentation at our local public library from some car guy with “secrets of car repair”. I think she thought he was going to tell people how to do some of their own basic repairs and maintenance, but instead he had lots of tips about how to avoid being ripped off and otherwise taken advantage of by the assorted nefarious car people. So it was actually a pretty useful seminar by my reckoning.

One of the guy’s secrets is that the whole thing about getting your oil changed every 3,000 miles or 3 months is total and utter crap. Modern car engines are much more efficient and clean, and even the auto manufacturers themselves recommend a much longer interval between oil changes. This LA Times story confirms that opinion, and says that the state of California, Automobile Nation itself, has launched a PR campaign to spread the word and convince California drivers not to give into the propaganda spread by the oil change companies about the 3-month oil change. According to the article, car owners are wasting millions of gallons of motor oil and millions of dollars per year through too-frequent oil changes.

And you really SHOULD keep your tires properly inflated, even if the Republicans did tease Barack Obama about it in the 2008 campaign. As usual, if the Republicans are against it, you can count on it being a good idea.

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Sometimes The Good Guys Win

Not one, but TWO wins yesterday:

1. You almost certainly heard or read that California overturned its ban on same-sex marriage yesterday, becoming the second state in the country to permit legal marriage for gay couples (along with Massachusetts, of course). The decision is somewhat notable because the state’s Supreme Court is predominantly Republican, and you know how those Republicans hate The Gay.

It almost goes without saying that this breathes new life into the anti-gay activist crowd, but the L.A. Times said it anyway, and you can bet your bippy that Karl Rove is sitting in his underworld lair somewhere getting it all down on paper to use as a wedge issue for the fall campaign.

Meanwhile, I though Louis Bayard’s piece at Salon this morning was a nice bit from the point of view of a gay man who has always known what the Supreme Court of California apparently just discovered: that gay people live normal lives, raise normal families, and that most of them aren’t any different from most of us. It’s good that the law is on their side now, but it’s time to stop making such a big deal out of it.

I also liked this post at Beacon Broadside by author Patricia Gozember, which points out that same-sex marriage has been legal here in Massachusetts for more than four years now (wow!) and, contrary to the wild ravings of the right-wing fundie freakshow crowd, absolutely nothing bad has happened to any heterosexual marriage as a result, nor have people been marrying dogs or sheep or any of the other ridiculous claims made by those awful people.

I genuinely believe that eventually same-sex marriage will be legal in most states, even though it may take a long time to achieve.

2. You probably did NOT hear or read that the United States Senate voted yesterday to overturn the FCC’s ruling that would have allowed greater concentration of media ownership in individual markets.

Late last year, the FCC made a ruling that allowed for cross-ownership of newspapers and broadcast outlets in the same media market. This situation, traditionally known as “duopoly” in broadcast regulation lingo, was a strict no-no for decades. Despite the fact that 99% of the public response received by the FCC during their open comment period was opposed to rescinding duopoly, and despite a stern admonishment from Congress not to do it, the FCC did it anyway. After all, why listen to Congress when the media industry is paying you off on a regular basis, right? John Kerry (remember him, the guy who was too dull to be President…) marshalled the bill through the Senate, where it was passed by voice vote. The bill must still make it through the House, which shouldn’t be too much of a challenge, but will almost certainly be vetoed by George Bush. So it’s not a clean win, but it’s a very good start and shows that occasionally Washington listens to its constituents.

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Tomorrow Belongs To Me

Hitler Youth

William Ayers, a professor of education at the University of Illinois – Chicago, has co-written this article on his website that discusses a disquieting piece of information. The City of Chicago has over 10,000 students participating in Junior ROTC programs and over 1,000 students enrolled at one of five different military high schools in the city. Chicago’s public school system is the most militarized in the entire United States, but the idea of military public schools first emerged in Oakland, CA in 2000 when then-mayor Jerry Brown proposed a military magnet school. Similar programs exist in Philadelphia and Atlanta. The idea of bringing military discipline to urban high schools has been touted as a “no-nonsense” approach to restoring order into unmanageable classrooms and to provide college-preparatory-level education, but the statistics tracking college enrollment from Chicago’s military schools show rather uneven results.

Of concern to many critics is that these programs are disproportionately focused on replacing high schools that served black and immigrant neighborhoods. In the Chicago area, there are no military schools in any white community or suburb. The criticism is two-fold: one, that the use of military programs creates a de-facto two-tiered system of education based almost solely on race, and two, that the Department of Defense (which provides significant funding for the military schools and JROTC programs) is using the opportunity as a method of recruiting at a time when overall recruitment goals are not being met.

Ayers, et. al., take the criticism a step further and argue that militarized public schools are not only discriminatory, they promote a culture of obedience and conformity. Public schools, they argue, exist in a democracy to provide students with the opportunity to develop critical and independent thinking and to be exposed to a variety of ideas. The nature of military training is just the opposite — to drill cadets into compliance with orders, to act as units, and to follow strict discipline that rejects any questioning. They point out that during both WWI and WWII there was public debate about militarizing American high schools, but the idea was ultimately rejected by the federal government as unnecessary.

What goes unsaid in Professor Ayers’ article, but as subtext is loud and clear, is that this phenomenon is also part of a larger trend toward institutionalizing elements of fascism in American life. The well-known 2003 article “14 Characteristics Of Fascism” by Lawrence Britt identifies many common elements that existed in various Fascist states ranging from Nazi Germany to Suharto’s Indonesia to Pinochet’s Chile, and sadly far too many of them can be readily demonstrated as alive and well in George Bush’s America; fetishizing the military is a prime hallmark of fascist states, and since 2001 the idealization of the military has skyrocketed in our culture. Compelling young people to open identify with the active military by instilling the military’s own systems of discipline and training furthers the goal of maintaining high approval for the military establishment. Moreover, co-opting youth as ideological warriors transcends merely fascism and is a well-established mechanism of authoritarian governments of all stripes: the Hitler Youth, the Young Pioneers of the Soviet Union and the youth gangs of Mao’s Cultural Revolution were all state-sponsored groups utilizing elements of militarization to produce compliant political cadres outside of the formal militaries themselves that could be used for a variety of ideological purposes.

Proto-fascist sentiment has long been a part of the American national character, and the resurgence of extreme nationalism in the last several years, along with the constant and unchecked anti-democratic abuses of power by the Bush Administration, should give anyone but the most blindly-partisan right-wingers pause to consider how close we are to being transformed into a fascist nation. Using a variety of rationalizations for informally drafting and co-opting underprivileged members of our society into serving questionable politico-military ends should not be getting a free pass.

(Thanks to Jessica at Beacon Broadside for the link to Ayers’ article)

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