Wednesday, June 25, 2014

[Terry's Tale] Why Should a Man?


It is too clear and so it is hard to see.
A dunce once searched for a fire with a lighted lantern.
Had he known what fire was, 
He could have cooked his rice much sooner.
         - The Gateless Gate, Translated by Nyogen Senzaki and Paul Reps 






I really do not like talking about negative things, but to not speak out against ills would be tantamount to hiding them.  I have talked about those conservatives and libertarians who continue to push for deregulation in spite of all the damage that the nearly deregulated environment has created.  Today, for example, I was reading about Rebekkah Mackey’s effort to save her mother’s house from foreclosure.  The mortgage holder, Bank of America, refused to allow Ms. Mackey to take over the payments because when the mortgage does go into default, the bank will collect the insurance on the mortgage thus paying off the debt, then turn around and sell the “debt” thus enhancing the profit from the transaction, work to collect the debt from the debtor (this is all legal by the way) even though at this point the bank has received far more in money than the original mortgage would have provided for, and then turn around and resell the house.  What a SCHEME!  I mean – WHAT A SCAM!  Yet, this is but another example of what corporate behavior deregulation brings.




Most people today have, at best, little knowledge of the ‘thalidomide babies’ disaster of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s.  Briefly, in 1957 a German drug company named Chemie Grunenthal brought a new sedative to the market, a thalidomide drug they called Contergan.  The drug seemed to work extremely well for the purpose for which it had been released, but, as is the often the way with drugs and now with the genetically modified organisms (gmo’s), it was not fully tested.  It quickly became the ‘go to’ drug for pregnant women who suffered from morning sickness.  The result was horrific numbers of badly malformed children - a great many are still alive today as adults in their 50’s.  From this incident people should have learned the importance of product testing on any drug or any substance that would be ingested by any – people or animals. 

Yet today, we see that despite the rapidly mounting evidence for the potential dangers of GMO’s, there remains no in depth, neutral party testing of these things people have already been consuming.  The behavioral limits imposed by regulation having been thrown out the window have put the public at large in great risk.  And it’s not just the GMO industry for, in addition, many drugs now get on to this deregulated market without proper testing or are used as unapproved methods of treating problems unrelated to the drug’s original intention.  Perhaps you may remember a couple of years ago that drugs used for treating depression in adults began to be used on children despite the lack of ANY testing for such use.  The results were horrifying, in the worst case situations you had children who had been administered the drugs committing suicide.  The list of untested or misused (at the manufacturer’s encouragement) drugs is lengthy, but to name just a few – Singulair, Levaquin, Topamax, Zyprexa, and Seroquel.  The manufacturers make huge profits, but look at those who suffer.  Worse still, in the long run, ultimately society pays in very many ways.  But, apparently most important of all, is the profit to be made.

So, what does deregulation really mean?  Profit for the few at the expense of the many.  The deregulated banks can afford to play high stakes games of risk because they cannot lose.  If someone offered you a blank check to gamble in Las Vegas and allowed you to keep any and all winnings to boot, would you turn down such an offer?  The US government under George W. Bush gave that blank check not only to the large US based banks, but to an insurance firm, AIG (American Insurance Group) as well.  What is more, AIG later threatened to sue the US government for not giving them enough money!!  Even the conservative President Theodore Roosevelt understood that same issue in his day which explains why he became known as the ‘trust busting’ President. 

For fun, read Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle.  Beginning with the Reagan presidency the FDA began to have severe restrictions imposed upon it that have resulted in an effective deregulation of the meat packing industry.  Today that industry largely mirrors the one Sinclair wrote about.

Unregulated capitalism has proven over the last 150 years that the people running the corporations and the people supporting corporations that such capitalism produces tend to be false to the public to maximize their profits.  The Buddha said that the precept of truth was the most important of all the precepts, as a person who tells lies would very easily then break the other precepts and cover up his misbehaviour by telling lies.  A person who always told the truth would not perform an act he would be ashamed to own up to later.

From Wikipedia

The Buddha also instructed Rahula (his son) on reflecting and thinking before he acted to ensure that his actions were moral and conducive to the well-being of others and himself, by using examples and language a young child would understand.  Showing him a mirror, the Buddha asked Rahula what a mirror was used for.  Rahula replied that it was for the purpose of reflecting.  The Buddha then said: "Similarly, Rahula, before you say or do anything, reflect.  Reflect if this speech or action would be beneficial to others and yourself.  If, when you reflect, you feel that it is not beneficial to others and to yourself, then refrain from saying and doing it.  If you feel when you reflect that it is for the benefit of yourself and others, that such an action will not bring harm to another, that it is beneficial to others, then and only then should you perform this action.  You should then perform this action again and again.




If all people, regardless their religion, regardless their economic philosophy, regardless their personal ethics and morals, would follow these precepts of the Gautama Buddha, life in the world would work to the benefit of all.

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