Thursday, August 13, 2020

THE TALE OF TWO WOLVES (A Guide for Voting)

At all levels of government, a lot is said.  There’s a lot of talk.  Especially, during campaigns candidates make many promises (how many are kept?). 


With this in mind, it’s best to watch what is done, and what is accomplished.  Promises are always kept through actions!  This is key to how we vote. Look at what has been done, and what has been accomplished. 


Also, ask questions.  Because of policies and decisions made by the government, is your life better than it was?  If so, then vote for that to continue.  If not, then vote for something else, or someone else.  All of this is like feeding the wolves.


How do voters feed the wolves?

  • With our time
  • By ignoring one or the other way.  Thereby implicitly making the other stronger.
  • With our money.
  • With our attention.


Demonstrate the power of your vote.  Vote for vision and positive actions.  Ignore the words.


VOTE FOR THE WOLF YOU WANT TO FEED!



. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.



Dave

Copyright © [2020] by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.  

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

BEACONS OF INQUIRY--INTRODUCTION

What is Beacons of Inquiry?  What is inquiry?  What place does it have in our democracy?  Why is it important to WE THE PEOPLE as voters?

The most important reason to ask ALL the questions (Inquire) is to insure that we find all the best answers and solutions.  All the questions also means thinking both short AND long term.  If there is a debate, and one side of an argument purposely omits a question, that is deception.  It is likely they aren’t looking for the best answer, but instead are looking for the most political advantage.  Identifying all the questions tends to maximizes justice.  This approach has been baked into our justice system through the formal process of discovery since the beginning of our American journey.

EXAMPLE
Let’s give Inquiry a trial run using the current debate on socialism.  America has a market economy (capitalism).  Several Democratic hopefuls are advocating for a sharp turn to socialism.  In America, this would be an abrupt change.  It is the kind of issue that elevates passions on both sides of the argument (question).

Here’s a beginning list of questions we might ask:

  • What is the history of socialism on our planet?
  • What is the promise of socialism?
  • Where has socialism succeeded?
  • Where has socialism failed to live up to its promises?
  • What about democratic socialism?  How is it different from socialism?
  • How does socialism compare to a market economy (America)?
  • Are there examples where market economies competed with socialism?
  • What are the pros and cons of market economies and socialism?
  • … etc.

In future editions of Beacons of Inquiry, we will do our best to identify as many questions as possible for each of the most controversial issues.  The best answers and solutions depend on knowing all the questions first.  So, over time there will be followup Beacons of Inquiry for specific issues.  

Our goal as voters is to push candidates toward the questions.  Then when they offer their vision, and their solutions, they should tell us how it positively answers all the questions for America.

Then we will know how to vote!

. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.


Dave



Copyright © [2020] by David William Wygant. All rights reserved. 

Tuesday, February 04, 2020

VOCABULARY DEFINITIONS OF OUR TIMES


Words are key building blocks in every language.  Our words are the basis of our communications with others, and with ourselves.  Our thoughts determine the words that connect us with everything outside. Have you ever said something and then immediately asked yourself, “Did I say that or think that?”  Not everything we think should be said, right?

Because words can be weapons.  They can be used as camouflage to hide the things we are doing.  This is called projection.

The best understanding of our own words and thoughts, or those of others, is gained by watching the actions that follow (or precede).  We should be careful observers of actions.  Sometimes actions don’t match the words and/or thoughts.  There can be good reasons, and bad reasons.  Either way, actions are always meaningful.  

Here’s a partial list of words from the Voting Alert Beacons glossary to which the above comments apply:  

Alt Right extremist:  The alt right (short for “alternative right”) is a segment of the white supremacist movement consisting of a loose network of racists and anti-Semites who reject mainstream conservatism in favor of politics that embrace implicit or explicit racism, anti-Semitism and white supremacy.

Authoritarian:  Favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.

Bigot:  A person who is intolerant toward those holding different opinions.

Compassion:  Sympathetic pity and concern for the sufferings or misfortunes of others.

Cult ideology:  In the sociological classifications of religious movements, a cult is a social group with socially deviant or novel beliefs and practices, although this is often unclear.

Fascism:  A form of far-right, authoritarian ultranationalism characterized by dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition, and strong regimentation of society and of the economy which came to prominence in early 20th-century Europe.

Groupthink:  The practice of thinking or making decisions as a group in a way that discourages creativity or individual responsibility.

Gay:  (of a person) homosexual (used especially of a man).

Heteronormativity:  The belief that heterosexuality, predicated on the gender binary, is the norm or default sexual orientation. It assumes that sexual and marital relations are most fitting between people of opposite sex.

Homophobic:  Having or showing a dislike of or prejudice against homosexual people.

Illegal immigrants:  Illegal immigration refers to the migration of people into a country in violation of the immigration laws of that country, or the continued residence of people without the legal right to live in that country.

Immigrants:  A person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country.

Islamophobic:  Having or showing a hatred or fear of Muslims or of their politics or culture.

LGBTQ:  LGBT is an initialism that stands for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender. In use since the 1990s, the term is an adaptation of the initialism LGB, which was used to replace the term gay in reference to the LGBT community beginning in the mid-to-late 1980s.

Mansplaining:  The explanation of something by a man, typically to a woman, in a manner regarded as condescending or patronizing.

Misogynistic:  Strongly prejudiced against women.

Nazi:  A person with extreme racist or authoritarian views.

Privilege:  A special right, advantage, or immunity granted or available only to a particular person or group.

Queer:  An umbrella term for sexual and gender minorities who are not heterosexual.

Racism:  Prejudice, discrimination, or antagonism directed against someone of a different race based on the belief that one's own race is superior.

Tyrannical:  Exercising power in a cruel or arbitrary way.  Characteristic of tyranny; oppressive and controlling.

Victum:  One who is harmed or killed by another, especially by someone committing a criminal or unlawful act: a victim of a mugging.

White Supremacist:   A white person who has the racist belief that white people are superior to people of other races and therefore should be dominant over them.

Xenophobic:  Having or showing a dislike of or prejudice against people from other countries.

In addition to watching who uses these words and how they use them, let us also remember as we all respectfully use our 1st Amendment Right of Free Speech, that with the right comes the responsibility to listen.  Even more, listening must mean we are willing to change.  We must be willing to let the other person, or the other argument, or the other viewpoint change us.  To think otherwise is not to listen. 

If we all come with a commitment to listen, we will indeed meet in “the middle of the road,” and we will build an incredibly strong COMMON SENSE FOR AMERICA.

Words should not be weapons.  They should be the way forward!


. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.


Dave



Copyright © [2020] by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.  

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

(REPEAT POST) BEACONS OF COMMON SENSE-The Middle of the Road

Below is a post from 2018 about "the middle of the road."  I had posted it "a few short months" before the fall election.  Now we are close to the 2020 election.  Not much has changed, and I still think the message hits the bulls-eye.  What you think?
--------------------------

In a few short months, another election will be here.  We the People will have another chance to “speak,” and tell our leaders what we want them to do.  

When we elect representatives in our American Democracy, we ask them to represent us because they come from us, and are like us.  They should do their work on behalf of us.  They should serve, not rule.  They should serve briefly and then make room for others.  They shouldn’t have perks, literally, they should have what we have, and live as we do.  They should be honest so we can respect them. 

It’s time to begin a new era!  Elective office is a public service opportunity, not a career.  (REPEAT).  Elective office is a public service opportunity, not a career.

So now, please join me in the middle of the American road with a new focus on possibility and potential.  Let’s not drive on the left or right shoulders, but travel down the middle of the road, where the language spoken is common sense supported by HONESTY AND PUBLIC SERVICE.  While the shoulders certainly define the outer limits or extremes of the road, and every road has its shoulders, they aren’t where we should be traveling down, and certainly not governing from.  

Just as the speed bumps on the shoulders can shake a car apart, literally shake a car apart, in some kind of grand intramural tug of war, the left and right are shaking our country apart.  IT’S DISGUSTING AND JUST PLAIN WRONG!  IT NEEDS TO STOP!

If we can find balance in the middle of the road, a destiny of continued blessings for each of us, and for America, will be assured.  Yes!  Let’s meet in the middle of the road where common sense lives.  Let’s use our right to free speech responsibly.   However, with the right comes the responsibility to listen.  Even more, listening must mean we are willing to change.  We must be willing to let the other person, or the other argument, or the other viewpoint change us.  If we all come with that commitment, we will indeed meet in “the middle of the road,” and continue building an incredibly strong Common Sense for America.

. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.

Dave



Copyright © 2019 by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

BE ON GUARD


We must live peaceably with the other 8 billion people on earth, but sometimes we must also stand apart and above in our words and actions. In any case, there should be peace. We should always answer the call of our higher angels, not our lower demons. That this really is a choice we have been given the power to make, speaks positively of our place in the universe, and our ultimate limitless potential.

Self-awareness means we carefully guard ourselves to avoid the negative influence and effects of those around us, including friends and family. It means we should guard against other’s words and actions by watching closely our own.

Lastly, we should know that there is an inverse relationship between honesty and selfishness. If we are increasingly selfish in our words, concerns, and deeds, then we become less honest. We become narrow and short-sighted. Our world shrinks. Ultimately, there will be fewer people in it until we are completely alone.  Run away from selfishness. Run toward unselfishness and selflessness as fast as you can!!

BE ON GUARD AND ALWAYS BE GOOD!!

. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.


David



Copyright © 2019 by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, August 06, 2019

BEACONS OF LISTENING - The Responsibility for the Right to Free Speech



We desperately need a moment of national silence and reflection.  Silence should overwhelm, like a tsunami, the volume of our nasty and negative voices.  

Only when we hear with an ear that seriously and sincerely considers the possibility of change, are we truly listening.  We must have an open mind so that we can learn.  There is no progress without change, and the conscious effort to learn.  This approach and mindset supports two of our most basic and fundamental American virtues, honesty and public service.

What is the most important thing we can do to insure and preserve our right to free speech?  Listening is perhaps the most critical responsibility for preserving free speech.  What is free speech, really?  It is two things.  It is not only a right.  It also includes a responsibility to listen.

When do words become illegal?  When they are words uttered only for their own sake.  Our words should have a positive direction and force behind them.  They must simultaneously exercise and support our inalienable rights as articulated in the US Constitution.  We are 200+ million American voters.  When our collective voice calls us forward with a positive force, there is nothing we can’t accomplish.  Without this positive voice, there is little that we can accomplish.

Call to action 

There is a personal call to action here.  We should all hang a mirror in our minds and look in it often.  We should always see someone who is willing to listen.  Someone who thinks them not me.  This may seem counter intuitive, but this is the only way we can make personal progress and American progress.  This is the only way we can find personal happiness and happiness as a country.  


. . .  remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.


Dave

Copyright © 2019 by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.  

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

BEACON OF HOPE--Wanis Kabbaj

Recently, one of the things the press in America has been consumed by is the fact that President Trump declared that he was a nationalist.  When I heard him say it, images of walking on the moon, the building of our transnational railroad, the steady walk of settlers westward, and even the Civil War with the abolishment of slavery.  That the press would necessarily compare the Presidents statement to Hitler’s or see it as racist is really extreme.

I’m proud to be an American and feel a strong sense of nationalism within.  However, I am also a globalist.  I believe President Trump is a globalist too.  He is a generous person, and I believe he’s proud of America as the most generous nation on the planet.

So, it is with great confusion and with frustration settling in, that I read about another war within our psyche created by the press.  Fortunately, my inability to express all that I feel is rescued by Wanis Kabbaj.  His TED Talk is full of clear thinking and common sense.  I hope you will take a few minutes to listen to and view it.


“How Nationalism and Globalism Can Coexist”




LET’S ALL VOTE!!

. . .  and as we do, remember that America’s best days aren’t behind her.   America’s best days are ahead of her.  They always have been and always will be.


Dave



Copyright © 2018 by David William Wygant. All rights reserved.