FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
How the NeoCons stole Freedom: A series.
For further information:
themelinda@pillsbury-foster.us
What do the environmental movement, the United Nations, and the
Republican Party have in common? Each was successfully taken over by the
elements we now are beginning to know as NeoCons either in this generation
or earlier.
Forget the Bilderbergers and the Illuminati. It isn't a conspiracy,
it was just 'good' business.
When America celebrated Earth Day this last April 22 it was celebrating
the day the environmental movement was taken over by elements we now
identify as Neoconservatives – although the people so identified are not
new and are certainly not conservative. More on that later.
The original Earth Day is not forgotten, however. It has been celebrated
since 1971 in the Peace Garden at the United Nations at the moment of
the Spring Equinox with the ringing of the Peace Bell. Those who
remember the original goals of the environmental movement included peace
for the human family as a whole have preserved the original local and
global focus.
Ringing bells sound across the globe at the moment of the Equinox
which is shared by all living things. The founders of the Earth Society,
among these John McConnell, Margaret Mead, and Helen Garland, had looked
for and identified a day of renewal that spoke to their goals for the then
nascent environmental movement. They saw a world of people who valued living
lightly on Earth, who saw small, local solutions as the ones that best
connected people to each other and to the Earth. It was a moment that
resonated perfectly with the work of such native San Francisco institutions
as the Sierra Club when it was small and personal, assuming individual
accountability, responsibility, and simply doing the right thing. It was
therefore entirely appropriate that in 1970 Equinox San Francisco became
the first official entity to recognize Earth Day.
If all of this is true then why do so few know? How did the commercialized
version with its emphasis on the banal and its website so void of meaningful
content manage to displace the very different values of the original
celebration? Money and spin can accomplish nearly anything if all you care
about is the short term profits.
The birth cry of the environmental movement was silently but
effectively stifled by an earlier generation of the same interests who
now occupy the White House and run our courts and Congress. Using money
and misdirection as tools they stole the moral high ground and stopped
the movement in its tracks.
With it they stole our institutions and the soul of America.
The techniques are simple.
1. Steal credit for the work of others.
2. Use brand new or recycled and stolen organizations to create a respectable
front.
3. Place relatives and people you can always control into[positions of power
and prominence
to eliminate our networks and establish theirs.
4. Find a REAL organization to authorize some fraction of your agenda.
5. Pontificate as you obfuscate. (Lie)
Sound familiar yet? And with any luck the perpetrator can get away with it
cold and still be cashing
checks generations later. These are the techniques used by the present April
Earth Day Cabal thirty years
ago and it is still working for them today.
That is what they did. A quick visit to their site reveals that it is all
oriented to dumbed down platitudes
with not a viable alternative in sight. Educating without content or focus on
independent thinking is perilously
close to what is going on in our schools today. A review of their big donors
is even more revealing.
What was being stolen was the moral leadership of a movement that 35 years ago
could have made
real alternatives available. That was one outcome, but it is the lesser issue.
How this was done and the
values it injected into our culture is at least as important.
While stealing a movement that enabled those responsible to focus the
public on irrelevancies and platitudes the perpetrators were also
demonstrating that how you treat others
does not matter as long as you end up with the credit and money. We see every
day how much talking
about morals and ethics works. In fact, talking about it while doing the exact
opposite has become
permanently installed in the tool boxes of so many of us that we no longer
even notice. 35 years ago the
devaluation of values had just begun. Then Americans still believed they could
believe.
Today we celebrate men like Karl Rove because he is expert in lying and
cheating. A culture that rewards getting your way with lies, manipulation and
plain violence has signed its
death warrant. Ignoring what happened with organizations like the Earth
Society can be best understood
using economic terms.
It is an economic principle that bad money, meaning money with less ability to
hold value, drives out
good money, for instance gold, that has objective, lasting value. By occupying
the same niche as good
money, bad money displaces it because the good money is too valuable to be
spent. In the same way good
ethics, behavior that invests the individuals in long term relationships
founded in trust, is driven out by bad
ethics, forcing individuals in look for other means of guaranteeing they will
not be ripped off.
The increase in commercial packaging to prevent shop lifting is just one sign
of this decay.
Cooperative commerce is good money; War commerce is bad money. With
cooperative commerce we build out into the future like a bank account filled
with trust and good will. In the
second we loot the bank account leaving everyone to starve.
What you do is what is true. Words too often lie.
We should have noticed 35 years ago. Dennis Hayes stole the name, Earth Day.
He has consistently
demeaned and sneered at those whose idea he stole. He has represented a very
different set of values and
acted those values out through his actions by delivering sappy mottoes in
place of viable alternatives for
both the environment and for the world.
How did the NeoCons achieve their place of prominence? Using the same tools
employed by Dennis
Hayes. And we let it happen. But we can still change it. The solutions are
still local. The means for change
is still personal accountability. All decent people, right and left, share a
common vision that can unite us to
act. Now it is time to turn that vision into our common reality.
And celebrate Earth Day on the Equinox.
END
Melinda Pillsbury-Foster is the author of GREED: The NeoConning of America, a
novel that tells
the story of what and who the NeoCons really are. She is a registered
Republican, a member of the
National Federation of Republican Women, and now active in a movement to
return control of the
electoral process to the people in every neighborhood across America. That
movement is called,
One Vote, One Voice. She can be reached at:
themelinda@pillsbury-foster.us
----------------------------
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