|  |                           Strategic
Planning Truths                                                                                                         
Earth Manifesto Insights                                                                          
                                    Dr. Tiffany B. Twain                                                                                                               
  August 2005 It
is vitally important that we fairly examine the true economic, social and
political realities of the world today.  We must do so with clarity of perception and understanding. When
we demand that our political leaders begin to make better choices and plan and
act more wisely, we will be able to make marked improvements in our communities
and our societies. We should reprioritize government spending to make it more far-sighted
and fiscally responsible.  Our goal must
be to courageously create greater justice and peace in the world.  Every
person is affected by the federal government's policies, and every person has
some degree of influence in choosing to help mold our human destiny and our
legacy to future generations.  Each of
us must become better stewards of Planet Earth.  We
must strive with intelligence, wisdom and far-sightedness to keep the following
principles foremost in our considerations of politics and policies:  1.  We must work together to leave America a
better country, and the world a better place.  We must embrace a positive, hopeful, affirmative vision of the
future, and strive to act consistently with noble values of fairness and the
common good.  We must oppose and limit
abuses of power by corporations and the government.  We cannot allow the goal of greater profits for Special Interests
to damage people's health and prospects.  2.  Now is the time to confront great national
problems.  We must not pass them on to
future generations.  We must not wait
until we reach crisis stages before addressing the social and environmental
challenges facing us.  The nature of
these problems is that the longer we delay in dealing with them, the more intractable
they become, and the more insidiously difficult and expensive it is to solve
them.  We must take into account the
impact of our actions on the future.  And
we must strive to redesign our activities and institutions to be sustainable in
the long run.  3.  We must intelligently prioritize our
energies and spending in handling problems. 
Our concern must be to care for our land and people, and to take
long-term considerations into account.  The
most critical problems should receive the most attention and funding and
remedial efforts.  It is a sad
commentary on our political priorities that our leaders are eager to spend
hundreds of billions of dollars on military interventionism each year, yet to
be relatively stingy in helping with humanitarian aid for such calamities as
the Christmas 2004 earthquake and tsunami destruction around the Indian Ocean.  4.  We must demand better fiscal discipline and
fiscal responsibility.  We must not
allow our leaders to resort to the easy political expediency of deficit spending,
which is an unfair and irresponsible way of addressing our problems today because
this expediency harms the prospects of tomorrow by burdening the future with
enormous debt.  5.  We must be honest, and demand that our
government do what is in the best interests of the public and of humanity, not
just the best interests of the wealthy and of giant corporations and of war
profiteers and of Vested Interests.  We
must embrace respectful open debate, and see through the distorting rhetoric
and deceptions of politicians.  6.  We must be flexible, open-minded, and
willing to embrace progressive change.  We
must support good public education.  We
must be strong advocates for innovation.  We would be wise, for instance, to boldly invest in energy
innovation and conservation and increased efficiency, rather than continuing to
give giant subsidies to Big Oil to maintain the status quo of fossil fuel
dependence.  We are gambling with our
national security to pursue policies oriented around perpetuating our expensive
addiction to the wasteful consumption of fossil fuels.  7.  We must insist on making our democracy more
participatory, more fair, more progressive, and more open to new ideas.  We must teach all citizens to be able to
think more critically.  We must build a
consensus in solving problems.  We must
trust and empower people, and not just accept doctrines and unexamined
assumptions.  8.  We must have a justice system that is truly
fair and balanced.  And,  9.  We must rein in the power, wastefulness and
intrusiveness of the federal government, which has increased its size in the
last 50 years from 25% of the national income to an astonishing 45%.  The purpose of government must NOT be to
create jobs in a bigger bureaucracy and an ever-expanding military.  These
are compelling issues that require bold, visionary, honorable and fair national
responses.  Almost everyone would agree
that one of the most important purposes of government is to help establish a
safe, healthy, fair and sustainable society, while simultaneously allowing a
maximum of individual freedoms.  Our
happiness and our fulfillment of deeper purposes and our prosperity depend on
this.  We
may disagree as to how to achieve this goal of a wholesome society.  On the one hand, some feel that we should
pursue success through patriarchal strength, trust in father figure authority,
faith in God, self-discipline, unyielding convictions, unregulated free
markets, materialistic consumption, tax cutting, deficit spending, subsidies
for big corporations, an extremely strong military, unsympathetic mercilessness
towards failure, sink-or-swim social Darwinism, self-righteousness, harsh
punishment for wrong-doing, obedience, and uncompromising authoritarian foreign
policy.  Others
feel that a safe and healthy society can best be created through responsible
parenthood, empathic understanding, true fairness of opportunity, honesty, open
two-way communication, respect for others, consumer protections, peace building
initiatives, limited government intrusiveness, a clean and unpolluted
environment, reasonable workers' rights protections, sustainable activities,
consensus-building, cooperation, mutual trust, fiscal responsibility,
moderation of consumption, wholesome connectedness, community-building, the
fair empowerment of women, a maximum of civil liberties, and a minimum of
obstacles for pursuing happiness.  A
healthy society is one that respects its traditional values, yet is flexible
enough to adapt to change.  Social
health is greatest where individuals are respected, and where a strong sense of
family and community is fostered.  Institutions
and programs are needed to help people cope who have suffered misfortune or
adverse circumstances in their lives.  Since
calamity and adversity can befall anyone at any time, it behooves us to create
a truly compassionate society wherein those who fall through the cracks are
helped, rather than being exploited, neglected, or taken advantage of when they
are down.  The
November 2004 elections resulted in Americans essentially choosing to stick
with the Status Quo, as represented by the current Administration, rather than
endorsing far-sighted change.  We have
effectively chosen to allow conservative Republicans to increase their
dominance in the federal government.  These
leaders now claim that they have won a mandate that solidly supports their
policies.  But any practical realist
must be honest, and acknowledge that the election victory was won by using fear
and divisive wedge issues, and by cobbling together a less-than-optimum
coalition of Special Interests and religious traditionalists, who strive to use
power for dominance, to exploit society and public resources, and to force
society to conform to their moralistic beliefs.  These interests too often oppose far-sighted progressive change.  Ideology
and theology have come to dominate our politics.  Theology asserts propositions that cannot be proven true;  ideologies scorn facts;  both hold stubbornly to worldviews that are
contradictory to what our reason shows is probable, and to what is generally
accepted as reality.  Republican
dominance embraces the tyranny of anti-gay, anti-abortion moralists over a more
complex and more truly "Christian" morality that cares about all
people in society.  True morality highly
values peace and justice, and shows compassion for the poor and the
underprivileged, and demonstrates a strong concern for clean air, clean water,
and protected parks and public lands.   All
discussions of faith and values should avoid being used as a wedge to divide and
destroy, but rather should strive to find common ground that includes understandings
of human morality that are more comprehensive.  This must include honesty, integrity, respect for the rights and
fair treatment of others, caring about poverty, charitable generosity,
commitment to sustainable development, working with healthy ecological
principles, and striving for peaceful coexistence amongst all nations of the
world.  Republican
dominance strives to allow Big Business to pretend to adequately regulate
itself while simultaneously all too often being dishonest and inadequately
accountable and irresponsible to workers and to society.  Republicans pander primarily to the rich and
powerful in their greedy drive to get richer and gain power at the expense of
everyone else.  They increase the
anti-democratic unfairness of an ever-greater disparity between the fortunes of
the Haves and the Have-Nots.  Republican
dominance promotes smooth sailing for Big Business by lowering corporate taxes,
making fewer IRS audits, reducing environmental protections, and providing the
corrupting influence of greater access to the halls of power for corporate
lobbyists.  It eagerly puts a squeeze on
State and local governments by inadequately funding federal mandates.  It allows the irresponsible political
expediency of wasteful government spending and giant military budgets in the
face of enormous deficit spending.  It also
increases our vulnerability by perpetuating our dependence on the consumption
of fossil fuels.  The irresponsibly
wasteful depletion of these energy sources threatens to severely disrupt our
economy in the not too distant future.   We
are fostering a risky reliance on foreign capital to finance the fiscally
irresponsible rapid growth of our $7.5 trillion national debt.  We are foolishly allowing increased access to
public lands by loggers and oil drillers and other forces of exploitation and
extraction of natural resources.  We are
letting polluters avoid the mitigation of the harm that they do by facilitating
corporate strategies of shifting the burden of pollution clean-up costs and
related negative healthcare impacts from those who cause the problems to our
society as a whole, where it is far more costly to deal with the harm done.  Republican
dominance also allows power to be abused in order to suppress opposition.  We are even allowing prisoner torture as a covert
military policy.  This endangers our own
troops.   We are allowing aggressive
economic domination and warfare in the guise of national security, causing the
killing of tens of thousands of innocent men and women and children by bombings
and military offensives.  The
Republican strategy to gain power and to disenfranchise opposition has been
brilliant.  First, they frame issues
very cleverly in terms of values, vision, and moral righteousness.  Second, they give popular tax cuts to gain
taxpayer support, and make the taxation system more regressive to benefit the
wealthy and powerful.  Third, they
increase government spending, but shift it from social programs to military
expenditures.  Fourth, they create enormous
budget deficits, crowding out the flexibility of future budgets to be able to
afford to deal with growing social problems. 
This effectively keeps society stratified into a small elite and a
marginalized majority.  Fifth, they
pander to big corporations and rich people's interests and the
narrow-mindedness of religious fundamentalists, repressing the poor and the
working class, and making the struggles of workers and the middle class more
difficult.  Sixth,
they capitalize on people's fears and insecurities, intimidating the public
into supporting aggressively authoritarian policies at home and abroad.  Seventh, they pursue policies to divide
people, using hot-button social issues like gay marriage, abortion, gun
control, faith in God, defending the American flag, and the nationalistic
patriotism of people's natural desire to support our troops, who have
ironically been put in harm's way by the doctrines and deceptions of aggression
and preemptive warfare.  Eighth, they
act as if it is democratic and moral to use ANY MEANS to justify their
ascendancy in power, defending their doctrinal Stern Father-knows-best goals.  Ninth, they do anything to win elections,
including using deception, intimidation, disenfranchising minority voters, and
using ballot-counting computer fraud.  Tenth,
they effectively abuse power to reduce the civil rights of citizens, making
this course of action seem like it is right and patriotic.  Eleventh, they abuse their legislative power
to stack the courts with conservative activists to make society more
authoritarian.  And, twelfth, once they
have hijacked fear and catastrophe and hypocritical "morality" to
gain power, they take advantage of their prerogatives to advance all-too-often
regressive initiatives, and use harshness and repression to engineer society
into a form that perpetuates their dominance.  Yes,
the Republican strategy to grab control and disenfranchise opposition has been
brilliant --- unfair, misguided, morally corrupt, deceptive, and very damaging
to society and to our children and their descendents --- but brilliant!  Republican domination is having negative
impacts on American society, and on workers, and on peaceful coexistence on the
international stage.  It is unfair, unjust,
and detrimental to the ecological fundamentals of a healthy and sustainable
environment.  The
Republican election victory strengthens the ascendancy of neoconservative
policies, despite the many shortcomings and preposterous audacity of these
doctrines.  This radical form of
"conservatism" does not represent mainstream American values.  Those in power are promoting agendas that are
actually extreme forms of risk-taking in foreign policy and in environmental
affairs.  These attitudes and policies
are tearing America apart with actions contrary to the public's best interests.
 Neoconservatives use fine-sounding
words and ideas that are contradicted by their actions and the impacts of their
policies, like "Healthy Forests” and "Clear Skies" and "No
Child Left Behind".   We
are allowing divisiveness to make the world more dangerous.  We are allowing people to become alienated
and frustrated.  And we are creating
hated and enemies with our aggressive militarism.  The
hopes of progressive causes are being severely harmed.  The airwaves are filled with the blaming,
attacking, mocking, gloating, interrupting, and criticizing of people who care
very deeply about their country and humanity.  Progressive principles have made America great.  The insidious subversion of these principles
in the last 25 years has been very unfortunate for our society and the world.  It
would seem to be difficult for supporters of Republican leaders to have pride
and conviction in these negative and arguably unethical characteristics, or to
gloat over these ruinous policies.  If
Republicans truly care about the American people, and about our precious,
beautiful Planet Earth, then they would support positive reform and demand
greater accountability of giant corporations and politicians. Sure, it would be
nice to be able to blindly trust our leaders, and to be convinced that their
actions are noble and supportive of the best interests of the majority of
Americans.  It would be nice to be able
to believe that our President is doing the right thing, that he is honest and
sincere, that he makes no mistakes, that his policies are concerned with the
common good, and that he is working for the majority of Americans in advocating
military and environmental policies.   But
it seems clear that our founders' worst fears are coming true -- that the
federal government is getting too big, too intrusive, too deceptive, too
wasteful, too uncaring for the general welfare, and too biased towards Big
Business and Big Money and religious fundamentalists and Vested Interests.  We must begin to marginalize, rather than
empower, right-wing media moguls and hyper-consumption-oriented laissez-faire
capitalism and such extremely doctrinaire organizations as the Federalist
Society, the Cato Institute, and the National Rifle Association.  We
can deny it, but we cannot evade the truth:  we are damning our children and our grandchildren by following
Neoconservative agendas, particularly in wasteful energy and natural resource
exploitation and in the political expediency of deficit spending.  We are borrowing enormous amounts of money
from future generations to give tax breaks to the rich and to finance the
waging of aggressive wars.  We are using
up non-renewable resources wastefully, and at an ever-faster pace.  We are polluting the land, rivers, lakes,
oceans and air.  We are altering the
atmosphere's very composition by spewing billions of tons of greenhouse gases
into the skies every year.  We are
increasing the risk of domestic and international social instability by
fostering greater inequities and injustices between people.  We are preying on people's insecurities,
using fear and uncertainty to give ever-greater power to the U.S. government.  We are increasing strife between people
through divisive actions and the exploitation of wedge issues and the fomenting
of regressive social policies and the pursuit of militaristic interventions in other
nations. And we are refusing to accept any method other than sexual abstinence
for reducing human population growth, a stance that will almost certainly
intensify all of these problems in the future.  "Quo
Vadis?" --- "Where do we go from here?"  How can we rein in the hyper-partisan and
megalomaniacal drives of our leaders, before they irretrievably harm the prospects
of humanity?  How can we shift our
political priorities to more sane ones that are in better accord with
intelligent principles and greater purposes?  How can we truly make the world a better place?  How can we lead our lives in such a way as to
not dramatically diminish the prospects of future generations?  We
must redesign our economy, embrace smart growth, limit suburban sprawl, protect
farmland and wild lands, establish effective incentives for conservation,
wisely invest in our country's infrastructure, balance the budget, and
emphasize renewable energy.  We must
strive for national security through collective security and global prosperity
and peace, not through risky unregulated capitalism and harsh militarism.  We must seek cooperation, not conflict.  We must foster innovation and moderation
rather than vigorously stimulating consumption.  We must form international partnerships, rather than striving for
costly and unjust hard-nosed domination.  We must create true justice, rather than favoring avarice and
unfair competition.  And we must make
smarter use of the world's resources and be better stewards of Planet Earth,
rather than continuously striving to maintain selfish, shortsighted dominion.  There
are many things that we can do to better the world, but the true State of the
Union is that the inflexible Status Quo opposes the best solutions.  We must mitigate the influence of Big Money
in politics, strengthen our democratic institutions, reduce the size and
wastefulness of our government, wean ourselves from our addiction to fossil
fuels, and embrace progressive ideas and principles that form the basis for our
great American democracy!  That’s
my opinion.  What’s yours?                                                 
--- Dr. Tiffany Twain                                                                
SaveTruffulaTrees@hotmail.com     |