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The Thom Hartmann Reader

Page 36

by Thom Hartmann


  Medicare, 15, 22, 25, 299–301

  mental illness, 151–153

  mesmerism, 105

  methane emissions, 169–170, 172–173

  Micheletti, Lorraine, 295–296

  middle class, 14–30

  conservative attack on, 22–27

  democracy and the, 17–22

  as disappearing, 14–17, 256

  embracing consumerism, 256–257

  private health care failing the, 295–297

  Milchen, Jeff, 291

  monopolies, 43–47, 52–54, 269–272, 279–280, 282, 307

  Mother Jane, 218–219, 220

  Moyers, Bill, 288–289

  Müller, Gottfried, 3, 58, 79, 82–85, 116, 136–140, 142, 143, 209, 212–216

  multinational corporations, personhood rights, 286, 289

  myth of happiness, 158–163

  NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement), 23, 257

  Native Americans

  as “civilized,” 110–111, 113

  conflict resolution by, 31–34, 246

  considering future generations, 174–175

  hunters vs. farmers, 70

  influence on Founders, 17–18, 109

  respect for nature, 154

  natural persons, 278–279

  nature

  assumption of supremacy over, 150–155

  climate change effect on, 167–168

  danger of disconnection from, 146

  externalizing costs to, 189–190

  hunters coexistence with, 120–121, 154

  reconnecting with, 155–157

  as sacred, 84–85

  neurobiology, 122–125

  New Deal, 26

  news. See broadcast news

  nuclear power, 184, 189, 191–192

  nurturing, 122–123

  Obama, Barack, 5, 287

  O’Connor, Sandra Day, 290

  offshoring, 313

  oil dependence, 184–187, 194

  older/younger cultures, 78–87

  addiction in, 147–149

  Christian teachings and, 82–86

  hunters and farmers, 78–81

  interconnectedness in, 80–83, 86, 150–155, 166

  meaning of wealth to, 159–163

  older warning younger, 81–82

  “something-will-save-us” viewpoint, 199–204

  states of consciousness, 155–157, 166

  synergist worldview, 204–206

  in tribe/city-state development, 235

  war in, 236–237

  100,000 Roofs Program (Stromeinspeisungsgesetz), 183–184, 191–194

  OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries), 185

  Opium Wars, 147–148

  overpopulation, 199, 258

  oxygen production, 176–177

  Pacific Lumber Company, 306

  Paine, Thomas, 11

  Palmer, Mark, 36

  paranoia, 152

  patents on living products, 307–309

  Paul, Apostle, 83

  Peace Clock, 35–36

  peaceful cultures, 236–237, 239–240, 244, 245

  pensions, 14–15, 16, 305, 306

  personal transformation, 200, 206–207

  personhood, corporate. See corporate personhood

  pharmaceutical companies, 297, 299–300

  Pickens, T. Boone, 186, 307

  plant products patents, 307–309

  polar ice melt, 167–170

  political campaign contributions, 275–276. See also Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission

  political framing, 95

  political institutions, 201, 206–207

  power elite

  anti-democratic views, 18–19

  campaign financing, 276

  CEO sociopaths, 312–316

  conservative world view, 276–279

  corporatocracy view, 24

  food production control, 255

  knowledge deficit benefiting, 146

  restraining the, 254–255

  taxes on the, 195

  in voodoo economics, 27–28

  See also corporate power

  predator cons, 23–24

  Prime Time Access Rule, 44–45

  primitive cultures. See indigenous peoples

  prison, 33–34, 253–254

  privatization, 25, 299–301

  commons, 302–303

  conservative support of, 25, 299–300

  health-care benefits, 295–297, 299–301

  hospitals, 294, 295–296, 298

  water, 303–305

  profits before people, 14–17

  Prophet’s Way (Hartmann), 3, 116

  public education. See education system

  public interest programming, 40–41, 43, 46–47

  public services, corporate use of, 310–311

  Pulitzer, Joseph, 275

  punishment, 31–34, 126, 140–141, 202, 206, 253–254

  Puritans, 126, 268

  Pygmies (Bushmen), 69

  Quinn, Daniel, 112, 157, 202

  Radical Middle, 10–12

  Radical Right, 11–12, 22–25, 128, 276–279

  radio

  corporate-owned conservative, 42, 45–46

  need for competition/public interest programming, 45–47

  Reagan deregulation of, 8–9, 40–43

  rainfall reduction, 177, 178

  Randerson, James, 19

  Ratner, Ellen, 39

  reading, 156, 247–248

  Reagan, Ronald, 8–9, 24, 27–28, 40–42, 46, 48–54, 100, 195, 294, 312

  recycling/reusing, 260–261

  religion, 83, 148, 154, 199, 201–204, 206–207

  Renewable Energies Law, 192

  reptile brain, 123–125, 127, 129–130, 132

  Republican Five, 276–277, 280–281

  Republican Great Depression, 5, 26–27, 103

  Republicans, 22, 287

  right-wing conservatives, 11–12, 22–25, 128, 276–279

  robber barons, 26

  Roberts, John G., 275, 277, 282, 283, 286

  Rockefeller, John D., 280

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 21, 26, 100, 195

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 96, 276

  Roper, Tim, 19, 20

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 244

  ruling class. See power elite

  Rummel, Rudolph, 34–36

  Russia, 221–234

  alcoholism, 223–224

  death of spirit, 224, 227, 233

  lack of work ethic, 225–228

  Salem project, 225, 228–230, 233–234

  Salem International, 136–144

  background of, 116

  child-care system reform, 144

  founding in New Hampshire, 138–142

  Russian project, 225, 228–230, 233–234

  Ugandan project, 209–210, 228–229

  Salem Research Institute, 143

  salinization of soil, 180–182

  salvation mentality, 201–204

  Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company, 263–264, 272–275, 280, 292

  Saudi Arabian oil, 185

  Scalia, Antonin, 276, 282, 286

  scanning, 66

  Schneider, Rama, 4

  schools. See education system

  Schore, Allan N., 125, 132

  Science global-warming paper, 168–170

  security, 158–163

  separateness. See interconnectedness

  service work, 142–144

  Shady, Ruth, 238–246

  Sherman Antitrust Act, 46, 53–54, 307, 312–313

  Shiva, Vandana, 307, 308

  sin, 31–34, 79, 202–203, 253, 276

  single-payer health-care system, 298–299

  small-business accountability, 24–25

  social change. See solutions

  Social Security, 15, 22, 25, 26, 28, 300

  soil salinity crisis, 180–182

  solar initiatives, 183–184, 191–194

&n
bsp; solutions, 198–207

  future vision, 251–261

  rooted in personal change, 200, 206–207, 259–260

  “something-will-save-us” viewpoint, 199–204

  synergist worldview, 204–206

  Sotomayor, Sonia, 281, 283

  spirituality, 118–121, 201–204

  Spock, Benjamin, 126

  standard of living, 256–257

  Stanley, Kurt, 58, 85, 118, 121

  Steinbeck, John, 9, 53–56

  Stephenson, Andy, 293

  Stevens, John Paul, 281–285

  Stinson, Clark, 118–121

  stress, 123–128, 131

  studio system, 43–44

  suicide, 152–153, 255

  sustainability

  future of human race, 173–175

  in indigenous cultures, 259

  international efforts in, 183–184, 186, 188, 191–194, 196

  synergist worldview, 204–206

  talk radio, 8–9, 42, 45–46

  taxes

  on carbon, 195–197

  corporate offshore havens, 309–311

  downside of Reagan cuts, 28, 195

  estate/death, 90–94, 96–99

  gas tax increases, 188–191

  to promote public good, 194–195, 310

  technology, 201, 203–206

  Telecommunications Act, 42

  telecommunications infrastructure, 46–47, 52

  television, 148–149, 256–257, 275–276

  television networks, 39–42, 44–45

  Thomas, Clarence, 276, 282

  timber industry, 178

  tipi living, 118–121

  trade agreements, 23, 257

  trance techniques, 90–94

  transportation sector, 186–190, 194

  trees, 176–182

  tribalism, 134, 253

  trickle-down economics, 24–25, 27–29

  triggering events, 125–126

  true believer cons, 24–25

  Truman, Harry S., 299

  Twenty-Sixth Amendment, 290–291

  2008 financial crisis, 287

  Uganda, 211–220

  hallucinogenic ritual, 216–218

  refugee camp accounts, 212–216, 218–219

  Salem project in, 209–210, 228–229

  Ungar, Sanford, 141–142, 213

  unions, 14–15, 315–316

  United Nations Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 189–190

  UnitedHealth, 314

  US Constitution

  amendment to end corporate personhood, 290–292

  Bill of Rights, 10, 271–272, 282

  corporations and the, 274–275

  First Amendment, 271, 275, 277–279, 281–286, 289

  Fourteenth Amendment, 272–273, 279, 291

  Iroquois Confederacy influencing, 17–18

  Twenty-Sixth Amendment, 290–291

  US Department of Education, 51–52

  US Federal Communications Commission (FCC), 40–42

  US Supreme Court, amending decisions of, 289–292

  US Supreme Court cases, 263–264, 272–275, 280, 290. See also Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission

  value-added-tax, carbon-based, 196–197

  vegetarianism, 173

  Veterans Administration (VA) system, 298, 299

  violence, 113, 246–247

  vision for the future, 251–261

  vivisection, 143

  voluntary simplicity, 260–261

  voodoo economics, 24–25, 27–29

  voters, knowledgeable. See informed electorate

  walking therapy. See bilateral therapy

  Wall Street, 287

  war, 35–37, 99–102, 236–237, 239–240, 245–250

  Washington, George, 10

  water privatization, 303–305

  water supply, 177, 178, 180–182, 303

  wattage imbalance, 168–172

  wealth

  CEO, 312–316

  Founders’ wariness of excessive, 10–11, 21, 96, 255, 264

  and the myth of happiness, 158–163

  resources afforded by, 200

  stress-laden culture of, 124–125

  wealthy. See power elite

  What Would Jefferson Do? (Hartmann), 5, 8

  Wiesel, Elie, 103–104

  Winship, Michael, 288–289

  women, and war, 246–248

  women’s cultural roles, 240, 242

  working class

  in economic theories, 24–29

  Hobbes’s view of, 18

  lack of resources, 199–200

  poorly insured, 293

  poverty and job loss, 257

  stress on the, 124

  worldview

  framing your, 94–95

  personal transformation, 200, 206–207, 259–260

  “something-will-save-us,” 199–204

  synergist, 204–206

  See also older/younger cultures

  younger cultures. See older/younger cultures

  About the Author

  THOM HARTMANN IS THE FOUR-TIME PROJECT CENSORED Award–winning, best-selling author of more than 20 books in print in 17 languages on five continents. He is the number one progressive radio and TV talk-show host in the United States, also carried on radio stations in Europe and Africa, syndicated by Pacifica, Dial-Global, and RT; and he has the number one program on the Free Speech TV Network. He does a three-hour daily radio show and a one-hour evening TV show.

  His work has inspired several movies, including The 11th Hour, produced and narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, and I Am, by Tom Shadyac. He has met in personal audiences with, at the invitation of, both Pope John Paul II and the Dalai Lama. He’s built several successful businesses and for more than 30 years did international relief work in almost a dozen countries for the international Salem organization based in Germany.

  Thom and his wife, Louise, founded a community for abused children and a school for learning-disabled children in New Hampshire. The couple now lives in Washington, DC, where Thom spends what’s probably an unhealthy amount of time sitting in the Jefferson Memorial and the National Archives.

  About the Editor

  TAI MOSES IS THE FORMER MANAGING EDITOR OF ALTERNET.ORG, a progressive news and opinion daily. During her tenure AlterNet won two Webby Awards for Best Print and Zines and an Independent Press Award for Best Online Political Coverage. Previously, she edited alternative newsweeklies in the Monterey and San Francisco Bay Areas and was on the staff of Esquire magazine. Her writing has been widely published in the independent press, and she has been a panelist and a speaker on progressive media issues in the United States and abroad. She lives in Oakland, California, where she edits nonfiction books and writes the blog Aerophant.com.

 

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