Friday, April 12, 2013

The Last Time...Again



The Last Time…Again.
Charlie Earl

Here we are in mid-April, and my personal life is starting to intrude into my writing. Produce must be planted, weeded, nourished and harvested. Business needs are many during our season plus the added responsibility for completing our new business facility. In addition because of the inconsistent writing schedule throughout the warmer months, I must devote what precious little time I have to working on my book. I fear my grand opus may be so far behind schedule that it will be moot by the time it is published. Given the fact that so many of us trip through life trying to find “meaning,” it appears to me that the book must be completed before it is totally irrelevant.

In previous sabbaticals from the column it was always my intent to return after the crop and festival seasons were nearly ended. This year may be different because I decided at this point to leave the “pause” button fully engaged. So…as far as I know, this may be my last scheduled column. I’m very aware that “the urge to rant” may become too strong to resist, but I shall try to resist it. Thank you for reading, commenting and tolerating these pages. Hopefully we’ll meet in the town square when liberty reigns.

Charlie Earl

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Personal Morality-Government Rules



Personal Morality-Government Rules
Charlie Earl

Most of us adhere to some type of moral code. Some follow theirs more loosely than others do, and some seem to possess a moral code that is indecipherable for the rest of us lowly mortals. Nevertheless internal anarchy is rare, and when we witness someone without a personal code of honor or morality, we are often shocked by their behavior. Our abhorrence of radically immoral or evil acts illustrates to me that there is a semblance of morality that threads its way through humanity. Personally, I believe that it is God-breathed and God-written, but others may rely on Natural Law as a source.

In a speech in 1886 Thomas B. Reed stated, “One of the greatest delusions in the world is the hope that the evils in this world are to be cured by legislation.” Yet….governments of all stripes and types attempt to regulate “moral” behavior by edict or laws. The inconsistency of having a government legislate moral codes is that governments have no souls, have no minds and are populated by extraordinarily fallible people. For many years I have been perplexed by people who trust the most sacred tenets of their lives to a bunch of lying, cheating and thieving ignoramuses. Why would any person who possesses a scintilla of reasoning capacity believe that Debbie Wasserman-Schultz or Harry Reid could design, implement and follow an unimpeachable legislated moral code?

As governments grow in size and power, they enforce compliance with their various dictates……a few of them are wise and reasonable, many others not so much. It is the government of Saudi Arabia that refuses to allow women to drive for moral reasons. The Iranian government has given carte blanche to the mullahs for stoning women for adulterous behavior….such as going out uncovered or without a male relative. Several governments around the globe tolerate or even encourage female genital mutilation as a moral practice for ensuring the purity of women. Governments are not the final judges of moral behavior because they are inherently amoral.

Even here in the United States of America a government-enforced moral code has emerged. Government has deemed that the life of a child should be sacrificed if its mother chooses not to carry the baby for the full term. Government has decided that benefits should be provided for cronies, friends and associates of those who control the reins of power. Government has determined that your neighbor is entitled to a portion of your labor. Government has concluded that although you purchased your property and pay the taxes on said assets, you cannot do certain things with that property. Government has made a moral choice about the function of the property you paid for. All of the above illustrations are morality-based choices enforced by government laws, rules and regulations. In my humble view, any government action that does not enhance my personal liberty is an immoral interference by government in my life.

Governments are not moral. They cannot be moral. At best they are amoral, and at worst they are immoral. Government is an untrustworthy guardian of social moral behavior. In 1954… “under God” was added to the Pledge of Allegiance. In the past 60 years nearly every act of the federal (now national) government seems to contradict that portion of the pledge because government cannot be moral.

Charlie Earl
 

Monday, April 8, 2013

High Points, Low Spots



High Points, Low Spots
Charlie Earl

Most of our fields here in northwest Ohio are flat….pool-table flat. There are some near our rivers or creeks that have a “little bit of roll in them.”  In addition there are a few ridges caused by the massive glacier when it was either pushing southward or receding back to the north. Even in those fields that appear flat to the naked eye, there are subtle variations in elevation. Each field has its high points and its low spots. Each one has sectors that drain water quickly, and others that “puddle” or retain moisture longer.

In every movement, every life or every endeavor there are high points and low spots. The high points are generally more “worker-friendly,” because they do allow the task to progress much faster following a storm. The offending (and often needed) rain strikes with force but the slope and resiliency of the high point carries it away toward the low spots. Breezes and warmth from the sun on the higher elevations join with the run-off to ‘wring-out” the higher points in the field. If one observes a field closely, you can detect the difference in evaporation and drainage rates in a matter of hours following a downpour. While the high points may be farmer-friendly, it is the low spots that feed the family.

The abundance of moisture in the lower sectors of the field extends the decaying process and generates additional organic matter. In addition the runoff from the higher points brings nutrients and top soil with it and as it settles in the low spots the richness of the soil increases. The high points get much of the attention because of their early readiness, but the low spots are the areas that produce the bounty. Just like much of life the low spots often become the most useful and productive.

When it appears that we are inundated, overwhelmed or drowning, the rich nutrients of experience help us to transform the low spots of our lives or movements into highly productive and fruitful elements. The high points are encouraging because they may allow us to bask in the sun while conflict runs off and dissipates. The low spots are where the greatest yields emerge. It is the low spots that continue to produce when the high points are dry and less productive. Our yields as individuals are often determined by how we manage our low spots. Using the richer soil of experience and the strength we gain from patiently waiting for the more productive soil to develop will often define our production.

Charlie Earl

Friday, April 5, 2013

The Largest Minority



The Largest Minority
Charlie Earl

While the two fossilized old parties are constructing strategies for pursuing the Latino vote, both parties have miserably failed to appeal to the largest minority in the nation and the world. The individual is marginalized and ignored as policy makers and their minions implement grand schemes for targeted demographic groups.


One does not have to be historian to understand that humans have gravitated toward communal living for security and social purposes. On the other hand our written and oral histories are replete with stories of those who disagreed with others and struck out on their own. The group is not the basic element of human life. The individual is. Individuals drift from group to group while seeking communal compatibility. It seems somewhat fruitless therefore for social scientists and the governments who rely on their findings to focus on “groups” when the clusters are in a state of constant flux.

Individuals represent the basic element of any social structure. Any parent can attest to the reality that each of their children is uniquely different….even though they spring from the identical gene pool. Yet… demographers, political parties, bureaucrats and legislators insist on addressing people as groups or clusters while ignoring their individual deviations from the norm of the designated group. In an elemental way this explains why governments must resort to force to assure compliance with dictates for the “common good.” It is the equivalent of government force and social ostracism being used to force square pegs into round holes.

Our individual natures inherently lead to the conclusion that huge communities, cities, states or countries are counter-productive. Individual inspiration and creativity are throttled by the constraints of the system. Individual desires, no matter how lofty, are sacrificed for the mediocre good for all. The larger a society becomes the more necessary it is for force to be used as a means for ensuring order and total compliance. A social structure of “one” is the most free. Those who have voluntarily mated or married realize that forging two “ones” into “one” is an extremely difficult task. To extend the energy for harmony to hundreds or thousands or even millions of individuals suggests that individual identities will be submerged or lost in order to promote the unreal “common good.”

The wisdom of our Framers was their awareness that local smaller units of self governance were most conducive for individual liberty. The Constitution of the United States specifically limits the power of the federal government to trample individual rights in order to give individual states and their local communities the primary task for structuring community mores and rules. As the power and force of government moves further away from individuals, their unique qualities are blurred and the society suffers. The forgotten minority is the largest minority. That minority is YOU.

Charlie Earl

  

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Against the Grain



Against the Grain
Charlie Earl

If you’ve ever petted a cat or a dog against the pattern of the fur or hair, then you are aware the critters would rather you go with the grain. In some cases you can feel the static generated by going against the natural direction of the protective covering. Likewise if you are planning wood, it is best to go with the grain lest you create uneven bumps and flaws. Perhaps the best example of working with the grain is the popular saying “to go with the flow.” It is easier and less traumatic to move the same direction as everyone else. Sometimes, however, one must resist the impulse to go along and aggressively move against the grain.

As the woodworking example suggests, moving against the grain can be a difficult and rough way to go. It is uneven, loaded with splinters and difficult to polish. There are times, however, when massive gouging and disruption are required to complete the job in a timely fashion. Continually moving with the grain may cause the project to lag and fail to be completed on time. If an inch or two of excess matter has to be removed in order to develop the plan, drastic measures must be taken to reduce the wood to a workable level. Moving with the grain is the better method for finishing a piece, but going against the grain is the quicker method for eliminating extraneous material.

The liberty movement has many similarities with craftsmanship. The rough edges must be negotiated and the unneeded material should be discarded. Fortunately for us, we have a plan….a template. In the woodworking world we call them “jigs.” They are guides for our tools to follow as we cut, trim and finish our projects. Jigs can be altered to allow for minor deviations from the original pattern, but they do provide a steadfast reliable means for achieving our goals. If the task is great and the raw material is much larger than our intended finished product, we must begin by going against the grain.

Going against the grain is not recommended for dealing with your pets. You may not wish to incur their wrath by “rubbing them the wrong way.” Today’s shortened column carries the wishes that your pets will always love you, and the sawdust of your goals will cloud the sky.

Charlie Earl