Comments (11)

Add a CommentInappropriate or promotional comments may be removed.

Reply
Lon Levy (8:29 AM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

Being of the same age group, I share your fears, John. On the other hand, we have been in this place before. The 1970's, too, were a time of diminishing expectations but we managed to get through it. If there is one country capable of reinventing itself, is is the U.S. Although it may not seem so at the moment our govenment remains, at its core, responsible to the people and our economic system is extremely flexible. I fear, but I remain hopeful.

Reply
Rick Taylor (8:46 AM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

Johnny O - Oh yes, I've thought about all of the above and more. My personal resolution/solution has bee to dust off my old hippie political activist roots and start slapping people wherever I can to hold them accountable wherever possible. My vote is a good place to start. So is my community. I've lived here in Philly for over 20 years and most of it at the same address. Mike Nutter or new mayor was our district's city councilman and genuinely a great guy. I was greatly gratified to see him become the new mayor. I figure this is a good place to start.

I think people are as 'mad as hell and not going to take it anymore' and I figure the boomers are going to take charge more in the next few years.

I know that's my plan.

Reply
Mike Gold (9:25 AM on Fri Jan 18, 2008)

"My personal resolution/solution has bee to dust off my old hippie political activist roots and start slapping people wherever I can to hold them accountable wherever possible."

Best advice I've heard all year.

Reply
Alan Coil (7:07 PM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

Supply side-trickle down-Reaganomics doesn't work. We've been mostly trying to use this method for almost 20 years and the decline in real incomes just keeps getting worse.

I'm not a fan of Ayn Rand, but the situation she described in Atlas Shrugged where all the corporations were making all the rules to benefit all the corporations sure sounds a lot like what is happening today---the energy and oil corporations writing the energy laws, the banking and credit companies writing the banking/credit/bankruptcy laws, the insurance companies writing the health laws. Also, the stuffing of judicial chairs with corporate benefactors. Congress couldn't manage to confirm judges during the end of the Clinton years. Why? Because the Republicans didn't want to, until they also took control of the nomination process under Bush.

Whatever happened to "...for the people..." ?

Angry? Damned straight. Yet I mourn most the opportunities that will not be there for the next generation. The neocons and their enablers want to take the country back to the way it was over a century ago---hundreds of wealthy families and millions of serfs. Is that the future we imagined for out offspring? I think not.

Reply
Linda Gold (10:49 AM on Fri Jan 18, 2008)

You may not be a fan of Ayn Rand, Alan, but most of the neo-cons who currently run this country are. Some were even disciples of hers. This explains why we are in this current nightmarish state you so correctly describe. These people like to pretend that they exalt the individual but it's really
corporatism they believe in. They couldn't care less about "we the people". We are just another commodity to them when they think about us at all.

Reply
R. Maheras (8:49 PM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

John O. wrote: "D. Aging population. That includes me. I’m part of your problem. A lot has already been written about the Graying of the Baby Boomers. The facts are – we exist. Not only will there be a bigger drain on Social Security, which has already been raided over and over by various Administrations, but on Medicare and other programs. Health insurance is less obtainable and less willing to pay claims and health problems will only continue to grow for those of us who grow older. "

Well, there's always Soylent Green.

;)

Reply
John Ostrander (9:36 PM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

Ah, I'm too cranky. I'd poison the lot of ya.

Reply
Mike Gold (9:26 AM on Fri Jan 18, 2008)

Oh, I don't know. If they could process Edward G. Robinson...

Reply
John Ostrander (9:35 PM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

"Supply side-trickle down-Reaganomics doesn't work. We've been mostly trying to use this method for almost 20 years and the decline in real incomes just keeps getting worse. "

I don't know about anyone else but I'm real tired of getting trickled on.

As you noted, the desire seems to be make us all pee-ons.

Reply
Mike Gold (9:27 AM on Fri Jan 18, 2008)

Wow. A twist on the old Tommy Smothers joke about judging a person's wealth and power by the amount of clothing worn. The poor and the powerless are the less-ons, the rich and powerful are the morons.

Reply
Alan Coil (1:41 PM on Thu Jan 17, 2008)

Supply side-trickle down-Reaganomics doesn't work. We've been mostly trying to use this method for almost 30 years and the decline in real incomes just keeps getting worse.

I'm not a fan of Ayn Rand, but the situation she described in Atlas Shrugged where all the corporations were making all the rules to benefit all the corporations sure sounds a lot like what is happening today---the energy and oil corporations writing the energy laws, the banking and credit companies writing the banking/credit/bankruptcy laws. Also, the stuffing of judicial chairs with corporate benefactors. Congress couldn't manage to confirm judges during the end of the Clinton years. Why? Because the Republicans didn't want to, until they also took control of the nomination process under Bush.

Whatever happened to "...for the people..." ?

Angry? Damned straight. Yet I mourn most the opportunities that will not be there for the next generation. The neocons and their enablers want to take the country back to the way it was over a century ago---hundreds of wealthy families and millions of serfs. Is that the future we imagined for out offspring? I think not.

Add a comment

Inappropriate or promotional comments may be removed. To create a clickable link, simply type the URL (including http://) and we will make a link for you. Line breaks and paragraphs are automatically converted — no need to use <p> or <br> tags, but if you're into that kind of thing, you can use any of the following tags: b, i, strong, em, a (href only), p and br.

Click one of the three commenter types below. Member comments are added immediately once you confirm your email address. Anonymous comments are moderated by our editorial staff.

Email me

  

Comment Preview
Avatar
Anonymous (3:31 PM on Sat Nov 21, 2009)

Preview your comment here.

Read our comics -- for free!


Active Conversations

ComicMix Features

Articles by contributor

ComicMix Podcasts

this gets replaced with a player
Ê ÊÊÊÊ ÊÊÊÊ