Friday, January 11, 2013

PORT HOLES



US PORTS UNSECURE AND VULNERABLE

Terrorists could be in virtually any major City in the Eastern half of

America within a 24 hour drive from Gulfport on the Interstate network.
(Photo courtesy of the Mississippi State Port Authority at Gulfport)



Part I of a three Part Series on Port Security; a TBC Exclusive Investigation.

(Friday January 11, 2013.  Gulfport, MS.)  The Port of Mississippi here at Gulfport is a sprawling 204 acre intermodal facility with over 6000 feet of berth space.  Located just five nautical miles north of the Intracoastal Waterway and an hour’s sail from international waters, it is the third busiest port on the United States Gulf Coast.  Standing dockside here on a typical humid morning, the activity appears frenetic but is actually a well-orchestrated industrial symphony between looming gantry cranes, huge ocean travelling ships toweringly loaded with hundreds of 40 foot shipping containers, and a hoard of semi-trucks, yard jockeys, and empty chassis.  This is the picture of the global economy, of the vital supply chain in action.  The port at Gulfport handles over 2 million tons of cargo a year according to The Port Authority of Mississippi.  This is largely a “green port” meaning that the bulk of the incoming freight is edible perishables.  Both Dole and Chiquita Banana are prime customers of this facility.

While the activity here is impressive there is one notable absence at this vital point of entry into the United States – security.  With all the talk and concern in this post 9-11-01 age about all the many and varied facets covered under the rubric of Homeland Security, there is little security of any kind in evidence.  There are some cosmetics of security including fences and uniformed “guards” as well as a handful of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) “agents” as well as a couple of US Customs and Border Patrol personnel who comprise a force that is so wholly inadequate given the scale and scope of the operations here that for all intents and purposes there is no security.  There are times when the only “security” personnel present are unarmed security guards from a local company.

The men and women employed by the myriad of companies who work here are all too willing to speak about this lack of security.  Many can rattle off a list of legislative measures taken in the name of Homeland and Port Security and can attest to the fact that all of them are just so many words printed on the never idle presses in Washington DC.  Some of their comments may come across as cynical, sarcastic or comical but the concerns they address are extremely serious and their worries are very, very real.  These are the people, crane operators, truck drivers, dock hands, forklift drivers and longshoremen who see all too clearly on a daily basis just how vulnerable this facility is.  Virtually anything can be inside one of the millions of containers that pass through here annually; even the casual observer is struck by the fact that it appears anyone can enter the port unquestioned, unimpeded, and unidentified.
 
ALPHABET SOUP

After the unprecedented terrorist attacks perpetrated on September 11, 2001 every department, agency and division of our federal and state governments were badly shaken.  No one, it seems, ever realized just how vulnerable we were.  Sadly, but in true Washington DC fashion we are basically as vulnerable today as we were then despite the avalanche of legislation and regulation developed under the auspices of Homeland Security.

Congress was quick to act and signed George W. Bush and Dick Cheney’s “Patriot Act” into law on October 26, 2001 thereby clearing the acreage needed to construct a huge, clumsy “Super Agency” which absorbed 22 separate federal agencies at least as dysfunctional collectively as most of them were individually. To trace the genesis of The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is akin to reading an Old Testament passage in the Bible. 

The DHS begat the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and as swiftly as wild rabbits breed there was spawned the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and a small legion of other alphabet agencies and a flood of legislation addressing security in factories and on farms, in food processing, warehousing and distribution.  The powers of the day saw that our nuclear facilities, power grid, vital infrastructure, airports, airplanes, borders, and ports were almost wholly unsecured.  Along with the now almighty DHS everyone jumped into the act from the DOT, FDA, DOE, DOJ, FBI, and even the hapless CIA was eager to ramp up their operations after their abysmal failures that allowed 19 men to successfully attack us on our own soil.  Concerns over the safety of our water supply, livestock and crops invited a level of regulation and accountability never before known in the agricultural industries and public utilities.  Actually, once it was realized plainly for anyone to see, it was utterly stupefying to realize that we had left so many components and elements of our country, economy, and people nakedly exposed as so many sitting ducks blithely paddling atop a still lake while a semi-obese, intoxicated camouflage adorned hunter aims his shotgun at them.

So Washington DC did what it always does and does best, they had an epic knee-jerk reactionary seizure and largely without thought or logic began to assemble this gawky apparatus of “security” agencies cheaply strung together by equally thoughtless and arguably unconstitutional legislation.  That there were enormous security challenges confronting us was not the issue; we were an amazingly open, unmonitored, unsecured nation.  But, in the efforts to provide security to facilities and industries that needed to be more secure, the legislation crafted in DC did not translate very well down to the rank and file workers and employees of these highly vulnerable potential “targets”.


HERE A TRUCK, THERE A TRUCK, EVERYWHERE A SEMITRUCK

The major American seaports that primarily receive imported goods from around the world are vast complexes covering thousands of acres.  Our network of distribution centers, industrial parks and warehouses are important links in the supply chain of virtually everything we use to live.  But the most obvious links in the supply chain that is the very lifeblood of our economy and way of life are mobile; they are the ubiquitous tractor-trailers traversing America on ribbons of cement and asphalt.  

An intermodal semi-truck running down the road.

the trailer is a shipping container mounted on a chassis.

One would be hard pressed to find an item in their home, office, school, local markets, shopping malls or anywhere else that did not spend some time from its point of origin to your home, business, school or local retailers on a truck.  That is a plain and simple fact.  Today there are an estimated 7 million semi-trucks in service in America with upwards of 3.8 million on the roads at any given time.  There is an approximate ratio of 1::7 meaning that for every power unit there are 10 trailers; so 70 million trailers are parked in most unsecured locales at any given time.  The trailers not connected to a power unit are dropped at terminals, carriers, shippers and receivers and are largely unattended.  Due to the advent of the “just in time” inventory management system at the wholesale and retail levels, semi-trailers have become de facto rolling warehouses for commodities and goods of every kind. 

As for shipping containers, exact numbers are notoriously difficult to come by however the best industry estimates report upwards of 27 million shipping containers being off loaded in American ports every year.  Of these, prior to 9-11-01 less than one percent were screened or scrutinized and since 9-11-01 that number has risen to near 1.4%.  Just think of these numbers for a moment and you get a picture of the enormity of the challenge when it comes to having even the most modest control of what is, is not, and what may be in a shipping container from some far flung port and just how easily a bomb of any kind or even nuclear material could be shipped into America.  The scanning process for nuclear material at our ports today is, according to one Port Manager at Port Elizabeth, New Jersey who asked to remain anonymous, “a freakin’ joke.  It’s like no one believes that we do so little to actually inspect what’s comin’ in here.  By some law most of the nuclear screening is supposed to take place at the port of origin but I doubt…screw that, I know, that is not the case.  What containers are run through the scanners here are a tiny fraction of what we receive.  The whole system is a fuckin’ joke and, mark my words, somebody is going to do some real damage to us using a device or material that was off loaded at an American port and sent on its way.”  These very same sentiments were expressed by dock mangers, port masters and longshoremen from Charleston South Carolina, to Long Beach California.

TWIC OR TWEET

Mark Whetstine is an Operations Coordinator for a major refrigerated motor carrier serving their customers here at the Port in Gulfport.  A former long haul owner operator trucker with over 2 million miles driven without an accident to his credit, he takes a few minutes to express his many and varied opinions.  He is not a shy man by any means and he is a highly intelligent and observant port employee who daily witnesses the folly of “security” at the Port of Mississippi.  We spoke on a recent balmy Sunday afternoon.  Whetstine’s concerns transcend the glaring lack of adequate security and the many sanctioned “loopholes” that exist to circumvent even the paltry security measures in place in the port at Gulfport; he and his family live within 15 miles of the Port and he is acutely aware of the potential for some terrorist activity that could destroy the area he, his family and friends call home.

“I guess it was shortly after they passed the MTSA (Maritime Transportation Security Act) in 2002 that they came up with the idea of the TWIC (Transportation Worker Identification Credential) card.  I had to pay $132, have the FBI do a background check, get fingerprinted, photographed and God knows what else so I could have a TWIC card.  Well, I got my TWIC card and let me tell you, TWIC card or not, anyone can bring anything they want into this port.  The TWIC card was just another revenue stream for the feds.”    

Technically, legally but actually just theoretically no one can enter the port without a valid TWIC card.  In reality, the very same federal agency that devised the TWIC program has built in a gapping loophole that anyone could literally drive a truck through. 

So it is by law that any and all truckers entering facilities covered under the TWIC card law must have undergone the tedious, costly, time consuming process of acquiring this card.  However, there is a legal way for virtually any truck driver to enter the Port here as well as others across the country without a TWIC card.  The existence of this particular loophole shows the idiocy of the entire “security” system at our ports and provides a free pass, or rather a $40 pass to any driver to enter any port.

In most ports as here at Gulfport there is a contract “escort service” available. These escorts are not of the sexual companionship variety although, as one Port employee here put it, this escort service could result in “a whole bunch of folks getting fucked and killed.”

A driver without a valid TWIC card can pay a mere forty dollars to America’s Security Escort Service, a company climbing to be “In compliance with the TWIC program.”  No doubt there employees who serve as escorts into our ports are in compliance.  The ludicrousness of this service is almost beyond belief and is actually advertised on this company’s web site.  America’s Security Escort Service functions much like the “mules” that help illegal aliens traverse the Rio Grande and the badlands between the United States southern border and Mexico thereby gaining entry into America.  Their boldly stated mission is: “To keep your company from the expense of $ 132.50 per person/TWIC card that belongs to the individual. This is crucial to your company due to the transient nature of this business.  To maintain your current workforce without interruption due to some personnel not being able to pass the stringent FBI screening process (i.e.)

    (a)  Individuals who lack certain immigration status.
    (b)  Have connection to terrorist activities.
    (c)  Have been determined to lack certain mental capacities.
    (d) Those who have been convicted of certain crimes will be ineligible.”


If you should happen to be a terrorist of some kind and have decided to wreak havoc in an American port or on a ship in a harbor, all you need to do is construct an explosive device, load it onto a semi-trailer or shipping container, arrive at your chosen port of preference, pay the escort fee, and they will guide you into the port for you to deposit a trailer containing a bomb, nuclear material, biologic or chemical warfare dispersal mechanism and you are in.  Your background will remain unknown to anyone.  The escort service makes the entire concept of the TWIC card an absolute joke and the card itself not worth the paper it’s printed on.  Yes indeed.  If you are a trucking company and have drivers who cannot pass an FBI background check, may be illegal immigrants, have connections to terrorist activities, lack certain mental capacities or have been convicted of a felony, there is no need to worry.  Just pay at the port and your driver and whatever it is he might be hauling is in.  This is what constitutes “security” at our already pitifully vulnerable commercial cargo ports.


IN THROUGH THE OUT DOOR

In practice every semitrailer exiting the Port here is run through a scanning device that registers the presence of radioactive material in the hopes of finding nuclear material sent via shipping container for use in America.  The odd, almost bizarre inverse of this protocol is that nothing entering the Port is scanned.  The system, for lack of a better word, is akin to having a front door on a bank designed only to keep people in while allowing anyone to enter at any time.  One security consultant from BronxWest Consulting commented, “ That anyone can so easily circumvent the port entry process is cause enough for concern but, add to that the fact that a step by step set of instructions are provided to do so by this escort service, is so far beyond my comprehension that it almost seems to be a sick joke.  Add to these facts the irresponsibility of the federal agencies tasked with port security obviously condone, if not encourage these breeches of protocol, and it all amounts to criminal negligence. If this scenario does not meet the standards of dereliction of duty on the parts of those overseeing these agencies and operations than, I suppose, I do not know what does.” 


IN THROUGH THE BACK DOOR

On October 12, 2000 while harboring and being refueled at the port of Aden in Yemen, the United States Navy guided missile destroyer, the USS Cole was severely damaged when a small water craft (no larger than a john boat) made contact with the hull of the ship detonating an explosion that left a 40’x40’ gash in the ship killing 19 Sailors and wounding 39.  The investigation afterwards revealed that the extensive damage to the billion dollar warship was caused by an estimated 400 – 700 pounds of explosive material molded into a shaped charge.  Essentially two terrorists in a rowboat equipped with an out board engine and a crude bomb came perilously close to sinking one of the most advanced US Naval ships in the fleet.  What would happen if a similar event were to occur in the Port at Gulfport or in the harbor?  What would be the economic, psychological, logistic, environmental and commercial shipping impact of such an event?  One long time maritime security analyst noted that such an attack on an inbound or outgoing freighter or a docked ship would be, “catastrophic in many ways.  It would render the Port unsuitable for use until the damaged or sunken ship could be salvaged and removed.  Psychologically it would be a victory for those who perpetrated the act and another blow to our national psyche and sense of security.”


The gaping hole in the port side of the USS Cole caused by

two men in a small boat and a homemade bomb.


The security breaches on the dockside of the operations and entry into the Port facility from the surface roads via the entry gates are just one component of the abysmal security at this facility.  The vulnerability and lack of security is just as serious from harbor side or from the water as demonstrated by the USS Cole incident.


Two local fishermen enjoying a Sunday afternoon within 20 yards of

the Port of Mississippi piers well within the harbor.


The United States Coast Guard Station Gulfport is located within one half of a mile from where the photo above was taken.  Virtually every Port employee commented that the Coast Guard presence is so infrequent in the Port and harbor that one would never know they “have a base right here in the Port, basically.”   The US Coast Guard personnel at Station Gulfport are reluctant to answer any questions regarding their “operations and security measures.”  They should be reluctant or ashamed to comment because for all intents and purposes they provide such a flimsy layer of security to this essential port that they may as well not even bother. 


“ONE IF BY LAND, TWO IF BY SEA”

Prior to the famous Battles of Lexington and Concord during our Revolutionary War against England, the Boston militia man and patriot, Paul Revere, devised a simple yet effective intelligence and alarm system to monitor the movements of the British forces.  He and a handful of others hung lanterns in church steeples to alert those within line of sight of the lanterns where the British were coming towards them from. It was a primitive relay system communicating that vitally important information from hamlet to hamlet, from cities to towns along the way. His “One if by land, two if by sea” quote is not only basic American history it is part of the lore of our fight for independence.

Unfortunately, despite far more sophisticated “intelligence and alarm” systems at our disposal, there will likely not be a counterpart to Paul Revere to alert us of the approach of terrorists.  This is our own fault and the fault of our elected leaders, appointed officials and those charged with oversight responsibility over all the constituent parts of our Rube Goldberg-like Homeland security apparatus.

We’ve had the last 12 years and have spent untold trillions on all aspects of Homeland Security, Intelligence gathering and analysis and possess the most powerful military force ever assembled but, we remain inconceivably unsecured with long standing, pre- 9-11-01 vulnerabilities and weaknesses remaining to be exploited. If rapid, reasoned, logical, practical actions are not undertaken by the federal government, the next terrorist attack is just a matter of time from being another devastating reality. 

TAGS: HOMELAND SECURITY WEAKNESSES, PORT SECURITY LOOPHOLES, DHS, ICE, USCG, MTSA, PORT OF MISSISSIPPI AT GULFPORT, AMERICA’S SECURITY ESCORT SERVICE, TWIC CARDS, TRUCK DRIVERS EXPENSES, SECURITY VULNERABILITIES, TBC EXCLUSIVE INVESTIGATIVE REPORT.


LINKS:





























Preview of Part II of this three part series:  We will take a closer look at the security arrangements provided by non-governmental agencies, private companies as well as the complicity on the part of certain locally elected officials, business leaders, and those making money from the DHS while providing inadequate services employing largely inept, unqualified, ill-trained personnel.

 Copyright The Brooding Cynyx 2013 © All Rights Reserved

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

CYNICALLY SPEAKING




A LETTER FROM THE BROODING CYNYX OMBUDSMAN
Diogenes, the noted Greek philosopher known as the father of Cynicism.



(Wednesday January 2, 2013. TBC HQ) It has been quite a year to be a Cynyc and cynics everywhere had more than ample opportunity to be cynical.  It was an election year in the United States, a presidential election year with a bruising often absurdly amusing but generally pathetic Republican Party primary.  The cast of wing nuts, buffoons, cranks and kooks who threw their hats into the ring on the GOP side surely represented one of the more colorful cast of inept characters to enter the same race.  Since President Obama had no primary challenge he was able to focus on his job and sit on the sidelines while the Republicans were gouging each other’s eyes.  There could not have been a cynic in America who did not observe the crass and cynical manner by which hapless Mitt Romney was chosen to challenge Obama for the White House.  So 2012 kicked off with the antiquated Iowa Caucuses and then the games really began thereafter.

For us New Yorkers the year brought us another Super Bowl victory by the NY Giants, their second in five years.  But this is not a recap of the year just concluded.  This is our pseudo-annual Ombudsman Report and there are a few orders of business we must address.  First, we give our heartfelt gratitude and a loud Thank You for all of our loyal readers and our slowly but surely increasing following. Since our Blog is hosted on Google’s “blogspot” we have been able to monitor our statistics and have been more than pleased with the numbers from 2012.  Our readership has increased over 80% from 2011.  Daily page views, visitors as well as the web and geographical locations of our audience have surged in the last quarter of 2012.  While the majority of our readers are in the United States we now have a substantial flow of traffic from places such as Ireland, England, Italy, Turkey, Israel, Pakistan, Russia, Ukraine, The Netherlands, and various locales throughout the Orient, just to mention a few.

We’ve not only expanded our readership we have also made many new friends; some of been vitally important to spreading the word about us; others have offered sound, thoughtful feedback, sometimes very critical, and we appreciate everyone’s thoughts just as we do their friendship.  Our Facebook presence has been clearly been an important factor in our growth and we appreciate all those who have found and now follow us through that social networking site.  We were proud to participate in the Third Annual Blog Action Day (BAD) sponsored by Google in partnership with such dedicated humanitarian organizations including: Greenpeace, OxFam, act!onaid, and Help Age International and several more. 

Every regular reader, occasional visitor or casual peruser is appreciated.  We value every person who has stopped by in 2012 and hope for even greater traffic in 2013.  Among the new acquaintances we’ve connected with are some highly respected journalists and authors.  Dana Priest of the Washington Post, Christopher Dickey, Paris Bureau Chief for The Daily Beast (formerly Newsweek), Jill Dougherty, renowned  Foreign and White House Correspondent for CNN, Iranian born journalist the Founder and CEO of "B4 Media Working Group"  the Editor and Publisher of "B4 media Publications",now living in Pakistan, Bilqees Seema, as well as Pulitzer Prize winning author Laurie Garrett now a Senior Fellow for Global Health at The Council on Foreign Relations.

We have been honored to become associated with several local New York City causes and the men who founded them.  We are deeply grateful to Lee Ielpi, President of the September 11th, 2001 Families Association.  John Feal, Founder and President of The FealGood Foundation who has dedicated his considerable energy, focus and passion advocating for the hundreds of First Responders who have been stricken by exotic malignant diseases and respiratory troubles as a direct result of what they were exposed to on 9-11-01 and the weeks and months thereafter laboring at the WTC Site in the recovery efforts.  We also salute Mark Consentino, retired from the NYPD who has organized and enlisted hundreds of active and retired MOS as well as civilians who have been working virtually non-stop on aide and relief efforts for those devastated by Hurricane Sandy; particularly those in the hardest hit neighborhoods of Staten Island and Queens. Retired NYPD – ESU Detective Glen Kline, founder of American Citizens Against Terrorism (A.C.A.T.) consistently provides important, practical information on a wide variety of homeland and NYC Metro Area security topics and concerns.  We are proud to support these men and many more too numerous to list here in their efforts and sacrifices.

With the increased audience we have seen more comments, feedback and e-mails than ever before in our five year history.  We invite and encourage anyone and everyone who stops by and takes the time to read one of our posts to check one of the boxes at the bottom of each post, to leave a comment whether you agree or disagree with our position.  Part of our mission is to promote our readers to think, discuss and debate the subject matter we address.  This free flow of opinions, perspectives and attitudes has helped bring The Brooding Cynyx into the dynamic world of “unconventional media”.  No, we’re not as well-known as we’d like to be – yet.  We have already begun to plan several “Special Series” on topics ranging from Homeland Security to Global Hunger and Health needs to the events that help shape our lives closer to home.

Some of you have written to express their disappointment at the lack of satirical posts.  Satire remains a very important tool for us to present certain truths, expose the hypocrisy of certain people, and to generally shake things up.  Unfortunately throughout 2012 we found the harsh truth to be more important to discuss than to satirize.  Truth is often far stranger than fiction and some issues and events simply do not lend themselves to a satirical treatment.  Yes, part of our mission to take a “nothing is sacred” approach to what we observe around us and we always have since 2007.  It seemed that every time we were prepared to lambast someone or some event in the grandest most sarcastic ad cynical way we could, an event would occur of such serious and often tragic nature that we had to leave the humor and satire aside.  We vow to produce more satire in 2013.

Overall we are relatively pleased with the body of work we produced in 2012 but we are nowhere near satisfied.  We are constantly striving to improve; to get better in all aspects required to produce a reputable, respected and, most importantly read blog.  Our writing will improve as will our topic selection. 

We respectfully ask for your continued support and that you please help spread the word about us.  Please continue to read our posts, click, comment, critique or just let us know how you feel about something we’ve posted.  This is a key aspect of our mission as well.

*****     *****     *****

We’d like to remind all readers to examine the takes and description of each post.  We have received some hostile e-mail about posts that were satirical, not at all factual or, if they contained any facts, they were there just to frame the issue. 

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So, from the desk of the TBC Ombudsman come genuine and sincere wishes to all of you that you and all of yours know nothing but the best in health, happiness, prosperity and peace in this New Year of 2013.

Be skeptical.  Look for ironies.  Think, read, discuss and comment.  But most of all remain engaged and stay cynical.

Bless.

 TheTBC Ombudsman
(From an undisclosed location)


Copyright The Brooding Cynyx 2013 © All Rights Reserved


Tuesday, January 1, 2013

2012: THE YEAR IN REAR VIEW



ANY LESSONS LEARNED?



(Tuesday January 1, 2013.  Along the most recently paved segment of memory lane)  January 1, 2013; a day for looking both ways at once, taking stock of where you are and possibly contemplating making some changes in this New Year.  Today is a day for hindsight as much as it is for foresight and anticipation.  Everything feels just a bit cleaner on the first day of a New Year.  The triumphs and tragedies, the good days, bad days, sick days, holidays, birthdays, vacation days, bad hair days, the totality of the past 366 days, all 8,784 hours of it have yet to recede to the point they are beyond our appraisal.  They are laid out behind us in a neat, finite, block of time. 

Over the last two weeks media outlets of every ilk and reputation from the most stolid scholarly journals, the shallow and crass newsertainment cable programs, magazines, websites, newspapers, tabloids and blogs have presented their own versions of the best and worst of 2012.  Year in review pieces start appearing just prior to Christmas.  Every aspect of our society, culture and the world at large is classified, categorized, pigeon-holed, filed, sorted, and weighed by a wide variety of metrics, calculations and a great deal of subjectivity.  Some of it can be thoughtful and poignant while the bulk of it is just so much recapping of crap.  Sometimes we may lose sight of just how much crap we are exposed to on a daily basis but scanning all the lists and the lists of lists, and lists of lists that critique other lists we get a full frontal assault from all the crap that serves as the cohesive force that makes American life possible as we know it.

Yes, we are part of a wider world, a complex sprawling global community but Americans tend to have an acquired propensity to not look too far beyond home.  There is nothing wrong with that except it is experiencing life as an intellectual dwarf uncurious and unconcerned not only about the far flung nations we couldn’t locate on a map if a shotgun was shoved up our asses but we have grown ever more parochial in our view even at the local level.  So be it.

It is 2013.  We have too much to do and not sufficient time to accomplish it.  We have to multitask, text, Tweet, e-mail, download, upload and carry on our day to day lives soaked in the cold irony that the more “connected” we have become thanks to the social networking technology, the less connected we are to each other, even our families.  But this is our “Brave New World” and there is no end in sight to what our sophisticated technology will empower us to do.

But, since this is our Year in Rear View assessment, we’ll begin with a wider gaze.  We here at The Brooding Cynyx did not think the Mayans were correct in their 2000 year old calculations but would have liked them to be correct.  After all, who wouldn’t at least be a little bit curious about what the end of the world would look like?    No the world did not implode on 12-12-12 but virtually every day in the last 366 some part of it was jolted, or crumbled, or shook with turmoil, war, hunger, strife, and conflict. 

In America we learned a little bit more about ourselves and just how horrifically broken the machinations of our government have become.  The presidential election campaigns clearly illustrated how divided we’ve become, how detestable our elected official are and that the gap between the haves and have nots is increasing at light speed.  We saw approximately $4 billion spent by the various candidates for president and Congress while being ground under the heels of a federal bureaucracy that can’t seem to accomplish the most basic of their duties.  What could be done in America with $4 billion?  How many would be covered by health insurance, how many would not be homeless or working for sub-living wages?  How many schools could we update and neighbors could we rejuvenate?  How much of our aging, failing, fragile infrastructure could we rebuild and put the unemployed and under employed back to work? 

We got to take a good hard look at the cold pale white underbelly of the Republican Party and were disgusted by what we saw.  We saw men seeking to pass legislation defining various “types” of rape and learned that some in that Party believe a women’s body has a “way of shutting that whole thing down” if she is the victim of rape.  We all travelled into new frontiers of lunacy and bigotry as efforts to suppress voters of a certain demographic, were buoyed as homosexual couples gained their equal rights in more States, and argued bitterly after each mass fatality lone gunman episode as they occurred in 2012 with an alarming frequency. 

We’ve felt the sprains and strains as our Constitution has been stretched and distorted by special interests on both sides of the political divide and on both sides of issues that should no longer be issues.  But they are and they are many.  We’ve listened to the people who have laid us off, cut our hours and eliminated our jobs and afterwards we sat numb in front of the TV news reporting Wall Street earnings, corporate bailouts, and golden parachutes.  The din became a roar as we were forced to do more with less while the facile arguments about “redistribution” of wealth were vociferously argued by those who never knew what it is like to go to bed hungry and cold. 

Yes, the past 31,622,400 seconds comprising 2012 treated us to a veritable smorgasbord of real issues and phony causes, of strains of apathy and complacency colliding with rabid engagement in issue after issue.  Compromise became a curse word in Washington DC last year while in the waning days of 2012 we were smacked with a mad dash towards a “fiscal cliff”, whatever the hell that is.

We saw many famous people die and mourned in private pain as we lost family members, friends, neighbors and more innocence.  Locations became infamous and draped in the purple bunting of shared grief.  A movie theater in Aurora Colorado, a factory in Minneapolis, a Sikh Temple outside Milwaukee, and an elementary school in Newtown Connecticut captured the national spotlight while cities like Chicago, East St. Louis, Memphis, Oakland, and Philadelphia saw non newsworthy carnage with each setting of the sun.  We heard reports of servicemen and women dying in Afghanistan and an Ambassador and three others murdered in Libya while the world community sat idly as thousands of Syrians were killed by their own government.  We tune most of this out.  We feel we have to and, after all, what can I do about it?  Why should I care?

Then, of course, there are all those other issues and arguments that have taken on a comic-tragic tone as what is and is not the truth is kicked around.  We saw the worst drought in the Midwest since the Dust Bowl of 1936, record breaking temperatures around the globe, powerful storms striking almost with a malevolent conscious vengeance.  Hurricane Sandy redrew the coastlines of New Jersey and much of New York City and Long Island and the NYC Metro area got in touch with their vulnerability to the forces of nature overnight.

We saw and observed a great deal of calamity, catastrophe and callous indifference but, did we learn anything?  Perhaps within the contours of our own lives as we buried a parent or sat vigil at our child’s bedside as some insidious disease had its way with her, or we experienced that unique aching in our hearts and marrow of lost a love, we did learn something.  Hopefully, possibly, we did.  If nothing else we might have discovered a reservoir of strength and resolves, of empathy, compassion, and humanity we’d not been aware we possessed.  Then again, maybe we didn’t.  Maybe we drifted further from the fold and embraced loneliness and shunned solace.  Whatever transpired in our lives since January 1, 2012 are ours and ours alone to bear one way or another.  That is the human condition, that’s life.

Looking outside ourselves today we might see the last 366 days as snow plowed up into curling frozen waves or as wind swept sand dunes piled against the glass door we just shut on 2012.  We each have our own road to travel, our own perspective, perceptions, and history, attitudes, and life experiences to work with.  That is also part of the dynamic parcel that is the human condition.

Maybe looking back and reflecting has value for some; for others it may be just so much wasted time.  There is tomorrow after all and we have to carry on.  But, tomorrow is guaranteed to no one and if any lesson is more consistent and sobering as that fact of reality, we can’t imagine it.

Our individual unique perch provides our perspective and we can look back on 2012 and celebrate the fact that a shitty year is over while hoping 2013 will be better or bid it a bittersweet farewell because our life is richer for what we experienced during the last 52 weeks.  Some will make resolutions and take the tableau rosa approach that 2013, at least for today is a blank slate to do with what I might.


The Brooding Cynyx wish you all the best in
Health,
Happiness,
Peace,
and contentment in this brand New Year.


“And there was a man who stood
unsure to look over his shoulder or look ahead.

He looked behind himself for a time seeking out the boy he once was
knowing that the boy was still part of him.

He caught a glimpse of the boy and beckoned to him ;
He wanted the boy to walk with him.

Together they would go forward and enjoy each other’s company,
Teach each other lessons,
Make peace with their common past
And walk ahead onto the untrodden soil of tomorrow.”





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