IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO RAISE AN IDIOT! THE MAKING OF TRUMP

It takes a village to raise an idiot

Don’t travel to Egypt now; Always have your passport with you, they warned me, the Attorney General, Keith Allison, isn’t he your friend?  We don’t know what Trump would do!” They advise me every day. The morning news is a constant stream of Trump’s latest vanity affair, his administration’s reckless policies, impulsive decisions, and juvenile political maneuvers, becoming a new art form.One day, it’s the deportation of student protestors speaking out against genocide in Gaza and praising Pro-genocide protestors as patriotic. The next is tariffs imposed at random products and countries. Entertaining renaming the Gulf of Mexico, seizing control of the Panama Canal, occupying Greenland, and—just for good measure—sharing our military strategy for attacking Yemen with the media; another form of Trump’s transparent who gives a f**c policy, while Biden secretly shared them with our allies, and Obama the champion of democracy and the political Ayatollah of liberals, as Aljazeera explained in his secrete “Kill lists” was “Barack Obama’s blind spot He opposes the death penalty in the US, after lengthy trials, but issued kill orders for Muslims overseas with no trial at all.” Another form of American fatwa. I am interrogated by friends and foes alike; their looks at the coffee shops are full of sympathy and suspicion. My friends want to make sure I’m grateful that Biden’s Genocide plans were discreet, and my foes want complete loyalty and submission to the new king. The question came at the coffee shop from an old friend who I hadn’t seen for years, a blond James Dean-looking 70-year-old man, a conservative republican lawyer with a knack for nonsensical conservation and a racy sports convertible cars with a personalized PRO_POLICE license plate: “ It got me off a speedy ticket” he bragged once. At the coffee shop, he asked me,  -What do you think of Trump? with a mockery smile. Well, before I delve into this and tell you what I think of Trump. I already spent four years talking about him in his first term. let me tell you a story about Rafat, the village idiot. He sat down with a curious interest.  I was born in a small village in the heart of the delta, people’s interest in the outside world didn’t exceed the village corn fields, a place with one street, one mosque, one school, one river, and one idiot his name was Rafat; and ever since no mother in the village dared name their loved ones Rafat, it takes a village to raise an idiot.  Rafat a darker man with a well-built body, with unshaved face, and unkempt hair, in his 30’s. 40’s, or even 50’s, hard to tell, he had no ID or anyone to give an alibi for the day he was born.  Rafat was a stranger, an outsider; he was morally and politically neutral, a modern man who somehow belonged to everyone and anyone, a non-threatening fellow. He had no known family or place to live, yet he was as much a part of the village as the call to prayer or the animal morning walk to the farm. He was protected by his idiocy and his enigmatic life, reflected everyone’s hidden self or secret. Village leaders feared his brutal honesty and the poor envied his careless free spirit.  Rafat showed up at weddings, funerals, and any social public celebrations he was given his space, welcomed in our kitchen where the mothers and daughters of villages were preparing meals, he was fed; at and during local celebrations, he was a spectacle, a spokesman for the uninvited, and a folk hero for unprivileged. Everyone, and then, you see the village’s Children tormenting him, chasing him out of the village through the dusty roads, where dogs looked on in disbelief. Adults tolerated him, dismissing his outbursts when he ranted about the village’s tangled web of, moral depravities, corruption, and secrets. In a village like ours, everyone had a story, and every story had a secret for Rafat to spill, saying out loud what everyone whispered in dark rooms behind closed doors, Rafat was indiscriminate with brutal honesty, which made him safe and his tails were the talk of the town; however, his stories melted away like morning dews, making room for new tails. Rafat became a village myth and folk hero,  where villagers blamed and contributed lots of stories to him, things he had never said or done. Refat cleansed and mudded the village’s morality fabrics and formed their collective memories.    Refat was tolerated by the villagers for his venerability and powerlessness. However, he was a mirror of the village’s vices and values, reflecting uncomfortable truths. It takes a village to raise an idiot, but the real tragedy? Unlike the old days when people in the village could ignore their fools, in modern days, we don’t have that luxury.

Ahmed Tharwat

Host and Producer of Arab American TV show BelAhdan

WWW.ahmediatv.com

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Contacts: ahmediatv@gmail.com

 

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The World is Run by “Generals”

American flag log

Harry S. Truman once said, “The ‘C’ students run the world.” That was a long time ago, and now the world is run by “Generals”–still “C” Students- -in two different camps. The first camp is usually run by military generals like Saddam, Gad
dafi, Nasser, Sadat, Mubarak, Ziad, Al-Sisi, Mugabe, Barre, Al-Bashir, Idi Amin, and the list goes on. The other camp is run by a different kind of general, corporate generals, like General Motors, General Electric, General Food, General Mills, General Dynamic, General Union, and the list goes one.
Where are the similarities and differences between these two camps of generals? The military generals usually run undemocratic oppressive regimes, and they enforce their will on people’s lives through guns and security measures. However, the corporate generals run more democratic systems, and they enforce their will and control over their people’s lives and institutions thorough money and influence. The military generals specialize in their undemocratic style and lack of political freedom, and they don’t respect human rights or the rule of law. Because corporate generals don’t have this luxury, they control people by different means. They control people’s minds, and take the political process to the market place creating a culture of consumerism where citizens become consumers and the political freedom moves from the ballot box to the shopping malls. Military generals may rig elections to stay in power, but corporate generals rig the election process and electorate’s minds.
Brendan Geoffrey reported in Forbes magazine “There may be 147 companies in the world that own everything…. But it’s not you and I who really control those companies, even though much of our money is in them. Given the nature of how money is invested, there are four companies in the shadows that really control those companies that own everything.”
Today, corporations have become the dominant institution of business and impact practically everything on this planet from people, animals and plants to the quality and availability of water, food, energy and resources (e.g., fossil fuels, timber, metals, gems, chemicals) to transportation, housing, media, education, communications and the shaping our socio-economic-political system, which was shown when the Supreme Court ruled that the government may not ban political spending by corporations.
Mark Chasan, CEO of AWE Global, wrote in the Huffington Post
“Prior to the 17th century, the first corporations were created as not-for-profit entities to build institutions, such as hospitals and universities, for the public good. They had constitutions detailing their duties overseen by the government. Straying outside the constitutional boundaries was punishable by law.”
For example, the world’s first commercial corporation was the East India Company, set up by merchants to get spices from India. The East Indian Company expanded into a vast enterprise, conquering India with a total monopoly on trade and all the territorial powers of a government. At its height, it ruled over a fifth of the world’s population with a private army of a quarter million.
Nothing has changed that much, here in America, where we have our military industry complex, with a $555 billon dollar budget, which spent mostly on Corporate generals.
Here is Mark Chasan again, on how our institutors are rigged to provide corporate generals the support and the legal “A substantial amount of today’s regulatory environment is couched in public interest, but provides great economic benefits to large corporations that can afford the lobbying and sponsorship, while often causing significant damage to the public, entrepreneurs, small business and innovation. For example, a study by the Sunlight Foundation, which used tax data to correlate corporate investment in lobbying with decreases in taxes, found that between 2007 and 2009, Exxon Mobil, Verizon, GE, AT&T, Altria, Amgen, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing invested approximately $540 million into lobbying which resulted in aggregate tax reductions of approximately $11 billion.
Similarly, Wall Street analysts predict Apple could earn up to $45.6 billion in its current fiscal year, but could manage to avoid paying billions of dollars in tax.
“We need red blood cells to live, the same way a business needs profits to live, but the purpose of life is not to make red blood cells, the same way the purpose of business is not to exist to make profits.” – R. Edward Freeman, author of Strategic Management
Now corporations run the government and make the laws. The corporate generals’ camp will develop their own institutions, jihadists, in their own way, who would produce the cultural and legal framework in which they operate and flourish.
Consumerism controls the average American, who is exposed to 20,000 marketing messages a day, 7,000 of them advertisements alone. From the moment we wake up to the moment we go back to bed, corporate generals tell us what to eat, drink, wear, what to think, and what is beautiful and what is fun. Consumerism fills our culture and consumer values replace our human values. The average American spends just 15 minutes a week on politics and six hour a day watching TV. Women spend an average of 17 years of their lives trying to lose weight following one weight loss trend after the other.
At the end of the day, we may have the freedom to select between 300 different kinds of water or beer, but we only have two parties to choose from, one is the Republican Party and the other is the Republican “Light” party, which both are in all actuality controlled by corporate “Generals.”

Ahmed Tharwat
Host/Producer of Arab American TV show Bel Ahdan with Ahmed
Blog at
Notes from America WWW.ahmediatv.com
His articles appeared in national and international publications
You can follow him on fBook, Twitter, and YouTube/ahmediatv

Sincerely yours

Ahmed Tharwat
Freelancer/ Foreign Press Fixer/ Public Speaker
Host BelAhdan.. with Ahmed …
a show with an accent for those without one,
airs on Public TV Mondays 10:30pm, Ch. 202

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