Monday, December 18, 2017

A Golden Moment in the Larch Bog

A Golden Moment in the Larch Bog

Chosen as a Featured Image at Fine Art America

Hand painted sky completes the image in this image that combines elements of photography and watercolor painting. An edition of 25 signed originals is created with a certificate of authenticity along with a digitally initialed open edition. To purchase the signed original with a certificate of authenticity, contact the artist directly, or click here: http://bit.ly/2ou9Pqr

The digitally initialed open edition provides you with the closest approximation of an original without the premium cost of the original. Open Edition prints of this image are available for as little as $12.26

Saturday, December 16, 2017

"Sacred Trust is now available in paperback!



"Sacred Trust is now available in paperback!

“An existential environmental time bomb - in the form of a massive powerline - is about to explode an entire way of life for the people of the North Country. Nine unlikely heroes - rock climbers, paddlers, a deer farmer and a former spook -  are all that stands between the people and their worst nightmare.”

This is their story . . .

The paperback version is available here: 

Sacred Trust Kindle eBook

Sign up for updates and events here.


Sunday, November 12, 2017

The Wikipedia Conundrum

Many a teacher today forbids his/her students use of Wikipedia, yet it is arguably the richest information resource of all time; an encyclopedia which draws on users to expand the breadth and depth of the information contained "within" it.

The argument of those teachers may be that it is "unreliable" . . . a lazy man's refuge. Yet in the end, how is that different from any other works of humans? The very act of committing words to paper is an act fraught with the perils associated with the human condition. . . that each of us brings the perspectives and prejudices of his/her own arc of experience to the task of conveying a "truth" or a set of "truths".

The physicist Stephen Hawking, in a speech celebrating the new Millennium at the White House said ". . . common sense is just another name for the prejudices that we have been brought up with."

Wikipedia is no more or less useful than any other resource but it does provide an effective launchpad for exploring almost any idea, event, person or theory.

To deny students access to the rich resources contained within Wikipedia is tantamount to denying them access to the wisdom of their elders or their teachers. Instead they must be taught to appreciate Wikipedia and to be aware of its limitations - as Ronald Reagan put it to "trust but verify". Reagan was speaking of the complexities of the US-Russian relationship, but he could very well have been speaking about the task of researching, or in an even broader sense the process of learning.

A good teacher need not fear Wikipedia, unless the depth of understanding that he or she themselves bring to their discipline and teaching is so shallow as to grant Wikipedia the power of absolute truth. A good teacher will use this resource as a means of stimulating students to seek out pathways to greater understanding, a solitary brainstorming session where ideas, links and resources lead us to drill deeper into the resources that lie beyond the gates of the wiki kingdom.

Wayne D. King

Asquamchumaukee - Place of Mountain Waters - A Ramble Through the Baker River Valley

Here's a great idea for holiday gift giving. . .

Asquamchumaukee - A photographic ramble through the Baker River Valley of New Hampshire



Storm Over Tenney Mountain

Asquamchumaukee - Place of Mountain Waters

A photographic ramble through the Baker River Valley of New Hampshire

This book and the images from it are available in a number of different formats including a large landscape hardcover, signed and numbered, limited edition art book; an open edition in hardcover, softcover and eBook formats as well as other related products including calendars, clocks, mugs, cards, posters and prints.

Signed, Numbered Limited Edition, Large Format $165.00
This book requires the artist to sign and number the books, it can ONLY be ordered directly from me at this secure address:
Asquamchumaukee Cover
http://bit.ly/OrderAsquam

Purchase the signed limited edition and receive your choice of two complimentary posters


Open Edition (unsigned) - Large Format $98.76
Available through Amazon.com
Large Landscape Hardcover 13” x 11” 
42 Pages printed on standard paper


Open Edition Small Hardcover (unsigned) - 8"x10" Format $59.35
Available through Amazon.com
Standard Landscape Hardcover 8” x 10” 
42 Pages printed on standard paper
Hardcover with Dust Jacket: 


Softcover "Keepsake Version"  8"x10": $39.58
Plus shipping & handling

eBook from Blurb
42 Pages
$4.99

Detailed information about Calendars, cards, clocks and other gifts can be found here.

Asquamchumaukee Facebook Page
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Asquamchumaukee-Baker-River-Valley/189924584514401?ref=hl

http://bit.ly/Asquam_FB


Dedication: This book is dedicated to the "Ladies of Got Lunch! Rumney" who saw a need and selflessly stepped forward to help and the millions of heroic people who volunteer in their communities, small and large in the quiet of anonymity and the glow of the hope they create through their actions.


ebook
http://store.blurb.com/ebooks/491117-asquamchumaukee-place-of-mountain-waters-open-edition


http://blur.by/1EISj5I

50% of the net  proceeds from sales of this book will benefit the local "Got Lunch!" programs in the Valley. 




Friday, October 27, 2017

"Sacred Trust" Overview


“The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution!”

In the coming “Age of Electricity” the principal battleground will be over who controls the production and distribution of power. All across America today the battle lines are being drawn and the two sides are rushing to create advantages for themselves. Already more than 10 trans-national power transmission projects are proposed from Maine to Washington State and the Canadian Electricity Association projects a tripling of that demand in the next ten years. In most instances these transmission projects are being proposed by utility companies or consortiums that include a local utility company.

Utility companies represent one front in this battle over competing visions of our energy future. These utility companies, already in an existential battle for survival, seek to maintain control of the revenues generated by the flow of electricity. With a few rare exceptions, they are pitted against those advocates of a new distributed energy paradigm where small, renewable power production replaces the large electricity generators of today.  

Most Americans notice that things are changing with respect to energy production and transmission but they have yet to put together the full picture of what will be a sea change in life for every American this presages.

“Sacred Trust” is intended to tell that story in the context of a novel about a group of citizens that have joined together to stop the construction of one, especially egregious powerline, proposed in the small state of New Hampshire where tourism is the second most important industry and the people deeply cherish their beautiful mountains, clean air and pristine waterways.

The power company behind the transmission line, Polaris Electric, proposes to put most of the line above ground with massive 150 foot towers and intends to export 100% of the power right on through the state - like a giant extension cord - with no benefit to the people of the state. In short, like the oligarchs of a previous age, they intend to reap 100% of the benefits and to pass off a large portion of their costs through the generations-long visual pollution of the public commons, to say nothing of the decline in property values and the unknown scientific consequences of high voltage transmission lines on citizens living in their path.

The citizens of the state who stand to lose most from the destruction of real estate values and cherished viewscape are dead set against the project but the political winds are against them with a Governor in the pocket of the utility company and an approval process that seems to be rigged against them, eight unlikely compatriots from across the political spectrum come together to take on the consortium proposing the “Granite Skyway” Transmission line.

While the compatriots, who call themselves The Trust, engage in creative civil disobedience intending to stop the project, or at the very least to literally drive it underground, a group of writers and activists, presenting themselves in the style of the writers of the Federalist Papers produce a series of essays in opposition to Granite Skyway, making the intellectual case, justifying the actions of The Trust.  One business writer, in search of a pulitzer, takes on the task of describing the tableau in which all of this takes place beginning with the 1972 election of Jimmy Carter and the drafting of the National Energy Policy Act and the Public Utilities Regulatory Policy Act into which one lone New Hampshire Senator, John Durkin, inserted two lines that changed history and ushered in the renewable energy revolution.Through the device of a series of articles scattered through the novel, business editor James Kitchen leads his readers through a virtual primer of the battle for a new post-carbon energy paradigm.

"Sacred Trust" is a vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private electric transmission powerline that leads the reader through not only the hijinks of The Trust, but also through the series of choices with which we all are currently confronting, or will be, in this new “Age of Electricity”.

Described by one reader as "The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution" the book follows these unlikely compatriots as they dodge both the law and a cabal of recruits doing the dirty work of the Consortium.

In part one of the book Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada who travels with her companion, a wolf named Cochise, meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman while hiking the Mahoosuc Range on the Appalachian Trail. After a unique first encounter the two - three with Cochise - continue their hike together. A few days later, while paddling on Lake Umbagog, they find themselves unexpectedly camping together with an unusual assortment of people including a former Olympic paddler, a very conservative deer farmer, a real estate broker, a retired spook who was the first US victim of Lyme disease and an iconoclast named Thomas (just Thomas) who is also a former Army Ranger now living as a recluse in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods area of New Hampshire. Thomas is also unique in that his primary mode of transportation is a moose named Metallak, who pulls a cart when traveling with Thomas’ five dogs or wears a saddle when Thomas rides him solo.

The group quickly discovers that they have one very important thing in common - a deep concern about the Granite Skyway proposal to transport electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston, New York, Connecticut, Philadelphia and Washington D.C.. Their concerns range from the effect it will have on the habitat of newly re-established Raptor populations; to the clear cutting necessary to construct the line; and, the impact of 150 foot towers on the landscape of their beloved state.

The threat to the environment and the scenic beauty are only the tip of an iceberg that includes the value of homes, farms and businesses built by generations of men and women in this hardscrabble land. Rumors alone are already affecting life for many caught up in whisper campaign around this proposed transmission line. All agree, Granite Skyway poses an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau, Alinsky and Dr. King proud.

While the book is a work of fiction, teachers and professors may find it a book that would add a new dimension to classroom discussions and an interesting touch for classes on sustainability, renewable energy or the American tradition of protest.

Throughout their adventure the members of "The Trust" examine many of the most important questions of our time including how America can continue to make an honored space for free speech and civil disobedience in an era of terror; how social media can help create accountability in an increasingly corporatized mega-media landscape; and, how citizens can challenge the corporate oligarchies that often threaten our planet's future.

"Sacred Trust" is written by Wayne King a former State Senator, Democratic nominee for Governor of NH, and most recently CEO of environmental cleanup company MOP Environmental Solutions. Not coincidentally, King worked his way through college as a Mountain Guide in New Hampshire’s White Mountain which explains his detailed knowledge of the setting for the novel. The book is filled with political and environmental stories that will have you laughing and gasping and wondering what is true and what is fiction.

"Sacred Trust' is a vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop the Granite Skyway power transmission project and its short-sighted and in some cases greedy corporate sponsors, intent on using political muscle and money to lock up the region's energy production and distribution, short circuiting efforts to bring about an energy future based on sustainable, and renewable energy deployed through micro-grids, smart-grids and a competitive environment that makes energy more - not less - affordable.

http://bit.ly/STrust

Saturday, July 15, 2017

"Sacred Trust" Published as eBook on Amazon

News Release
For Immediate Release



"Sacred Trust" Published as ebook on Amazon
Available from Kindle Books
Moosewood Communications Publisher

http://bit.ly/STrust

"Sacred Trust" A vicarious, high voltage adventure to stop a private powerline has been published on Amazon.com as an ebook with the paper edition due soon.

Described by one reader as "The Monkey Wrench Gang Meets the Third Industrial Revolution" the book is a fictional account of a group of unlikely compatriots who join together to stop a powerline proposed by a private consortium, employing creative civil disobedience in the traditions of Alinsky, Thoreau and King. 

In the book, Sasha Brandt, an Iroquois woman from Canada who travels with her companion, a wolf named Cochise, meets Daniel Roy, a guide and outdoorsman while hiking the Mahoosuc Range of the Appalachian Trail. The two find themselves unexpectedly camping together on Lake Umbagog with a group of unlikely compatriots including a former Olympic paddler, a deer farmer, a retired spook who was the first US victim of Lyme disease and an iconoclast named Thomas (just Thomas) who lives in multiple backwoods abodes in the Great North Woods and rides a moose named Metallak. The campsite itself is said to have been frequented by the Indian medicine woman Moll Ockett in the early days of the American Republic. 

They find, in short order, that they have one very important thing in common - a deep concern about a proposed private power transmission line proposed to transport electricity from Canada to the toney suburbs of Boston, New York, Connecticut, Philadelphia and Washington D.C. 

The project, dubbed "Granite Skyway", proposes to bring massive 150 foot towers through the most beautiful parts of a state that boasts some of the most beautiful scenery in the entire country.

The threat to the environment and the scenic beauty are only the tip of an iceberg that includes the value of homes, farms and businesses built by generations of men and women in this hardscrabble land. Already affecting life for many caught up in the mere rumor of this proposed transmission line, Granite Skyway poses an existential threat to an entire way of life.

Determined to do more than shuffle papers and employ lawyers, the compatriots form a band of brothers and sisters - along with Cochise and Metallak - calling themselves "The Trust". Armed with only their wits and a lot of heart they embark on a rolicking campaign of civil disobedience that would make Thoreau, Alinsky and Dr. King proud.

While the book is a work of fiction, teachers and professors may find it a book that would add a new dimension to classroom discussions and an interesting touch for classes on sustainability, renewable energy or the American tradition of protest. Woven into the story narrative are news stories by a journalist observing the shifts and upheavals of climate change and the renewable revolution as well as a group of patriots writing in the style of the Federalist Paper authors in opposition to the power project.

Throughout their adventure the members of "The Trust" examine many of the most important questions of our time including how America can continue to make an honored space for free speech and civil disobedience in an era of terror; how social media can help create accountability in an increasingly corporatized mega-media landscape; and, how citizens can challenge the corporate oligarchies that threaten our planet's future.


"Sacred Trust" is written by Wayne King a former State Senator, Democratic nominee for Governor of NH, and most recently CEO of environmental cleanup company MOP Environmental Solutions. Not coincidentally, King worked his way through college as a White Mountain Guide which explains his detailed knowledge of New Hampshire's White Mountains. The book is filled with political and environmental stories that will have you laughing and gasping and wondering what is true and what is fiction. 

"Sacred Trust' is a vicarious, high voltage campaign to stop the Granite Skyway power transmission project and its short-sighted and in some cases greedy corporate sponsors, intent on using political muscle and money to lock up the region's energy production and distribution, short circuiting efforts to bring about an energy future based on sustainable, and renewable energy deployed through micro-grids, smart-grids and a competitive environment that makes energy more - not less - affordable. 


Available from Kindle Books
Moosewood Communications Publisher

Saturday, June 17, 2017

Common Sense 2017: Time for Democrats to Offer Alternatives

Common Sense 2017: Time for Democrats to Offer Alternatives

Wayne D. King

I'm so tired of the Democrats in Congress acting like the Republicans who did nothing but obstruct Barack Obama. I want them to stand up and offer alternatives.

Tell the country how to fix Obamacare and try to peel off enough Republicans to pass it.

Offer a plan for infrastructure that modernizes the national grid to prepare us for the Internet of Things and the post carbon era with laterally scaled micro-grids linking homes and businesses and small power producers. The vast majority of good jobs that will be created over the next 20 years will be in building out the Third Industrial Revolution infrastructure. Let's get to it. China is already working to wrest the mantle of world leadership from us. Let's not give it away without a fight!

One up the Republicans and offer a tax reform plan that eliminates business taxes entirely (and all the special exemptions, incentives, and give aways - in 2015 fossil fuel companies received more than 82 billion dollars in tax incentives) Collect the taxes from the individuals who benefit from the profits and let the shareholders determine whether the companies should be spending money for wasteful purposes. This would also eliminate all of the onerous filings required of nonprofits and encourage the development of more of them.

Choose 10 of the most impoverished, jobless regions of the country and test ten different outside-the-box ideas for turning them around. Put some real money behind the effort. Toss out the ideas that fail and try ten more. Take the ones that work and share them with others who are experiencing similar problems.  Start by testing the Guaranteed Basic Income idea providing a minimal monthly allowance to every adult (in the test area) and then allow them to build their employment and lifestyle choices  around that to achieve a standard of living that is real, sustainable and fulfilling.

Create a National Service requirement. Every person who reaches the age of 18 should be required to choose between military or civil service and to serve 2 years before the age of 30. No exceptions for rich kids or people with disabilities or any other excuse. . . ok if you must have a conscientious objector status for those who object to being forced to do right - but make it hard as hell to obtain. Think about what it would do for the country to have rich kids and poor kids working side by side to make this world a better place. Think of how many kids who have grown up in abject poverty would be empowered by the franchise granted to them by two years of service to the nation. A young man or woman who has spent two years building the nation is going to think twice before he or she throws a trash can through a storefront window.  From many we must be one again. This is the revolution of our time.

Just saying . . .
wdk 2017

The Whisper of Wind


Friday, April 7, 2017

King Image "The Road Darkens" Chosen in Juried Competition "One Planet, One Home"

King Image "The Road Darkens" Chosen in Juried Competition "One Planet, One Home"
Wayne King's image "The Road Darkens" has been chosen for a juried show at the Kehler Liddell Gallery in New Haven, CT. The exhibition: "One Planet, One Home" focuses on the challenges of Climate Change.

The image is part of a Climate Change series King has been working on for the past two years. The image alludes to the growing crisis. The image is a color montage of several different images including elements of photography and watercolor painting. One original edition of 5 prints is created, printed on fine art rag paper using archival inks; signed and with a certificate of authenticity. To purchase an original, click here: http://bit.ly/1ZxBg3p

The title is drawn from a quote from J. R. R. Tolkien's "Fellowship of the Ring". "Faithless is he who says farewell when the road darkens."

A digitally initialed open edition, also created, provides the closest approximation to an original work at a more affordable price, especially for those who love art but don't feel the need to purchase original works. Follow the link above and choose the open edition link if you would prefer the open edition.

The image is also available as a poster and a greeting card, here: https://www.zazzle.com/moosewoodmindscapes?qs=Road%20Darkens

Kehler Liddel Gallery:
http://www.kehlerliddellgallery.com/



Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Where are the good jobs in the next decade?

Where are the good jobs in the next decade?
by Wayne King

In the next decade the fastest growing sector of job growth worldwide will be those jobs associated with moving toward a renewable energy future and creating smart grids and a Third Industrial Revolution infrastructure to carry locally produced and distributed energy.

China recently announced that they would pour 82 Billion dollars into creation of a smart grid.

This is the very sector of our economy that Donald Trump has suppressed.

Its not that these jobs will move elsewhere. One of the largest benefits to locally produced, renewable energy is that it produces local jobs to build it and the long-term jobs stay local as well. They will just not be grown here where we are desperately seeking ways to create jobs that can replace the well paying jobs of the past.

The truth is that the jobs of the past are largely gone and no amount of huffing and puffing by politicians are going to bring them back. The battle for the future will be for the jobs of the future. Those countries that are building a Third Industrial Revolution infrastructure will have a massive competitive advantage.

If we targeted just 1/4 of the funds we use for infrastructure toward building this infrastructure of the future. We would produce millions more jobs than we are producing trying to revive the jobs of the past.

Here's just one example: I would be willing to bet that not one single NET new job will be produced in the coal industry in the next year. The companies will take advantage of the new Trump EPA to pass costs off to the public domain by polluting more - one change made recently allows coal companies to use public waterways for the disposal of wastes (hell it came out of the ground didn't it!) . But the coal companies will add more automation to take coal out of the ground, requiring fewer coal miners to do the job. The only bright spot is that the market for their coal is drying up faster than the RioGrande. Within a decade most of these companies will be gone. In the meantime owners will try to suck every bit of value that they can from their dying industry. Then they will throw up their hands and declare bankruptcy allowing them to walk away from their remaining debts.


Windows at an Exhibition
Purchase this Image

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Green, Sustainable Energy is Here to Stay - Coal is Dead


Green, Sustainable Energy is Here to Stay - Coal is Dead
Wayne King

President Trump thinks that he is going to undo all of the good work that President Obama has done to put us on the road to clean and sustainable energy. Today he's going after the Clean Power Act but President Obama was smart. He used the crisis of 2008 to give a huge boost to wind and solar and other green energy sources and now they have market viability. Anyone who invests in carbon producing energy sources from here on is liable to lose their shirt and they know it. Coal is dead, we need to create new clean energy opportunities in the coal states and educate the people who live there to enable them to work in the industries of the future not the past.

But we need a smart grid to deliver and target energy resources. This will cost a lot of money but that money is already there.

According to the International Monetary Fund in 2015 they quantified the amount of money that is going into subsidies for fossil fuels and it was 5.4 TRILLION dollars. 6.5% of global GDP. What we have is not a technology problem, it is a political problem. Corrupt politicians and energy companies scratching to hold onto power in a system that is rapidly transitioning away from them have built a system where second industrial revolution energy is at an advantage over Third Industrial Revolution (TIR) Tech. We need to redirect those funds to build a new paradigm for distributing energy






The Whisper of Wind Poster

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Sacred Trust Update


Sacred Trust Update

You may already know that I've been writing a novel about a group of unlikely compatriots that come together to try and stop a high voltage power transmission line in NH.

While I have tried to avoid the pitfalls of linking the power project in this novel directly with any similar project (duh! as my son says) the obvious connections will certainly be made and I believe that will be useful to those of us who have been opposing the real NH transmission project.

The book is set here in New Hampshire but has much broader implications for similar projects throughout the country, particularly in light of President Trump’s executive order on pipelines and transmission lines.

I am currently about 3/4 finished with the novel - having spent two years to date on it in my spare time - I am hoping to supercharge a final push in the next 3 months to finish it and get it edited and published through a crowdfunding campaign to support the final push.

I'm fully aware that this will not be without controversy. However, I sense that the controversy might be just what is needed to refocus the public eye on the efforts to stop or at least completely bury the proposed project. There has been a palpable drop in public interest of late.

Furthermore, in the panic to get at least some of the line buried we have missed out on a lot of teachable moments that just did not seem to be high priority items in the beginning. Bigger picture issues like the over reliance on large sources of power production instead of smaller sources of power and micro-grids that make our system less subject to large outages from human or natural causes; The desecration of native lands and the massive carbon output associated with flooding of large tracts of land. The choice between direct transmission and a more nimble smart-grid allowing for the creation of power sources within communities that serve their economy and their environment better.

While the novel is first and foremost a fun read about an important trend in the nation as a whole, it is also an opportunity to explore some of these teachable moments a bit. Perhaps even to create a book that serves as the basis for discussion of these issues in classes, book groups, and reading and discussion groups etc. For example, one device that I will be employing will be to have essays addressing some of the important issues written by actual experts who will be portrayed as “Gazetteers” much like the patriots who wrote the Federalist Papers. The purpose of their essays will be to ostensibly provide support to the compatriots fighting the power line but the more important reason for their essays will be to lay out the arguments against this and other similar projects and to examine some of the challenges of providing energy and power to our world in the future.

I am hoping that you will have an interest in helping me to spread the word about the book and the campaign.

If you are, here are some of this things you can do to help:

Pass the word about this campaign on to your friends, especially if they have expressed concern over Northern Pass. I have included a sample note below.

Sign up to receive updates on the campaign and snippets from the book: www.gofundme.com/TreesNotTowers

If you have publishing contacts who may have an interest in looking at the book please let me know and feel free to contact them.

If you know an expert in any of the related areas (climate change, sustainable and renewable energy, Native American rights and treaties, Smartgrids, Energy planning, etc) Please let me know and I will speak with them about contributing to the book.

Best wishes,

Wayne King



Sample Referral Note

Wayne King has been writing a fictional novel, “Sacred Trust”, about a group of compatriots using civil disobedience to stop an electric transmission line similar to the Northern Pass project proposed in New Hampshire. His novel is intended to be a great read with a message, using real experts to lay out the arguments against similar projects.

He is running a crowdfunding campaign to put the book over the top - to cover the costs of paying the experts for their essays, editing and publishing the book.

He is hoping that both the crowdfunding campaign and the book will stir up more interest and help to put fire back into the opposition which has seemed to lag lately.

If you would like to learn more or to help, visit his GoFundMe Campaign page at: www.gofundme.com/TreesNotTowers



The Trump Presidency: this Generation’s Vietnam Moment

The Trump Presidency: this Generation’s Vietnam Moment
Trump May Unify Americans After All - Against Him
by Wayne D. King


Looking back, it was all just too easy . . .

We elected the first black president and the forces of darkness knew that they had to do something. They met, even as he was addressing the nation and calling for unity, and decided that they would oppose everything he did.

Yet despite that in the four years of Barack Obama change came like a waterfall. In the course of two brief years twenty million Americans living without health insurance would join the ranks of the insured, another 10 million would benefit from its provisions with respect to pre-existing conditions. Unfortunately, the opportunity to bring another 20 million under the umbrella of coverage was lost to the compromise that relinquished the “Public Option”; but national health was in our sights. In the course of only a few years - beyond rescuing the world from a catastrophic recession - much more would be achieved: marriage equality, medical marijuana, the Dream Act, the Paris accord on Global climate change, Iran Nuclear agreement, and expanded rights for LGBTQ citizens.

In an historic blink of an eye we were again moving toward that beloved community Dr. King described.
But these things occurred in a nation still deeply divided and with the help of the opposition the nation remained divided throughout the presidency of Barack Obama. The changes so many of us embraced came despite those divisions.
Did we think this was just going to happen without an almost cataclysmic clash that began with the push back and then the emergence of a unifying fight? This is how Vietnam and Nixon at first divided and then united us. It began with mostly young people in the streets, opposing the war. They were met with opposition: hardhats beating up those kids in the streets. Waving flags and carrying Nixon signs. In the final gasp of another deeply divided time and after another paranoid national leader emerged, delivered to us at the hands of Sirhan Sirhan.

The divisions evolved into a national strike on college campuses across the country and then the killing of our kids at Kent State and Jackson State Universities. The deaths at Kent and Jackson State opened the floodgate for the “silent majority” . The middle class, shaken to their core at the lengths to which the Nixon administration would go to maintain its grasp on power, came flooding into the streets to join the kids, the hippies and the yippies demanding peace.

It did not end immediately but it brought down a President and ended a war.

The period after Vietnam and up to George W. Bush, though not without its turbulence, represents the longest period of national unity, peace, and economic prosperity in our nation’s history.

Historians will debate for one hundred years what happened to our nation that so sharpened our divisions at the beginning of the new millennium. The symptoms will be relatively easy to agree on, a new gilded age for the wealthy and a shrinking of the middle class; legislative changes that opened the doors for unethical behavior, the lionization of greed and avarice. The causes of this will be more difficult to agree upon and still harder to reverse.

My own view is that we have entered a fourth wave of human endeavor, a new industrial revolution that calls not for reversing existing trends but finding a new way to surf them, as we did during the second industrial revolution - in the period sandwiched between two great leaders named Roosevelt.

However, reaching a point where we can build a national consensus for moving forward will require that we first begin to bridge the divide that separates one American from another and that is where I began this brief analysis. With the opportunity wrapped in a crisis.
Looking back, even to the beginning of the Presidential Primary process, one can make the case that no candidate seemed capable of bridging that divide - given its root causes, though some may have been on the right track for the wrong reasons as I have previously speculated. The election of Donald Trump has, in many ways, simply hastened the day of reckoning.

Never before has an American President sought to deepen the divisions in our country; never before has a President been so out of touch with the truth; and never has a President been so boldly unconcerned and brashly unapologetic about it.

Already Americans are taking to the streets. They are not willing to relinquish American leadership on the critical issues of our time. They still believe that Democratic values hold out the best hope for change that is just, and sustainable. Young people, who have grown up in the era of Barack Obama are unwilling to allow the limits of racism, sexism and homophobia to be defined by Theocratic leaders. Americans alarmed by the pace of climate change are unwilling to allow China, an undemocratic regime that suppresses free science and free speech, to step into the void created by the Trump administration’s climate change deniers.
Every American who has watched with pride as our national leadership has been demonstrated time and again during the last fifty years will ultimately not allow us to cede leadership on the world stage. Their protest signs may vary, but they all translate the same: “This is Not My America”.

The crowds are big, and growing. . . and, as they often say “The Whole World is Watching”.

But there is a notable void in the crowds. Donald Trump has the worst approval ratings of any president since those numbers were first recorded. Yet among Republicans his approval is among the highest ever recorded. 87% of Republicans still state that they approve of the President’s actions; despite the heroic efforts of Republicans like Senators John McCain, Lindsey Graham, and Susan Collins who have stood against the tide speaking out forcefully for Western values and Democratic principles.

How do we bridge this divide, particularly when the issues at stake are not just critically important but - in many cases - moral imperatives with little room for compromise that does not spell acquiescence?

The answer is we don’t try. We fight for what we believe but do so with grace and with open hearts. We wait for them, knowing that joining us represents a deeply disappointing revelation for many. They are not our enemies and we do not have a monopoly on truth.

We must stand and deliver. Above all we must be patient and humble. If there is one thing we have learned in the first thirty days of the Trump Presidency it is that when we think the President cannot possibly overreach any more than he already has - he will always find a way.

Already he has shown this with his travel ban and immigration actions which have surely peeled off many previous supporters. Just wait until they try to take healthcare away from 30 million Americans or begin to give polluters free reign or cause a trade war that raises the cost of everything from food to underwear.

Wait until middle class and working class whites realize they have been punked by a billionaire con artist who is far more interested in cutting taxes for his friends than raising the living standards of those who have seen no real income growth in almost two decades. 

Evidence that the Russian connection may lead to the demise of this administration is accumulating. Demonizing the media and banning the most powerful among them from media briefings at the White House is little more than a thinly veiled effort to discredit them in the wake of an ever-widening inquiry and at least three formal investigations by government agencies and the intelligence community.  

It will not be long before disillusioned Trump voters will be joining our ranks.

Then it will be up to us to open our ranks and to welcome all these Americans home. Not only by making space for them but by making an effort to understand their hopes and dreams. By seeking new ways to renew the promise of a growing standard of living for all Americans; by making an effort to find common ground on even the thorniest of issues.

There is little chance that the skies will open and the sun will shine down on us as we sing kum-ba-yah but there’s a pretty good chance that 2020 will see a new President and, hopefully, a lot of Americans carrying signs that effectively say: This is My America.

Ripple of Hope
Includes "Ripple of Hope" Quote from Robert Kennedy





Sunday, February 5, 2017

The Fight for the Middle



The Fight for the Middle
Wayne D. King

If anyone is unclear at this point, let me be perfectly clear. . . 50% of the people or more who supported Trump in the election are not going to be reached by any argument or act. We have watched them interviewed in diners in Pennsylvania and W. Virginia and on a thousand tv and radio stations. They are frightened by the fear-mongering of candidate and now President Trump and the coterie of altNews, AltFacts and AltRight he has drawn around himself with the help of Steve Bannon and Kelly Ann Conway. They are angry at being left behind by a world that is shifting under their feet.

If their minds are to be changed it will only happen over time when they learn that Trump has "punked" them. The very fact that on day one he signed an executive order that made the cost of buying a home for lower and middle income people $500.00 more expensive might have been a good warning but Trump slipped that one under their radar.

The battle is going to be for those who voted for Trump reluctantly, those who did not vote, and those who voted for Hillary Clinton reluctantly. We want these people protesting in the streets with the rest of us. Not in support of one party or another but in support of the American constitution and American ideals. Only then will we have a chance of stopping this outrage before it spreads roots that are too deep to pull out easily.

We must put the "fear of the people" into the hearts of Republican AND Democratic elected officials who would walk away from the ACA, or the gains in human rights, LGBTQ rights and religious freedom made under the Obama administration and from the challenge of reversing the income disparity that has led us to this place and time.


Hot Springs Two

Friday, February 3, 2017

Senate Uses Trump Chaos to Relax Regulations on Coal Slag and Bribery of Foreign Officials

Senate Uses Trump Chaos to Relax Regulations on Coal Slag and Bribery of Foreign Officials

The recent actions of the Senate allowing rules promulgated around previously passed laws to be overturned with 51 votes and prevents the agencies from taking any action to assure that the spirit of the law is upheld is very very discouraging. This week they overturned a law that makes it illegal for Oil Company executives to bribe foreign officials and to keep Coal companies from dumping their slag into clean rivers.

There is a growing number of people who are suggesting that many of the controversial actions of Trump and Bannon are intended to create a diversion while they make sub-rosa changes like this that most Americans would find highly objectionable.