Until last Friday, there was a huge tree that dominated a section of my back yard. From everything I could tell, the tree was healthy and vibrant — tall and lush and beautiful. But a brief thunderstorm Friday brought strong wind and rain. I happened to point my iPhone through the screen of an upstairs window to shoot a few seconds of video of the storm just in time to see that huge tree collapse like a toothpick.
When the rain ended, I was able to look at the tree. It turned out that the inside was rotten and dead. The outside of the tree and all the branches and leaves above were green and gave every indication of being healthy. But the core had apparently been dead for a long time.
Is the same thing going on in the United States today? The U.S. government appears strong. It has the world’s most powerful military. It still has influence far beyond the population that it rules. But decades of borrowing and spending are gutting the U.S. economy. Is the U.S. state more dead than we realize? Is it just going to take one powerful, sudden wind to knock it over, leaving its dead trunk lying around waiting to be cut up and carted away?
If ‘bigots’ can lose their rights, will your rights be next to go?
Stop using children as pawns to promote adult political agendas
How do we protect innocent and still keep peace in civil society?
Slow culture changes might mean skin color matters less in future
This is why people are confused about what anarchists really are
To think clearly, turn off the tube: Your television is not your friend
In the great new culture war over Thanksgiving shopping, I’m neutral
AUDIO: We rarely realize we’re wasting our lives ’til it’s too late
Corrupt Trump isn’t even hiding half-billion dollar bribe anymore