written 6 July, 2025
published 13 July, 2025
On this 4th of July weekend, celebrating the 249th anniversary of the founding of our nation, our country seems to be in trouble. The Republican Senate and House narrowly passed the "Big Beautiful Bill", reducing taxes for the wealthiest, while impoverishing the poorest, throwing millions off health care. The national debt will grow by more than 10 percent, causing the US credit rating to be downgraded, keeping interest rates high.
The Republican Supreme Court declared the president above the law, who needn't follow judicial orders, allowing him to disregard the Constitution which he swore to uphold when taking office.
The administration is populated by presidential loyalists, without regard for knowledge of, or competence in, the job they hold. Revenge against anyone who thwarts presidential whim, including whistle blowers and journalists, is now policy. Attacks on undocumented immigrants have militarized the justice system and disrupted core parts of the economy that depend on cheap labor, including food production, construction, and care workers. Combining with TACO tariff uncertainty, the economy has already begun to slow.
The president openly favors foreign dictators, disparages and bullies traditional allies, and is blatant about turning the executive office into a cash machine for his personal and family businesses. In addition, his deteriorating mental condition is becoming more obvious every week, which even Fox News has begun to acknowledge.
However, none of this is unique. America has had corrupt, incompetent, even demented, leaders in the past. The American ideal of equal justice under the law is a noble goal, but in practice, women and people of color were originally left out, and had to fight for inclusion. The Senate is designed to be unrepresentative. California, with 2 Senators, has as many citizens as the 20 least populated states, with 40 Senators.
My primary grief is the climate crisis, officially denied and declared a hoax. Climate mention is being removed from Federal documents and websites. Research is being defunded. Programs to deal with the problem are now canceled. Other countries are pressured to repeal their efforts. Funding for weather reporting is being cut, leaving everyone blind to what is coming. Disaster relief funds have been shifted to deporting undocumented aliens, throwing States on their own financially. Instead, the push is on for consumption of expensive, finite fossil fuels, further destabilizing the climate, and guaranteeing higher energy prices.
But reality doesn't care about denial. An intense night time downpour in central Texas, recently caused a river to rise 26' feet in one hour. Inadequate weather reporting, resulting from budget cuts, increased the death toll. 106 large fires are currently burning in Alaska, with another 84 in the lower 48. This will get worse.
All of the above results from the same long standing cultural error: the belief in separation in a unity reality. The greed and corruption of exclusive economic gain, wide spread misogyny and racism, and the complete disregard for the value of the environment and long-term sustainability of life, follow from this error.
The collapse of the political/economic model that has overshot the carrying capacity of the planet, powered by the rapid consumption of unique, irreplaceable stores of fossil energy, looks like a disaster. But from another perspective, it may be a cathartic healing of thousands of years of human misperception.
Which suggests an effective response. As a product of this culture, to the extent that I begin to heal myself, opening to being part of a conscious unity, to that extent my small portion of reality changes. This has been known for generations, and a path forward is easy to find once you start looking.
One tool, common to many spiritual traditions, recognizes that all experience of reality happens only in the moment: the eternal Now. All action takes place only in the now. However, my thinking is often rooted in the past or the future, which are concepts, not experiences. The apparent tsunami of dire events tends to pull us into longing for the remembered past, or worrying about the possible future. The more often I can pull my attention into this moment, the more I am able to experience what is actually happening, and am more able to respond appropriately. Most times, when I succeed in focusing on this moment, I find I am fine, and relatively at peace with life.
The world is rapidly unfolding. The challenge is to keep our balance as best we can.