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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: LindyBill who wrote (19681)12/13/2003 6:31:34 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793640
 
Interesting bit on one of my favorite writers, that I mention here often, Robert Heinlein.

"I've simply changed from a soft-headed radical to hard-headed radical, a pragmatic libertarian."

Heinlein novel imagines a future America patterned on Alberta
By Robin Rowland, CBC News Online | December 9, 2003

Long-lost first work surfaces

TORONTO - The American science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein is known for such classic novels as Stranger in a Strange Land, Starship Troopers and The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress.

A new book reveals that Heinlein, at least early in his life, was a Socred, a believer in the Social Credit movement that came to power in Alberta in 1935.

Heinlein's long-lost first novel, For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs, is scheduled for publication in January. It imagines a future America patterned on 1930s Alberta.

Heinlein wrote the novel in the late 1930s. It tells the story of a U.S. Navy officer named Perry Nelson who is killed in a traffic accident and is somehow transported, alive, to the California of 2086.

The book was rejected by a number of publishers, probably because much of the story is actually a series of lectures on how Heinlein felt the future should look. In later works, Heinlein would use fictional characters for the same purpose.

In Heinlein's America of 2086, the country did not enter the Second World War, remaining isolated. (Hitler commits suicide after the collapse of the German economy, Mussolini just retires and the Duke of Windsor becomes king of a united Europe).

In the novel, in the 1950s, Fiorella LaGuardia (mayor of New York when Heinlein was writing) begins a series of economic reforms, starting with a banking system based on the Social Credit theories of Socred thinker Clifford Hugh Douglas. In the novel, the U.S. Supreme Court upholds these changes. In reality, in Canada, the Supreme Court rejected them.

In For Us, the Living, later presidents complete the reforms. These reforms then give people a basic income that bridges the gap between production and consumption, which then allows the Americans of 2086 to do what they really want, free of economic fear.

Robert James, who is writing a biography of Heinlein, says in the afterword that there was an active social-credit movement in Los Angeles at the time. According to James, Heinlein had to leave the U.S. Navy after he contracted tuberculosis. He then worked for Upton Sinclair's political campaign. The muck-raking author of The Jungle had long pushed for social reform in the United States.

In 1934, Sinclair ran for governor of California as a Democrat on an EPIC (End Poverty in California) ticket. Sinclair was crushed by the Republicans and the conservative California newspapers. Heinlein continued in the EPIC movement and was editor of the movement's newsletter. In 1938, he stood for the California state assembly in a district that included Beverly Hills and part of Hollywood, losing to a Republican.

After that, Heinlein turned to writing, and quickly became the star of the science-fiction pulp magazines, making enough money to pay off his mortgage. His first successful novel, Rocket Ship Galileo, about a trip to the moon, was published in 1947.

Heinlein then went on to write a series of juvenile novels, which drew many young people into the science-fiction world, followed by his adult fiction.

James quotes Heinlein as telling another science-fiction writer about the later changes in his political philosophy: "I've simply changed from a soft-headed radical to hard-headed radical, a pragmatic libertarian." James also says the events of the Second World War and the Cold War, including the threat from communism, influenced Heinlein's change of political philosophy. He supported Senator Barry Goldwater for president in 1964 (some political analysts consider Goldwater the first neo-conservative).

Heinlein, however, opposed what today is known as social conservativism. In the new novel, his first draft of future history includes a take-over of the United States by what he calls "Neo-Puritans" led by the televangelist Nehemiah Scudder, a character who is also prominent in his 1941 novella If This Goes On. The novella is the story of the second American revolution, when libertarians finally overthrow a dictatorship of the religious right.

For Us, the Living also includes one chilling incident, a surprise attack on the island of Manhattan by two giant helicopters that flood the island with poison gas, killing 80 per cent of the population. The helicopters are based on aircraft carriers and the attack comes when the United States is at war with Argentina, Brazil and Chile in December 2003.

cbc.ca



To: LindyBill who wrote (19681)12/14/2003 1:06:56 AM
From: Ann Corrigan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793640
 
EU squabbling...that's ashame:o)
Here's another version:

European Constitution Summit Collapses Saturday, 13-Dec-2003 6:30PM Story from AP / PAUL AMES, Associated Press Writer
Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press (via ClariNet)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- The European summit to forge a constitution for a united, post-Cold War Europe collapsed Saturday after leaders failed to agree on sharing power within an expanded European Union.

The deal-breaker was a proposal to abandon a voting system accepted in 2000 that gave Spain and incoming EU member Poland almost as much voting power as Germany, which has a population equal to those two countries combined.

European leaders sought to minimize the damage, saying talks would resume next year, but the debacle leaves the EU in turmoil as it prepares for one of the greatest challenges in it 46-year history -- accepting new members from the former Communist east.

The failure scuttles, for the time being, the EU's plan for a new president, foreign minister and a greater profile on the global stage to rival that of the United States.

It also raised doubts about the bloc's future direction and fears over its cohesion. French President Jacques Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder spoke of a core group of countries pressing ahead with closer integration -- a scenario others warned would divide the union.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair appealed for all to respect the "essential unity of Europe."

Blair insisted the summit failure would not delay the expansion in which Poland and nine smaller nations will join the bloc on May 1, expanding it from 15 to 25 members.

He said the differences could be overcome and the constitution adopted, but he suggested leaders would take at least several months before a breakthrough.

"My best judgment is it's not an impossible mountain to climb, but I can't be sure," Blair told a news conference. "I don't think there's any point to rushing this before we have the basis of an agreement."

After almost two years of preparations, the constitutional talks were sunk by the voting fight that pitted Germany and France against Spain and Poland.

The fight revealed an unusual level of public animosity among the EU nations. Schroeder complained bitterly that nations "are representing their national interests and have left the European idea behind."

Warning that an expanded EU could force Europe to "march to the slowest step," Chirac suggested a "pioneer group" of nations could move forward alone with closer cooperation on areas such as the economy, justice and defense.

"It will be the motor. It will set the example, allow Europe to go faster, better," Chirac told a news conference.

Others were dubious about such a "two-speed Europe."

"I hope that no country will take measures to try to divide Europe," Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar said.

The leaders managed some successes on the first day of summit Friday -- boosting the EU's military planning capability independent of NATO and setting up a $75 billion investment plan for public works projects to lift economic recovery.

They also resolved a three-year dispute over the location of 10 new EU agencies, ranging from a European Police Collage in London to a Food Safety Agency in Parma, Italy.

However, it was impossible to put a positive gloss on the meeting as its chair, Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi abandoned the talks before the expected late-night marathon session, usually favored by EU dealmakers.

Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen called the outcome "a sad day for Europe."

A plan backed by France and Germany would replace the EU's complex, population-based voting system with a formula under which key decisions could be passed by a simple majority of 13 of the 25 members -- if they represent 60 percent of the EU's population.

Spain and Poland said the proposal concentrated too much power in the hands of EU's big four -- Germany, France, Britain and Italy. They want to keep a system that gives them almost as many votes as Germany, the union's biggest member.

"We're talking about compromise or domination" said Polish Foreign Minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz. Declaring he was fighting for all the smaller nations, Prime Minister Leszek Miller defied doctors' orders to attend the meeting just days after surviving a helicopter crash that broke two vertebrae in his back.

The union still has to settle what issues would be covered by the voting system, though it would likely include the EU budget, environmental regulations and certain parts of foreign policy matters -- a list that could be expanded in the future.

Without agreement, the voting system adopted three years ago at a summit in the French Riviera resort of Nice will take effect when Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Cyprus and Malta join the EU in May.

However, leaders said a constitution will eventually be needed to manage the EU's affairs efficiently when it has so many members.

The 464-article draft charter boils down 80,000 pages of accumulated treaties and agreements into one simplified rule book for the bloc, giving it new powers designed to endow it with political weight to match Europe's economic clout.

Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, who takes over the EU presidency from Italy on Jan. 1, said he would sound out members and make a report at the next summit, in March.



To: LindyBill who wrote (19681)12/14/2003 7:25:59 PM
From: unclewest  Respond to of 793640
 
Germany's chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, called the summit meeting "largely a failure," and said, "We don't have a consensus on a constitution here because one or another country put the European ideal behind national interest."

He certainly got that right.

I hope he was looking in a mirror when he said it.