Editor’s Note

Stephan:  I am back on duty, if not really up to speed, and want to thank the many people who wrote me via emails or through the four editions of SR, for their expressions of good will and healing intention. I was very touched by this, and moved by your sentiments. I do so appreciate them. -- Stephan
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US Presidential Contest Reflects the Growing Polarization of Society

Stephan:  This is, I think, a pretty good assessment of where the Great Schism Trend that SR has been reporting on for the past 10 years currently stands -- do a search of the archives and you will see how many stories I have done on this because I think it is so important. It is not a good story. The problem with this story, as with most stories on this subject is that it is filled with emotion laden political terms. Forget all that. Ask which candidates' policies produce wellness, which degrade wellness? The truth is we have reached a point where major social disruption is occurring, particularly around issues like climate change and immigration. If those of us who are wellness-oriented do not begin to act through our daily choices and encourage others to do so, making the compassionate life affirming choice each time a decision point is presented to us, the world we grew up in will be gone by 2030, and the change will increase (negatively) exponentially year-by-year.  I don't mean technological changes, a new app on the internet. I mean mass migrations, real estate collapse, flooding of cities, epidemics, breakdowns in the food system.      

Donkey-Elephant-USAWho’s on top? As of this writing, on the Democratic Party side, the ultimate insider, Hillary Clinton, faces off against establishment socialist and theoretically “independent” Bernie Sanders. On the Republican side, the main contest is between two men who have never held political office: rude and crude misogynist and racist Donald Trump, a billionaire by virtue of milking corporate bankruptcy laws, versus Ben Carson, a retired neurosurgeon and Christian fundamentalist who doesn’t believe in evolution.

Second-tier candidates include everyone from two sons of immigrants who each want to build a bigger and better border wall to a fired Hewlett-Packard CEO who touts her business savvy.

A motley crew indeed, but one that reflects what is happening outside the electoral ring. The crowded debate stages mirror the growing polarization of society as a whole, largely caused by people’s deep uneasiness about the economy and their place in it.

The candidates also personify the sharpening of a trend whereby capitalist democracy, as represented by the electoral process, is becoming less and less democratic all the time.

Divisions Result From the System’s Decline

It’s easy to see how people’s insecurities […]

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For the Wealthiest, a Private Tax System That Saves Them Billions

Stephan:  Here is an excellent assessment of the growing Neo-Feudalism Trend, and how it is being put in place. The 2016 Presidential election is either going to dismantle this, or lock it into place. One of the main reasons I support Bernie Sanders over Hillary Clinton is that now that she and her husband are worth over $100 million it is very unclear to me where she honestly stands on this. Only Sanders will try to unravel it, and if the Congress remains Republican I am not sure even he can do it.You will note most of these billionaires and their minions work through the Republican Party. The truth is that except for a small middle class, and a minor gentry -- mostly attorneys and tax planners -- who will administer the system for their masters, who have better things to do, or those provide professional services, most people in the future will be peasants. Not agricultural peasants as in the past, but still essentially peasants. Think carefully as to how you vote. Your children and grandchildren will live with the consequences.
Daniel S. Loeb, shown with his wife, Margaret, runs the $17 billion Third Point hedge fund. Mr. Loeb, who has owned a home in East Hampton, has contributed to Jeb Bush’s super PAC and given $1 million to the American Unity Super PAC, which supports gay rights. Credit Left: Patrick McMullan Company; Right: Doug Kuntz

Daniel S. Loeb, shown with his wife, Margaret, runs the $17 billion Third Point hedge fund. Mr. Loeb, who has owned a home in East Hampton, has contributed to Jeb Bush’s super PAC and given $1 million to the American Unity Super PAC, which supports gay rights.
Credit Left: Patrick McMullan Company; Right: Doug Kuntz

WASHINGTON — The hedge fund magnates Daniel S. Loeb, Louis Moore Bacon and Steven A. Cohen have much in common. They have managed billions of dollars in capital, earning vast fortunes. They have invested large sums in art — and millions more in political candidates.

Moreover, each has […]

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Drought taking big toll on California’s forests

Stephan:  When I say climate change is going to change the face of the Earth, and fundamentally alter its eco-systems -- upon which much of human, animal, and even insect and soil bacterial life depend, I mean that quite literally. This isn't getting as much play as sea rise but the impact will be equivalent. Here's an example of what I mean.
Drought plagued California forest Credit: Huffington Post

Drought plagued California forest Credit: Huffington Post

California’s years-long drought is not only having a distressing impact on humans but also on vegetation, as years of little or no rain is taking a big toll on the state’s forests, a new study revealed.

The new study, conducted by a team of researchers at Stanford University’s Carnegie Institution for Science, estimated that up to 58 million big trees in the state experienced water loss that could be life-threatening since 2011 because of the state’s historic drought.

The researchers also estimated that nearly 41,000 square miles of forest containing nearly 888 million big trees experienced change in the amount of water stored in their canopies between 2011 and 2015.

Water loss coupled with higher temperatures and outbreaks of deadly insects like bark beetle have further increased the risk of the trees’ death. Loss of trees would bring widespread potentially-destructive changes in the ecosystems.

Carnegie’s Gregory Asner, the study’s lead author, said, “The drought put the forests in […]

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Government ‘may exclude’ Donald Trump after 565,000 sign petition calling for UK entry ban

Stephan:  This is an absolutely appalling story. Think about it for a minute: The leading Republican Presidential Candidate for the 2016 election is considered so vile and vulgar, that over half a million people and growing more day-by-day, in our second oldest ally in the world -- France, with whom we have never gone to war is the oldest -- write their national leaders demanding that he be disallowed from entering the country. Then ask yourself why isn't this story news in the U.S.? Everything else about Trump is covered at granular level. MSNBC and CNN have become the Trump Networks. Why did I have to go to a British paper to find any mention of this development.
Donald Trump, Republican Presidential Candidate Credit: Reuters

Donald Trump, Republican Presidential Candidate
Credit: Reuters

Donald Trump could be banned from entering the UK after Theresa May, the Home Secretary, declared that she ‘may exclude’ people who are not ‘conducive to the public good’.

Banning entry to the UK for the US Republican presidential contender, who remains the frontrunner in the heated contest, has been called for by more than 560,000 people in a petition to the Government.

After reaching 100,000 signatures, the Government confirmed that the petition could be discussed in Parliament.

Now a spokesman for Mrs May has responded officially warning that Mr Trump’s comments, in which he called for a ban on Muslims entering the USA in the wake of the Paris terror attacks, were “divisive, unhelpful and wrong”.

The statement said: “The Home Secretary may exclude a non-European Economic Area national from the UK if she considers their presence in the UK to be non-conducive to the public good.

The Home Secretary has said that coming to the UK […]

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