Monday, April 3, 2017
Think About Thinking
"Once you understand that what you think about is what controls your life, you start getting real carefu1 about what you think about," Wayne W. Dyer, Ph.D.
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
the gambler
an original on the dharma--------- what draws a man to madness ?---what makes him think that he---can harness light and darkness---to create that which is free ?---what makes him think there's light and dark ?---what bounds define what's free ?---whatever makes him disembark---on 'you' and 'them' and 'me' ?---two worlds he has before him---one earthly, one unseen---each has it's pleasure in the swim---each has it's own smokescreen---i pose the question to all concerned---from sacred to obscene---why can't a man fill the fire that burns---and still be self redeemed ?---does one so drain the other---for he who drinks to the hilt ?---is it really divine mother---who so entwines this quilt----of man's existence---to truly make us side---between the worldly appetence---and the meditative bride ?---the problem leaves me baffled---helpless and forlorn---the freest minds then shackled---not one of us freeborn---to take what life can offer---and still fulfill the soul---making every man a gambler---between wants and self control----what draws a man to madness ?---what makes him think that he---can harness light and darkness---to create that which is free ?---what makes him think there's light and dark ?---what bounds define what's free ?---for all this man can leave one mark---and that is just to BE !
Monday, January 16, 2017
Indicate Never Specify
For years I have subscribed to a theory I call: "Indicate Never Specify". I discovered the concept while reading about East Asian ink wash painters. They carefully limit their brush strokes to the minimum required to capture the mood and texture of a landscape. Detail is absent; allowing the viewer to fill in the intentionally missing visual information.
Sales people sometimes employ this technique to help shape their offering to meet a prospect's needs by limiting information to only that which is absolutely necessary to close the sale. There is a potential ethical danger with this technique, as it may lead some sales people to mislead a prospect into an unwise purchase.
The other day, Bill Bonner an investment advisor who posts a daily diary entry, http://bonnerandpartners.com/the-age-of-trumpismo/ explained why it has been so easy for Donald Trump to embrace the Goldman alumni he has appointed to his cabinet after vilifying them during his campaign.
I guess he didn't mean what I inferred from what he said. He indicated but never specified. Aside a few "bumper sticker" phrases he offered no specifics, except to say he will solve the country's problems. He said "Trust me it will be tremendous".
I pray that in four years The Donald will have done such a "tremendous" job that I will enthusiastically want to vote for him. My concern is that during the campaign he beat the drum about how cozy HC was with Goldman and how the speaking fees she collected were obscene. How she said one thing in public and another in private.
I feel as if a Jedi mind trick is being played out on a national scale. Something like a cosmic three card monte.
I pray that in four years The Donald will have done such a "tremendous" job that I will enthusiastically want to vote for him. My concern is that during the campaign he beat the drum about how cozy HC was with Goldman and how the speaking fees she collected were obscene. How she said one thing in public and another in private.
I feel as if a Jedi mind trick is being played out on a national scale. Something like a cosmic three card monte.
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Politics - ONE FINAL TIME!
This is a copy of my response to a Facebook post about Aetna abandoning The Affordable Care Act (Obama Care).
WOW to both of you. You clearly have your minds
made up but I will simply state my case ONE FINAL TIME!
Donna, you will remember I introduced you to
Alex Jones and PrisonPlanet,tv. I have very
broad and varied sources for my information and Alex Jones is just one of them. So is Noam Chomsky.
For the record, I am not a democrat or
republican. I feel as though I am at a
party and the host tells me I can have anything I want to drink; then asks if I
want Coke or Pepsi. I ask, "Do you
have ginger ale?" and he repeats, "Do you want Coke or Pepsi." That is the difference I see between the two
ruling parties. I emphasize RULING
PARTIES.
Politics today is presented to us by the
mainstream media and the whores in Washington just like the "bread and
circuses" the Roman Empire fed the plebs right before the Roman Empire
collapsed.
I read and followed Ayn Rand when Paul Ryan was
still in his diapers. I understand and ascribe to the libertarian principles she
wrote about many years ago. Unlike the Tea Party fanatics, who rage "We
the people", "Take our country back"; I also am a realist and
businessman who recognizes we are out of control FIRST as a society.
Government is a construct of our society. There ARE free and democratic socialist republic
countries in the world today, but our media scoff at their success because the
media and government is controlled by lobbyists for the power elite, not for
the people of the country. The people
are simple chattel who are enslaved by banks and government privatization which
is turning our world into a version of a bad futuristic Sifi book or movie.
Getting government out of education, health
care and the economy is exactly what the rulers who REALLY run this country
want.
I have friends in education who cite numerous
examples of corporations making hundreds of millions of dollars from Charter
schools while abandoning less profitable neighborhoods and children. Education
is NOT something that should be treated like a business with measureable
outcomes and standardization. You can
read my post on this subject at http://efficiency-expert.blogspot.com/
The collusion between the health care
providers, big pharma and the insurance companies is a disgrace to our
nation. EACH and EVERY ONE is a private
company. Today, corporations are no
longer corporate citizens of America, They are international entities focused
on short term shareholder value. They move their jobs and revenues across the
globe to find the best tax rates and the cheapest labor.
Have you given any thought to the disgrace
private prisons are in this country. We have a prison-industrial complex made
up of companies who operate prisons simply for profit. Last week the justice department ruled that
the federal government would no longer support private prisons. The mainstream
news reported about how this will impact the profits and share price of these
public companies. That was the focus of
the story they fed us as if running prisons for profit is a "good"
thing.
Are you familiar with the case in Pennsylvania
where a judge was colluding with a private prison to receive a kick back for
every young person he sent to their facility.
It was a fabulous marketing scheme,
In business we call this a spiff.
GREAT marketing, and the more actions
the government declares illegal, the more people get arrested and sent
to prisons. These modern day Bastilles
are run by corporations who bring jobs
and stimulate the economies of the former industrial towns where they build
them.
Maybe someday they will be stormed just as the
original was stormed in 1789.
Unfortunately, our government has insured this will never happen; not
because they have corrected the injustice, but because they have financially,
chemically and electronically sedated the public so they no longer have the
desire to revolt.
So please don't tell me about, "We the
People", or getting the government out of the very activities in which the
government SHOULD be involved.
Open your eyes.
Democrats, Republicans, Tea Party, Clinton, Trump, Sanders, Paul, Cruz,
Bush, Kasich, Biden, Obama, Fiorina, McConnell, Ryan, Reid, Cheney,
Conservative, Liberal, Moderate: It's all bull. A puppet show set up to give
you the illusion that your vote matters and that you have a choice.
So what will it be, Coke or Pepsi?
https://www.facebook.com/martin.amadio.75/posts/10210150169734790?comment_id=10210154454641910&reply_comment_id=10210166976114939¬if_t=feed_comment¬if_id=1471995377622082
So what will it be, Coke or Pepsi?
https://www.facebook.com/martin.amadio.75/posts/10210150169734790?comment_id=10210154454641910&reply_comment_id=10210166976114939¬if_t=feed_comment¬if_id=1471995377622082
Sunday, August 21, 2016
Mr. Holland's Opus
Sunday, August 20, 2016
I just caught the last 15 minutes of the movie Mr.
Holland's Opus on Showtime.
Normally I would have just clicked to the next choice
on my multi-channel cable feed which constantly shows movies I have no desire
to watch.

I stayed with the movie past this scene as I was
getting dressed and the TV was just on as background.
Now Mr. Holland’s Opus is a very well made mainstream
movie. There should be more movies like this but marketing and sales dictate
what gets made.
The movie was perfectly, emotionally manipulative, and
hooked me right into Mr. Holland. It
romanticized the role of Humanities in education in the same fashion that Hollywood
movies like An Affair To Remember or You’ve Got Mail romanticized love and
relationships.
Mr. Holland’s Opus presents the pleasantly romantic,
even innocent, notion that our school systems are or should be, places of
enrichment and development of our youth. The movie’s climax illustrates the
fact that teachers, and music teacher, Mr. Holland in particular, shape our young
people into adults who create tomorrow’s society. This is an idea which should be at the core
of our education system. Unfortunately, one could not recognize this sentiment
when one looks closely at the reality of the educational system in America.
I'm sure we'd all like to believe how important the humanities
are to a person's education and development but as a nation we continue to cut budgets
for education because we view education as an expense which needs to be
streamlined and made to run efficiently.
I cannot help but think that this view is hurting our society. The humanities are far more important than
school boards realize.
Believe me, I am a true capitalist. I recognize the importance of the vocations
and training our educational system provide to prepare students with the skills
they will need to keep the capitalist society going forward. But education should be more than glorified job training.
Like so many things in life, and in business, something’s
dollar value sometimes is not really equivalent genuine value.
I just heard a quote but cannot find to whom it is attributed. "Not everything that can be measured is
valuable and not everything valuable can be measured.” I struggle with this everyday in business.
The moral of Mr. Holland’s Opus, although the movie is
a fairy tail, a fable if you will; is that under appreciated teachers all over
our country are indeed touching our youth’s lives with subjects such as art
appreciation and music who’s value cannot be measured or tested.
Education, at both the high school and university level
needs to be much more than preparation for the jobs our society needs
filled. Yes that is important, but the true
value of education cannot be measured on tests.
There is no metric for the love of learning that comes from a well
rounded education.
Thursday, August 27, 2015
100 Years After Immigration
There has
been much talk in the news these days about immigration and the illegal
immigrants coming into our country. This
has prompted me to examine my roots and my family's journey to and assimilation
into America after 100 years.
After all, I
am only a second generation American.
Although all four of my grandparents were admitted into this country
legally, both of my parents were what today would be called "Anchor
babies". Coming to America at the
beginning of the 20th Century was entirely different proposition than coming to
America today.
Back then it
was easy for the our government to manage the tens of thousands of people who
came to this country from Europe by steamship in the early 20th Century. They
were cataloged, registered and processed at Ellis Island where immigration
officials could decide who came in and who didn't. Back then Italian immigrants were called
WOPs, a term which meant With Out Papers. This was the early 20th Century
equivalent of the derogatory term Wetback.
BUT they were accepted into the country and a process to gain full
citizenship was started.
The Atlantic
ocean is a formidable barrier to illegal entry.
The distance from Naples, Italy to Ellis Island is 4400 miles and
required a two week ocean voyage in 1914.
By contrast a person can literally wade across the Rio Grande river to
get into America making our southern border much more difficult to manage. The 90 miles of ocean which separates Cuba
from Key West, FL is littered with the remains of the thousands who attempted
to get to America but never made it.
But
immigration legal and illegal is not solely a United States problem. Everywhere
in the world people are risking live and limb to immigrate to Western countries
to escape everything from poverty to war and sectarian violence. I just heard an interview on the radio with a
man who is one of the nearly 80 thousand people who illegally migrated to
Greece this year alone. This man traveled by row boat to reach Greece so he
could......get this, walk to Germany. The problem of illegal immigration in the
EU is much worse than here in America because the European Union has lifted
many of the cross border restrictions between member countries. So that guy might actually be able to walk
from Greece to Germany. It is only about 930 miles from Athens to Munich.
We take so
much for grated in this country. Try to
imagine what it would take for you leave your home, get on a boat and travel
for weeks to a place where you don't speak the language, where the people
aren't particularly welcoming, where you will be discriminated against,
thousands of miles from the rest of your family to start a new life in a new
country. Think about how much courage
this takes. Sure they are breaking all
the rules, but just think about the motivation.
My
grandparents all came to America separately as teenagers between 1912 and 1915
on steamships in what was referred to as steerage class. I did some research with the help of my
cousin into what it was like on these steamships. It was hardly the Amistad but it certainly
wasn't the Carnival Cruise line either.
They slept in compartments with hundreds of people divided into women
without male escorts, men traveling alone, and families. The sleeping berths
were 6 feet long and 2 feet wide and with just 2 1/2 feet of space above. The voyage was two weeks across the
Atlantic.
100 years
later, I bitch when I have to take a five hour plane trip to the West Coast. I need a window seat, my ipad, my laptop, the
right snacks, a neck pillow and I still need a day to recuperate. I cannot imagine what could make me embark on
such a treacherous journey.
My father's
mother Elizabetta Sulpizio was 19 years old and traveling with her brother,
Ponfilio (Paul) when they came to America.
They departed from Naples on Oct 19, 1913 aboard the steamship "Taormina". They arrived at Ellis Island on Nov 3, 1913.
On the
manifest Paul listed his occupation is as "farmer" while no
occupation is recorded for my grandmother. They declared that they are each had
$25. That is the equivalent of about
$540 today. They listed their last
residence as the town of Bucchianico in Italy. On the manifest they had to list their
destination in the U.S.. They listed
that they were going to stay with their brother, Domenico, whose address was
1022 Catherine St. in Philadelphia.
My father's
father Alec, came to America under the similar circumstances on a different
steamship in 1915 one hundred years ago.
He met my grandmother Elizabetta in South
Philadelphia and they married. He could
not speak any English, only
Italian. The Italians were
considered good with shovels. So they
handed him a shovel and he went to work on a crew digging ditches for what
would someday become the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
He was paid about 25 cents an hour.
Today, one
hundred years later, his great granddaughter, our daughter Ayla, has 26 years
of education. She can speak both English
and Spanish, but not Italian. She is a PHD candidate in Archeology who has to
pay thousands of dollars a year to dig ditches with a trowel.
This is what
an immigrant's assimilation into American society is all about.
Labels:
Armistad,
citizenship,
Cuba,
Ellis Island,
heritage,
illegal immigrants,
immigration,
Italians,
philadelphia,
Toastmasters,
WOP
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Today's Father is Not Your Father's Father
Today's father is not your
father’s father.
The changing role of fathers is really tied
to the changing role of men in our culture.
As I look back over my life I can see how
the role of "father" has transformed in just the last 30 years. The signs are everywhere I look.


Television which either mimics or drives
our culture at large (depending on your point of view) is a great way to
understand our views on the role of father.


Our ideas about father are
inextricably connected to our ever changing ideas about family. And as
our culture redefines family, so is the role of father redefined.
As more and more women enter the workforce,
once common expressions like “Wait until your father gets home.’ become
obsolete. And frankly “Wait until your mother gets home” just doesn’t have the
same impact.
Some things never change. Every person on earth has a father and a
mother, and a few days ago we had a special day set aside for
fathers. Like millions of people, I took time to fondly remember my father.
I especially remembered that by the time I realized my father was right about so many things, I had my own
child who thought I was wrong about everything.
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