Wednesday, September 13, 2017

TOP 40: Great Alternative Rock songs

Addendum to Top 25 Alt-Rock songs

26. Michael Kiwanuka, "Cold Little Heart" (2016)


27. Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, "Over Everything" (2017)


28. KD Lang, "Constantly Craving" (1992)


29. Ani DiFranco, "Shameless" (2013)


30. The Cranberries, "Dreams" (1993)


31. Amy Winehouse, "Valerie" (2007)


32. Adele, "Rolling in the Deep"(2011)


33. Chris Isaak, "Wicked Game" (2013)


34. Nirvana, "Heart-Shaped Box" (1993)


35. Green Day, "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" (2013)


36. Stone Temple Pilots, "Sour Girl" (2010)


37. Natalie Merchant, "Jealosy" (2010)


38. Jewel, "Foolish Games" (1997)


39. Indigo Girls, "Closer to Fine" (2012)




40. Alanis Morisette, "You Oughta Know" (2011)

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Octophins of Europa/Chapter 2/Discovery

Jupiter has 53 named moons including Europa, foreground. Scientists believe there are at least 69 Jovian moons, according to the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration /NASA image


AFTER John Ginan was formally accepted for the Europa Colony Program (ECP) in early 2015, his first order of business was to spend at least three days in a NASA psychiatric facility. That was where he got the "Spoonman" moniker.

NASA's Europa-colony recruiters had suspected he was bipolar psychologically during the "First Wave" colonist-selection process; but his intelligence and physical-endurance assessments had registered at the top of the scales. In addition, stigma over most mental health conditions had not been a barrier to NASA employment for more than a century.

Spoonman stuck as a nickname because of all the ingenious spoon inventions that he created in the Cape Canaveral Behavioral Health Unit (BHU). Like the plastic knives and forks that patients received with their BHU meals, spoons were considered potentially dangerous objects; and patients had to ask for spoons if they wanted to snack between meals.

In general, John Ginan loved to eat sweets; in particular, he adored ice cream. Finding ways to enjoy his favorite dessert without asking for a spoon had fired the flames of his imagination.

First, he discovered no spoon was required at all when raiding the BHU's refrigerator-freezer, which was always stocked with vanilla and chocolate ice cream. The seemingly endless supply of frozen temptations in the freezer box were packaged in small, tub-like paper containers. The soon-to-be-dubbed Spoonman had realized quickly that he could pull off the little containers' lids, then tear off about half of the containers' remaining paper to consume the delicious contents without using a spoon.

Second, this 26th-century man followed in the cheesy footsteps of a 20th-century pop icon -- old fashioned television's Angus McGyver. Spoonman's grandfather, Daniel Ginan, had a favorite joke about McGyver that he would spring on anyone around him whenever necessity became the mother of invention: "McGyver could make a hand grenade out of a potato and a tampon!"

John Ginan discovered several other ways to craft spoons in the BHU:
  • He could combine the paper lids from two or three of the little ice cream tubs to make a rudimentary spoon, which was particularly effective if he had the patience to allow the frozen treat to melt a bit.
  • He extrapolated from the paper-lid-turned-spoon invention to other forms of utilizing readily available thick paper, including tool-making with manila folders.
  • He realized that the index, middle, and ring digits could form an effective spoon -- ideally with a sink nearby to wash his sticky fingers.
When the BHU staff came to appreciate these displays of ingenuity, they started calling their ingenious patient Spoonman among themselves. Much to their chagrin, John Ginan had extraordinary hearing, so he called them out at the end of Day 1 in the BHU, insisting that the psychiatric staff and his sole fellow patient, Jim Pappel, call him Spoonman.

They all dutifully honored his request, and the Spoonman sobriquet stuck like glue.
Opening positions in chess /Wikimedia Commons image


Jim Pappel


Jim Pappel also was being evaluated in the BHU for "unspecified" bipolar disorder. Despite the commonality of being mechanical engineers in the ECP, the contrasts between Jim and Spoonman could not have been more stark.

Unlike Spoonman, who had no awareness of his precarious mental state before he was recruited for the ECP, Jim had known he was bipolar for more than a decade. He just chose to ignore it.

Unlike Spoonman, who grew up in a relatively stable neighborhood in Manhattan, Jim grew up in a low-income housing project in the perennially tough North End of Hartford, Connecticut.

Unlike Spoonman, who could trace his ancestry to the Mayflower Pilgrims and had such a fair complexion that his skin was almost transparent, Jim could trace his ancestry to the slave trade in Nigeria and had such dark skin that he was "out-of-Africa brown" as his grandmother Angela Pappel would often say.

Unlike Spoonman, who had no children, Jim had sired his first son when he was 16.

Spoonman had an itch to play chess from Day 1 of his confinement in the BHU, and he defeated two staff members handily, so his confidence had been transformed to hubris. Jim was game for the challenge on Day 1 of his three-day stay in The Unit.

The pair met over breakfast on Day 2 of Spoonman's BHU stay.

"One of the psychiatric nurses says you have rolled over two pretty good chess playahs on the BHU staff," Jim said, making his first move of the psychological game-within-the-game of chess.

"I am on a roll. If you want to play, why don't you go ahead and take white. I'll give you the first-move advantage," Spoonman replied, brimming with confidence as he gestured with his pancake-laden plastic fork to the chess board and pieces he had set up at an empty table in the nearly empty BHU cafeteria.

"Alright, but don't think you are going to play teacher and preacher on me. You are probably in the BHU because you don't know who you are; and I'm not interested in hearing any lecturing from anybody in this place."

"Sounds like you are bringing your 'A game' to this match, Jimbo!"

Jim quietly moved himself and his breakfast tray to the cafeteria's de facto chess table, then made his second move in the psychological game-within-the-game. "Nobody ever called me Jimbo in the hood. Your move," he said, advancing his queen's pawn two squares.

"It's about time somebody here challenged me for the middle of the board," Spoonman said, matching Jim's opening move by advancing his queen's pawn to block encroachment into his side of the board.

"Didn't you hear me when I said no teaching and no preaching? Are you going to play this game, or are you just gonna to talk about it?" Jim said in a serious tone as he advanced one of his knights to bring more force to bear in the center of the battlefield. "I'll say this: I don't care whether I win this match or not. I'm playing this game to figure out how you play, so I can definitely beat you in the next game!"

"Maybe I should start focusing on my A game," Spoonman replied, pushing his king's pawn forward one square to help brace his shiny black pieces against the growing potential of a bloody onslaught from his apparently skillful opponent.

"You're not listening. You're talking. I'm not bringing my best 'game' to this match. I already told you what I'm doing, and I'll tell you again. This round is all about figuring you out -- discovering how you play the game."

Jim's harsh rhetoric took hold on Spoonman as he pondered his next move. "Alright, alright, I'll focus on the game. Why don't you tell me where you're from?"

"I thought you wanted to focus on the game; but if you really want to know where I grew up, I was born in New London, Connecticut, and grew up in Venice, South Carolina.

Spoonman fell silent, realizing that he had probably lost the game-within-the-game and that he was at least one move behind in the mounting struggle to control the center of the playing field. The next hour of the match was fought hard, move-by-move, with barely a word said.

After the inevitable blood-letting in the center of the board, Spoonman conceded, "I'm not going to win this game, but I can play you to a stalemate."

"That's the first nearly intelligent thing you've said since we sat down to play," Jim said, pressing his advantage in the game-within-the-game.

"We're playing for a stalemate now," Spoonman replied.

"No, I can still win. You're playing for a stalemate. You really don't have a clue of who you are, or why you are here in the BHU, do you?"

Spoonman managed to fight Jim to a stalemate, but the effort was exhausting and emotionally raw. "I get it now," he said to his more-than-worthy chess adversary. "You were my teacher and my preacher."

"No, you don't get it at all," Jim said flatly. "This match wasn't about teaching, or preaching, or even chess. It was about your overblown ego and cocky attitude."

"I learned at least one thing, Jim: Over confidence can get me killed."

The next day, which was slated to be Spoonman's last in the BHU, he requested to spend one more day in The Unit.

On Day 1, all Spoonman wanted to do was get out of the BHU, but he had come to appreciate the group therapy sessions and coping skills he was learning. Additionally, the Day 2 care-team meeting after his humbling chess encounter with Jim had been an Earth-shattering eye-opener: He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

The diagnosis spurred both shock and relief in the blond-haired, blue-eyed wonder man.

The revelation that he had been bipolar for more than a decade was shocking.

When his NASA psychiatrist, Dr. Zeppelbaum, announced the diagnosis during his daily care-team meeting, Spoonman felt like he had looked up and saw a piano dangling in mid-air above his head. How, he asked himself in that moment, had such a dangerous condition develop without his considerably capable intellect being aware of it?

The relief associated with discovering his bipolar disorder was equally heavy with gravity: Much of his struggles and triumphs as a young man now made sense.

In terms of size and mass, Jupiter dwarfs all of its moon, including Europa. /NASA image 

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Octophins of Europa/Chapter 1/Going Home

Europa is a satellite of Jupiter, the solar system's largest planet. Scientists believe vast oceans of liquid water are below the mysterious moon's frozen surface. /NASA image


THE year is 2517, and half of the United States has surrendered to the advancing glaciers.

The front line of America's desperate struggle against mountains of ice stretches 3,000 miles, coast-to-coast from Hilton Head, South Carolina, to San Francisco. The summer is over, and the entire nation is bracing for yet another brutally cold winter.

John "Spoonman" Ginan has not seen his father, Goodman, since he began terrestrial-exploration training at Cape Canaveral on his birthday, Jan. 2.

Spoonman could fly no further north than D.C. to get as close as possible to New York City, which was home to him in many ways. The Modern Ice Age had made Reagan International Airport the last bastion of U.S. aviation north of the Mason-Dixon Line.

The last leg of Spoonman's journey home is a bone-chilling trek on every snow machine imaginable. At the Reagan airport, the bevy of vehicles available to most travelers with family or professional business in The Big Apple is a menagerie of machinery. The collection at the airport's ground-transportation depot ranges from 100-year-old Arctic Cats, trailer-equipped snowmobiles, and the speedy anti-gravity Snow Devils that the U.S. government started deploying nation-wide in 2508.

Traveling in the trailer of a relatively new model snowmobile seems like the best value, so Spoonman tosses his backpack next to the spare gasoline canister and gingerly slides into the trailer's unexpectedly comfortable banana seat.

Goodman Ginan


When Spoonman emerges from the subway station in Hoboken, New Jersey, he does what he always does when he comes home -- gaze at the greatest walled city of all time. When it had become clear around 2220 that the Modern Ice Age had begun in the prior century, the citizens of NYC faced a choice: fight or flight.

Manhattan had decided to accept the Herculean challenge, designing then constructing walls of reinforced concrete 50-feet wide and 50-feet tall. The inhabitants of the great city's other three boroughs fled south.

Spoonman decides to take a creaky Arctic Cat with two other travelers across the long-frozen-solid and glacier-covered Hudson River to The Great Wall's Pier 45 Parapet. After tipping the Cat's driver generously, he looks at the parapet's entryway with mixed emotions -- this would be his last visit to the first city he had ever known. Like his wife and most of the other astronauts, engineers, and builders in Earth's first wave of Europa colonists, Spoonman's fate was to die on Jupiter's ice-clad, water-world moon.

The Pier 45 Parapet is one of seventeen 70-foot-high titanium towers that interlock The Great Wall and help protect America's financial center from the Northeastern Glacier's megaton pressure. After passing through the parapet's base, Spoonman re-hitches his backpack and scampers two blocks to the Christopher Street subway station. His next stop would be where he could always find his father in the hour after dawn -- atop the Battery Park Parapet.

Before he could feel his father's warm embrace in the chilled air that blankets the city, Spoonman climbs the hundreds of artfully crafted stairs that spiral up the inner wall of the Battery Park Parapet. In addition to being relatively close to Goodman's apartment in Greenwich Village, this rook-like outpost has unique commanding views. To the north, all of Manhattan is visible. To the south and east, feet-thick ice cover the once-bustling harbor, Long Island Sound, and the vast frozen expanse of the Atlantic Ocean.

Spoonman opens the exit door at the top of the spiral staircase silently, hoping to surprise his father. He sees his dad's back, which is covered by a bright orange parka. Goodman had been surveying the icy wasteland surrounding the city since dawn. Now, he is deep in thought about his son's months-long journey to Europa, Jupiter's ice-clad satellite.

"The day is always darkest before the dawn," Spoonman says, borrowing a catch phrase that his father has told him at least dozens of times.

Goodman spins on his heels in an instant, the sound of his son's voice breaking the spell that the mysterious moon had cast upon him.

"Son! I was beginning to think I would have a frost-bit nose by the time you showed up," the older man says.

Father and son then hold each other in a bear hug, swaying gently as puffs of their flash-frozen breath flow from their fur-lined parka hoods.

After 30 seconds that alternately seem like an eternity and an instant for Spoonman as his father holds him close, Goodman leads his son to the parapet's edge.

"The Northeast Glacier is still inching its way up The Great Wall, you know," the retired mechanical engineer says.

"I know," Spoonman says, staring intently down the concrete slope of The Great Wall to the meters-thick sheet of ice and detritus that has encased the city since before he was born at Mount Sinai Hospital in 2483. "New Yorkers are lucky they listened to you and grandfather instead of Reginald Thump."

The son sensed his father's back stiffen reflexively at the mention of the Ginan family's arch nemesis.

Real estate magnate Reginald Thump served a shortened term as president of the United States because he was impeached and removed from office. /TLB Designs image


"Thump's plan for The Great Wall would have heaped cataclysm on top of disaster," Goodman says flatly, using his favorite turn of phrase when describing anything related to the real estate magnate and disgraced former U.S. president's ill-conceived scheme to save Manhattan.

"If that decrepit ass-hat had had his way," he said, looking over his right shoulder at Thump's frost-covered golden tower, "the glacier would have razed the city decades ago."

Goodman and his father were both outstanding mechanical engineers.

Thump's brilliance was limited to the mechanisms of turning a fast profit, usually on assets that were leveraged with debt to the hilt.

To be effective, Goodman's father knew years before the first gargantuan bucket of concrete was poured that The Great Wall would have to be the biggest public works project in the history of civilization. While he was president, Thump's minimalist approach to construction of the glacier-barrier wall would have saved U.S. taxpayers about a trillion dollars, but it would not have saved the city.

Thump could not help seeking the limelight and being a slave to his self-interest. Single-minded selfishness was the root cause of Thump's scandal-shortened single term as president of the United States. Narcissism doomed his presidency to impeachment in the House of Representatives and removal from office in a landslide vote in the Senate.

The trillionaire's attempt to cut corners during the final phase of The Great Wall's construction probably sealed his fate as the worst president in U.S. history. He had rarely emerged from his golden, 58-story monolith since Marine One had delivered him to the helipad on the skyscraper's roof in 2500. The city's vibrant tabloid press called Thump the Hermit of 5th Avenue.

"I am a compassionate man," Goodman says, draping his right arm across his son's broad shoulders, "but I can't wait much longer for that shit-heel to draw his last gasping breath."

Artist's conception of Europa's frozen surface, Jupiter, and the Sun /NASA image


Genevieve Ginan


AFTER talking for two hours about the great city of New York, The Great Wall, and Spoonman's impending great adventure, father and son made the slightly dizzying decent down the Battery Park Parapet's spiral staircase.

Before they parted outside the titanic tower, the men gaze at one another's faces through their parka hoods. "I'll be alright, dad," Spoonman says.

"I know, but I also know that this is the last time that I will see you in the flesh."

Neither of the engineers wanted to cry, so their last-ever clutch is short and sweet.

The astronaut-engineer is hankering for lunch before starting his journey south back to Cape Canaveral; but his eagerness is fueled by love, not hunger.

The Battery Park Parapet is only three blocks from the Golden Orchid, the Thai restaurant where Spoonman first met Genevieve Leigh.

In the summer of 2514, the then-bachelor had arrived at the eatery before his future bride, whom he had met online through the NASA astronaut online community. Through the restaurant's thick plate-glass window facing the street, he had watched with amusement the beautiful and brilliant woman's confusion as she tried to open the locked door that led to an apartment above the Golden Orchid.

He sensed the native New Yorker's embarrassment as she walked toward their table wearing a tight-fitting blouse and a smile that betrayed her nervousness, and her dismay over picking the wrong entryway door.

"Genevieve, it's great to see you," Spoonman said, attempting with great difficulty to pronounce his lunch-mate's name with a French accent.

"I'm so flustered," the tall brunette with dark-chocolate eyes said as she took her seat opposite from Spoonman across their ornate dining table.

"Your agitation is nothing compared to how I feel about butchering the pronunciation of your name."

"Please call me Genie," she said, quickly signally to a waitress before the conversation spun out of control into premature intimacy,

"The curry dishes are amazing here," Genie said, hoping to change the subject.

"I love Thai food, so pretty much every kind of curry they have here will work for me!" Spoonman said, with the prompting of his empty belly and gratitude for Genie's abilities as a conversationalist.

She had been recruited to be among the first Europa colonists for her communications skills, which were essential to overcome the 40-minute audio-signal delay over the 390-million miles separating Earth and Europa.

Communication skills also would be essential if the colonists encountered intelligent life on the Jovian moon.

After its awkward beginning, the rest of the soon-to-be couple's first date flowed effortlessly. The topics of conversation ranged rapidly from growing up in Manhattan, to the rivalry between their respective high schools, to the Europa colonist selection process, to what the pair expected when their spacecraft arrived at the ice-encrusted moon as it orbited the solar system's largest planet.

The curry had been very good.

Their first kiss outside the Golden Orchid was much more satisfying.

Scientists believe Jupiter's powerful gravitational forces are responsible for fractures in Europa's ice-encrusted surface. /NASA image

Sunday, September 3, 2017

Top 25: Great Alternative Rock songs

1. Lana Del Rey, "Love" (2017) /Video via YouTube




2. The Killers, "The Man" (2017) /Video via YouTube




3. Cage The Elephant, "Ain't No Rest For The Wicked" (2010) /Video via YouTube




4. Mumford & Sons, "I'm On Fire" (2014) /Video via YouTube




5. Ryan Adams, "Wonder Wall" (2009) /Video via YouTube




6. Charles Bradley, "Ain't It A Sin" (2016) /Video via YouTube




7. Lord Huron, "Night We Met" (2015) /Video via YouTube




8. Norah Jones, "Chasing Pirates" (2009) /Video via YouTube




9. Sharon Jones/The Dap Kings, "Nobody's Baby" (2014) /Video via YouTube




10. Jack Johnson, "My Mind For Sale" (2017) /Video via YouTube




11. Regina Spektor, "Laugh With" (2009) /Video via YouTube




12. Spoon, "Can I Sit Next To You" (20) /Video via YouTube




13. Mike Doughty, "Light Will Keep Your Heart" (2014) /Video via YouTube




14. Modest Mouse, "Float On" (2009) /Video via YouTube




15. Feist, "The Bad In Each Other" (2011) /Video via YouTube




16. Cake, "Short Shirt, Long Jacket" (2011) /Video via YouTube




17. Corinne Bailey Rae, "Been To The Moon" (2016) /Video via YouTube




18. The Secret Sisters, "He's Fine" (2017) /Video via YouTube




19. JD McPherson, "Lucky Penny" (2017) /Video via YouTube




20. Dave Matthews Band, "Satellite" (2006) /Video via YouTube




21. Ray LaMontagne, "Hey, No Pressure" (2016) /Video via YouTube




22. Death Cab For Cutie, "Black Sun" (2015) /Video via YouTube





23. The Lemonheads, "Mrs. Robinson" (2014) /Video via YouTube





24. Dispatch, "Only The Wild Ones" (2017) /Video via YouTube




25. Ron Gallo, "Put The Kids To Bed" (2016) /Video via YouTube

Saturday, August 26, 2017

Soccer-Chi™ Rule Book

Soccer-Chi(TM) is a version of The Beautiful Game modified for safety-first. Soccer-Chi(TM) workouts can have as few as one participant, and games can range from 2 to 20 players.

Soccer-Chi™ Rules:


1. No rough contact: Violations draw yellow or red cards. Drawing two yellow cards or a red card results in 5-minute side-lining.

2. No goalie, and hand-ball violations draw yellow or red cards.

3. No heading: Violation draws foul call and referee-directed restart of play. 

4. Scoring: (a) goal created with two objects on ground to serve as goal posts; (b) to score, ball must roll over goal line; and (c) to score, ball cannot knock over or displace goal posts.

5. Referee: (a) generally, the oldest player on the field of play serves as ref, (b) an experienced fan on the sideline can serve as ref, and (c) if there is an odd number of players on the field, the oldest player present takes on role of ref.

Recommended Equipment


Soccer ball, eight small orange cones for goal posts and playing-field corner markers, referee whistle, red card, and yellow card.
/Christopher Cheney photo

Friday, August 25, 2017

Poetry: Love is God

There are many paths to a Good life. Choose your path and follow it. /Christopher Cheney illustration


I know God is Love


I know
Love is God.

I know
God is Love.

I know
violence is evil.

I know
evil is weaker than Love.

One of the ways I roll. /Image via @deviantART


Kindness: 'Petting Phin'


First, learn Cat Language.

Second, gently pet and/or scratch the back of Phin's neck.

If Phin does not "play" scratch and/or bite, proceed to third step.

Third, pet Phin, but end stroking before
the center of the friendly feline's back.

If Phin does not "play" scratch and/or bite, proceed to fourth step.

Fourth, stroke kitty from the back of his neck to the end of his back.

If Phin does not "play" scratch and/or bite, proceed to fifth step.

Fifth, stroke kitty from the back of his neck to the end of his back,
then gently grasp the base of his tail and feel the furry softness
all the way to the tail's tip.

Phin is a Good Cat.
Phineas the Cat was born on the Fourth of July, 2015. /Christopher Cheney photo

Monday, July 3, 2017

Trump's Afghan War: No Mission, No Margin

More U.S. military dead in Afghanistan this year, and more U.S. troops are deploying to the world's most inhospitable place for foreign armies. /AP photo

With the Trump administration sending more U.S. troops to fight in Afghanistan, America's longest war is getting longer.

The commander-in-chief has yet to offer the country an explanation why Americans are dying under his watch during in the latest interminable Afghan war.

Borrowing and inverting a business-world motto that could appeal to President Trump, America's war in Afghanistan is now a "no-mission, no-margin" scenario. In business, even the best-intended enterprises are doomed unless they can turn a buck, generating the marginal income necessary for long-term financial survival. No margin, no mission.

It is impossible to turn a buck--or generate any other gain--if there is no mission to execute at the outset of any enterprise.

What is the U.S. mission in Afghanistan under President Trump?

Trump loves to win. If winning is the mission, then Americans should brace for a long struggle and consider making Afghanistan the 51st state.

Editor's Note: More to come

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Trump following in Nixon's disgraceful footsteps

While facing impeachment over a criminal conspiracy that included a break-in at the Democratic Party's national headquarters, President Richard Nixon resigned in August 1974. President Donald Trump is making calls out of Nixon's playbook, blaming the news media and leaks of sensitive information by government officials for his failings. /bullworkofdemocracy photo illustration

"The press is the enemy."

"It's always the son-of-a-bitch that leaks."

"The American people are entitled to see the president and to hear his views directly, and not to see him only through the press."

These are all quotes from the president of the United States, but they were not uttered by the current leader of the free world. All of these comments were made by Richard Nixon, the first and only U.S. president who resigned his office in disgrace.

Since taking the oath of office less than a month ago, President Donald Trump has been channeling Nixon, railing against the press and leaks from within his own administration.

Trump says any poll that casts his performance in a negative light should not be believed, calling them "fake news."

When The Washington Post revealed Trump's national security adviser, Michael Flynn, had held policy-related discussions with a top Russian official before Inauguration Day, the billionaire businessman claimed the biggest concern was leaks from his administration not the undermining of President Barack Obama while he was still in office.

Flynn apparently discussed American sanctions against Russia with the Russian ambassador to the United States, which the FBI concluded made the national security adviser prone to blackmail from the Kremlin. Trump knew about the blackmail threat for at least two weeks, according to U.S. officials. But he kept Flynn as his national security adviser and only fired the retired general after the Post story was published.

The depth and breadth of the Flynn cover-up is a mystery, for now. The truth will come out eventually.

One of the truths that came out of Nixon's disastrous second term as president is a cover-up is almost always worse than the original crime.

There are many troubling similarities between Nixon and Trump. Just one month into the 45th president's first term, the scariest potentiality is that Trump is even worse.

Sunday, January 29, 2017

War on 'mainstream media' menaces democracy

Defying President Lyndon Johnson's administration in 1968, legendary CBS journalist Walter Cronkite had the courage to tell the truth about America's disastrous war in Vietnam. /CBS News video

Nothing is more patriotic than speaking truth in the face of power.

Journalists in the so-called mainstream media are not inclined to defend themselves against misguided assaults on their integrity and commitment to telling the truth, even when their reputations and lives are under threat.

With powerful politicians peddling alternative facts, these are dark days for the free press, which has served as a bulwark of democracy in the United States for more than two centuries. The professionals who staff newsrooms at America's best news media organizations such as The New York Times need to accept that producing high-quality editorial content is no longer sufficient to ensure continuation their pivotal role in American society.

When the president of the United States declares war on the news media, journalists have a patriotic duty to defend themselves. When President Trump and his sycophantic supporters attack members of the press, it is not just journalists who are under siege; one of the pillars on which democracy stands is under assault.

When I decided to pursue a journalism career more than two decades ago, my grandest aspiration was to work at CBS News, The New York Times, The Washington Post or Time Inc., David Halberstam's powers that be. My dream came true on a modest scale in the first week of April 2013, when I started working weekends as a digital media producer at WBZ, the CBS News affiliate in Boston.

A couple of days after joining the WBZ staff, terrorists detonated two bombs along the route of the Boston Marathon. On television, radio and online, WBZ journalists provided world-class coverage of the heinous crime and the manhunt for the perpetrators that followed. I witnessed firsthand the professionalism and dedication of journalists employed in one of the bastions of the "mainstream media."
On April 19, 2013, WBZ was the first news media organization to broadcast live video of Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in the boat where he had taken refuge after a shootout with police in Watertown, Mass./ Massachusetts State Police image

Despite my devotion to journalism, I know even the best U.S. news media organization are far from perfect.

In addition to participating in coverage of the Marathon bombings, one of my most memorable experiences at WBZ was having lunch in the station's cafeteria with Jack Williams. The veteran newsman told me about how CBS had treated his friend, Walter Cronkite, at the end of his career.

Cronkite was still "the most trusted man in America" when CBS replaced him as anchor of the evening news with Dan Rather. As he recounted the succession story, Williams could barely control his disgust. Cronkite had plenty of journalistic "life in his tank" when CBS executives forced him into retirement, Williams told me.

Here is the key fact about the best news media organizations: for every misstep that reputable journalists make, there are thousands of examples of high-quality information provided to the American people.

Here are just a few examples of courageous and groundbreaking journalism generated at news organizations that Trump and his supporters are gleefully tarring as the "dishonest mainstream media" in America:

In 1954, CBS News icon Edward R. Murrow challenges Red Scare demagogue Sen. Joseph McCarthy. /CBS News video

In 1963, Eric Sevareid of CBS News interviews "Silent Sprint" author Rachel Carson for a CBS Reports documentary. Under pressure from the industrial chemical industry, three of the documentary's five commercial sponsors withdrew from the broadcast about Carson's book, which exposed the dangers of pesticides and revolutionized humanity's views of the environment. CBS aired the documentary despite the financial blow. /CBS image via Getty Images

In June 1971, Washington Post publisher Katherine Graham and the newspaper's editor, Ben Bradlee, are elated as they depart U.S. District Court after a federal judge upheld their right to continue publishing the Pentagon Papers. The documents, which had been obtained from whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, exposed years of U.S. government deception about the war in Vietnam. /AP photo

Bradlee talks with reporters Bob Woodward, left, and Carl Bernstein in the Washington Post newsroom. Woodward and Bernstein exposed a criminal conspiracy in the White House that ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon in 1974. /Image via Outside the Beltway

In 1975, New York Times photo journalist Dith Pran and correspondent Sydney Schanberg stayed in Cambodia when other members of the news media fled the country's Khmer Rouge reign of terror. Both men were captured and Pran endured several years in brutal work camps. After Schanberg escaped, he earned a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Cambodian genocide. /New York Times-AFP image

After publishing 600 stories in 2002 about sexual abuse perpetrated by priests, The Boston Globe was awarded a Pulitzer Prize. The Globe's coverage included the revelation that the Archdiocese of Boston's leader, Cardinal Bernard Law, had allowed a pedophile priest to prey on parishioners for years. /Boston Globe image

Sunday, January 15, 2017

America's vanishing middle class documented

/ABC News image

An investigative journalism series produced at ABC News is a grim wake-up call: The American Dream is dying.

In the series, "My Reality: A Hidden America," veteran journalist Diane Sawyer exposes the undeniable truth about income inequality in the United States. Millions of hard-working, tax-paying, law-abiding citizens are getting screwed while the wealthiest Americans bank an ever-increasing portion of the nation's treasure.

There are several drivers of the transformation of The American Dream into The American Nightmare that are largely out of the citizenry's control, including automation of workplaces that make traditionally secure jobs obsolete and low-wage labor competition from countries such as China. However, income inequality in the wealthiest nation on Earth is largely a self-inflicted wound.

In a rare case of billionaire candor, mega-investor poster boy Warren Buffett gave an honest assessment of U.S. income inequality back in 2006: "There's class warfare, all right; but it's my class, the rich class, that's making war, and we're winning."

Sawyer's documentary series is shining light on the American casualties in this struggle that pits the rich against middle class and working class citizens.