Important, Reverent, and Vital.

The following, I believe, is the most important, reverent, and vital to all of our lives. ~ Larry

OP-ED COLUMNIST NY Times

The Market and Mother Nature  By 

“Whenever I hear the word “cliff,” I am reminded of something that President Obama’s science adviser, John Holdren, used to say about how we need to respond to climate change because no one can predict when it might take a disruptive, nonlinear turn. “We are driving toward a cliff in a fog,” said Holdren about the climate, and that’s always a good time “to start tapping on the brakes.” Indeed, when you think about how much financial debt we’ve built up in the market and how much carbon debt we’ve built up in the atmosphere, the wisest thing we could do as a country today is to start tapping on the brakes by both emitting less carbon to bend the emissions curve down and racking up less debt to bend our debt-to-G.D.P. curve down. Unfortunately, we are still doing neither
Indeed, we are actually taunting the two most powerful and merciless forces on the planet, the market and Mother Nature, at the same time. We’re essentially saying to both of them: “Hey, what’ve you got, baby? No interest rate rises? A little bitty temperature increase? That’s all you’ve got?” I just hope we get our act together before the market and Mother Nature each show us what they’ve got.

Let’s look at the huge carbon and financial deficits we’re amassing. For thousands of years up to the dawn of the industrial age 200 years ago, the Earth’s atmosphere contained 280 parts per million of the heat-trapping greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. Today, that number is nearly 400 p.p.m., with 450 p.p.m. routinely cited as the tipping point where we create the conditions for out-of-control acceleration. Melting the permafrost in Alaska, Canada and Siberia, for example, would release massive amounts of carbon that would further increase global warming. Permafrost is packed with CO2 and frozen methane, which is 25 times more potent a greenhouse gas than CO2. “If the tundra continues melting,” says Hal Harvey, the chief executive of Energy Innovation, “we could basically release the equivalent of all the carbon that all humanity has emitted from the start of history to now.” That would really send temperatures soaring, ice melting and sea levels rising.

We’re on a similar trajectory with our debt. Mounting deficits have driven America’s debt-to-G.D.P. ratio from 36.2 percent in 2007 to 72.8 percent today. In their widely hailed book on credit crises, “This Time Is Different,” the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff argue that countries that allow their debt-to-G.D.P. ratios to exceed 90 percent experience slower growth and greater instability — much like hitting a climate tipping point. Indeed, they note, those who would point to low interest rates today as some kind of “all-clear” for more debt “should remember that market interest rates can change like the weather.”

There is another striking parallel. At some point, when we allow so much carbon to build up in the atmosphere, our mightiest efforts to cut emissions through energy efficiency, conservation and new technologies will only enable us to stay in place. They won’t be able bend the curve downward anymore. And 450 p.p.m. is not a place we want to get stuck. And, at some point, the debt will get so large that big tax increases and spending cuts will simply go to pay interest. We also won’t be able to bend that curve anymore, and spending on infrastructure, education and the poor will vanish.

I am struck by how many liberals insist on reducing carbon emissions immediately, but, on the deficit, say there is no urgency because no interest rates rises are in sight. And I am struck by how many conservatives insist we must reduce the deficit immediately, but, on climate, say there is no urgency because, so far, temperature rise has been slight. (Although 2012 was the hottest year on record in the continental U.S.) One reason interest rates are so low is that they are being suppressed by the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing. That won’t last. As for the climate, well, “Mother Nature doesn’t do quantitative easing,” said Harvey. Beware of nonlinear moves in both.

We can’t go off coal overnight, and we can’t go into recession by cutting spending overnight, but we need to start tapping on the brakes in both realms by agreeing on spending cuts, tax increases and new investments that would be phased in as the economy improves, as well as higher efficiency standards for power plants, buildings, vehicles and appliances that would be phased in, too.

A carbon tax would reinforce and make both strategies easier. According to a September 2012 study by the Congressional Research Service, a small carbon tax of $20 per ton — escalating by 5.6 percent annually — could cut the projected 10-year deficit by roughly 50 percent (from $2.3 trillion down to $1.1 trillion).

What would you rather do to help solve our fiscal problem: Give up your home mortgage deduction and wait two more years for Social Security and Medicare, or pay a little extra

for gasoline and electricity? These will be our choices. I’d rather pay the little carbon tax, especially since it would clean up the air for our kids, drive innovation and make us less dependent on the most unstable region in the world: the Middle East.

How could a carbon tax not be on the table today?”

Reference:.http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/09/opinion/friedman-the-market-and-mother-nature.html?hp&_r=0

 

Marin Voice: Running for office on principle

The following was in the November 5 issue of the Marin I.J.

Marin Voice: Running for office on principle
Posted:

marinij.com

I WAS A CANDIDATE for Congress this year. I survived the complexities of filing reports, paying fees, and appearing in debates and ran in the June primary. My platform was based on a common sense, centrist position with respect to financial reform, the environment, education, and national defense – views that most educated Americans support.

My central point is that the underlying problem in Washington is the unethical and corrupt dual relationship that our elected officials have with money.

For example, our elected officials give billions of taxpayer dollars to the oil industry which, in turn, gives millions of the same dollars right back to those elected officials! These “kickbacks” are unethical and this corruption leads to our elected officials serving those industries instead of serving us, the voters.

Similarly, Lynn Woolsey, our current congress person, took thousands of dollars from the sugar industry while sitting in a Congress that voted billions of taxpayer dollars to support the sugar industry’s peddling cheap sugar to our children. In my campaign, I pledged to accept no money from any corporation, lobby, PAC or entity other than a person, and I agreed to accept no more than a $100 from any individual.

I hoped that the electorate would understand that when elected officials accept money from anyone they regulate or legislate, it creates a dual relationship. Who does the elected official then serve: the voter, or the guy who gives them cash?

Too much of the time they serve the money guy. That is why Congress has a 7 percent approval rating. It is why we are so familiar with the following:

My campaign was a success and a lot of fun.

Although I didn’t win, it was a success because a lot of people heard, understood and agreed with my message.

With no bumper stickers, no ads, no robo-calls, and no lawn signs, I received over a thousand votes and accolades and support from nearly every one of the other 11 candidates, their staffs and the audiences at the debates and forums.

After all, who could be against asking our elected officials to act like grown ups and to sit down and come up with common sense solutions to our pressing problems?

We have come a long way towards creating a healthy form of government. But we need to remember that for many generations, we thought slavery was acceptable, voting was only for men, and that corporal punishment of children was OK.

The paradigm shifts that were necessary to right these wrongs took many generations.

Running for Congress was hard, but I am grateful for the outpouring of support I received from so many people. I was able to do what I think all of us would like to do: to tell our truth to an (about-to-be) elected official.

Repeatedly, I confronted the audiences, and the panel that included our next congressperson, about the insanity of politicians’ behavior. I denounced the unethical and corrupt practice of taking money from those one regulates and I exposed the crying needs of our environment that our elected officials are ignoring.

I am very grateful to live in America where any citizen can run for office and I challenge our next congressman to do the right thing – or I may feel the need to run again.

Larry Fritzlan of Mill Valley directs a teen and young adult drug treatment program in Corte Madera (www.RecoveryServices.com).

P. O. Box 910

Mill Valley, California 94942

My “Day One” Goals As Your Public Servant

If elected, and on my first day after being sworn in as a new member of the United States House of Representatives, I would publish and begin to promote the following measures:

End Corruption in Government:

First, what I will not do is accept cash from any source except from individuals, and then only in amounts of $100 or less. The practice of Representatives and Senators spending 30-70% of their time dialing for dollars contributes to the incompetence, gridlock, and corruption in Washington. Because I will not be spending my time raising campaign funds, I will be available for full time work.

I will invite other elected officials to take my Money Out Of Politics Pledge and make public the list of those who agree to abide by it.

 ”I agree to accept no money from any corporation, lobby, PAC or entity other than a person, and I agree to accept no more than $100 from any individual.” 

I will list individuals who take this pledge on the following website: www.MoneyOutOfPoliticsPledge.com 

1. Implement Campaign Finance Reform:I will approach and coordinate with Senator Bernie Sanders and other elected officials who are working on bills designed to ban money from politics. We need a constitutional amendment to reverse Citizens United (the recent Supreme Court ruling that designated corporations as people), and we need laws and amendments to create public financing of elections and abolish the Electoral College.

2. Restore the Environment:
Everyone agrees that we are stressing the environment in ways that put our future at risk. I will initiate a movement to create a constitutional amendment that would say the following:

“Congress and the Executive Branch, in all their actions, will strive to recreate a biosphere like the one that existed when this country was founded.” 

I would seek out like-minded lawmakers and environmentalists and campaign to see that this amendment is adopted.

3. End The Drug War and Establish Comprehensive Addiction Treatment:
I would initiate a dialogue in Congress to find a comprehensive solution to two of our biggest problems. The War on Drugs is really a war on ourselves. This misguided approach fuels addiction, our number one mental health problem. I would propose the following Constitutional Amendment:
“All laws prohibiting the sale and use of any and all substances to adults are hereby repealed.  100% of the taxes derived from the sale of these substances shall be used only for prevention, education, and free treatment for those suffering from addictions.” 

4. Create Energy Sustainability:
Our current approach to energy use is not sustainable and is dangerously short-sighted. We could have gone green decades ago; now we must go green. I would actively campaign to stop fracking and to end subsidies to oil and coal. I would instead introduce and advocate measures designed to support green energy production and use.

I would form or join a caucus that works to introduce the following:

  1. Shift all energy production to renewables.
  2. Transform our buildings into micro-power plants to collect energy.
  3. Deploy hydrogen and other technologies for onsite storage.
  4. Use Internet technology to transfer energy throughout a smart grid.
  5. Transition the transportation fleet to electric plug-in and fuel cells.

5. Reform Agriculture and Food Policy:
Our current policies are a great example of congressional corruption. Congress annually gives 14 billion dollars to six multi-national food mega-corporations that produce unhealthy food. In turn, the corporations bribe members of Congress to vote for the subsidies that support this food production.

I would transfer the subsidies now given to these mega-corporations to supporting sustainable agriculture practices and farming of organic food as well as promote public understanding of this corrupt system.

6. Engage in Protest:
I will bring attention to the insanity in our current Congress by protesting. At noon on the first Saturday of each month, I will walk down the stairs from my office in the Capitol and out to the National Mall. I will invite others to join me in a peaceful protest on the Mall designed to increase awareness of these issues and restore sanity to our national government.

And in my recent books:
We Are The 99% And We Are Running For Office: Washington’s Worst Nightmare

Intervention On America: A How-To Manual for Getting America Into Recovery and Replacing All Federally Elected Officials In The Fall of 2012.

Really, Norman!

The primary election is just a few weeks away and over a million advertising and marketing dollars will be spent during this brief time in an attempt to educate, confuse, and frighten voters. TV and radio ads, Robo-calls, mailers, lawn signs, road signs, bumper stickers, emails, website spots, and anything else the marketing folks can dream up.

(I have been approached by folks offering to sell me email lists of every voter in this District for $25,000 and to make Robo-calls starting at $1.99 each.)

As you know, one of my concerns is where did these advertising dollars come from? And what did the candidate have to promise to get that money?

In the past five months, there have been at least nine congressional candidate debates and forums extending from Marin City to Eureka. Nearly all of the candidates have attended each debate and we have gotten to know each other pretty well. All of us have put a lot of time and energy into this. We have all witnessed the beauty of California from Highway 101 and met concerned voters from six counties. We have commiserated about the endless confusing forms we’ve had to fill out for the Federal Election Commission, the House of Representatives’ Ethics Committee, and the IRS.

The process has, for the most part, been positive. Oh, Norman Solomon would chide Stacy Lawson for failing to vote in some of the elections, and I would remind him that, in fact, nearly half the electorate fails to vote because so many folks distrust our elected leaders and find the elections irrelevant. And I’d also reiterate that our focus needs to be on growing up and finding common sense solutions to our big problems, and that getting the corrupting influence of money out of politics would be a good place to start.

And then last week, a large and expensive hit piece arrived in my mailbox that one candidate sent out to slime another. You probably got one, too. It is an attack on Stacy Lawson, sent by Norman Solomon.

Really, Norman! Your mailer epitomizes the reason half the population does not vote. We want to respect our leaders. We want to trust them. But right now, 90% of us do not trust politicians, and your mailer is an example of why we don’t trust politicans. Sliming someone else makes us all feel yucky.

Prior to getting this hit piece, I was telling my friends that I respected and liked all of the other 11 candidates in this race. Norman Solomon is no longer on that list. The next time I see him, I will tell him something like this:

Dude, you blew it. That piece I got in the mail was bad politics. Not only bad politics, but disrespectful and slimy. You placed a picture of a sad-looking old woman under Stacy Lawson’s name, implying that this was actually a picture of Stacy. You demean Stacy for being a successful businesswoman. You attack her because she has not bought a house in a falling housing market.

Yuck!

Listen, we all have our warts. I sure have mine and I generally get a sinking feeling when I know I have been wrong. And then I need to go clean it up and make amends for my transgression. Norman, I hope you will do the same. I hope you will send out a big, full color apology to Stacy, and to the voters and your followers. Please do this — or you will feel yucky carrying this around with you, and the electorate will lose yet more respect for politicians

You demeaned this election, the candidates and the voters with your mailer. I don’t want to be a part of the same universe as you and this approach.

I’m not specifically defending Stacy Lawson, but doesn’t she represent what is great about America? She came from humble beginnings, went to college, got an MBA from Harvard, became a successful businesswoman and entrepreneur, worked to create a bunch of jobs, earned some money in the process, then moved into academia and is currently a U.C. Berkeley professor helping students become entrepreneurs. And her staff is sweet and includes some young folks. Stacy, my wife, and I have had some good laughs together.

And, in the mean time dear voter, please vote. Absentee ballots have been sent out and the primary is June 5th. Please check out the positions of all the candidates and pick the person you would like to be the next Representative from California’s Second District.

‘Passionate’ candidates debate issues

All 12 Second District congressional candidates sit around the Ukiah City Council chamber table, presenting their views on issues of importance to a roomful of voters during a May 3 forum. (Brian Maneely/Ukiah Daily Journal) (The Willits News)

By Jennifer PooleTWN Staff Writer Posted:   05/16/2012 08:53:02 AM PDT

The forum for congressional candidates in Ukiah on May 3 was truly one of those “only in Mendocino County” events.

All 12 candidates for the U.S. House of Representative’s new 2nd District seat were in attendance, along with a room full of voters.

“That was great,” moderator K.C. Meadows, editor of the Ukiah Daily Journal, was heard saying after the final applause died down. Later in the UDJ editorial endorsing Assemblyman Jared Huffman, Meadows saluted the whole slate of “colorful and passionate” congressional candidates.

Leading off the final comment of the evening, independent candidate Larry Fritzlan observed: “This is our sixth or seventh debate, and you know this is the coolest group of people we’re so bizarre, all of us. If you could take the best features of all of us, we would be one killer Congressperson.”An article in the Willits News was published yesterday as we finished our final debate. CLICK HERE TO READ FULL ARTICLE

…In closing, Mill Valley therapist and independent Larry Fritzlan pointed to his new book, “We are the 99% and We are Running for Office: Washington’s Worst Nightmare,” suggesting “a simple solution to fixing our dysfunctional political system: It is to get money out of politics.

Last chance to see us live before the primary. . .

Final Congressional Forum/Debate
This Thursday May 17
The final Marin event for Congressional Candidates will be a Congressional Candidate Forum on Healthcare, to be held this Thursday evening May 17 at the Novato Community Hospital. The Forum will be hosted by the Marin Medical Society.

When:   Thursday May 17
Time:    6:30 – 8:30 pm
Where:  Novato Community Hospital (Wilkes-Weseman Room),
180 Rowland Blvd.,
Novato

Congressional candidate Larry Fritzlan overcame his addiction, wants to help Congress end its addiction.

By Richard Halstead
Marin Independent Journal
Posted:   05/10/2012 01:58:32 PM PDT

Larry Fritzlan is seen at a debate for candidates of the 2nd District Congressional seat, held in… Editor’s note: This is one of a series on the candidates in the 2nd District congressional race.

In his campaign for the new 2nd District Congressional seat, Larry Fritzlan has asserted that Washington politicians are addicted to money, and the Mill Valley resident understands addiction from the inside out.

Fritzlan is not shy about talking about how alcohol has affected his life.

“My father was a functioning alcoholic, and my mom was forever looking to get him away from his drinking buddies so I went to 13 schools in six states before I finished high school,” Fritzlan said. “I think it resulted in a certain amount of self-reliance.”

(more)

Guys, You Have To Say It.

At the debate in Ukiah two days ago, I looked at the leading contender in our race for our next Congressman and said, “It’s a swamp that you are going into – you have to name it.”We all know that Congress is a swamp. The latest polls say that 91% of Americans distrust Congress. And every candidate in this race knows it.

So, to my opponents I say: (more)

To Huffman, Solomon and Adams: Dude, it’s an elephant!

WTF! Don’t pretend you don’t see it!

Seriously. We are not stupid and you look like an idiot if you keep pretending not to see it!

EVERYONE SEES IT!

I entered this race for a Congressional seat because I was so disheartened at apologizing to my grandkids about the insanity, dysfunction, immorality, and corruption in our democracy. (more)

A Shattering Truth

Sometimes someone tells a truth that shatters our denial and suddenly explains a lot of things. Suddenly things make sense.  Perhaps someone tells you that his wife or her husband is an alcoholic.  You knew that there had been something odd for years, but now their behavior suddenly makes sense. (more)

Am I crazy?

I’m a family therapist.  My job is to assess and treat dysfunctional systems.

I’m freaking out about our current political system.  I think everyone is.  Our current leaders are spectacularly failing at coming up with common sense solutions to fix some very big problems.

It is making me crazy! (more)

Wanna Start A Revolution?

“Well, you know, we all want to change the world.”
(Beatles, Revolution, 1968)

We, the 99% are getting clearer that the 1% are steering the Titanic towards an uncertain outcome.  In my book, I make the statement that:

1. We have more votes than they do.
2. We can step outside their “game” and simply write in our own guys.
3. The only thing stopping us is our failure to understand this.

(more)

Pizza is a Vegetable! LOL

You know how to tell when someone is really crazy? It’s when everyone is looking at them and telling them that they are really in trouble, and then they do something really stupid anyway!

Over 90% of us distrust Congress. And yesterday, with everyone watching, they did something really, really stupid! (more)

Beyond Occupy, A 4th Way

There is massive discontent in America today. Violence in the streets, bankruptcies, an economy on the brink of failure, elected officials unable to cope, voters on the left and the right outraged, environmental degradation, home foreclosures. (more)

How Did It Happen?

My book was released three days ago and I am heartened and excited at the initial response of friends, colleagues, and strangers.  Sometimes I need to pinch myself.  Did I really write a book challenging the current political landscape?

The premise of the book, if you have not yet read it yet, is simple.   (more)

One year from today we can replace all 537 federally elected officials with sane, ethical, and adult Americans.

I’m scared.

My world is in big trouble and I am very worried.  All around me I see distressing signs that frighten me.

I want to relax and enjoy my life and my family, but I keep getting information that disturbs me.  I put myself in the shoes of my grandkids and I feel ashamed.  You and I are the stewards of their world, and we have blown it.   (more)

Thank You.

I want to thank you for your support. I appreciate you emails, calls, letters, showing up for the debates, volunteering, your contributions, and your vote. When all the votes have been counted, nearly a thousand people will have supported my common sense, bi-partisan, and “Get the money out of politics” platform. This is amazing to me, since there was zero money spent on advertising or marketing.

I was naïve and started campaigning late but I feel that my supporters and I had the opportunity to show young people and others that democracy is a gift and something we all need to participate in; it is lack of participation that has gotten us into our current mess.

I liked the words of Jared Huffman, the leader of the pack of candidates and the presumptive next Congressman for the 2nd District, spoken after he won the primary:

(more)