About the Blog and the Author
Why this blog? For many years people have told me my strengths are: (i) making accurate predictions on social and economic issues long before others (ii) offering practical solutions to complex problems (iii) teaching effectively.
As the title of the blog notes, I believe the United States is headed for another revolution, probably by CY2020. As a country we seem to have a revolution about every 50 years. Here’s my count of the revolutions.
- Revolution against British rule, which did not end until the War of 1812
- Internal revolution, or Civil War, 1861-1865
- Industrial revolution – say 1910-1917 – combination of an influx of foreign immigrants and migration from farms to cities
- Rights revolution, civil rights, women’s rights, environmental rights occurred late 1960’s, early 1970’s
- Fifth revolution, which I have labeled the ‘Revenge Revolution,’ which is what this blog is all about.
While I believe a revolution of sorts is inevitable, how we as a country manage the revolution will determine the amount of violence and bloodshed. I’ve designed the blog to lay out what I think are the issues, explain in what I hope are understandable terms, and then offer practical solutions.
The solutions are woven into a story. We all seem to learn more effectively with stories. I hope you find these stories interesting and helpful in understanding topics and proposed solutions. Doubtless you will not agree with all the proposed solutions…but at least you will have been presented another perspective.
Some of the stories seem more personal in nature and less about policy. I am including these segments because we are all products of our environment. We cannot divorce completely professional lives from our personal lives and background.
If you have a political bent leaning strongly left or right, you’re likely to be disappointed in some of the proposed solutions. The goal is to present problems and solutions in an understandable way. Some solutions might lean more right; others might lean more left. I’m not keeping score about which side has more solutions. I hope you don’t try to keep score either.
If you are a stickler for details, then read no farther. I’ve done my homework and the data are sound enough. If you want to nitpick, OK. But you’ll be missing the point. Listen to people making policy decisions in the United States. Whether voters or elected officials, few grasp the basics of an issue. The real world operates using less than perfect information.
I also decided my character in the story should be an assumed name. Why? To provide more freedom to address issues without the reader immediately assuming some sort of bias on my part.
The character name, “Jordan Abel” evolved one day. As far as the names and traits of the characters, like any author, I suppose, these are based in part on people one knows. If you are a friend and recognize yourself, don’t take the character too seriously. The topic is serious but using you as a base for the character was convenient.
We all have quirks and it was much easier to write with someone in mind than to construct a character. Besides, even the seeming “bad guys” in this blog have some positive traits. Keep reading, you’ll turn out OK…and I will deny to everyone else that you are the model for the character.
Where is this blog going? I don’t know. I intend to keep writing. National politics and personal issues provide an endless source of material. I also hope that my prediction about an armed revolution in the US is exaggerated. However, from everything that is happening in the US, I think a revolution is inevitable.
If no one reads the blog, that’s OK. Just starting the blog and the writing has been great fun…and at times cathartic. If you are a reader, I hope you enjoy it and I hope, on occasion, to provoke you to think about issues a bit differently. Thanks for your time. John R. Dabels for Jordan Abel
More about the author, http://www.linkedin.com/in.johndabels

Pingback: #214 Trade Agreements Cost Jobs! But Why? (Part 1) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #215 Trade Agreements Cost Jobs! But Why? (Part 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #216 Trade Agreements Cost Jobs! But Why? (Part 3) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #217 Trade Agreements Cost Jobs! But Why? (Part 4 of 4) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #218 Voting for the Devil You Know vs the Devil You Don’t Know | usrevolution5
Pingback: #219 Rioters in Charlotte. Drive Looking through the Windshield or the Rearview Mirror? (Part 1) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #220 Rioters in Charlotte. Drive Looking through the Windshield or the Rearview Mirror? (Part 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #221 Rioters in Charlotte. Drive Looking through the Windshield or the Rearview Mirror? (Part 3) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #222 Rioters in Charlotte. Drive Looking through the Windshield or the Rearview Mirror? (Part 4) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #223 Rioters in Charlotte. Drive Looking through the Windshield or the Rearview Mirror? (Part 5) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #224 Rioters in Charlotte vs Role Models (con’t) (Part 6 of 6) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #225 Revenge Revolution: Some Benefits (Part 1) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #226 Revenge Revolution: Some Lessons Learned (Part 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #227 Post Revenge Revolutions: Some Lessons Learned (Part 3) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #228 Post Revenge Revolution: Lessons Learned — Presidential Physical, Mental Exams (Part 4) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #229 Post Revenge Revolution: Lessons Learned – Economic Policy Fundamentals: Taxes (Part 5) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #230 Post Revenge Revolution Lessons — Republican Economics – 3-Card Monte (Part 6) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #231 Lessons from Revenge Revolution: Trump’s ‘Incompetents Club’ Cabinet (Part 7) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #232 Year-End Review. Is a Revenge Revolution Still Likely? | usrevolution5
Pingback: #233 Is Revenge Revolution Still Likely? Yes, Outlook Worse. (Part 2 of 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #234 The Bet: How Long before Trump Leaves Office? | usrevolution5
Pingback: #235 The Set-Up. Primer from “Practical, Affordable Policies Institute” (Part 1) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #198 Lessons from Feeling the Bern and the Donald (Part 8) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #199 Bullying, Blame and Blasphemy (Part 9 of 9) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #200 US Microcosm: Raleigh Republicans Render Revenge | usrevolution5
Pingback: #201 Reliving Archie Bunker (Part 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #202 Reliving Archie Bunker (Part 3) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #203 Reliving Archie Bunker (Part 4 of 4) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #236 Primer Cha 1: You Can’t Drive Very Fast Only Looking in the Rearview Mirror | usrevolution5
Pingback: #237 Primer Cha2: Basic Economics and Common Sense Test | usrevolution5
Pingback: #238 Primer Cha 3: Is the Federal Debt Too High? Well, Not Really. | usrevolution5
Pingback: #239 Cha 4: Unemployment Rate: A Lagging Indicator | usrevolution5
Pingback: #240 Primer: Cha 5 — Trends and Seasonally Adjusted Rates | usrevolution5
Pingback: #241 Creating Societal Wealth: Manufacturing | usrevolution5
Pingback: #242 Primer Cha 7: Eliminating Incentive to Pillage | usrevolution5
Pingback: #243 Primer Cha 8: “What’s Good for General Motors is Good for the Country.” Still True? | usrevolution5
Pingback: #244 Recall When the Donald Was Taken Out | usrevolution5
Pingback: #245 Trump Taken Out – Why? Follow the Money (Part 2) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #246 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 3) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #247 Who Took Out Howdy Doody…err the Donald? (Part 4) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #248 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 5) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #249 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 6) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #250 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 7of7) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #251 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 8) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #252 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 9) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #253 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 10) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #254 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 11) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #255 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 12) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #256 Who Took Out the Donald? (Part 13) (Were some Trump voters brainwashed?) | usrevolution5
Pingback: #257 Who Took Out the Donald? (Were Some Trump Supporters Brainwashed?) (Part 14/14) | usrevolution5