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Searching For The REAL Bob Basso

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Bob Basso's "Thomas Paine" is no fun at all - and Bob used to be a fun guy.

Bob Basso is a pioneer of REAL wellness who spreads a message of humor, fun and happiness, even (especially) at workplaces.  Bob has enjoyed a long career as an entertaining motivator-trainer, captivating speaker and corporate workshop leader. I have long enjoyed Bob Basso's work as well as his friendship.  He is terrific as a humorist and promoter of fun.  He is, in my view, an effective advocate for happiness, a key element of REAL wellness.  His passion has been helping employees make work fun - or at least more enjoyable. 

Lately, however, he seems to have given up on fun.  Lately, Bob has become a seriously bent-out-of-shape character performing an act on YouTube as Tom Paine. Basso's Paine character calls for a The Second American Revolution.  Basso as Paine sounds more like Glenn Beck bloviating on Foxx News.  It's a dreadful act, in my opinion that reminds us that free speech works for and against the people who enshrine and protect it.  The freedom to speak freely gives us the right to say what we like and the duty to tolerate speech we consider ridiculous.  We are wise to do both with equal vigor - and with civility.
 
Bob Basso's Paine is no fun at all. The rant elicits no laughter, no joy, no happiness and certainly leads not to creativity, spontaneity or exuberance.  Bob has gone from fun to fury, from a message that brings people together to one that divides Americans into warring camps.  It's hard to believe, but Bob Basso has turned into a Thomas Paine few historians not Right Wing Republican fundamentalists would recognize. Basically, I think Bob Basso's new role as a revolutionary anti-government rabble-rouser is simply awful. The impression he does of Paine is also a terrible disservice to the legacy of the great man's memory and ignores his humanist philosophy that got him in so much trouble with the very types of orthodox religionists to whom Basso's Paine appeals.
 
PaineA British citizen at the time of the Nation's founding, Thomas Paine was a writer and intellectual, as well as revolutionary leader.  He played a key role in helping advance the independence of the American colonies.  He was a friend of Jefferson and other Founding Fathers.  He promoted Enlightenment ideals.  He wrote Common Sense, Rights of Man and Age of Reason.  He challenged Christian doctrine while promoting rational thinking. You would never recognize the real Thomas Paine in the screeching impression Basso offers on YouTube.  However, Bob Basso's reactionary distortions of Paine's ideas and current problems in America are a big hit with the estimated three million viewers who have tuned in to the rants. C'est dommage.
 
Of course, there are indeed very good reasons to oppose much that Congress has done with its egregiously excessive perks and junkets, privileges, spending and multiple abuses of the public trust.  Unfortunately, Basso's scattershot screaming and hollering (while dressed as Thomas Paine) offer no distinction of good from bad policies, nor does he provide specifics or a focus on identifiable evildoers.
 
Wellness Report adviser Bob Ludlow looked at the YouTube show and wrote this assessment of Basso's performance: More right-wing paranoia. Every point he so pompously pronounces as though handed down from on high, or from the Founding Fathers, is debatable. What garbage. Sounds like he took writings from Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh, put them in a blender and came up with a pretentious, indigestible word salad.
 
As Ludlow noted, not everything attacked by Basso/Paine is ridiculous - some criticisms are on target: if you keep throwing mud balls at a wall, some of them will stick. Congress DOES rip off the public, but that is something nearly everyone agrees on.  It's a small part of the overall rant.
 
Ludlow concludes: There is no question that this country is deeply, hopelessly divided: the lunatic descendants of the John Birch Society have multiplied profusely and have come home to roost, and they're armed to the teeth. Now they look to people like Limbaugh, Michelle Bachman, Joe the Plumber, and Sarah Palin, among others, for their sanctimonious, simple-minded platitudes. The only group I hold more contempt for are young-earth creationists, who think people put saddles on dinosaurs and rode around on them.
 
Another adviser, David Gresko, thought Basso's transformation from a cheerful positive humor promoter to angry extremist seemed unpleasantly familiar: One day a friend seems fairly normal, then gets a bump on the head and turns into a Rush Limbaugh follower. You have to wonder if his true self is the guy promoting fun at work or the maniac on YouTube.  It always makes me laugh when a Right-Wing extremist quotes the founding fathers.  Most of them, particularly Thomas Jefferson, wouldn't have a snowball's chance in hell of election today.  A commitment to separation of church and state would be too controversial.  Jefferson once took it upon himself to rewrite the New Testament.  Imagine a Presidential candidate found guilty of rewriting 'God's word.'
 
The lunatic Right loves the anti-government ranting, but as a friend of Bob Basso the humorist, the former REAL wellness artist, I find it hugely disappointing.
 
I prefer to write about the Bob Basso I knew years ago, who produced This Job Should Be Fun: The New Profit Strategy For Managing People In Tough Times (written with Judi Klosek).
 
I want to be clear about one thing: Unlike the biggest moral charlatans in American politics, particularly Republican Representatives Robert Livingston, Mark Foley and Newt Gingrich, Senators Larry Craig and David Vitter and most recently Governor Mark Sanford, my friend Bob Basso is no hypocrite.  He may be distorting Tom Paine and serving as a propagandist for the far Right, but he does not say one thing (be pure and righteous, protect the sanctity of marriage, love God and so on) and do another.  He IS, however, doing one thing (urging workers and others to lighten up) while inspiring the worst among us to screaming anger.
 
I like the old Bob Basso more than the new (and faux) Tom Paine.
 
When I wrote about Bob Basso's work a few years ago, he wrote back, signing off with these words: Your article, as usual, is lucid, simple and always on point.
 
I'll let you know if Bob writes again, and if he still finds my articles lucid, simple and on point.  (At the time this was posted, attempts to contact Bob had been unsuccessful  If he's willing, a follow-up story with his own perspective on the Paine performance - and his responses to this essay, will be provided.

For a fuller understanding and appreciation of the other, happy and cheerful Bob Basso, enjoy this essay about his earlier work (posted this week at SeekWellness.com).  The title of the essay is Bob Basso - A Pioneer Of REAL Worksite Wellness Humor, Fun And Happiness.

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Comments (8)

Submitted by Ron Wacik (not verified) on Mon, 07/13/2009 - 12:02pm.

Trusted MD is apparently a liberal far left publication. This review of Bob's Thomas Paine message is ludicrous. Bob's message was well presented and accurate.

This is my first and last exposure to Trusted.MD

Submitted by Bec (not verified) on Tue, 07/14/2009 - 2:17pm.

Why is it that anyone with a dissenting opinion has to be labeled a "liberal far left publication", Rick Wacik?  I think Ardell's article was thoughtful and offered me more of an insight to Bob Basso than I had prior to reading it.  I thought he was always a screaming lunatic who did a historically inaccurate and utterly insulting impersonation of the noble Thomas Paine.   After reading Mr. Ardell's article, my view of Basso has softened a little.  

 And because of your response, Mr. Wacik, my view of right-wing zealots - as pseudo-patriots who claim to love America but hate Americans - as dead on accurate.  

Submitted by Don Ardell (not verified) on Tue, 07/14/2009 - 2:31pm.

My thanks to both parties who commented on this essay. 

After study, reflection and deep pondering, I have decided I rather incline toward the interpretation of my piece put forward by Bec.

Thanks to all for feedback. 

Submitted by walker on Tue, 07/14/2009 - 7:25pm.

I listen to people diverting their energies to insulting this guy and it worries me.  He's tough to blame for these principles. One comment describes the videos as a word salad. Really, I think there are a finite number of concepts presented here in these Bob Basso monologues. Every word is accounted for. If you didn't catch  this, watch it again. Someone else here says that most of it is a pompous rant for the exception of something about  congressional ripoff of some kind. My viewpoint is simple; forget about Bob Basso for a moment and see if you can debate  each of these ideas until you exhaust your resources.

Submitted by Confused in PA (not verified) on Wed, 07/15/2009 - 1:36pm.

This seems to be an attempt to waive your hand to address an annoyance than a serious attempt to discuss what Mr. Basso speaks about in his 'presentations'.

Word salad?  Not at all.  It seems as though you were either unable or unwilling (possibly both) to actually listen to the points being made.  You cannot see the trees for the forest here.  Lumping everthing into the neat little package of "right wing paranoia" is lazy.

 I would be interested in hearing a point by point rebuttal though.  I certainly didn't agree with everything Mr. Basso said but he is right on with more than one of them. 

The main idea I took from his little youtube speech was:  "We don't hold our government accountable anymore."  

 I guess if you love big government that probably doesn't look like a big problem but to many it is. 

It's been true for several decades now through adminstrations from both parties.  We are removed from goverment and from actually doing something meaningful about it.  Most people won't even bother to send an email.

So please tell us what you specifically disagree with. 

Submitted by Al (not verified) on Thu, 07/23/2009 - 6:42pm.

I see that instead of debating what Basso says point by point you would rather tack labels on him, complain that he's no fun anymore and walk away patting yourself on the back.

You accuse him of trying to divide people and immediately jump to the other side of the deep divide by demonizing those who don't agree with your dogma.

 What I see from you in this piece is an extremist, elitist author of a blog who is jealous of another writer who has more people paying attention to his  words.

Submitted by R M Edaps (not verified) on Tue, 09/01/2009 - 12:52am.

Basso's Thomas Paine is the most important role of his life.....he has inspired thousands if not millions of Americans to do something to prevent a communist/socialist/marxist president from turning the USA into a larger version of Venezuela, or worse.

My hat is off to Basso, who I remember as a TV personality in Honolulu in the early 70's.  Wake up Americans, listen to Basso's Thomas Paine before he is outlawed, and America as we know it is no more.

Submitted by Matt Schwartz (not verified) on Sun, 11/01/2009 - 4:43pm.

Mr. Ardell, it does appear to me that your criticisms of Bob Basso are the results of your philosophical differences with him as opposed to a well reasoned analysis of the substance of his presentations.  I state this because there is a palpable political bias in your piece.  For example, when you refer to the "biggest moral charlatans" in politics, you mnetion only Republicans when you could have easily also referenced Ted Kennedy's storied peccadilloes (which include academic cheating and serial philandering -- not to mention a likely DUI murder).  Or Bill Clinton's serial philandering and resulting perjury.  You could have also referenced any of the tax cheats that have been appointed by President Obama, or Rep. Charlie Rangell (D-NY) who chairs the tax oriented Ways & Means committee.  Or the stingy Obamas and Bidens who seek to redistribute our wealth to the poor, but who have not deigned to give any meaningful amount of their own money to charity.  Or William Jefferson's (D-LA) bribery counts.  Or Jack Murtha's obscene serial wasteful earmarks that continually subsidize a useless airport in the middle of Pennsylvania.  But you did not.  And these omissions speak volumes about your tendentious disposition.

If you were not so blinded by your political bias, you would realize that Bob Basso is not dividing people, but instead uniting people behind a worthy cause -- to keep our elected officials in check and make sure they answer to the people whom they purportedly represent.  Why can't you be on board with that agenda?  Do you like and appreciate the status quo of a self-interested, elitist, and corrupt governing body that thinks nothing of lining their own pockets while depleting yours?   Sure, Mr. Basso's pleas are not fun.  Clearly, he's not going for "fun" when he makes these videos.  Are you the kind of person who would have been cracking jokes as the Germans marched into the Sudetenland?  These are serious times plagued by what can eventually evolve into existential threats to our society.  The circumstances in which we now find ourselves do not beg for levity.

You and Ludlow (who is that man anyway, and why is his biased opinion relevant -- aside from the fact that it comports with your own?)  have no idea about the people to which Bob Basso appeals.  You would like to think that he appeals to that convenient target of your common ire known as the "Religious Right" -- Because, obviously, anyone who disagrees with you MUST be a member of that dastardly Religious Right group.  You and Ludlow need to wake up and imbibe a few shots of reality.  Most of the country is extrememly alarmed about the direction into which our government is leading this country.  Andy while there are probably many fundamentalist Christians who fall into this category, you're missing the boat when you fail to see that this group is also comprised of millions of all kinds of Christians, Jews and atheists; Regular families; Doctors, lawyers and blue collar workers, alike.  There is a huge movement brewing in our country.  Do you think it is a coincidence that Glenn Beck has boffo ratings?  It's not that Glenn Beck is any great talent or intellectual.  It's because he is expressing the legitimate concerns of a majority of people in this country as the so-called "mainstream media" deliberately ignores them. 

Now, I understand if you're one of those big government guys who sees no trouble at all with things like socializing medicine, nationalizing private companies, infringing on people's rights to own guns or gradually ceding American sovereignty to some international body like the United Nations.  And if this is the case, you should try to understand one thing;  Guys like Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Bob Bosso are not your problem.  They are merely symptoms of your problem.  They are actually REFLECTIONS of your problem.  Your problem, sir, is the American people.  Americans, by and large, do not like Socialism.  They do not like tyranny or totalitarianism.  And they are very fond of their liberty.  So when these independent-minded, hard-working producers of society perceive threats against their freedom, their property and their general way of life emerging, they will unite and do something about it.  And the joy, laughter and happiness you seem to be seeking in Bob Bosso's work will only be detected after we succeed in restoring proper government. 

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