Saturday, March 22, 2008

Process

"Though the human body is born complete in one moment, the birth of the human heart is an ongoing process. It is being birthed in every experience of your life. Everything that happens to you has the potential to deepen you. It brings to birth within you new territories of the heart."

-- John O'Donoghue. Anam Cara. New York: Cliff Street Books, 1997.

Einstein knew a few things

"We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them."
-- Albert Einstein

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Readings on Greed

Robert Greenwald has compiled a short bibliography of articles on the current trend of personal greed and its devastating effects on the poor, the middle class, and our social fabric. Another excellent article from Rolling Stone is Paul Krugman's "The Great Wealth Transfer."

Saturday, November 24, 2007

A Common Word

Muslim leaders declare the unifying tenets of the three Abrahamic faiths in an letter submitted in September 2007 to Pope Benedict XVI: "A Common Word Among Us."

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Terror is in the Eye of the Beholder

In this 2004 interview Mariane Pearl displays great maturity and insight as she reflects on her experience during and after the abduction and execution of her husband, Daniel. The 50-minutes interview is from the radio show, "Speaking of Faith. with Krista Tippett." To listen, download, or read a transcript of the interview, click here. Here's an excerpt:
"For me they clearly haven't won as I'm still standing, because to take somebody's life is nothing, you know? If you have seven, eight people in a room and the person has shackle and you kill him, you know, then that's not a victory. And there is something bigger than that, and the spirit is what makes us human. And that's the only way you can challenge those people because, physically, I could never be as ruthless as they are, and I'm not interested in being as ruthless as they are. So that's not even something I'm considering. But you cannot get hold of a strong spirit, and I think that's why Danny opposed them. That's why I oppose them, and that's why hopefully our son will oppose them. And that's something, whatever you do, you can imprison someone, you can kill that person, if they resist you mentally, you — that's it. You haven't claimed anything. And I think they know that."

Sunday, June 24, 2007

If we don't save Democracy, who will?

Bill Moyers delivered a transformative speech to the the United Church of Christ's bi-annual General Synod in Hartford yesterday. Moyer's talk provides moving examples of the current threats to American democracy and of outlandish economic and social injustice. And his talk calls th church to action, for "it is a small, committed, determined people of conscience that can turn this country around," he says. "Poverty and injustice are religious issues and Jesus moves among the disinherited." It is time, he says, to "drive the money changers out of the temples of Democracy." Listen to it via the UCC's video archive.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Not Buying It

Here's a New York Times article that glimpses extraordinary personal dedication to limiting growth: Not Buying It.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Is that the emperor without any clothes?

In this essay from The New York Review of Books, Cheney: The Fatal Touch, Joan Didion manages, through unremitting scholarship, to disrobe our vice-emperor.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Sailing is divine

Sailing is a wonderful way to engage with beauty... of wind, waves, the curve of a sail and a hull, the strain of a line staying true. The boat doesn't move by dominating its surroundings, but through understanding, yielding, respecting. Will and I were lucky enough to go sailing overnight last week with my oldest friend, Bill, on his beautiful ketch Black Pearl.

Saturday, June 24, 2006

American Indian/European Fusion

I went to a wonderful concert Monday night, sponsored by Robert Jonas's Empty Bell center, and featuring Vince Redhouse. Vince had been a jazz musician from childhood who, at age 37, embraced his "Indianhood" and began playing the Indian flute. He extended its traditional Dorian scale into a full chromatic scale, and thereby can perform with European instruments in playing classical western music, like Satie and Debussy. He was joined Monday by drums and two electric guitars. The effect is magical and a little haunting as he weaves the sounds of the two cultures into a musical unity that belies our visceral memory of them at war.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Keeping it simple

In a 3/1 salon.com artlcle entitled Impeach Bush,Garrison Keillor suggests "The U.S. Constitution provides a simple ultimate way to hold him to account for war crimes and the failure to attend to the country's defense. Impeach him and let the Senate hear the evidence." Hear, hear.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Saving Our Democracy

Bill Moyers takes on the scandal that is our national government in a Feb. 27 article, Saving Our Democracy on http://alternet.org. As usual, he cuts to the heart of the matter while providing full -- in this case, lurid -- detail. Here are a few conclusions, but you've got to read the article for the stories behind them. They made my hair stand on end.
"It is a Dick Cheney world out there -- a world where politicians and lobbyists hunt together, dine together, drink together, play together, pray together and prey together, all the while carving up the world according to their own interests."

...The recent book, "Economic Apartheid in America: A Primer on Economic Inequality" and Insecurity, describes how "thirty zipcodes in America have become fabulously wealthy" while "whole urban and rural communities are languishing in unemployment, crumbling infrastructure, growing insecurity, and fear."

...In the words of Al Meyeroff, the Los Angeles attorney who led a
successful class action suit for the workers on Saipan, the people who
now control the U.S. Government today want "a society run by the
powerful, oblivious to the weak, free of any oversight, enjoying a cozy
relationship with government, and thriving on crony capitalism."

... If a player sliding into home plate reached into his pocket and handed the umpire $1000 before he made the call, what would we call that? A bribe. And if a lawyer handed a judge $1000 before he issued a ruling, what do we call that? A bribe. But when a lobbyist or CEO sidles up to a member of Congress at a fundraiser or in a skybox and hands him a check for $1000, what do we call that? A campaign contribution.

...Think about this: Californians could buy back their elected representatives at a cost of about $5 or $6 per California resident. Nationally we could buy back our Congress and the White House with full public financing for about $10 per taxpayer per year. You can check this out on the website Public Campaign.Public funding won't solve all the problems. There's no way to legislate truly immoral people from abusing our trust. But it would go a long way to breaking the link between big donors and public officials and to restoring democracy to the people. Until we offer qualified candidates a different source of funding for their campaigns -- "clean," disinterested, accountable public money -- the selling of America will go on.
Thank you, Bill Moyers.

Saturday, November 05, 2005

Conserving Comm[on]Unity

Here's Wendell Berry's manifesto for conserving community through localism. Berry argues persuasively that: "the great, centralized economic entities of our time do not come into rural places in order to improve them by 'creating jobs.' They come to take as much of value as they can take, as cheaply and as quickly as they can take it.... They are structures in which, as my brother says, "the buck never stops." The buck is processed up the hierarchy until finally it is passed to "the shareholders," who characteristically are too widely dispersed, too poorly informed, and too unconcerned to be responsible for anything. The ideal of the modern corporation is to be (in terms of its own advantage) anywhere and (in terms of local accountability) nowhere."

Our experience calls us to action. Says Berry, "We are now pretty obviously facing the possibility of a world that the supranational corporations, and the governments and educational systems that serve them, will control entirely for their own enrichment-and, incidentally and inescapably, for the impoverishment of all the rest of us This will be a world in which the cultures that preserve nature and rural life will simply be disallowed. It will be, as our experience already suggests, a postagricultural world. But as we now begin to see, you cannot have a postagricultural world that is not also postdemocratic, postreligious, postnatural-in other words, it will be posthuman, contrary to the best that we have meant by "humanity."

The work, says Berry, is to recognize the emerging "party of local community." The membership of this party is scattered, but increasingly self-aware, he writes. "They are people who take a generous and neighborly view of self-preservation; they do not believe that they can survive and flourish by the rule of dog eat dog; they do not believe that they can succeed by defeating or destroying or selling or using up everything but themselves. They doubt that good solutions can be produced by violence. They want to preserve the precious things of nature and of human culture and pass them on to their children. They want the world's fields and forests to be productive; they do not want them to be destroyed for the sake of production. They know you cannot be a democrat (small d ) or a conservationist and at the same time a proponent of the supranational corporate economy. They believe-they know from their experience-that the neighborhood, the local community, is the proper place and frame of reference for responsible work. 'They see that no commonwealth or community of interest can be defined by greed. They know that things connect-that farming, for example, is connected to nature, and food to farming, and health to food-and they want to preserve the connections. They know that a healthy local community cannot be replaced by a market or an entertainment industry or an information highway. They know that contrary to all the unmeaning and unmeant political talk about "job creation," work ought not to be merely a bone thrown to otherwise unemployed. They know that work ought to be necessary; it ought to be good, it ought to be satisfying and dignifying to the people who do it, and genuinely useful and pleasing to the people for whom it is done."

Berry continues with a 17-point charter for governance of the local common wealth, and thoughts about growing local food supply as a core process in the system.

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Break the chains to Wal-Mart

Speaking of returning the holy to the holidays, here's a national campaign to "buycott" Wal-Mart and the other "big box" stores in favor of local, organic, sustainable. Includes a directory of eco-friendly products.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

May WalMart merchandise the holidays without us

Here's a wonderful essay by Meredith Jordan that reminds us to treasure the holy in our upcoming holidays.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Clergy decry the co-opting of religious values

In a clarion letter to our weekly newspaper in Amhest, Mass., local Christian and Jewish clergy call us all to do more than passively watch the current administration destroy our world and the lives of our fellows, and in the name of God.

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Does Wal-Mart support "familyvalues"?

The conversation about how to best protect the family will be expanded formally Nov. 13-20 during a "Wal-Mart Week of Action" sponsored by the United Church of Christ.

The actions don't include boycott, but rather seek to open a conversation about whether Wal-Mart's employee treatment is good for the families and communities it serves.
"Does Wal-Mart really support strong, healthy families with its employment practices? Does it seek to contribute to the long-term economic health and stability of the regions where it does business?" [UCC President] Thomas asks. "Thus far, Wal-Mart has not been able to demonstrate that it really says 'yes' to these critical questions."
A centerpiece of the week's actions will be coordinated screenings for UCC congregations of "The Wal-Mart Movie" by Robert Greenwald.

Thursday, September 08, 2005