Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Jacksonville's Ideological Brawl Over Breasts at MOCA

On public radio this morning, I heard an interview and call-in show about Jacksonville's City Council President Yarborough suggesting that the photo of a nude pregnant woman in the city's leading museum MOCA have some sort of draping over the breasts  in order to avoid offending parents that do not wish to have their children exposed to such imagery while otherwise teaching them about art in a museum.

Personally, I disagree with the Council President.  I have a lot of conservative, religious preferences, but they are PERSONAL. Regardless of anyone's idea of decency, my religion (as I can only interpret it) teaches me that my values and morals are best upheld by CHOICE, rendering unto "Caesar what is Caesar's and unto God what is God's." I think most if not all censorship is ultimately counterproductive, particularly when it comes to the human body and sexuality.  After all, we want most what we can't have, so if you make something like the female breast extremely taboo under any and all circumstances, sexual or otherwise, odds are that children and adolescents, especially, are going to be that much more focused and interested in seeing what they are told they cannot - and, most likely, sexually objectifying it in the process. Other nations (such as Japan, if I'm not mistaken) are not nearly as strict in these regards yet, as a society, seem to have fewer sex crimes and so forth. Unless I'm mistaken, the museum is a public place, so to me, that means it should at least be ALLOWED to represent as much of society as it wants in order to be relevant to as many as possible. Therefore, if you're offended, simply don't look or don't go. There are, for better or worse, other ways to teach children about art.

Then, there's the other side of this coin - the side in which one caller linked Yarborough to the city's conservative and therefore religious nature and compared his views and alleged intentions to those of ISIS', which is imposing strict Islamic law everywhere it goes. While I see where he's coming from, I wonder if his seemingly tolerant attitude would lead him to protest the suing of a school, a business or anyone else that would be and has been sued in the recent past over public displays of religious symbols within Christmas and/or other holiday displays. Those that sue generally cite separation of church and state, but while I cannot claim to be an expert or have a perfect solution, I think the intention of that clause in our law is way too conveniently and narrowly interpreted by BOTH sides on a regular basis.  Personally, I believe it means that religious institutions no longer have the ability to help make or enforce actual laws the way the Catholic Church and the Church of England might have in centuries' past. The ability to lobby and to influence legislators and their legislation, though, is a right given to ALL Americans. It should not be taken away from religious people and institutions or from anyone else precisely BECAUSE the nation is so big and so diverse.  After all, individual elections are never going to represent the interests of everyone, no matter how they are funded or how fairly they are conducted. Lobbying, as it were - even if you resent the ease with which the rich and big business seem to do it over those of the so-called "ordinary" citizens - allows segments of the population to be heard even if they are not specifically represented by the results of individual elections. If nothing else, at the end of it all, you're left with the plain and simple fact of life not always seeming fair and not everyone can get exactly what they want or be pleased ALL of the times.  Therefore, the most fair thing to do in my opinion is simply to take turns.    

In conclusion, while I disagree with Mr. Yarbrough's stance that said photo should somehow be censored, my beef with so-called "progressives" is that, most of the time, their method of promoting tolerance and diversity is actually to suppress or remove that which is perceived by them to cause the most conflict - i.e., inherently religious and/or nationalist iconography and ideas. They often claim to be non-conformist, yet they value solidarity on the issues that mean the most to them and seek to ostracize and diminish anyone that disagrees as somehow being ignorant, regressive, not representative of the "majority" and therefore in need of being rooted out either immediately or systematically. To me, that's neither tolerance nor diversity because you can't tolerate something to which you do not expose yourself and you cannot be "diverse" if you root out of society all elements which you think are divisive, outdated or just plain wrong.  What I believe the progressive side is really trying to avoid is not intolerance or mass conformity, but conflict.  It's an understandable goal, to be sure, but whether it is over a nude photo or even a cop's actions in Ferguson, Missouri, human nature requires that we MUST allow for conflict in order to fairly work through social issues as well as to allow diversity and therefore BE tolerant.  It isn't always pretty or fun, but I do believe it to be a fact. The alternative, which I would endorse, would simply be to promote self-restraint and say, "The fact that someone disagrees with you and does not like you should not necessarily be an excuse for violence or excessive civil unrest."

Like the pans people used to keep under their beds to be emptied later, before modern plumbing - out of sight and out of mind - it is what it is and exists whether you see it or not. Or, in other words (which I hope you'll pardon), "Shit happens." 'Think you're tolerant and pro-diversity? Then get over it. ;)

Thursday, November 6, 2014

RE: Tuesday's Midterm Vote (or lack thereof) and the Excuses that Keep Us from Meeting Our Government Halfway on Issues We Claim to Care So Much About

In lieu of Tuesday's election, in which only a third of registered voters even bothered to vote, I wanted to make some observations about what our place in is in the political system as American voters versus what it could be. Since I made a promise of sorts not to talk much about these things on my personal Facebook page, I'll do it here instead - yet, I would like to still try to be as UN-partisan as possible so as to reach and make as much sense to as many as I hopefully can.

It is an undeniable fact that whatever politicians say on the campaign trail, they ultimately wind up with campaigns funded almost exclusively by the government and, to a greater extent, wealthy individuals and private corporations. The concern that this prevents policy makers from listening and responding to the needs and desires of most outside of the single digit percentage of wealthy people, groups and businesses is legitimate.  However, I do not believe that such action should be taken solely by the federal government, itself.

A lot of this phenomena - which has been an issue to some degree since the turn of the 20th century - is due to industrialization and the expanding size of the nation until as recently as about fifty or sixty years ago, give or take. The structure of the government, size of the nation and the diversity of people to represent based on a number of factors make giving even half of them an informed set of choices at all, with information available on both sides (or more) and on a range of issues, a logistical and financial challenge.  Increasingly, candidates have two choices: Stick to public funding and donations out of fairness, yet risk an ever-struggling campaigns that might not reach everyone, limiting votes and keeping them from helping those people, anyway - or rely heavily upon private donors that may expect much in return, leaving little time to adequately represent the majority.  Though there are no fully justifiable excuses, it's a tough call to make and a tough balance to strike.

A number of people like to use other nations such as Norway as an example of the kind of government that America should have and, specifically, the way America should conduct its elections and allow for their fair funding and carrying out. What I think too many seem to overlook, though, is that they're not immune to the effects of industrialization, either.  Norway, itself, has a government and economy comprised of both capitalist and socialist elements - which seem to work well in the country (whose population, though, is literally 1/60'th the size of the U.S.) - but it also benefits from a number of natural resources and valuable exports, including an oil and gas industry that is about the best there is outside of the Middle East.  Americans like to say that the oil industry, for example, has too much control and influence in politics, but I would be surprised if a lot of the tax and other monies used by governments such as Norway's to pay for their campaigns does not come from the taxes and fees collected from the very same industries, which the government must be motivated to keep healthy to continue having that well to tap.

However we may feel about the results and for whatever reasons, I think an important takeaway from Tuesday's midterm elections is that the American public is just not as engaged as it should be in its own governance.  Many are disenchanted with both parties and distrusting of the government as it is, as a whole, and I share a lot of those sentiments, but if I may set aside what I see as far too varying definitions of "fairness" for just a moment, I think it is wrong of us as voters to allow something such as who gets to contribute to and influence campaigns and candidates more than others to keep us from exercising our rights not only to vote, but to donate, ourselves.  I remember many a time when I received calls from campaign headquarters asking for donations and had to turn them down. At the time, I had good reasons - and since the recession, I'm sure many with those experiences have, as well - but I keep coming back to one undeniable fact: Until something drastic changes, we all still have CHOICES - if not in how much money we make all the time, then in how we manage our money and what we do or do not spend it on.

I see full well that, to some extent, the government should look after the lower and middle classes and make sure they are at least fairly stable because in some ways, the so-called recreational and luxury spending that generally is the first to get cut in tough times is also what keeps a lot of small businesses open and a lot of people employed.  Take that away and, well... you get the picture.  That said, my grandmother, at 90, hasn't worked more than a little job at a department store and not in at least fifty or sixty years, I don't think.  Having been a widow now for almost 30 years (my grandfather was an insurance salesman), she's been wholly dependent upon a combination of inheritance money and money from Social Security, but she also chose to follow the lead of her husband and invest some of that, however much of it she had, and leave it alone to accumulate while also living a frugal lifestyle. Now, she is arguably the wealthiest on that side of my family, and for reasons having NOTHING to do with specific wages, her education or anything. The same is true of my mother's best friend, whose skill in coding saved her family from bankruptcy and whose relatively uneducated late husband's frugality meant that when he died in 2009, the start of the recession, he left her better off than the otherwise successful entrepreneur to which she recently remarried.

What I'm saying is that it's good that we be socially conscious and hold our government accountable, but no matter what party we belong to, it behooves all of us to take a little more responsibility and at least try to think, "Well, if the government isn't going to do anything or do anything yet, what can I do?" Remember Kennedy's 1960 inaugural address and what he said about asking what we could do for our country? I've seen educated people struggling financially, with families to support, still turning down jobs because they thought they deserved better while continuing to spend regularly on the weekends. They'd pay their taxes, for sure, but talk about actually ponying up money to fund a campaign? I just never heard it. Most of us also act like we don't have time for anything... that is, until it comes down to something we really want to do with whomever we really want to do it.  Also, who is it that frequently shows up to campaign fundraising dinners and so forth?  The idea that only ONE party is in more or less with the super-wealthy is a myth, too, for while the Democrats may not be cozy with Wall Street, they are with Hollywood and most of the audio-visual media, an industry or combination of industries that make up some of the wealthiest, most powerful and most resilient in existence.

Whatever the state of and validity of issues such as income inequality, lack of political compromise, etc., the fact as I see it is that if we're not more willing to make our own sacrifices here and there in order to, say, make more meaningful campaign donations to our candidates of choice so that they can see that we're serious and we count, too, then I'm afraid that the complaints about the wealthiest 1% and their dominance, for example, will continue to ring relatively hollow. While this doesn't mean that NOTHING should be done about these issues on the part of government, it does go to the heart of the fact that the same politicians with which we may currently be upset have come out of and largely been formed by the society that WE have created or allowed to evolve. I've said this before and I'll say it again. If we, as a people, are in any way lazy, corrupted or lacking in sufficient honesty and transparency, then how can we expect the public servants that we raise, educate and elect to be significantly different or better?  

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Affleck Defends Islam on Left-Wing Commentator's Show - Exactly What Is It With Religion and Politics?

Here's the link to Yahoo's article on both the political left's and right's reaction to Ben Affleck, who recently defended Islam when fellow Democrat/Leftist Bill Maher criticized and panned it on his own show.  Here's the link to the Yahoo! news article. I almost feel worse for having even read this, especially since I'm tempted to side with Bill Maher, of all people - someone I see as a vulgar, left-wing comic and commentator.

I'm no expert on Islam, itself, but my half-sister has been a convert since her college days over 25 years ago, so I at least have some idea of what a family of Muslims and/or Muslim converts in America might actually be like.  Unfortunately, some of the facts of my own family and its ties to Islam would lead you to believe that I am, as the article says, an "Islamaphobe" due to certain, more recent incidents.  Nevertheless, I heard a segment on NPR this morning about a Muslim organization coming out to condemn ISIS and believe more now what I always tended to believe, which is that while it would be hypocritical of me to slam or condemn ALL Muslims and forms of Islam, it is at least an assertion made by some Islamic terrorists, themselves, that America is at war not just with terrorists that happen to be Muslim, but with one or more forms of extremist Islam.  This would seem to be and be seen by many Muslims, in fact, as a corrupt branch of their ideology used now to justify violence and oppression and, sadly, to perhaps give some meaning to the somewhat bleak lives of increasingly isolated, young, Muslim males not only in the Middle East, but in Europe and America, as well.  As for Affleck, I simply cannot help but wonder if he'd be as quick to come to the aid of Christianity in a discussion of right-wing militias, many cults and, most recently, of alleged racism and a sense of almost quasi-Fascist nationalism within the Tea Party, itself made up largely of middle and upper-class Christians (or people that identify themselves as Christians, however truthfully or otherwise).

Then again, those issues and concerns about American conservatism (almost always linked to religion, faith and/or Christianity) - whose general ideas on faith, fiscal responsibility (particularly personal responsibility to lessen the need for more government intervention and control), border control/security and some other things I favor and share - are why I started and am about to cap off the final draft of my latest original script (different story - get it? Ha.). Conflicting, often extreme attitudes on Islam's role in current events and a number of other issues are things that I think people on both the political right AND left need to look at more closely and be a little more honest about among one another.  It's getting to the point to where the rhetoric on both sides, particularly among us as voters, is at such a fever pitch that far too many, I believe, might privately just accept some form of benign dictatorship and an end to democracy just to keep the "other side" from gaining and using power.  Incidents such as the Michael Brown shooting, ISIS and lingering resentment over the Iraq War and recent recession make this kind of internal turmoil less noticeable and perhaps even less of a legitimate problem on the political left because, for now, it still controls the White House, the Senate and is able to claim a significant role in shaping or at least reacting to public opinion.

Still, I think the same growing internal divides and swaths of disillusionment within the individual parties, for example, are issues that should be addressed by both sides now and could, I think, become of even greater import in the near future - particularly once Obama leaves office and neither side has a clear scapegoat for its troubles anymore, for lack of a better term.  Whether some like it or not, religion does play a part and factor into this, and on both sides as there are Christians, at least, and probably even a few Muslims that are both fervently right-wing Republican AND fervently left-wing Democrat. A few years ago, I know that some Christian churches (Southern Baptist, I think) were actively discouraging Democrats from joining and attending.  At the same time, I doubt you'll find a lot of Republicans in all-black congregations, some of whom have had very public reverends coming out in condemnation not only of people like George Bush, Republicans and Wall Street, but of America as a whole. Yet, is one more or less Christian than the other? How involved is each side of the same coin in current events and political power struggles, etc?

So what is it with religion and politics?  Frankly, I think they've become far too intermingled, but then the downside to organized religion in just about any form has always been that, while definitely useful and beneficial to many, it has also been used to unscrupulously gain and wield power, control and to cover for or even justify numerous wars and other atrocities.  All I really know for sure is this: I've encountered people that more than just dislike religion and religious faith. They tend to see it as an outdated, outmoded joke on society - an inherently repressive and prejudicial form of humanity trying to control itself and understand its environment - yet, now and increasingly, a detriment to progress being overtaken by science and rapidly on its way out of both world-favor and ultimately existence in order to make room for a "better," more unified human society.  Okay... well, to each their own, but as with other things, I think religion and faith are things to be dismissed at people's own peril.  'Wanna guard against ignorance, for example?  I say don't be so quick to dismiss something like religion and religious people simply because you think of it and them as merely temporary obstacles to a future for humanity that is going to either unfold in your ideological favor or cease to exist altogether.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

RE: Iraq/ISIS - If "All Options Are On The Table," Then Obama Needs To Pick One NOW!

When NBC News starts its broadcast as it did tonight with the identification of a record number of "world hot spots" and a report of yet another on-camera beheading of yet another American reporter - whose fate has been known of for weeks - and by what appears to be the same ISIS militant, no less, I don't know how anyone in their right mind can be comfortable with Obama and Kerry's standard mantra nowadays of, "All options are on the table."  I don't care how bad an idea the Iraq War was.  I don't care what history preceded or led to this situation. I don't care what "right" anyone thinks America has to throw its weight around. I don't care whose feelings could be hurt or whose cultural pride could be stepped upon - Heaven knows enough people are not only willing, but EAGER to sacrifice and offend America's cultural pride in order to make illegal immigrants and potential enemies feel better about themselves.

The fact of the matter is that American citizens - not soldiers, mind you, whose job it is to go in harm's way - but citizens doing what are considered by most to be fairly harmless jobs are being killed, overseas, not just with impunity, but with ADVANCE NOTICE GIVEN while the nation that arguably has one of, if not the biggest, strongest and most capable military and intelligence community on Earth just sits back and does... what?  Fly drones around, taking photos and dropping a few bombs here and there? It's not that this kind of thing hasn't happened before that makes me mad because I'm not naive enough to believe that.  It is what looks, at least, like a foreign relations and national security policy which actually puts the "respect" of cultural differences and feelings ahead in importance of the actual, physical lives of American citizens.  That goes not only for an unwillingness to put ground troops in places like Iraq where, by now, they are so clearly needed (at least temporarily), but also for what seems like an unwillingness to firmly and rationally deal with the unexpected and uninvited influx of South American immigrants, all of whom America cannot possibly take care of or take care of adequately IF, as so many claim, we still have so many economic and unemployment problems of our own and are barely taking care of ourselves, whatever the morality of the scenario(s).

If all options were on the table when it comes to things like Ukraine and Iraq, as they've allegedly been for months now, then why hasn't a better one been implemented?  'Word is that another 300 troops are going to be sent to, um... protect embassies or something.  In the meantime, how is that going to stop ISIS from capturing and beheading yet another American or perhaps European citizen?  Why, if these embassies are so worthy of ground troops when so much of the rest of the region clearly isn't seen as being so deserving, was not Benghazi better protected two years ago?  I know there are people that believe I'm an occasional Fox News/Rush Limbaugh ditto-head, but in fact, most of what admittedly little I know and have heard recently has come from OTHER sources - from interviews and newscasts on public radio and allegedly more moderate news broadcasts. Most of the time, I can't stand Fox News for more than an hour of broadcast (and that's pushing it nowadays), but this idea that dissatisfaction with current foreign and military policy is some kind of alarmist, right-wing extremism is, given what's happening and at the moment, at the very least, categorically and in its own right every bit as biased, narrow-minded and downright STUPID as any other partisan position out there.

Like I said, I don't care how bad the Iraq war was or how "intolerant" or hypocritical it seems to say that America is at war with Islam.  Islamic terrorists are no longer even our only or potentially biggest problem.  Look, for example, what's been going on with Russia - on the verge of being an enemy of ours yet again for the first time in 25 years! And why?  Clearly, these threats don't just materialize overnight, but people like Putin don't generally behave this way unless something - like, say, America's/Obama's foolish ultimatums on Syria which were never really acted upon - indicates that the only or biggest potential obstacle is or might no longer be such an obstacle.  In any case, at this point, it isn't a question of how many corporations might or might not get fat government contracts in the Middle East or how many oil companies might be able to profit from conflict in the long-run.  America has tried to take just a few baby steps back AWAY from its perceived post as "world police" and look what's happened.  How many civilians have to be murdered - executed, with notice given way, way in advance - before LOGIC and DECISIVENESS is put ahead of seemingly useless worrying and moralizing?

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Why is the Tea Party the Worst AND Best Thing To Happen To Obama?

Anticlimactic as this statement is by now, I think the worst AND best thing to ever happen to or for President Obama is... THE TEA PARTY! Hear me out.  Look it up and it appears to have formed almost in direct response to Obama's election as of early 2009.  A year later, it proved a pain for Obama because it almost singularly robbed Obama's Democrats and even a few "mainstream" Republicans of their seats in the House.  After a while, however, it became pretty clear to everyone but Tea Party members and supporters that whatever the so-called "Republican" House had to actually offer would never see the light of day as long as Obama and his ilk controlled the other two branches, so it reduced their tactics to sometimes comical, yet expensive sideshows (like Ted Cruz's fight to repeal Obamacare during the government shutdown last year) and made them little more than obstructionists.  Nevertheless, despite obscenely low approval ratings, Obama's re-election and no change in the Senate's balance of power after 2012, the Tea Party branch of the Republican Party is STILL in charge in Congress!

This is bad for Obama (and fellow Republican Speaker John Boehner, interestingly enough) because it puts everything he does under even more and incredibly intense scrutiny, but there's a reason why it might also have guaranteed him a second term.   I don't think people re-elected Obama because they all enthusiastically embrace all of his notions about changing America and so forth - although there have been documented, fundamental shifts in certain attitudes towards government's role in the economy and healthcare and so forth across the board. Yet, neither do I think these Tea Party people are being voted into and kept in Congress as part of a fluke or because people think they might actually get the upper-hand.

For better or worse, a majority of Americans probably do not vote - certainly not in midterm elections and not even in Presidential ones - and of those that do, the mob mentality pretty much rules.  Two mobs face off (bear with me here) and whichever one looks like it has a better chance of winning and of not messing things up even more is the one most likely to get the most votes. Since most people are wary of politicians, in general - regardless of their political persuasions otherwise - most voters, particularly the swing voters, are not looking for who is "good" but, rather, who is WORSE. When those few and far between that aren't going to just blindly vote the same way over and over again find who is or, rather, looks worse, they then vote the other way. It must come down to which side gets the most converts on which issues nowadays because I find it hard to believe that one party has so much more of America's confidence than the other, particularly when rhetoric and some policy proposition is so extreme.  It may look that way sometimes, but the left has ALWAYS controlled the popular media in America (one of the earliest TV interviews EVER features Eleanor Roosevelt criticizing then-Senator Nixon over his prosecution of Alger Hiss) while the right has long had footholds in the business and, more recently, the religious communities. Which American subculture you belong or are closest to - Hollywood or Wall Street, to put it more directly - likely decides who you think most represents America at its core, past, present and future, regardless of actual facts and political statistics (many of which are skewed for roughly the same reasons).

Obama got re-elected because everyone was scared to death that Romney would start a war with Iran and/or North Korea and sever just about every proverbial purse string connected to social programs, etc., and that just wasn't acceptable while unemployment numbers are still so high and, again, those fundamental shifts were/are still occurring.  More than that, he's the one that came up with the original form of the Affordable Care Act in the first place (or, rather, the Heritage Foundation came up with it for him), a bill that one side rejects while the other supports ONLY as a fantasy stepping stone towards socialized medicine - and since personality matters in elections, nobody was going to vote for someone that wealthy and seemingly "out of touch" and void of recognizable personality when coming out of a major recession. At the same time, I don't think it was hard to predict in 2012 that, should Obama be re-elected, not only was he likely to step up his more personal agenda, but his supporters would demand it.  Sure enough, practically his entire second inaugural speech is about Obama's vision of America and the way he'd leave it after his second term; about civil rights in the future coming in the form of increased government enforcement of fairness and equality laws as well as a stance of pro-immigration and what would become a foreign policy dedicated to ensuring that America move closer to and promote, in his words, "global norms." Socially, economically, etc., and it's no secret that up until they found out Obama's drones were spying on everyone, much of the rest of the world heartily celebrated Obama's initial election because his ideas about healthcare, for example, have been almost identical to much of Europe's.

So why is the Tea Party faction still in control of the House of Representatives - THE legislative and arguably most powerful branch of the government, itself - when it has held approval ratings in the teens and below since before 2012? Besides the obvious stench of decay emanating from what used to be a more stable and dignified Republican Party, the Tea Party faction is perfect for keeping Obama in check because even if they don't make any actual gains, they are effective at limiting Obama's gains whenever he appears to be getting too full of himself.  It has nothing to do with policy, at least not from them.

American voters nowadays may be riled up, but they're not idiots.  They know that both sides have wandered off the reservation, politically speaking, but it is for that very reason that - given the choice - they want the so-called "fringe" segment of the Republican Party to keep what is now the entire Democratic Party behind Obama in check... even if, generally speaking, they actually like Obama more. Liking someone and trusting them, though - NOT the same things. ;)

Saturday, July 12, 2014

What Is The REAL Value And Agenda Behind The Discrediting Of "Creationism?"

A lot of people nowadays use the "big bang theory," age of the Earth and evolution in general to not only explain the Earth's origins, but to pointedly discredit anyone that dares believe in a god - particularly, it seems, the Christian God (because so many critics tend to start with Christianity and rarely go much further in their criticisms of other beliefs in deities).  While people like Isaac Newton were both scientists and people of faith, the whole concept of any real reconciliation of science and faith nowadays is painted as being borderline preposterous, stemming from the ignorance and delusions of uneducated and superstitious people.

But here's a question: The big bang theory is, broadly speaking, the expansion of the universe from something akin to a spec which involves the combining of elements to create more familiar matter.  Where did that spec and those elements come from?  Why, I wonder, is it more "ignorant" to believe in a god that, in whatever way over however many years, CREATED a vast universe that functions independently (i.e., evolution) and naturally formed the Earth, than it is to believe that all these elements and this expansion just... existed and began its processes, for no reason whatsoever? If you're going to say, "Oh, well, we're just criticizing those that take the Bible too literally," then you still throw off the whole argument.    You can say, "Well, faith and religion are just ancient psychological tools meant to be grown out-of and replaced with fact, originally used to make sense of the world and provide some structure for early man." To some extent, that's probably true as it makes a lot of sense, except that the only practical benefit in doing away with spiritual and religious faith in a deity at all is to get out from under that god's and religion's restrictive tenets. After all, rules are made to be broken, so they say, and how much easier could it be to break a rule than it is after you've just decided for yourself that the rule is obsolete (mostly because you want it to be), serves no practical purpose and is, in itself, immoral because of its inherent intolerance?

Answer this: Do you want EVERY impulse and human behavior to be... tolerated? Where is the line drawn and why?  For example, since everyone is going to die, anyway, why is murder wrong? Say someone comes and murders a friend or relative.  They can't be brought back, so why not just tolerate it and let the killer go?  What is "justice?"  Like faith and the rules of religion, why do we need it? And even for those that do tend to take most Scripture literally, there is at least an awareness that it is full of metaphors, shadows, parables and so forth. I can't speak for other faiths and religions, but much of Jesus' teachings are in the forms of stories and parables whose meanings were never in the literal.  The Bible with which most are familiar cites the Earth as having been created in seven days, yet later admits that a day unto the Lord is as a thousand years.  Or more? There's a lot of "scripture" that isn't even in the Bible that most know and abide by, at least in the Western hemisphere.  The point where the time frame and mode of the Earth's creation is concerned is that nobody knows and nobody really needs to know - at least, not in the definitive sense.  Understanding nature is one thing, and that is useful, but knowing for certain its origins and where it came from is something else altogether.

Frankly, I don't think it has anything to do with actual science. It seems to  change very little to believe that the Earth is 4 to 6 billion years old instead of just 10,000 in that there aren't many practical applications of either theory that haven't already at least begun to be explored and put into practice.  I think it has to do with the fact that religion (and not just Christianity or even Islam) has for so long been used to excuse so many atrocities and so much hate that science and the battle to discredit creationism is just the latest tool in some people's attempt to systematically rid the world of any semblance of organized religion whatsoever. If you can't guilt the "ignorant" religious people into seeing that they have too much influence or power and hurt too many people with their seemingly arbitrary rules about homosexuality and abortion and other things, then, well... get them on the facts.  Get them on their belief in things that cannot be proven and for which many say there is solid evidence that contradicts said beliefs.  Okay, but there's still just one problem: FAITH, BY DEFINITION, IS A BELIEF IN THAT FOR WHICH THERE IS NO PROOF!

And religion?  Does anyone with half a brain actually believe that there has to be a god at the center of an actual religion?  In the earliest heyday of Star Wars, there were people that made a serious attempt at getting the Jedi... lifestyle or... whatever... recognized as a legitimate "religion."  They almost pulled it off, and what's at the center of that: The Force?  Even in Star Wars mythology (which is what many consider it in a modern sense), the anthropomorphism of the Force as midichlorians only exists in one or two of the films and is largely rejected.  Otherwise, that's about as close as the myth gets to identifying the Force as any one or group of entities.

The subtle hypocrisy in trying to discredit creationists is that, in doing so, you're engaging in a form of intolerance that is not so dissimilar to that intolerance which many would attribute to religious believers and simultaneously condemn. Whether you're seeking to silence anyone teaching evolution or anyone promoting religious dogma in public and trying to merge it with public policy, you're trying to silence someone.  You are actively discriminating against a point of view and, by extension, anyone that holds it, and the very fact that you could be threatened by a perspective which you claim to be so preposterous and ludicrous does, in itself, I think, say something about the weakness of your own crusade if not your overall argument.  Ultimately, people will believe what they want to believe, especially where the origins of the Earth are concerned IF they even think it's of any personal or practical relevance.  What I think critics of creationism tend to fail to consider is that even the validity of their theories on evolution and of the big bang theory, itself, still does not rule out the existence or even involvement of a higher power.  If anything, the universe, itself, becomes that higher power because you are always going to be stymied by that ultimate question: Where did the spec and the elements come from that had to combine and expand to execute the "big bang" and form the universe as we know it today?  

Friday, July 4, 2014

JULY 4TH INDEPENDENCE DAY - Enjoy It While You Can! And BE GRATEFUL!

Something tells me that July 4th will not be a holiday much longer.  The alleged desire for more "globalization," particularly while President Obama and his ilk rule the proverbial roost, portends a day in which almost any form of national pride will be looked upon as naive and, ultimately, immoral.  I don't argue with people that talk about America's mistakes, at least in terms of what those mistakes are.  America is an experiment and as with most experiments, it has had more than its share of explosions and injuries that could have been prevented.  What was done to the Native Americans, for example, seems almost totally inexcusable.  What I see many of America's accusers fail to acknowledge, however, is that - like slavery - the abuse of the Native Americans began LONG before America was actually a single nation and, technically, was perpetrated mostly by the English, French and Spanish.  However, the nation of the United States does bear its share of responsibility in that particular tragedy for what was done by people like President Andrew Jackson, who I think oversaw the displacement of the Cherokee in the Trail of Tears.  There are also things like certain dubious motives for America's participation in overseas wars and other conflicts, particularly the Vietnam conflict (never officially declared a war by Congress) and, most recently, Iraq.  However, it strikes me that this was all made possible when, in the first years of the 20th century, presidents like Teddy Roosevelt and, later, Woodrow Wilson - one a Republican-turned-Bull Moose Independent, the other a Democrat that first tried to help form a version of the United Nations - began to think that America needed a more significant presence and a reputation of its own in world affairs. People can judge any way they wish, but it's a FACT that America became instrumental in winning two World Wars for its allies overseas and, in particular, for beating back the threat of the Nazis, who might otherwise have taken over most if not all of Western Europe and created a scenario which might have eventually threatened the United States, as well.  America didn't do it alone, but the war began in 1938, three years before America's involvement began, and the Nazi war machine was going strong at that time (Japan is a slightly different matter).

The fundamental reason I'm in favor of holidays like July 4th is that it reminds people to be GRATEFUL for something, and in the case of America, one of those things is the freedom to air such a long litany of complaints without excessive fear of reprisal from the State.  Unless I'm mistaken, China now forbids ANY celebration or recognition of the anniversary of the protests in Tienanmen Square,  Russia is slowly reverting back to its Soviet era habits of harassing and trying to occupy and possess its neighbors, such as the Ukraine and Georgia, which poses an indirect threat to Western Europe in part because that region relies a lot on things like natural gas from the East.  One can call America hypocritical and, at times, warlike, but in the end, I think it's done more significant good than harm to most of its citizens. After all, people are still coming here from all over the world, and do you see boatloads of Mexicans and South Americans headed for Cuba?  No.  They trek hundreds of miles sometimes on foot to reach the border of AMERICA - and you can argue that it's the more obvious and convenient choice, but by how much?

Speaking only for myself, I've seen nothing to suggest that I would have lived past my first week or two of life had I been born anywhere else, and the homeopathic or alternative medicine of the Far East would NOT have saved me from the conditions which required surgery and technology to correct.  The healthcare systems in some other countries may be cheaper, more accessible and even efficient to a degree, but from what I've heard, they're not all so flexible as to be able to devote enough time and attention to saving a single patient's life.  That's why I'm opposed to socialized medicine HERE (not everywhere) because no matter how well it is alleged to work in other nations, most of those nations deal with smaller, less diverse populations, and in the end, we're still talking about wholesale healthcare: First come, first serve and nothing done that isn't first approved for payment by the state.  My family has been in the healthcare business for 40 years and I've been in and out of hospitals as a patient my whole life.  So far, I've not heard ANYONE - not doctors, nurses or anyone actually working in the field - voluntarily say a single good thing about the Affordable Care Act or the prospect of socialized medicine.  Just recently, my father went to the emergency room, where a doctor talked a little about how he feared the Affordable Care Act's limitations in the near future on what they could do due to insurance restrictions meant to make it all less expensive.  Recently diagnosed with cancer, my father was even offered FREE CARE by an oncologist at Baptist (he can only really afford the VA, which is technically free but not very efficient or reliable and knew about his lung tumors a full year without saying anything), but was unable to get, the oncologist said, because the law prohibited any doctor from treating patients for free so long as they have Medicare, which my father does now that he's 65.      

I'm sure there are people that could come up with a thesis' worth of statistics and incident reports with which to argue against what I've just written, particularly when it comes to the above paragraph, but this whole blog boils down to the following: If you want to live in a place or a nation that doesn't have its share of sins and still have America's level of freedom and relatively low taxes, your best bet is probably to develop independent space travel so you can fly to a similar world whose population hasn't had time to make as many mistakes. People associate patriotism with nationalism, and nationalism with the warmongering attitudes of the Nazis and the former Soviet Union, who goose-stepped through history on the backs of their beleaguered and sometimes neglected citizenry and all over any and everyone they could find.  Almost every serious accusation leveled against America having to do with mistakes made since the end of the second World War comes back to similar behavior and, most notably, the "military industrial complex" first warned about, ironically, by Republican President and former general Dwight Eisenhower upon leaving office in 1960.

Yes, it is an unfortunate fact that nations like America have sometimes relied, whether intentionally or unintentionally, upon war and conflict to boost economies and world standing. However, this, at least, is not solely a flaw of the Americas.  Rome was born, lived and died on the fruits of war and of conquest. War was made just to keep Rome alive, as it needed territory and populations to conquer, rule over and tax to maintain its own opulence. Similar things could be said of the Spanish and of the English thereafter  The difference with the United States, I believe, is the freedom to acknowledge these imperfections and to at least try to avoid letting them get the better of us in the future.  They may be facts of U.S. history, but they need not be facts of our future just because we continue to be a nation unto ourselves.  As far as nationalism and national pride is concerned, I see it as being more about gratitude than anything else, with gratitude being a far healthier and more productive attitude than the nurturing of feelings of victimization and apocalyptic despair. Some may claim that this requires the convenient forgetting of America's "atrocities," but I disagree.  If anything, we can remember those atrocities and be GRATEFUL that, as a nation, we learned and/or are learning from those mistakes instead of letting them get us down. I also disagree with anyone that believes it to require a lot of naivete.  Does one have to believe themselves perfect and flawless in order to have self-esteem and to want to live?  If so, then I think we would all be suicidal - at least everyone of at least average intelligence.

If you're an American, living in America, then be GRATEFUL for that - if for no other reason than the fact that you have the freedom to complain if you wish!  If, of course, that's what you get off on, and believe me, I would understand.  A lot of people that come down the hardest on America claim also to be "humanist," but what is more human than being able to be as flawed as America allegedly is, yet still be able to learn from the past, stand up and march into the future with adjusted attitudes and new approaches?  Many are criticized for believing that America is the greatest nation on Earth, but frankly, I hope that everyone - no matter where they live - can have the luxury of believing that about their nation. The fact that the world is divided into nations does NOT, in my opinion, mean that we cannot work together.  All it means is that we acknowledge our differences, both voluntary and otherwise, and celebrate them while still having respect and getting along as best as possible.  The fact that we have differences also does not mean that they cannot be set aside to achieve common goals. I don't think humanity NEEDS one world order just to be able to work together.  To me, that's a defeatist way of looking at things because it says that we're so fundamentally divided, so flawed and relatively helpless that we need a super-strong, centralized power with global reach to affect change that can benefit everyone.  Yeah, that may seem to be the case once in a while, but does it have to be?  I don't think so.  If it's an example of anything, America is an example of how humans can do just about anything when they want to, and regardless of their differences considering that America is a nation built by immigrants from around the world. If you need a reason to celebrate July 4th and be grateful for America, then I can think of none better.