Wednesday, January 31, 2007

What WAS Good for General Motors . . . ?

Whether muddled or not as the websites below suggest, the assertion that 'What is good for General Motors is good for the country!' is emblematic of the decisions made during the course of the 20th century that have gotten us into the energy crisis over oil that we now face.

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/Chronicles/May2002/0502Hartman.html


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Erwin_Wilson


Once upon a time (as have European countries now) the U.S. had developed a network of train lines and embryonic trolley and subway systems such as only a few cities now have. The advantages of travel by rail are twofold: 1) trains can carry more goods and people far more efficiently than busses, cars, trucks, 2) trains can be run with electricity which can be produced from a wide variety of energy sources -- water, coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear. So when the crunch comes for energy, a nation is not simply hostage to a single energy source -- in our case oil.

How did we get into this fix As I recall the details, the oil and truck, bus, car, rubber industries early in the 20th century began lobbying for the transfer of transportation from our then expanding rail system to roads. Local city councils were prevailed upon to abandon trolleys for busses. Later increasing numbers of super highways would be built to accommodate truck traffic across the country (at a hidden cost to states obliged to maintain highways in the face of heavy on-going damage caused by being pounded by trucks).

A number of private industries had combined to push us towards oil as our major energy sources for moving things and people. No longer can one take a train across the country with any ease -- no Twentieth Century Limited -- the air industry has also got its piece of the action. Some local communities are even being cut off from ANY public transportation because such is not profitable for private carriers!
We subsidize trucks and cars heavily, but not rail travel.

The sad bottom line here is that our American expansion outwards now stands in peril as the costs of individual living out there increase -- both getting there and controlling temperatures house by house.

Those of us who happen to live in a major city with efficient public transportation save thousands of dollars each year that we do not have to pay for travel and for heating our homes. We live in large buildings with a single boiler. We do need to use air conditioners to cool things down. But many of us can do without the expenses of owning cars -- on the insurance payments saved alone we can rent cars for vacations at long term rates. take a cab or hop on a bus or subway which often gets us there faster than would a car through increasing traffic jams.

We are stuck now with the incredibly energy inefficient decisions made by previous generations. Where we can go from here, I cannot say. Presumably the energy bidding against the expanding Chinese and Indian economies (representing 2/5 of humanity) will be tough. And we seem to be hopelessly mired in the Middle East chaos where the Neocons apparently assumed we could grab the oil away from those who owned it and/or competing bidders.

I suspect that we are going to be in for some colder winters as well as hotter summers as we reap the energy whirlwinds. Better stick something on your roof to collect the wind power there or some such energy producing alternative. Good luck. We gave up a car 3 decades back and enjoy the 4 bus lines and subway running within two within short blocks of our doors. And co-op costs are just those for running things -- no big profits being made except by our banks holding our mortgages.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Sunday, January 28, 2007

The Muslim Wars?

I was chatting with one of my students yesterday whose parents had migrated to this country from the Middle East. We shared views on things over there and he expressed his deep distress that Muslims are killing Muslims (particularly Sunnis and Shiites). "We are all Muslims. How can we be killing each other?"

As one runs down the line of countries, Lebanon is now on the brink of break up with Nasrallah goading Shiites to displace the largely Sunni/Christian government. Iraq is in murderous chaos. The feuding in Gaza is becoming daily more deadly. Is this some sort of Hobbesian stage that peoples have to go through before they realize that a war of all against all is so disastrous that people will settle for peace at any cost?

Our Western political examples are not all that lovely -- the British civil wars of the 17th century into which Hobbes was writing, the French revolution and its bloody aftermath, the American Civil war with its loss of 750,000 lives only a little more than a century ago, the two World Wars of the 20th century fought mainly between Christian nations.

I mention these latter events as a reminder that peace in our Western nations was not achieved without great violence and destruction -- lest we forget. And needless to say an increasing majority of Americans now see the Bush travesties -- war on Iraq and homeland violations of basic Constitutional rights -- as no model for democracy.

Let us hope for peace soon between those warring within Islam. May we lend our assistance with peace-making and resist the impulse undoubtedly of some to pour oil on the flames!
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Saturday, January 27, 2007

U.S. Military Justice Parallels that of Nazi Germany?

Lieutenant Ehren Watada faces a court marshall February 5 on charges of refusal to redeploy to Iraq and "conduct unbecoming an officer" (i.e. he publicly criticized the Bush administration for launching an illegal war in Iraq). The first charge carries a sentence of up to 2 years in prison and the second an additional four. Watada has been denied the right to bring witnesses to testify on his behalf on the basis that the decision to go to war is "political" and not "military" and, thus, exempt from the defense that Watada is defying an order that he claims violates both his Constitutional rights of free speech and international legal conventions:

http://thehollytree.blogspot.com/2006/12/american-hero-first-lieutenant-ehren.html


An interesting implication here. During WW2 German soldiers were also denied the right to protest fighting in an illegal Nazi war because a Vatican pronouncement (eventually reversed at the Second Vatican Council) had disallowed individuals the right to declare a war illegal -- only a state waging one could do so. Unhappily Pope Pius XII (unlike his immediate predecessor) concurred and was subsequently criticized for his silent toleration of the Nazi horrors, including the Holocaust:

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/pius.html


What, then, we are seeing in the prosecution of Lieutenant Watada is a replay of the Nazi defense which denied selective conscientious objector status to German soldiers protesting a particular unjust war.

Watada is not a conscientious objector (to all wars) and has offered to serve in Afghanistan as an alternative to Iraq.

And so it goes with American justice?

P.S. In a recent case parallel to that of Watada's the German government accepted the right of a German soldier to refuse service in Iraq on the basis that the war there violated international conventions.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Friday, January 26, 2007

The New Robber Barons

[I would only add here that anyone who cannot see that the U.S. is involved in class warfare has not studied the turn of the century conflicts and particularly the progressive contribution of Teddy Roosevelt of anti-trust legislation which has been virtually nullified, particularly by the takeover of our public means of communication by our large, greedy corporations for which too many media commentators are shills: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antitrust Let us not forget that the young George W. Bush vowed to repeal the New Deal as a student at Harvard Business -- and has shown no departure from that aim in any actions by him or the Republicans dominated by right wing money interests. We are facing a major con operation run by a new generation of robber barons. Ed Kent]

.....................................

Op-Ed Columnist
On Being Partisan

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: January 26, 2007

American politics is ugly these days, and many people wish things were different. For example, Barack Obama recently lamented the fact that “politics has become so bitter and partisan” — which it certainly has.

But he then went on to say that partisanship is why “we can’t tackle the big problems that demand solutions. And that’s what we have to change first.” Um, no. If history is any guide, what we need are political leaders willing to tackle the big problems despite bitter partisan opposition. If all goes well, we’ll eventually have a new era of bipartisanship — but that will be the end of the story, not the beginning.

Or to put it another way: what we need now is another F.D.R., not another Dwight Eisenhower.

You see, the nastiness of modern American politics isn’t the result of a random outbreak of bad manners. It’s a symptom of deeper factors — mainly the growing polarization of our economy. And history says that we’ll see a return to bipartisanship only if and when that economic polarization is reversed.

After all, American politics has been nasty in the past. Before the New Deal, America was a nation with a vast gap between the rich and everyone else, and this gap was reflected in a sharp political divide. The Republican Party, in effect, represented the interests of the economic elite, and the Democratic Party, in an often confused way, represented the populist alternative.

In that divided political system, the Democrats probably came much closer to representing the interests of the typical American. But the G.O.P.’s advantage in money, and the superior organization that money bought, usually allowed it to dominate national politics. “I am not a member of any organized party,” Will Rogers said. “I am a Democrat.”

Then came the New Deal. I urge Mr. Obama — and everyone else who thinks that good will alone is enough to change the tone of our politics — to read the speeches of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the quintessential example of a president who tackled big problems that demanded solutions.

For the fact is that F.D.R. faced fierce opposition as he created the institutions — Social Security, unemployment insurance, more progressive taxation and beyond — that helped alleviate inequality. And he didn’t shy away from confrontation.

“We had to struggle,” he declared in 1936, “with the old enemies of peace — business and financial monopoly, speculation, reckless banking, class antagonism, sectionalism, war profiteering. ... Never before in all our history have these forces been so united against one candidate as they stand today. They are unanimous in their hate for me — and I welcome their hatred.”

It was only after F.D.R. had created a more equal society, and the old class warriors of the G.O.P. were replaced by “modern Republicans” who accepted the New Deal, that bipartisanship began to prevail.

The history of the last few decades has basically been the story of the New Deal in reverse. Income inequality has returned to levels not seen since the pre-New Deal era, and so have political divisions in Congress as the Republicans have moved right, once again becoming the party of the economic elite. The signature domestic policy initiatives of the Bush administration have been attempts to undo F.D.R.’s legacy, from slashing taxes on the rich to privatizing Social Security. And a bitter partisan gap has opened up between the G.O.P. and Democrats, who have tried to defend that legacy.

What about the smear campaigns, like Karl Rove’s 2005 declaration that after 9/11 liberals wanted to “offer therapy and understanding for our attackers”? Well, they’re reminiscent of the vicious anti-Catholic propaganda used to defeat Al Smith in 1928: smear tactics are what a well-organized, well-financed party with a fundamentally unpopular domestic agenda uses to change the subject.

So am I calling for partisanship for its own sake? Certainly not. By all means pass legislation, if you can, with plenty of votes from the other party: the Social Security Act of 1935 received 77 Republican votes in the House, about the same as the number of Republicans who recently voted for a minimum wage increase.

But politicians who try to push forward the elements of a new New Deal, especially universal health care, are sure to face the hatred of a large bloc on the right — and they should welcome that hatred, not fear it.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Two Young Women Reporting from Beirut and Gaza)

In my signature below appear some group lists reflecting my concerns. They run more or less on their own, as I do not moderate and only intervene to remove the occasional spammer. To one of them, Israel_Palestine, I post a variety of reports from a wide range of sources -- more than 70 links on the list that I scan daily, ranging from publications over there to activist groups on all sides. In my postings I have tried to pass along the voices of the new generation -- particularly those of the young women on the scene who are both expressive and caring. Two of these are Zena and Lailia El-Haddad.

Zena from Beirut, is an exuberant painter who has been exhibiting both in NYC and Beirut, but has been silent since her last reports of her despair at both the destruction of her country and the death of a dear friend. She was involved in trying to clean up the ugly mess on the beaches from the oil unleashed into the sea by the Israeli bombings: http://beirutupdate.blogspot.com/ Some might wish to view her paintings available on her web site.

Laila El-Haddad http://a-mother-from-gaza.blogspot.com/ is not publishing her blog as frequently, but some may have noticed that she was the author of a recent report passed along from Aljazeera on the indirect Israeli occupation of Gaza (to which she has recently returned from the U.S.). The article was low key, but persuasive. The lives of Gazans are now pretty miserable, as the Israelis have destroyed much of their infrastructure and more or less cut them off from basic resources and exchanges with the wider world.

Needless to say there are Israeli equivalents to Zena and Laila, I am sure, but I have not found them yet -- only peace workers mainly of my generation. I wonder what is what there? I did post a caring report about two guys who met in a Seeds of Peace camp in this country, but the Jewish member is American: http://www.seedsofpeace.org/site/PageServer

Perhaps the Israeli counterparts are literally under the gun as conscripts in the Israeli military? --
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Pinnacle Remains Unpopular Despite Gift

[Being something of a skeptic about money donations by interested parties, I can't help but worry about what J. Raymond Jones, Harlem Democratic leader in the late 1950s and 1960s, used to warn us about "getting off the plantation." Too often Harlem pols were 'purchased'
by interested parties. Ray made a point of bringing in real representatives such as Dinkins and Charlie Rangel. The pr piece put out by Pinnacle features several supporting local pols:

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=danews.story&STORY=/www/story/01-09-2007/0004503047&EDATE=TUE+Jan+09+2007,+03:24+PM

This is published in a Texas paper. An earlier version of the same text indicated that Pinnacle was the source. Interesting how pr releases fly with the flocks across the country. For those unfamiliar with this on-going story, Pinnacle was a small Brooklyn real estate operation that most recently has been expanding more widely in NYC where it is using various foul and fair tactics to evict poor renters to be replaced with luxury ones. Ed Kent]

....................................

Pinnacle Remains Unpopular Despite Gift
http://www.columbiaspectator.com/news/2007/01/25/News/Pinnacle.Remains.Unpopular.Despite.Gift-2677455.shtml

"These nominations came on the heels of Pinnacle's announcement that it would give a $500,000 grant toward the founding of the Harlem Senior Tenants and Landlords Reconciliation Center. The center, which will be administered by the Harlem Consumer Education Council, aims to educate Harlem's elderly tenants, property managers, and landlords about their rights and obligations."
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

For every weapon there is a counter weapon!

[I well recall this (subject heading) aphorism from my military training days. I wonder what fun a terrorist might have with one of these toys -- or with a good mirror system? And so it goes with the "military-industrial complex" -- so named in Eisenhower's final cautionary speech. What next, I wonder? Ed Kent]

........................

* US military unveils heat-ray gun *
The US military unveils a "revolutionary" heat-ray gun to repel enemies or disperse hostile crowds.
Full story:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/-/1/hi/world/americas/6297149.stm
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Kids Making Peace

[Seeds for Peace works to bring together kids from both sides of conflict situations so that they can get to know each other as persons:

http://www.seedsofpeace.org/site/PageServer

This ordinarily helps, as teens are likely to be attracted to each other -- as the story below intimates. I recall making peace with my life long best friend when we had resolved a girl conflict as bare teens at a co-ed summer camp. Other comparable experience as an older teen was my participation in a hiking tour down the Rhine with a mixed group of British and German students (and me) arranged by the West German government after WW2 helped to achieve peaceful reconciliation. It worked its way as we hiked from youth hostel to youth hostel over the course of a summer month. I had to switch sides at the half point in our soccer games -- no loss to either as it was not my school game. One hopes that outreach on a personal level -- such as endeavored by Dorothy Naor and the Christian Peace Workers -- will help in bridging the barriers between Israelis and Palestinians. It is so hard to break down that "intrinsic racism" which obsesses with the wrongs done to US and excuses those done to THEM! Ed Kent]

P.S. Subsequent to this posting, Joey Katona contacted me and asked me to add this location where he is doing fund raising: If you would like to contribute to Omar's Fund, please contact Joey either through email at josephkatona@gmail.com or directly by phone at 310-613-6268.

.................................

http://www.seedsofpeace.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8200

Media Story
When Worlds Collide, Sometimes Good "Stuff" Happens, As Well

This article was originally published by Earlham College on December 12, 2006.

For Immediate Release:
Dec. 12, 2006

RICHMOND Ind. — Joey Katona has a lot of explaining to do…

To his parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and others who have favored the young man from Los Angeles with birthday, bar mitzvah and graduation gifts of money, hoping the first-year student at the University of Virginia (estimated annual cost: $36,000) would one day use the resources for his college education.

About why he has given so much of that money away, and why he keeps coming back to them for more so that Omar Dreidi, a Palestinian Arab from Ramallah, can continue to attend Earlham College.



Earlham first-year Omar Dreidi of Ramallah, left, and Joey Katona, a freshman at the University of Virginia, have become best friends despite coming "from two different places with two different backgrounds and two different religions." When Dreidi needed tuition support so he could enroll at the College, Katona raised the needed money — more than $10,000.



This year, the 18-year-old Californian directed $10,809 to Earlham on his friend's behalf. Barely two years ago the pair could hardly stand each other; something about a girl.

"We kind of butted heads a little bit because of a crush we each had on this one other camper," recalls Katona of his first encounter with Dreidi at a 2004 Seeds of Peace summer retreat in Maine. "When we left, we didn't keep in touch. Even when my family and I visited Israel and the Middle East a little later, I didn't look him up. I didn't call."

Omar, meanwhile, likewise dismissed Joey: "He would walk in like Michael Jackson and do these dances. I thought he was a spoiled American boy."

Thrown together at camp the next summer, however — this time as peer support campers and roommates! — the soon-to-be high school seniors realized it was time their relationship matured to the level of the important international and intercultural peace building the camp promotes.



Dreidi was the second-leading scorer for the Earlham men's soccer team this season, finishing with nine points, including four goals and one assist. He played in 16 of 18 games for the Quakers, notching the game-winning tally in a 1-0 victory at Anderson and scoring both goals in a 2-1 defeat of Hanover.



During a three-day climbing trek, Dreidi says Katona pulled him aside at the end of one particular dialogue session and asked if they could talk awhile in private. They left the group and Joey began peppering Omar with questions about Palestinian issues.

"I could tell he understood," says Dreidi, who has lost two close friends in the sectarian violence that punctuates life in Jerusalem, Ramallah and the surrounding territories. One was shot as Dreidi watched; he fell into his friend's arms, having lunged forward while possibly trying to shield Omar from the gunfire.

"We were in the middle of the city and this Jeep came out…A lot of stuff can happen there," Dreidi reflects laconically.

But, more cheerfully, he adds that other "stuff" — much more positive stuff — sometimes happens, too, at night on a mountaintop in Maine. By the end of their discussion under the revolving stars of the northern sky, the Jewish-American teen from the West Coast and the Palestinian kid from the West Bank had forged a bond.

"We come from two different places with two different backgrounds and two different religions, but we became best friends" recalls Dreidi.

"We don't always agree politically," chimes in Katona, "but we do agree that everyone wants a solution to the violence."

Although from a proud Jewish heritage, Joey says that he and his family are opposed to the more extreme racial and religious views sometimes heard expressed in "support" of Judaism.

"That's why we went to the Middle East, and why we go to Ramallah and not just Jerusalem," says Katona, recalling his family's various excursions in the Holy Land, "because we wanted to see the other side. That's why I got involved in Seeds of Peace, and that's why Omar needs to be at Earlham — so he can help people to see the other side."

809

Omar Dreidi's parents are not poor. Their government jobs — he works in the Palestinian statistics office, she in telecommunications — would by most definitions make them "middle class." If only they actually received the salaries they earn. Because of the funding crisis currently besetting the Palestinian Authority, the couple has gone more than eight months with no pay.

"It is very hard for them," says Omar (his brother has been sent to Texas to live with grandparents). So, when his letter of acceptance — and offer of a half-scholarship from Earlham — arrived last spring, prospects appeared dim that he would ever actually enroll on the Richmond campus.

Even factoring in an additional $3,000 scholarship from Seeds of Peace, Omar and his parents calculated he remained $10,000 short of his goal to go to college in the United States. Or, more precisely, $10,809.

"The 809 part just got stuck in my head. I still remember it," says Katona today from his U.Va. dorm room. "It was kind of that little extra challenge hanging out there, almost taunting me. We weren't going to stop at that nice round number 10,000. No, we needed to raise $10,809, and we did."



Information about contributing to the Omar Dreidi Fund is available from Joey Katona at josephkatona@gmail.com or 310/613-6268.



Jumping in to help as soon as he got the news from Dreidi and tapping a list of donors he describes as ranging from family members and friends to "friends of friends of friends," Katona was able to secure donations in amounts from as little as $250 up to $2,500 (the latter gift amended ultimately by the giver to — not coincidentally — $2,809). What shortage was left to be covered he made up from his own finances. Working through Earlham's International Programs Office (IPO) and Associate Director Kelley Lawson-Khalidi, the necessary funds were delivered to Earlham by mid-August, in time for Dreidi to register with the incoming first-year class.

"I won't lie. It wasn't easy. In fact, it was very much something of a struggle," confides Katona, who plans to major in political and social thought. "But, our word should be our bond, and I said I was going to do something to help Omar out. Of course it's very satisfying we were so successful, although already I've started making contacts for the next time."

While earning proportionately higher levels of financial aid from the College and other sources for every year he completes at Earlham, Dreidi knows that until conditions improve at home his overall financial situation is not likely to the point that his freshman friend Joey can put aside his temp job as an annual scholarship recruiter — and he's thankful.

"He has a big heart," says Omar of the one-time "spoiled American boy."

"What he has done for me is something unique. He has opened my eyes to the world. I am very proud to be Joey's friend and I wish that I could do something to help him. Some day I will."
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/StudentConcerns
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AcademicFreedom
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PrivacyRights
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Israel_Palestine
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Credit Card Company Abuses!

Under the deregulation programs instituted with Reagan and continued by his Republican successors, corporate America has become ever more emboldened to cheat and harass Americans. Some of the most egregious examples of such abuses are those committed by the major credit card companies.

Scarcely a day goes by when we are not recipients of some special deal by this or that credit card operation -- minimal interest payments (unless one misses a payment), large tempting offers that must be ensnaring many. I know too many of my students who had to drop out of college to catch up on their credit card bills!

And let us look at the cheating techniques. For no reason at all -- no late payment, no excess charge over that contracted -- credit card companies can and do increase interest rates without notice -- sometimes by several multiples.

I had read about such things and then we had the experience ourselves. We had been slow to reduce the balances on two of our major cards -- we were planning to use an equity line to do so as we try to keep interest as low as possible. Just as we had completed the payments -- letters crossing in the mail -- we received notice that our card interest rates had been doubled! Happy day for us simply to cut up the paid off cards.

Another of our credit card companies waits until we have built up and balance and then increases rates -- less drastically. We close them out and they come back with the lower rate restored. How many are employed with playing such games with us?

The latest trick or treat makes one want to weep for those who are facing bankruptcies due to a major illness or other tragedy affecting principal bread winners (perhaps killed in Iraq?) This consists of constant harassing phone calls in response to a late payment. We have been undergoing a Catch 22 version of this -- a relative not available was apparently late with a payment. The credit card company constantly calls us at all hours, but will not give us details so that even we in desperation can pay the small amount owing -- we are not the card holder. The phone being called is MINE, however. I can imagine how the spouse or children of a dying, dead, or gravely ill family member must feel to be receiving comparable calls.

I certainly hope our legislators will do something about these horrors and so will send this around to as many of them as possible. I suggest that all who receive this memo do the same.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PeaceEfforts
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New York Public Hospitals Fear Proposed Medicaid Changes

[Unfortunately these cuts can be made without Congressional approval:

"But a Medicaid regulation can be made without Congressional approval. State and hospital officials say such a policy would probably be challenged in court, and Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York said that Congress might pass a law to block it."

It is conceivable that the Courts and sufficient numbers in Congress to sustain a Presidential veto could leave NY's most needy medical people stranded with inadequate care. Pretty ironic, given that all other industrialized democracies operate with single payer systems -- more efficient, less costly, and services provided regardless of wealth or income differences. Ed Kent]

..................................................

New York Public Hospitals Fear Proposed Medicaid Changes
By RICHARD PEREZ-PENA
Local and state officials said public hospitals and clinics
would lose billions of dollars over the next few years
under a plan proposed by President Bush.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/24/nyregion/24hhc.html?th&emc=th
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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From Death Row on Bush's Killing Games

[Pardon my subject heading here, but the contrast between the threatened execution of a man who may be innocent of any crime beyond shooting in self defense and the on-going slaughter in the Middle East unleashed by Bush is all too evident to any who take a hard look. Ed Kent]

From: Nattyreb
Subject: "No Matter What" by Mumia Abu-Jamal



NO MATTER WHAT
================
[Col. Writ. 1/10/07] Copyright 2007 Mumia Abu-Jamal


I did not wait with baited breath for the President's long-anticipated
speech on a "new strategy" for Iraq.

For I knew, with chilling certainty, that no matter the 'strategy', it
would hardly be 'new.' I knew that more didn't mean new -- just more.
And I knew that this president was incapable of little more, than more
of the same.

More troops -- more war -- more death -- more disaster.

There may be a new phrase -- but after "Bring 'em on!", "We're
winnin'!", or "War Against Terror", what can a new phrase mean, but more
b.s.?

Wars aren't fought with phrases; they're used to sell wars; to stir the
blood; to quicken the pulse; and to enliven the bloodlust in men.

This is no different.

I fought my journalistic urge to watch the President's press
conference. It's a lot like watching Elmer Fudd stuttering something
about catching that 'wascally wabbit' (Bugs Bunny). I can actually hear
Bugs laughing at Elmer's latest antic, saying, between guffaws, "What a
maroon!"

Madness!

And yet, as is often the case, the journalistic urge wins out, so as a
compromise, I turned on the local NPR affiliate, and listened to the
speech. And despite advance billing by party and PR flacks about the
contents, Bush managed to do it again.

Within moments of his latest offering came appeals to the events of
Sept. 11th, which he blamed on "extremists." Like Iraq had a damned
thing to do with 9/11! Once again, he sprinkled his speech with calls
to supporting 'liberty', and essentially said the problem was 'too few
U.S. and Iraqi troops, and too many restrictions.'

And the solution? 21,000 more troops.

With each twist and turn of administration policy, I've scoffed. This
'new strategy' evoked the same old emotion.

This too is destined for failure. Why?

Because the U.S. Army hasn't an ounce worth of trust in the Iraqi
forces. Because Iraqi "insurgents" (or dead-enders" -- or "extremists",
or whatever we're calling them now) have seeded themselves within the
Ministry of the Interior -- the Army, the police -- you name it. If the
U.S. delivers new arms to the Army, it will be in the hands of the
so-called 'insurgents' by dawn.

And what is this American antipathy against 'extremists' or
'insurgents', anyhow? The U.S. was formed by armed groups of insurgents
-- and yes, 'extremists.' Those who stood against the British King in
1776 were opposing the biggest, baddest superpower of the era. The
Crown was the seat of legality, order, and power. To dare to challenge
them -- to fight the mighty British Empire, was -- well, extreme.

The U.S. did it, and at least one 'founding father' -- Thomas Paine, had
to flee Britain, or face time in the Tower awaiting the national noose.
(It was just his bad luck that he fled to France, where the
Robespierre-led National Assembly tried to feed his head to the
guillotine -- but that's another story.)

The point? A war against extremities, or terrorism, is misleading and
stupid. It's a war against an idea.

It's now approaching 4 years of this madcap and illegal war -- now is
hardly time for a 'new strategy.' Failure leads to failure. Disaster
leads to disaster. This 'new strategy' is kinda like putting lipstick
on a pig.

Its other flaw is its obvious tilt towards the Shia, with Sunnis
targeted by the U.S.-Iraqi forces for a kind of 'super-occupation.'
What will this lead to?

*Every*thing that the administration has done -- from Day One -- has
made *more* enemies, not less. It has made the threats facing the U.S.
*more* dangerous -- not less.

Good work, Elmer ( or should I say, Daffy -- as in 'Lame' -- Duck?).

Copyright 2007 Mumia Abu-Jamal

[Mr. Jamal's recent book features a chapter on the
remarkable women who helped build and defend
the Black Panther Party: *WE WANT FREEDOM:
A Life in the Black Panther Party*, from South
End Press (http://www.southendpress.org); Ph.
#1-800-533-8478.]
===============================

"When a cause comes along and you know in your bones that it is
just, yet refuse to defend it--at that moment you begin to die.
And I have never seen so many corpses walking around talking about
justice." - Mumia Abu-Jamal

MUMIA'S COLUMNS NEED TO BE PUBLISHED AS BROADLY
AS POSSIBLE TO INSPIRE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT AND
HELP CALL ATTENTION TO HIS CASE.

The campaign to kill Mumia is in full swing and we need you to
**please** contact as many publications and information outlets as
you possibly can to run Mumia's commentaries (on-line and
**especially off-line**)!! The only requirements are that you run
them *unedited*, with every word including copyright information
intact, and send a copy of the publication to Mumia and/or ICFFMAJ.
THANK YOU!!!

Keep updated by reading ACTION ALERTS!!
at http://www.mumia.org, http://www.onamove.com/ and their links.
========================================

To download Mp3's of Mumia's commentaries visit
http://www.prisonradio.org or http://www.fsrn.org
==============================================>

The Power of Truth is Final -- Free Mumia!

PLEASE CONTACT:
International Concerned Family & Friends of MAJ
P.O. Box 19709
Philadelphia, PA 19143
Phone - 215-476-8812/ Fax - 215-476-6180
E-mail - icffmaj@aol.com
AND OFFER YOUR SERVICES!

Send our brotha some LOVE and LIGHT at:
Mumia Abu-Jamal
AM 8335
SCI-Greene
175 Progress Drive
Waynesburg, PA 15370

WE WHO BELIEVE IN FREEDOM CAN *NOT* REST!!

Submitted by: Sis. Marpessa

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(|8|)
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Will our ancestors be as proud of us
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--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Where Columbia Gets (and Spends) Its Monies

Bollinger Compensation Totals $685,930
http://www.columbiaspectator.com/news/2007/01/23/News/Bollinger.Compensation.Totals.685930-2668671.shtml&mkey=2330503

Princeton Won't Raise Tuition
http://www.columbiaspectator.com/news/2007/01/23/News/Princeton.Wont.Raise.Tuition-2668618.shtml

"This year, Columbia tuition charges amounted to $45,444, the most in the Ivy League. The University will announce the tuition for the coming school year in June."

...........................

And the guy who bought and is upping the rents in Stuyvesant Town and elsewhere is a former Columbia board chair (he has been replaced by his son):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuyvesant_Town


Sadly, money through real estate (and tuition) seems to be the name of the game for those who run Columbia. I wish that this were not so, but so it seems to be -- as it was in the dark days of brutal Columbia expulsion of its rental tenants that so many well remember on these lists. I wish we could expect better, but I see no sign of gain apart from a cooler pr effort to placate the skeptical.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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Monday, January 22, 2007

Intrinsic Racism and Collective Retaliation

Unhappily most of the violence and abuse of persons in the Middle East -- Israel/Palestine, Iraq, elsewhere -- is stimulated by two somewhat archaic human attitudes towards 'enemies'.

The first of these was explicated by Kwame Anthony Appiah, also as Barack Obama, the son of a Caucasian mom and African dad. In a penetrating analysis of what he called "racialism" Appiah noted that racism can be divided into two types of negative prejudice:

http://spruce.flint.umich.edu/~simoncu/167/appiah.htm

The less malevolent he denoted "extrinsic" -- people have acquired negative attitudes towards other groups, but can be persuaded against such either by education or through positive experiences with those denigrated. The other type, "intrinsic racism," is much harder to eradicate precisely because it is linked to competition with one's own group. Thus, to admit the error is at the same time to subvert one's own. One has heard of the expression, "self-hating Jew" applied to those who criticize Israel, some feature of Jewish life or behavior, etc.

The other source of abuse is linked with a more primitive stage in our notions of punishment. Originally punishment was instituted largely by the powerful to intimidate and control slaves or others subservient to their interests. For example, crucifixion was apparently designed along with a number of other horrors as a punishment to intimidate rebellious slaves. The move towards modern theories of punishment reflected in the retributivist (Kant) or utilitarian (Bentham/Mill) theories stressed individual responsibility or at least controls on human behavior directed to individual wrong doing.

The intermediate stage of punishment -- which is now manifest in the Middle East and the extremist defenders of their own ethnic groups against their enemies is "collective." If you harm one of mine, I am entitled to do harm to one of yours -- regardless of individual responsibility. Suicide bombing is the archetypal manifestation of this attitude in that it is indiscriminate in determining who precisely will be killed or wounded.

Needless to say there are comparable statist manifestations of such 'homicide' killing that fit this pattern -- rockets and bombs from on high, shooting into crowds, etc.

For those of us who hope for peace in that tormented part of our globe, condemnation and criticism of both racism and collective punishment are not only justified, but essential to curb these barbaric practices.

There is no justification for indiscriminate killing. We eventually emulated our enemies in doing that in both Japan and Germany before WW2 had been concluded -- the aim of our bombings was manifestly to 'terrorize' civilians, not to destroy military targets (fire raids on both Tokyo and Dresden being prime instances as well as the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki).

I mention these things because there are some now apparently plotting a nuclear attack on Iran. Such could not be done cleanly and without loss of life as was the Israeli attack on Hussein's early nuclear program. It would constitute a dangerous war crime of the first order. Bluffing this may be, but the risk of a weak leader playing wag the dog is too much with us these days to disregard these threats! And let us not forget that history has a way of fomenting revenge upon those who abuse others. It would be all too easy to ship a batch of nuclear weapons in crates to any or all major cities in the West. Let's not restart the Armageddon game again! I don't want MY children or theirs to be destroyed because week and foolish men could not resist the temptation to pull such a trigger in my era!
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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Krugman on Bush's Health Insurance Proposals

[As a college teacher I have encountered all too many avertable health tragedies caused either by lack of medical insurance or insurance inadequate to meet the health crisis (e.g. one parent's plan that declined to remove ALL the cancerous tumors). Even those of us with supposedly adequate insurance are all too aware of the battles that have to be waged to get our plans to cover/pay for necessary medical procedures. One despairs for those unable to fight back! Let us not forget that Bush was the business school student who vowed to repeal the New Deal!
Ed Kent]

Op-Ed Columnist


By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: January 22, 2007

President Bush’s Saturday radio address was devoted to health care, and officials have put out the word that the subject will be a major theme in tomorrow’s State of the Union address. Mr. Bush’s proposal won’t go anywhere. But it’s still worth looking at his remarks, because of what they say about him and his advisers.

On the radio, Mr. Bush suggested that we should “treat health insurance more like home ownership.” He went on to say that “the current tax code encourages home ownership by allowing you to deduct the interest on your mortgage from your taxes. We can reform the tax code, so that it provides a similar incentive for you to buy health insurance.”

Wow. Those are the words of someone with no sense of what it’s like to be uninsured.

Going without health insurance isn’t like deciding to rent an apartment instead of buying a house. It’s a terrifying experience, which most people endure only if they have no alternative. The uninsured don’t need an “incentive” to buy insurance; they need something that makes getting insurance possible.

Most people without health insurance have low incomes, and just can’t afford the premiums. And making premiums tax-deductible is almost worthless to workers whose income puts them in a low tax bracket.

Of those uninsured who aren’t low-income, many can’t get coverage because of pre-existing conditions — everything from diabetes to a long-ago case of jock itch. Again, tax deductions won’t solve their problem.

The only people the Bush plan might move out of the ranks of the uninsured are the people we’re least concerned about — affluent, healthy Americans who choose voluntarily not to be insured. At most, the Bush plan might induce some of those people to buy insurance, while in the process — whaddya know — giving many other high-income individuals yet another tax break.

While proposing this high-end tax break, Mr. Bush is also proposing a tax increase — not on the wealthy, but on workers who, he thinks, have too much health insurance. The tax code, he said, “unwisely encourages workers to choose overly expensive, gold-plated plans. The result is that insurance premiums rise, and many Americans cannot afford the coverage they need.”

Again, wow. No economic analysis I’m aware of says that when Peter chooses a good health plan, he raises Paul’s premiums. And look at the condescension. Will all those who think they have “gold plated” health coverage please raise their hands?

According to press reports, the actual plan is to penalize workers with relatively generous insurance coverage. Just to be clear, we’re not talking about the wealthy; we’re talking about ordinary workers who have managed to negotiate better-than-average health plans.

What’s driving all this is the theory, popular in conservative circles but utterly at odds with the evidence, that the big problem with U.S. health care is that people have too much insurance — that there would be large cost savings if people were forced to pay more of their medical expenses out of pocket.

The administration also believes, for some reason, that people should be pushed out of employment-based health insurance — admittedly a deeply flawed system — into the individual insurance market, which is a disaster on all fronts. Insurance companies try to avoid selling policies to people who are likely to use them, so a large fraction of premiums in the individual market goes not to paying medical bills but to bureaucracies dedicated to weeding out “high risk” applicants — and keeping them uninsured.

I’m somewhat skeptical about health care plans, like that proposed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, that propose covering gaps in the health insurance market with a series of patches, such as requiring that insurers offer policies to everyone at the same rate. But at least the authors of these plans are trying to help those most in need, and recognize that the market needs fixing.

Mr. Bush, on the other hand, is still peddling the fantasy that the free market, with a little help from tax cuts, solves all problems.

What’s really striking about Mr. Bush’s remarks, however, is the tone. The stuff about providing “incentives” to buy insurance, the sneering description of good coverage as “gold plated,” is right-wing think-tank jargon. In the past Mr. Bush’s speechwriters might have found less offensive language; now, they’re not even trying to hide his fundamental indifference to the plight of less-fortunate Americans.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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Sunday, January 21, 2007

May God Continue to Bless America?

[I happened to hear a fragment of an interview with Jim Winkler on npr in which he was suggesting that American evangelicals who supported Bush's war are now having second thoughts. Winkler Is General Secretary of the United Methodist Church (Bush's) and has opposed the war since its inception. He also argues that state support is necessary to supplement inadequate private charity. The following criticisms of Winker are instructive in several ways. Winkler had mentioned that pastors are reluctant to preach on 'political' issues, as they get too much flack from their parishioners. Such offers an insight into much of American religion which is dominated, perhaps, by what DeTocqueville (and Mill) characterized as "tyranny of the majority." Also note the use of St. Paul to justify dominance by whatever happen to be one's political authorities -- presumed to have been appointed by G-d. And so
Hitler, Stalin, Hussein -- andBush . . . ? Yes, there are some decent Christians, but note who is Commander-in-Chief. Ed Kent]

http://www.reporterinteractive.org/main/DiscussionBoard/tabid/260/view/topic/postid/78/forumid/1/Default.

Jim Winkler "doing exactly the right thing"?!

Jim Winkler is doing "exactly the right thing" as he misuses his position to push his personal views to the national press in the name of the United Methodist Church? At face value to me this looks more like a power grab and a stab at political notoriety. The "right thing" would be to work within the context of the church and not purport to speak for those he does not represent.


Jim Winkler's doing "exactly the right thing" as he calls for the impeachment of our President? What ever happened to representing the stance expressed in Romans Chapter 13 about "submission to the authorities?" In verse one; "The authorities that exist have been established by God" and in verse four; "He is God's servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer."

Jim Winkler is quoted nationally by the AP, speaking for United Methodist Church, and saying "the war on terror is a war of terror." Does he infer here that the Armed Forces of the United States are terrorists? Certainly this is the stuff of repugnancy.

Mr. Winkler is further quoted by the AP as in favor of an 80 percent slash in the U.S defense budget. Certainly such an action would rapidly lead to the end of our nation as we know it. Certainly we are blessed by the Lord with many freedoms here in the USA, and the Lord keeps those freedoms in place through strengths. I wonder if Mr. Winkler appreciates his civil rights, and what he thinks secures them.

Is it improper for the secular leader of our land to be who he is, a man who was changed and born again by the transformative lifestyle of Jesus? Is it improper for the secular leader of our nation to seek God’s wisdom, guidance, patience and understanding? Should our President be a man who attends church just to look good and get votes, or should he be a man who actually lives his faith, a man of whom we can trace back a walk with the Lord as he grew in faith within the United Methodist Church?

It is not unseemly for a Christian man to seek God and then act in the best way he is led.

It is not unseemly for an elected official to seek the Lord as he uses the authority given to him by the people to carry out his responsibilities.

The best I can tell, President Bush is actually a Christian man who truthfully seeks the Lord. I will assume Mr. Winkler is the same. It is not my place to judge men -- the Lord does that.

It's interesting to me that Mr. Bush acts within his authority and Mr. Winkler does not.

Do they both hear God's voice? Certainly this is not for me to judge, but I do know this:

God is in control.

Will my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ come back tonight?

I don't know, but I'm ready.

If he doesn't come back today or tomorrow though, I'd like to continue to enjoy my freedoms, and for my children and grandchildren to do the same.

I thank the Lord for putting the right people in the right authority at the right times.

May God continue to bless America.

Perhaps our Church should concentrate on making disciples for Jesus Christ rather than political issues such as impeachment!

Charles Weiss
Wichita Falls, Texas
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
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Saturday, January 20, 2007

[cpthebron] Coming Together In Susiya

[So far as I can tell, the Christian Peacemaker Teams are both conscientious and accurate in their reports:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Peacemaker_Teams

This report (below) is emblematic of the abuses of Palestinians by creeping expansion of the settlements into Eretz Israel.

I recall once being asked with one of my philosophy department colleagues to serve on a panel featuring a debate between a two state peace supporter and an Eretz Israel type who refused to use the term, "Palestine," for which he substituted Judea and Sumaria. We had been warned that many faculty had declined to serve in this hot spot role, but we figured that as representatives of truth speaking, we should do our part. The scene was itself interesting -- Jewish students and others seated in the front of the hall and Muslims (silently) in the rear.

The debate proceeded along obvious lines with the two stater distressed by the Eretz Israelite. I was allowed one question by the chairman, so I asked the latter what he expected the Palestinians to do if they were to be driven out per his program of expulsion. His answer was that that was their problem. If they did not like the arrangements, permanent occupation with no right of return, they should get themselves out.

Frankly, I was a bit stunned to see the real face of what I take to be a powerful, if minority, voice in Israel, which nevertheless has the support of governments there. The settlements and the treatment of Palestinians living near them tell the story. And everything I encounter tells this same story. Woe to the children of all. Sadly, Ed Kent]

..........................................

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cpthebron/

Coming together in Susiya
Art Gish
At-Tuwani, West Bank
15 January, 2007

On Saturday, January 13, 200 Israelis along with 200 Palestinians
gathered in the Palestinian village of Susiya, in the South Hebron
hills for a day of solidarity between Palestinians and Israelis.

In 1985, the Israeli military demolished every dwelling in the old
village of Susiya, and evacuated its 1,000 inhabitants. Some of the
people returned and now live in tents on their land about a half mile
from the original village. The Israeli military has not permitted the
villagers to build any permanent structures. They support themselves
with their flocks of sheep.

The Israeli military now wants to demolish the villagers' tents and
evict the villagers who stand in the way of the expansion of the
Israeli Susya settlement. The purpose of this gathering of Israelis
and Palestinians was to build support for the case of the people of
Susiya to be heard by the Israeli High Court on January 29, to prevent
the Israeli military from demolishing their homes.

This assembly included speeches by both Israelis and Palestinians,
including a recent history of the area, the effects of the nearby
Susya settlement, and the court case. One Israeli speaker said he
dreams of a peace between Palestinians and Israelis that does not need
to be defended by weapons. "Beat those weapons of war into
agricultural implements," he said. A Palestinian speaker quoted the
prophet Mohammad as saying, "God did not create you to be enemies."

The day concluded with a walking tour of the area, viewing the ancient
Susiya village, seeing the ruins of demolished caves and homes,
getting a view of the village land confiscated by the Susya
settlement, and the settlement on the next hilltop to the south.
--
"A war is just if there is no alternative, and the resort to arms is legitimate if they represent your last hope." (Livy cited by Machiavelli)
--
Ed Kent 718-951-5324 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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Thursday, January 18, 2007

Killing in the Name of Jesus?

[I had the good fortune to have spent 3 years studying theology between undergraduate and graduate years of training in philosophy. The experience taught me any number of things that most who claim to be religious believers simply do not know:

1) The prophetic tradition of the Hebrew bible again and again warned religious believers (Israel) against using Yahweh as an excuse for doing evil things. Read the prophets for yourself. Few do and most only get an occasional line or so used as the basis of a sermon. The Pentateuch (first five books of the Bible) is the focus of attention for Jewish scholars.

2) Jesus of Nazareth was not calling for people to march off to war. That perversion entered into Christianity when it was coopted by Roman values -- legalism and war as a means of imperial outreach. See St. Paul and particularly his Letter to the Romans for hate stuff directed against Jews, gays, women and a call for sycophantic obedience to any and all political authorities -- no matter how brutal and corrupt.

3) Christianity was the most murderous of the Western religions -- always marching off to war against Muslims and other Christians who disagreed with their particular slant, launching yet another pogrom against the Jews culminating in Hitler's Nazi Christian church Holocaust directed against Jews, gays, those with disabilities, et al.

Having really read the texts and followed the history in detail, I took a deep breath, saw that I could not join the cast of preachers claiming divine authority for their expostulations, and got back to philosophy. There I had the benefit of knowing the sources from which some of our unexamined philosophic value systems derived in the long standing theological tradition. Supererogatory acts are not necessarily not duties just because the Christian theologians divided off duties and saintly self-sacrifice. Our right wing Christian evangelicals and comparable sect religions (e.g. the Mormons) are hung up on this distinction and opposed, therefore, to proper state provisions for the basic human needs -- food, affordable education, universal medical care, adequate education for all.

I don't necessarily believe that it is irrational to believe in a benign divinity hiding out beyond the skin and shell of things, but with all the horrors of the world I have serious doubts about the odds of this claim. It would be nice, were it true, but what you see is probably what you've got. Make the best of it while you can! Ed Kent]

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http://www.alternet.org/stories/46566/

Atheist Richard Dawkins on 'The God Delusion'

By Terrence McNally, AlterNet. Posted January 18, 2007.

In the last few years, Americans have seen the harm that results when political decisions are made in the name of religion. Now, the non-believers are fighting back.

In the last few years, Americans have seen the dark side of religion. The events of 9/11 brought home the extremes to which some radical Muslims would go to defeat infidels and attain virgins. At home, we've seen assaults on the separation of Church and State and attacks on the teaching of evolution and the distribution of life-saving condoms. And now, it appears the godless are fighting back.

During the recent holiday season, there were prominent articles about atheism in The New York Times and the UK's Financial Times and Telegraph, and a segment on NPR's All Things Considered. Richard Dawkins debated the existence of God on the London chat show, The Sunday Edition. Dawkins' book, The God Delusion was a top 10 bestseller on the lists of both the New York Times and LA Times, number one at Amazon UK and Amazon Canada, and number two at Amazon.com. Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris was recently an equally successful bestseller.

A group calling itself "The Rational Response Squad," has launched The Blasphemy Challenge, a campaign to entice young people to publicly renounce belief in the God of Christianity. Participants who videotape their blasphemy and upload it to YouTube will receive a free DVD of The God Who Wasn't There, a number one bestselling independent documentary at Amazon.com.

Richard Dawkins holds the Charles Simonyi Chair for the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University. His 1976 book, The Selfish Gene, popularized the gene-centered view of evolution and introduced the term "meme." In January 2006, Dawkins hosted on the UK's Channel 4 a two-part documentary on the dangers of religion, entitled (against his wishes, I might add) The Root of All Evil. His newest book, The God Delusion, is an international bestseller.

Below is a shortened version of Terrence McNally's recent interview with Richard Dawkins. You can also listen to the audio of the full interview.

Terrence McNally: When and how did you become an atheist?

Richard Dawkins: I suppose it was discovering Darwinism. I was confirmed into the Church of England at the age of thirteen. I then got pretty skeptical about it, but retained some respect for the argument from Design -- the argument that says living things look as though they've been designed, so they probably have been. I then learned the real scientific explanation for why they look as though they've been designed, and that was enough for me. I lost my religious faith pretty much then.

TM: What do you think explains the current interest in atheism?

RD: I would love to think that there really is something moving -- a shifting in the tectonic plates, and, at last, in America, atheism is becoming respectable; that one can now come out of the closet and proclaim one's self.

I got certain indications of that on my recent tour of the United States. I got packed houses everywhere I went. Of course, I was preaching to the choir, but I was impressed by how large the choir is and how enthusiastic. Over and over again people came up to me afterwards and said how grateful they were that I and Sam Harris and others were finally speaking out and saying the things that they wanted to say, but perhaps didn't feel able to.

TM: You compare the experience of atheists to that of gays in the fairly recent past. Do you think that's an apt comparison?

RD: I think the parallel is a valid one. Until recently nobody dared admit that they were gay. Now, they're rather proud to do so. Nowadays it's impossible to get elected to public office if you're an atheist, and I think that's got to change. The Gay Rights Movement raised consciousness. It initiated the idea of Gay Pride. I think we've got to have Atheist Pride, Atheist Consciousness. I think it's pretty clear that a fair number of members of Congress must be lying because not a single one of them admits to being an atheist. The probability that in a sample of over 500 well-educated members of American society, not a single one of them is an atheist, statistically, that is highly unlikely. So, some of them, at least, have got to be lying, and I think it's a tragedy that they have to.

TM: Could you address a couple of reactions that I see in the media, either to atheism, in general, or to you and your book? One, people ask why are atheists so angry?

RD: That's a very curious misperception. We get accused of being angry or of being intolerant, but, if you were to look at critiques of one political party by the other... when Democrats criticize Republicans, or Republicans criticize Democrats, nobody ever says, "You're being intolerant of Republicans, or angry." It's just normal, robust argument.

People have gotten so used to the idea that religion must be immune to criticism that even a very mild and gentle criticism of religion comes across as angry and intolerant. That's yet another piece of consciousness raising that we've got to undertake.

TM: You and others are accused of being arrogant, condescending. What would you say to that?

RD: Exactly the same thing. Nobody says that a Democrat who dismisses Republican ideas is arrogant. They just assume that's what politicians do. They attack each other's ideas with good, robust give and take. That's exactly what people like me and Sam Harris are doing with respect to religion. Once again, the accusation of arrogance comes about because religion has acquired this weird protection that you're not allowed to criticize.

TM: You give the Americans too much credit. In the last couple of years, perhaps since 9/11, when people criticize the Bush Administration, they are accused of Bush-hating. I think they're attempting to clothe this President and this Administration in the same kind of protective halo that religion has had.

RD: Now that you mention it, I have noticed that very thing. There has been a tendency to say, if you criticize the President, Bush, you are criticizing America, which is ludicrous because he was elected by a --

TM: --a minority.

RD: -- if indeed he was elected at all. I take your point completely. Thank you.

TM: People finally say, "What's it to you? Why not be an atheist if that's what works for you, and leave the rest of us to be as religious as we wish?" This, I believe, is offered as a challenge to your open-mindedness or your respect for others. You're being called "an atheist fundamentalist."

RD: "Fundamentalist" usually means, "goes by the book." And so, a religious fundamentalist goes back to the fundamentals of The Bible or The Koran and says, "nothing can change." Of course, that's not the case with any scientist, and certainly not with me. So, I'm not a fundamentalist in that sense.

Why not live and let live? Why not just say, "Oh, well, if people want to believe that, that's fine." Of course, nobody's stopping people believing whatever they like. The problem is that there's not that much tolerance coming the other way. Things like the opposition to stem-cell research, to abortion, to contraception -- these are all religiously inspired prohibitions on what would otherwise be freedom of action, whether of scientists or individual human beings.

There are religious people who are not content to say, "Oh, well, my religion doesn't allow me to use contraceptives, but I'm quite happy for anybody else to." Instead, we have religiously-inspired prohibitions on aid programs abroad, including in areas where HIV AIDS is rife, prohibiting aid going in any form that might be used to help contraception. That is religion over-stepping the bounds and interfering in other people's freedom. So, religion does not observe this "live and let live" philosophy.

TM: In other words, if it were just a philosophical belief that had no impact on the world, fine.

RD: Exactly. I don't think you'll find many people criticizing any gentle religion, like Jainism.

The other thing is that, as a scientist and an educator, it is impossible to overlook the fact that, especially in America, there is a vigorous and virulent campaign to suppress the teaching of scientific biology. In state after state, there are court battles being fought. Scientists have to go out of the laboratory and waste their time responding to these know-nothings who are trying to stop the teaching of evolution or give equal time to creationism or intelligent design, or whatever they like to call it. They actually are trying to interfere with the freedom of children to learn science and the freedom of science teachers to teach their science properly.

TM: Why did you write The God Delusion?

RD: I care passionately about the truth. I believe that the truth about whether there is a God in the Universe is possibly the most important truth there is. I happen to think it's false, but I think it's a really important question.

Also, because I felt that the world actually is drifting, parts of it anyway, towards theocracy in very dangerous ways. Education in my own field of Evolutionary Biology was under threat. There are all sorts of reasons why one might worry about the looming rise of religious influence, especially in the United States of America and in the Islamic world.

TM: Can you explain the distinction you offer between Einstein's God, as you put it, and Supernatural God? You clarify this at the top of the book to make clear which definition of God you believe is a delusion.

RD: Sometimes when people hear that one is an atheist, they say something like, "Oh, well, surely you believe in something." Or "You believe that the Universe is a wonderful place." And I say, "Yes, of course, the Universe is a wonderful place." And they say, "Oh, well, then you believe in God." And they are using "God" in the Einsteinian sense of a kind of metaphor for that which is mysterious and wonderful in the universe. And the more the physicists look into the origins of the universe, the more wonderful it does seem to become. Without a doubt there is cause for something approaching worship or reverence that moves scientists such as Einstein, and Carl Sagan, and, in my humble way, myself. Einstein was very fond of using the word "God" to refer to that feeling of non-personal reverence.

TM: Beyond that feeling, didn't he also use it to refer to the awesome existence that we confront?

RD: Yes, he did. When Einstein wanted to say something like, "Could the universe have happened in any other way? Is there only one kind of universe?" The way he expressed it was, "Did God have a choice in creating the universe?" Now, to any ordinary churchgoer in the pew, that sounds as though Einstein believed that a personal God designed the universe. In fact, all Einstein was doing was wondering whether there could be more than one kind of universe, which is a perfectly respectable scientific question.

I think it's extremely unfortunate that Einstein chose to use the word "God" for that. Einstein himself was most indignant when he was taken literally and people thought that he meant a personal God, such as the Christian God or the Jewish God. But I think he was asking for trouble by using the word "God." He did it again over Heisenberg's indeterminacy principle, which he hated. He expressed his hatred for it by saying, "God does not play dice."

TM: So you're making the distinction between that use of the word "God" and the God that you believe is a delusion?

RD: A personal God. A God who is a deliberate, conscious intelligence, the sort of God who listens to your prayers, forgives your sins. A God who sits down like a master engineer or physicist and designs the Universe, works out what ought to happen, worries about sins, all that kind of thing.

TM: Could you briefly respond, as you do in the book, to some of the arguments for this supernatural, directive, personal God. The argument from beauty...?

RD: People say things like, "If you don't believe in God, how do you account for Beethoven? How do you account for a lovely sunset? How do you account for Michelangelo?" It's such a dopey thing to say. Beethoven wrote beautiful music. Michelangelo painted wonderful paintings and did wonderful sculptures. Whether or not there is a God doesn't add to the argument one bit. So that's not an argument, although an amazingly large number of people seem to think it is.

TM: The argument from scripture...?

RD: There are lots of scriptures all around the world and they contradict each other. There's really no reason to suppose that just because something's written down, it's true. You have to ask who wrote it and when and why.

If you ask somebody, "Why do you believe that your Scripture is the Word of God?" the answer that comes back is, "Oh, because it says so." And you say, "Well, where does it say so?" And they say, "In my Scripture." So, the Holy Scripture, whichever it is, The Koran, or The Bible, or The Book of Mormon, says within itself that it is the Word of God. This is a circular argument and not to be taken seriously.

TM: The argument from personal experience...? In late-night conversations during my high school days, my questions regarding God's existence would be answered by the challenge-defying, "You have to experience it."

RD: I think that is a difficult one, but, on the other hand, anybody who knows anything about psychology, knows what an immensely powerful simulation engine the brain is. I'm impressed by the fact that every single night of my life, my brain conjures up images and sounds of things that have never existed and never will exist. They are completely non-sensical. It's as though I go temporarily insane every night of my life and you do, too. Everybody does. We get a very life-like, full color simulation of a fantasy world inside our heads. Now, when we get that in our sleep, we call it a dream. When we get it in our waking lives -- in much less vivid form -- we might call it a vision of God or a vision of an angel, or we might say "God just talks to me."

Even when you actually see an angel or you actually hear a voice inside your head, that is an easy feat of simulation for the brain to achieve. When it's just a sort of vague feeling that God is whispering to you, it's really rather pathetic to be fooled by that, I think.

TM: My president claims God talks to him.

RD: Yes. Your president is told by God to invade Iraq. It's a pity, by the way, that God didn't tell him there were no weapons of mass destruction.

TM: I, too, wish God had been more specific. What do you make of the recent scientific conversations about certain phenomena such as a "God nodule" in the brain?

RD: There is a certain amount of evidence that specific parts of the brain do have something to do with so-called religious experience. I've had experience of the work of the Canadian neurophysiologist, Michael Persinger. He tries to mimic the effects of temporal lobe epilepsy by passing magnetic fields through the brain. In about eighty percent of subjects, when he passes magnetic fields through certain parts of the brain, he can induce religious or mystical experiences. The details of the religious experience depend upon how the person was brought up. So, if the person was Catholic, they tend to see Virgin Marys or whatever it might be. I turned out to be one of the twenty percent for whom it didn't work. If it had worked for me, I probably wouldn't have seen any gods, but I probably would have experienced some sort of mystical experience of Oneness with the Universe.

TM: How universal is the belief in a supernatural God?

RD: It's universal in the sense that all human cultures that anthropologists have looked at seem to have something corresponding to a belief in some sort of God.

Sometimes it's many gods. Sometimes it's one. Sometimes it's an animistic set of gods -- the God of the Waterfall, the God of the River, the God of the Mountain, the Sun God. The details vary, but it does seem to be a human universal, in the same sort of way as heterosexual lust is a human universal, even though not all individual humans have it. Like sexual lust, I suspect there's a kind of lust for God.

TM: How do you explain its prevalence?

RD: When you ask a Darwinian like me, how we explain something, we usually take that to mean, "What is the Darwinian survival value of it?"

Quite often, when you ask what is the survival value of "X", it turns out that you shouldn't be asking the question about "X" at all, but that "X" is a by-product of something else that does have survival value. In this case, the suggestion I put forward as only one of many possible suggestions, is that religious faith is a by-product of the childhood tendency to believe what your parents tell you.

It's a very good idea for children to believe what parents tell them. A child who dis-believes what his parents tell him would probably die, by not heeding the parent's advice not to get into the fire, for example. So child brains, on this theory, are born with a rule of thumb, "believe what your parents tell you." Now, the problem with that -- where the by-product idea comes in -- is that it's not possible to design a brain that believes what its parents tell it, without believing bad things along with good things. Ideally we might like the child brain to filter good advice like, "Don't jump in the fire," from bad advice like, "Worship the tribal gods." But the child-brain has no way of discriminating those two kinds of advice. So, inevitably, a child-brain that is pre-programmed to believe and obey what his parents tell it, is automatically vulnerable to bad advice like, "Worship the tribal juju."

I think that's one part of the answer, but then, you need another part of the answer: Why do some kinds of bad advice, like, "Worship the tribal juju," survive and others not?

Beliefs like "life-after-death" spread because they are appealing. A lot of people don't like the idea of dying and rather do like the idea that they'll survive their own death. So the meme, if you like, spreads like a virus because people want to believe it.

TM: Though children may tend to believe what their parents tell them, you state strongly that a child should not be called a Catholic child, a Muslim child, or a Jewish child.

RD: Yes. I'm very, very keen on the idea that children should be not labeled like that. We're back to consciousness raising. The feminists raised our consciousness about use of language in all sorts of ways -- things like saying, "his or hers," instead of just "his". In the same way, I think we need to raise consciousness about such labeling of children.

I'm not saying that parents shouldn't influence their children. That would be hopelessly unrealistic. Parents influence their children in all sorts of ways, but I think religion is more or less unique in being licensed to confer a label on a child. You never talk about a "Republican child" or a "Democratic child." You never make the assumption that because a professor of post-modernist literature has a child, that therefore it will be a post-modernist child. It would be ridiculous to do that, and yet if a Christian or a Jew or a Muslim has a child, then the whole of society goes along with the idea that you can label this child "a Jewish child," "a Christian child," "A Muslim child." I think that is a form of child abuse. I think it's a civil rights issue.

TM: Many suggest that you and other atheists, perhaps especially scientists who are atheists, neglect phenomena that you cannot explain. For example, the subjective experience of meaning or comfort of inspiration many claim to receive from their belief or their relationship with God... If millions experience such things, is this not evidence for the source to which they attribute them? If not, can you clarify why it isn't?

RD: There's no question that people do get comfort and consolation from religion. If a loved one has died, of course, it's comforting to feel that they're still somewhere out there caring for you, and you're going to see them again one day. But, what is comforting isn't necessarily true, and it is sort of intellectual cowardice to say, "We should let people wallow in their illusions, because it comforts them." I think it's rather patronizing.

TM: Do you think this is similar to when families or even doctors debate whether to tell someone their cancer is terminal? Because, after all, life is terminal...

RD: That's a really good parallel. There are people who would rather not be told the truth by a doctor and I respect that, but that doesn't make it true. That you want your doctor to tell you that you haven't got terminal cancer, and your doctor obliges by lying to you, that's fine; but the fact is he has lied to you. Similarly, you may be comforted by the thought that there's a God looking after you, but if there isn't a God looking after you, then I'm afraid there isn't one, and that's all there is to it.

I don't want to impose my beliefs on anybody else, but I do care about what's true. If you want to know what I think is true, read my book. If you'd rather not know what I think is true, don't read my book.

TM: Many criticize you on the grounds that science can't answer some of the biggest questions or that science is unwilling or unable to offer those meaningful things that we just talked about. Is it fair to respond to your book or your arguments by pointing out insufficiencies of science?

RD: There are some questions that science not only can't answer, but doesn't want to answer, things like, "What is right? And What is wrong?" or "How shall we be comforted?" Science has nothing to say about "right" or "wrong." Moral philosophy does. There's another whole category of questions that science may not be able to answer -- the really deep questions of existence, like, "Why is there something, rather than nothing?" or "Where did the laws of physics come from in the first place?" It's an open question at the moment whether science will ever be able to answer questions like that.

Physicists, in particular, are working on questions like, "Where do the laws of physics come from?" But it's a fallacy to say that because science can't answer such a question, therefore religion can. Much more realistic to say, "Well, if science can't answer that deep question, nothing can."

TM: In America, we hear that we're more provincial and religious than so many other people; that much of Europe, even the Roman Catholic countries of Spain and Italy, for instance, are far more secular...

RD: I suspect that the grip that religion is alleged to have over America has been exaggerated. If people who are not religious would only recognize that they're not a beleaguered minority, but actually are exceedingly numerous and potentially very powerful... If they would stand up and recognize each other and organize, I suspect that they would soon give the lie to this idea that America is a supremely religious country.

I think there's been a kind of hijacking of American political life by religious interests, and I think it's rather sad the way so many have gone along with that. You'll see even intelligent Democrats desperately currying favor with the religious vote because they think it's so powerful. No member of Congress will admit to being an atheist, although obviously some of them are.

TM: In polls, people are least likely to vote for an atheist for significant political office. They claim to be much more willing to vote, for instance, for a homosexual or a Muslim...

RD: It's no wonder that politicians are scared.

TM: I don't think we can expect too many politicians to move first.

RD: People have to come out of the closet and write to their Congressmen and Congresswomen and say, "Look, stop sucking up to the religious vote. Suck up to us, for a change. Better still, don't suck up to anybody, but speak your own convictions."

TM: I once asked a member of the Achuar -- an Amazon rainforest tribe who had its first contact with the modern world in the 1970s -- "How do you feel about the missionaries?" I assumed he would say, "Oh, bad folks," but he said, "They were the ones who stopped us from killing each other all the time."

Although several of our Founding Fathers were more likely Deists than conventional Christians, they believed that once you took away the monarchy or the Papacy, that the people did need religion in order to behave as a moral society.

Do you agree that religion is a civilizing or moralizing force? RD: There's something awfully patronizing and condescending about saying, "Well, of course, we don't need religion, but the common people do." I hope it's not as bad as that.

With regard to the missionaries being a civilizing influence on tribes whose habit was to kill each other -- presumably, if their first contact with Westerners had been with policemen, they would have said, "Until the policemen came, we killed each other."

Through centuries of change, we have now reduced our natural tendency to kill each other, but there have long been tribes where killing is the norm and the way to achieve worldly success. In our society we talk about making a killing on Wall Street. The equivalent in some tribes in the Amazon jungle might be to literally go and kill sexual rivals, for example.

That changes when such tribes are brought into contact with Western civilization. The fact that the people who go out of their way to bring Western civilization to such tribes usually are missionaries doesn't mean that religion fosters the "Thou salt not kill," point of view. "Thou shalt not kill" is a general moral principle, which we all have now, whether or not we're religious.

TM: Some people will claim that without religion we would not act morally; we would lack ethics...

RD: That's an appalling thing to say, isn't it? It suggests that the only reason we have morality -- the only reason we don't kill and rape and steal -- is that we're afraid of being found out by God. We're afraid that God is watching us, afraid of the great surveillance camera in the sky. Now, that's not a very noble reason for being good.

As a matter of fact, there's not the slightest evidence that religious people in a given society are any more moral than non-religious people. We are, all of us in the modern world, far more reluctant to kill, reluctant to discriminate against other people on grounds of sex. We no longer regard slavery as a good thing. All these things are universally approved of among educated people of goodwill in modern society, whether or not they are religious. You can point to abolitionists who happened to be religious, and you can point to other religious individuals who were in favor of slavery.

Modern morality is very different from the truly horrifying version of morality in the Old Testament. If we went by the Bible, we'd still be taking slaves. If we went by the Bible, we'd still be stoning people to death for the crime of picking up sticks on the Sabbath. There are all sorts of ways in which we've moved on, and nobody who claims to get their morality from religion, could seriously maintain that they get it from Scripture.

TM: You have a problem with moderate Christians, Jews, and Muslims, don't you?

RD: I take this largely from Sam Harris. In his two excellent books, Letter to a Christian Nation and The End of Faith, he points out -- and I agree with him -- that the majority of religious people are perfectly nice people who don't do horrible things. Yet moderate religion makes the world safe for extremist religion by teaching that religious faith is a virtue, and by the immunity to criticism that religion enjoys. That immunity extends to extremists like Osama Bin Laden and that dreadful man who goes around saying, "God hates fags." I've forgotten his name...

TM: Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, the list goes on.

RD: The world is made safe for people like them and Osama Bin Laden because we've all been brainwashed to respect religious faith and not to criticize it with the same vigor we criticize political and other sorts of opinions that we disagree with.

If you can say, "such and such a view is part of my religion," everybody tiptoes away with great respect. "Oh, it's part of your religion," then of course, you must go ahead. In a way, we've been asking for trouble by moderate people persuading us to give to all religion a respect, which it has never done anything to deserve.

TM: You quote physicist Steven Weinberg: "Religion is an insult to human dignity. Without it, you'd have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. For good people to do evil things, it takes religion."

You open the book marveling at the wonders of existence. You end it writing about your personal experience of awe and transcendence. You also write eloquently about this in a previous book, Unweaving the Rainbow.

RD: Unweaving the Rainbow, which I wrote in the late '90s, was my answer to those people who say that science and, in particular, my world view in The Selfish Gene was cold and bleak and loveless. Maybe I could read a few words from the opening of Unweaving the Rainbow, which I've set aside and asked to be read at my funeral.

"We are going to die and that makes us the lucky ones. Most people are never going to die because they're never going to be born. The potential people who could have been here in my place, but who will, in fact, never see the light of day, outnumber the sand grains of Sahara. ...In the face of these stupefying odds, it is you and I, in our ordinariness, that are here. Here's another respect in which we are lucky. The universe is older than a hundred million centuries. Within a comparable time, the sun will swell to a red giant and engulf the earth. Every century of hundreds of millions has been in its time, or will be when its time comes, the present century. The present moves from the past to the future like a tiny spotlight inching its way along a gigantic ruler of time. Everything behind the spotlight is in darkness, the darkness of the dead past. Everything ahead of the spotlight is in the darkness of the unknown future. The odds of your century being the one in the spotlight are the same as the odds that a penny, tossed down at random, will land on a particular ant crawling somewhere on the road from New York to San Francisco. You are lucky to be alive and so am I."

We are lucky to be alive and therefore we should value life. Life is precious. We're never going to get another one. This is it. Don't waste it. Open your eyes. Open your ears. Treasure the experiences that you have and don't waste your time fussing about a non-existent future life after you're dead. Try to do as much good as you can now to others. Try to live life as richly as possible during the time that you have left available to you.

Tagged as: fundamentalism, religion, atheism, god, richard dawkins

Interviewer Terrence McNally hosts Free Forum on KPFK 90.7FM, Los Angeles (streaming at kpfk.org).
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