Sunday, December 30, 2007

The Republican Smear Tactics

For eight years we watched the Republicans refining their smear tactics directed at the Clintons -- with the expenditure of $millions of public funds misdirected to that end. Fox News and the Murdock operations generally have emulated the pattern to the point where our media are generally corrupted with such just within the libel limits.

Hopefully those of us who give a damn will try to stanch this deadly attack on democracy -- a variant of the McCarthy era tactics writ large. I mention this because I was startled to see a posting along these lines on one of my lists from a caring person. Ed Kent
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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Saturday, December 29, 2007

The Nihilists (II) -- Exiling the Elites

One cannot understand the game being played by the radicals in the Middle East apart from a pattern as old as the exile by the ancient Babylonians in the 6th century BCE of the elite (nobility) of Judea as a tactic for maintaining control of occupied masses:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babylonian_captivity#Biblical_account_of_exiles

The murder of Benazir Bhutto fits this pattern as did her exile prior to her return to Pakistan. The Maliki government in Iraq is profiting from this same pattern of threats of death to the bulk of Iraq's intellectuals and professionals and their exile to nearby countries (or academic posts in the U.S. where one finds them bewailing what we have done to their country). The Bolsheviks 'cleansed' Russia of its small but liberal middle class to install its own gangsters who brutalized the populations both of Russia and nearby countries swept up into the Soviet Union. The Khmer Rouge perhaps most dramatically murdered its own Cambodian elites and any who had been property owners prior to their ascension to power.

Had Bush or his neocon puppet masters had any awareness of history, they never would have set out on their misbegotten war on Iraq. Certainly they would not have participated in driving out the Iraqi elite groups and establishing the gangsters of the Maliki operation -- now halting Bush in his tracks with their most recent threat of retaliation should Iraqis be allowed to sue for damages in American courts -- just announced as the reason for a likely Bush veto of our major spending bill to get this permission removed from it.

What a sad loss in Bhutto. But this is the prime play of the nihilists and presumably bin Laden and Co. They merely need to kill off or drive into exile the natural leaders of the countries which they hope to dominate and then they can move in to manipulate the remaining fraudulent ones who can be removed in turn in due time.

One has to observe that the Bush administration has been a primary accomplice of the nihilists -- and perhaps dangerously tempted to imitate them!. We have just learned that J. Edgar Hoover had his hit list of 10,000 American whom he wished to round up and imprison with the suspension of habeas corpus. Sadly Israel is playing this game with its own captive Palestinian population.

And so it went.
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Friday, December 28, 2007

The Nihilists -- Religious and Political

Some time in the future I want to do a detailed study of the religious traditions out of which emerge periodically the blood thirsty distortions of Western religions and those shaped by them. There is brutal stuff in the 'scriptures' of our major Western religions and such is called forth to justify murder and wars by religious nihilists bent on destroying things and people. The story of Joshua -- probably a vast exaggeration -- is the model for ethnic cleansing. The Christians were split between the life supporters -- Jesus and those who appealed to the sense of justice embodied in the Hebrew prophetic literature versus the death worshipers -- see the Book of Revelation and much of St. Paul which wallowed in an apocalyptic hope for the imminent destruction of the world -- and all who had not converted in time to their version of Christianity:

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

These two visions are incompatible and the latter has done irreparable harm to humans over the millennia. Most of our political destroyers, if not explicitly appealing to their religions, have been shaped by them. I am not knowledgeable about Islam and so offer no citations there. Ed Kent]
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Giuliani Makes Big Bucks Defending Crooks?

[The shocking report below is presumably only the first of a number of to come on Giuliani's profitable turn to defending borderline crooked operations. An article last month listed a number of them. This is presumably only the first -- which does not mention that the young federal prosecutor who defeated Giuliani in this case was fired two weeks later.

What really gets to us New Yorkers who experienced him are Giuliani's boasts that he was somehow our super star. He was not. He did not prepare us for 9/11. He left the city in financial trouble. He hired crooks for high offices here. He messed up after 9/11, leaving many thousands with damaged lungs in the clean up of the "pile" and threatened them with legal retaliation if they complained. He is not a very nice guy. Like father, like son. Ed Kent]

..................
THE LONG RUN
Under Attack, Drug Maker Turned to Giuliani for Help
By BARRY MEIER and ERIC LIPTON
The work that Rudolph W. Giuliani's consulting firm did for
the maker of OxyContin provides a window into how he used
his standing to aid a client.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/28/us/politics/28oxycontin.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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Sunday, December 23, 2007

The Real Jesus?

Thanks to a Danforth Fellowship which allowed one to study a year of theology in addition to one's formal Ph.D. field, I was able to squeak in a three year Bachelor of Divinity degree awarded by Union Theological Seminary with a middle transfer year at Mansfield College, Oxford. Although I did not continue on in theology but shifted my interests to social/political/legal philosophy, I continue to review books in theology and also found that my training there added immensely to my understanding both of Western history and many items taken for granted in my primary fields which had been shaped by theological presuppositions.

Of particular interest, needless to say was who was the real Jesus. One of my grandfathers, Charles Foster Kent, had done one of the many 'Life of Jesus' studies in his era when biblical studies were breaking beyond literalism into the historical roots of the biblical texts and intellectual and historical currents that had shaped them.

Our introduction to biblical studies at UTS followed the logically reasonable pattern of Hebrew texts first followed by the Christian ones. Our teacher of the first, James Muhlenberg, was inspiring in that he practically read them aloud and my knowledge of Hebrew follows from his frequent use of a key word. When we came to the Christian texts the next spring, however, an Episcopalian followed the pattern of his denomination by teaching 'about' the texts, but not exposing us directly to them. We protested and he changed a bit awkwardly to letting us study the texts, themselves. We discovered that the four Gospels had a number of discrepancies and obviously had been written from vastly different perspectives. Matthew had a Hebrew tilt. Mark was the most bare and possibly the earliest composed. Luke was obviously patterned on the life of Moses (and the only one to offer the birth of Jesus that we are now celebrating as Christmas -- which was not dated on the annual calendar as it is today until about 3 centuries after the death of Jesus when it was most likely stolen from the Roman sun god who was reborn with the lengthening of the days each year.

If you sense a note of skepticism in that last comment, it becomes obvious with in depth studies that all our major religions as well as our present day cults borrowed heavily from other religious and mythic sources. We get the devil from the Zoroastrians. The death penalty was a direct steal from a Babylonian commercial code. Much of Genesis had roots in Babylonian religion as well.

The bottom line is that we have no certainty about the real details of the life of Jesus apart from one contemporary Roman reference to him as a suspected revolutionary executed as a zealot (terrorist in modern language).

However, the grave uncertainties being noted, such reports as that of the Sermon on the Mount and others offer one a sense at least of an incredibly wise and caring person who forgave sinners as well as his enemies -- who nowhere attacked gays or abortion among other things! His only reported moment of anger was against the money changers who made out when changing monies for Temple donations -- possibly a comment on modern capitalism?

The reports on Jesus first came from Saint Paul, who never met him, perhaps a generation after his death. The Gospels were apparently dated even another generation later. My conclusion about Paul was that he got it all wrong, was obsessed with death and obedience to the powers that be and so set Christians off on a destructive diversion from its get go. Paul also unleashed Christian anti-Semitism. However, even if the lives of Jesus were embroidered with abundant mythical elements, an incredibly decent and caring person -- for me at least -- is embedded at the core. I do not call myself a Christian, but certainly Jesus along with Socrates, has been one of the truly inspiring figures in our collective memory -- if one gets him right!

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

The following is one of the many websites reporting the difficulties involved in dating the Christian writings -- and the difference that such dating makes: http://www.carm.org/questions/gospels_written.htm
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Mixed Metaphors on Iraq

[From reading this article one would have to conclude that the U.S. is currently riding the back of a tiger in Iraq. Or to change metaphors, if and when we reduce our huge military and financial outlays in Iraq, such may light the fuse of a bomb ready to explode into civil war -- or a host of them all at once. Saddam Hussein, where are you now that we need you -- or your equivalent? Ed Kent]

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

In a Force for Iraqi Calm, Seeds of Conflict
By ALISSA J. RUBIN and DAMIEN CAVE
Sunni "Awakening" groups, paid by the U.S. to fight
extremists, have become a success story in Iraq, but there
are growing concerns about what will happen to them after a
U.S. handoff.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/23/world/middleeast/23awakening.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 212-665-8535 (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
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Saturday, December 22, 2007

The State of Iraq: An Update

[The op-chart below (open website to access) more or less tells it as it is. Security has been improved, but the social/political/economic situation of Iraq is a mess. I heard 3 Iraqi scholars who are teaching in the U.S. this year -- Harvard, Stony Brook and one other -- the other day on npr. And what they point out is that the professionals in Iraq -- a million or more -- have been largely driven out of the country by death and kidnapping threats against them and their families -- the doctors and academics particularly. Those remaining who are running the country are its gangsters -- stealing and killing still with little hope of getting the country together. One hears of some 40 to fifty women having been brutally murdered in the south for violating the strict dress codes there. The Kurds in the north want nothing to do with the Arabs to the south. Half the million Christians have been driven out of the country by death threats. And the war over oil has scarcely been resolved. There looks to be no likely way that our troops can resolve any of these problems. Ed Kent]

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

OP-CHART
The State of Iraq: An Update
By JASON CAMPBELL, MICHAEL O'HANLON and AMY UNIKEWICZ
As 2007 comes to a close, how should we understand the
situation in Iraq?

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/22/opinion/22ohanlon.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 212-665-8535 (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
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Friday, December 21, 2007

How Many Homeless Do We Have Today?

[We are seeing a nightmare in New Orleans which is most likely being emulated elsewhere where communities are destroying rather than building public housing that is affordable.

-------------------------------------

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-neworleans21dec21,1,7386395.story?coll=la-news-a_section

Fury in New Orleans as housing demolition OKd

Protesters, police clash outside a City Council meeting where a plan to
raze public housing is unanimously approved.
By Jenny Jarvie, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
December 21, 2007

--------------------------------------

We learned in the 1950s that private developers cannot fund affordable housing. Robert A. Taft, Republican Senate majority leader and competitor with Eisenhower for the presidency, learned this lesson when his family tried to build affordable housing and severely dented the family fortune. He became one of the principal supporters of public housing which flourished until the Reagan era.

We saw the difference in the quality of people's lives lived in public housing when we did so as grad students from 1960=63 under a special program designed to bring some desegregation to Grant Houses located on West 125th St. in Harlem. Previously I had worked with kids in Manhattanville nearby and seen how miserable their lives were in the broken down tenements subsequently replaced by public housing. Those living with us in the project were safe, could study for school, and had enough income to eat as well as live in secure housing -- rents were set on a percentage of family income.

It is shocking, then to see New Orleans destroying the public housing there to replace it with 'mixed' -- read profit-making -- housing. We are seeing similar development drives here in NYC. Columbia University which should be devoted to community service is taking over a chunk of lower West Harlem which will result in the same sort of gentrification there that has afflicted its main base in Morningside Heights where one must now be a multi-millionaire to buy in. They say that there is a big market here in Manhattan for foreigners looking to invest in condominiums:

----------------------------------------

New York Condos Lure Deal-Seeking Europeans
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
Foreign tourists are keeping brokers busy with their
eagerness to buy Manhattan apartments.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/21/realestate/21condo.html?th&emc=th

-----------------------------------------

How many homeless do we have today? Ed Kent]
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
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http://www.bloggernews.net

The Two Faces of Columbia

An half dozen or more of our family have attended Columbia or affiliated institutions in Morningside Heights. Sadly what we have seen over the years has been a divided institution -- one that values scholarship and one that pursues mad real estate and other dubious schemes designed to profit the institution. The two faces of Columbia have resembled the Zoroastrian gods of light and dark, good and evil, constantly at war which were imported into our major Western religions as God and the Devil.

One can scarcely believe that Columbia once wanted to invest big bucks in a better cigarette filter or a faculty housing and retail center off towards the Catskills somewhere. But they were once plans put forth by the Columbia trustees, if fortunately abandoned. For most of the period past the mid-20th century, Columbia was known as the landlord from hell with which the Columbia Tenants Union waged wars to protect targets of Columbia's wrath. We had a brief encounter with one of Columbia's property lawyers who instructed an assistant to lie in a court case in which we were being sued for being behind in repaying a $150.00 student loan. The case was thrown out and the lawyer admonished by the judge, but we had seen the devil face to face.

Now Columbia is at it again. It is going to build the biggest brain research center on earth on 17 acres of West Harlem extracted from the people there? One can't help suggesting as a loyal Columbia alum that its monies be directed to faculty -- particularly departments in the humanities that are being stinted now -- where are the greats that we had as teachers such as Ernest Nagel, John Herman Randall, Jr. and Oscar Kristeller and others who taught us philosophy? Columbia would rather spend its none too abundant endowment digging a seven story deep hole in the potential Harlem ditch that runs from the Hudson River to Broadway? Not too wise in this era of radical climate change, methinks. Better to stick with the high ground!
--
"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 212-665-8535 (voice mail only) [blind copies]
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/CollegeConversation
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EndingPoverty
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/440neighborhood
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

A Year of Maximum Damage by the Republicans

[It is becoming increasingly clear that the Republicans -- both Bush and the still relatively effective minorities in the House and Senate -- are determined to wreck as much damage on our nation as they can before they are hopefully driven out of office by the next election cycle. One sees give aways to corporate interests right and left (e.g. the award of new dominant media outlets to the Murdocks this week) and more startling the denial of medical aid to children. These types manifestly are on a nihilistic trip that rivals any that we have seen in our nation's history. Presumably things will get far worse this next year. Be braced! Ed Kent]

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

Republican Unity Trumps Democratic Momentum
By CARL HULSE and ROBERT PEAR
Since last January, Republicans have remained persistently
unified against Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of
Representatives.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/21/washington/21cong.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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Thursday, December 20, 2007

The Columbia Deal

[The deal reported here was cut yesterday morning by half a dozen people meeting in a closed room below the Council chamber. Needless to say such verbal agreements are scarcely binding. The next generation will presumably discover that. This is not the way that comparable academic institutions have worked out cooperative agreements with their communities. No comments on get along, go along pols. Ours is a city run by real estate developers. Beware if you are in the line of fire. Ed Kent]

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

Columbia Expansion Gets Green Light
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS and RAY RIVERA
A $7 billion project will transform a section of Manhattan
now dominated by warehouses and auto body shops.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/20/nyregion/20columbia.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 212-665-8535 (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
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http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Gavaritchi Vi pa Ruski? Nyet?

But Gospodin Putin says that this is the year of the Russian language (forgive my fractured phonetic Russian acquired from a harried semester of Russian taught by the military intensive language instructors left over at Yale after WW2).

The interesting fact here is that Mr. Putin made this claim during a news conference today in Moscow with the Prime Minister of Greece at which they were announcing a joint program to build pipelines from Russia to Greece that would allow the ready distribution of oil and natural gas (and mutual profits therefrom) more readily around the globe.

Looks like Mr. Putin's economic star is on the rise while Mr. Bush's is fading into an economic black hole -- and with them the futures of our two nations. On top of it all Putin has also announced the transport of enriched uranium to Iran to get their nuclear plants (two of them?) going there. He looks to be the energizer bunny on the economic move these days while Bush hangs out with the local small business associations?

One has to hand it to Putin. He has learned fast how to make it in the world of big corporations. And the Russians seem generally happy with the prosperity that such is bringing them while Bush tries to convince his constituencies that lowering the taxes of our super rich and letting them (hedge funds) hide their profits off shore will bring trickle down benefits to the rest of us? I think that song has been sung to death. What do you think?
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Monday, December 17, 2007

Sub Prime Loans Hit the Neighborhood!

[So you thought that your property depended on your hard work and persistence in the face of obstacles. Think again. While you were doing all the right things, your neighbors were falling prey to the loan sharks and now your property is as much at risk as theirs -- your business, your job, the value of your home which you perhaps planned to sell when you retired as your nest egg?

The property game entangles all of us. The markets do not look too happy today around the globe. And they may hit the neighborhoods down the line, too. Ed Kent]

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

CITYWIDE
Holidays Find Loan Crisis Spreading to Businesses and
Neighbors
By DAVID GONZALEZ
In one Bronx neighborhood, the hangover from the binge of
sub prime loans that flooded the area a few years ago is
being felt even by those who did not take out risky loans.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/17/nyregion/17citywide.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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

American Racism -- One Drop of 'Black' Blood!

I recall somewhere back there (before the civil rights efforts, I think) a much bruited about book (and possibly movie as well) about a 'white' man who is stunned to find that he has a 'black' ancestor. I did not like this racist message then and I don't like it now. It is the essence of American racism. The Mormons did genealogical studies to ensure that they had no African roots at least though 1978 when they got around to renouncing their racism -- somewhere I have one of these complicated studies done by a relative who converted which takes us back to a 14th century Irishman, a major 17th century British poet, early arrival in Plymouth of our great, great etc. grandparents.

My shock at American racism as a child came when I happened to read Richard Wright's autobiographical Black Boy which opened the window on the horrors of the racist South. I had been growing up in the outer suburbs west of Hartford, Connecticut where one did not find either Jews or African Americans living. The only exceptions were a grocer in a poor community and a couple working for a wealthy gentleman farmer. I only discovered that Hartford actually had an African American ghetto of about six blocks when we delivered some war effort newspapers there as Boy Scouts.

Since that time I have watched the various manifestations of American racism -- the civil rights break throughs, the developing African American middle class -- but the enduring racism which has condemned so many to prison, poverty, the struggle to survive, and early deaths.

I respond (honestly) "other" to the census questions on race. I am pretty sure that all of us are a mixture from diverse sources -- some suppression of identities in our family legends. We are members of the human race -- other.

At the very least Apartheid South Africa drew more distinctions -- white, black, and colored (mixed and East Indian -- Gandhi). I recall asking South African friends at Oxford whether they had ever dined with Africans after we had invited them to dinner with an American fellow student. They said they had -- with 'coloreds' like him which was acceptable in South Africa (they opposed racism).

I only began to see things through the eyes of those impacted by American racism when I watched my brilliant Nigerian college roommate reacting to it -- he would become quite angry at its manifestations. He finally gave up on a career in Nigeria and did his brilliant medical teaching here in the U.S.

Also we lived for 3 years in a housing project on 125th St. in Harlem when we were graduate students which helped us lose the automatic reaction that someone of color was somehow different.

But I bristle at the manifest racism that is all around us. When I hear Obama characterized as a "black -- he would have been "colored" in Apartheid South Africa -- I see how deeply embedded it is. No wonder that Clarence Thomas is (sadly) so embittered with his hatreds directed towards his fellow human beings.

How would you feel if your children and grand children would be automatically classified as "black"?
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Our Workmen's Compensation Property Rights

One summer back in my student days I did two dangerous jobs simultaneously -- one in a large scrap metal operation and the other in an aircraft plant. One day when I took off to apply for a fellowship, my replacement at the aircraft plant was killed when two racing fork trucks smashed him. In the scrap metal plant an older worker and I had a metal barrel being hoisted by crane, which we had just filled with metal parts, break loose and smash six inches into the ground between us.

In the old days prior to the introduction of workmen's compensation laws -- first in Wisconsin in this country in 1911 -- any injured or killed on a job had to prove that they were not negligent or in any way at fault for their injuries or deaths for they or their families to collect any compensation from their employers. The decks were usually stacked, so that it was virtually impossible to collect compensation.

However, the significant feature of workmen's compensation laws is that fault is irrelevant and any injured when working for an employer is entitled to compensation automatically which then kicks back into increased rates for the employer.

Needless to say employers have made great efforts to avoid unnecessary injuries to their employees. One of the rules at the aircraft plant was that no worker was permitted to lift more than 30 pounds in weight -- to avoid back injuries which are a common feature of heavy laboring jobs. At the scrap metal operation we were obliged to have protective vaccinations.

Some of the 9/11 clean up workers have been able to collect compensation for the damage to their lungs done on the "pile" (Trade Center site) during the clean up. As these injuries were not determined within a year (the ordinary cut off for claims after an injury), the NY State legislature was obliged to extend this cut off date -- which it did at the insistence of a NYC deputy mayor so injured.

If one looks around at other dangerous substances and practices in the United States, one often discovers no comparable compensation protections -- against drug side effects, pollution of the atmosphere, faulty food production, and a host of other harms that are emerging in our modern world, e.g. recent reports of pollution in the fish production in China from which we derive 70% of the fish we eat. Our public agencies have become quite lax in maintaining protective regulations, driving people injured to costly and time consuming lawsuits.

Needless to say, if not terribly generous, workmen's compensation is still a form of property that extends beyond the mere ownership of things. A short history here from Wiki:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workers'_compensation#History

--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Friday, December 14, 2007

Where Did My Home Go?

[Many Americans have connected up their homes to debts, retirement plans, etc., etc. However, if Krugman is right in his column below, they/we may be in for a big shock as we discover that our 'property' in our homes has been stolen away by sub prime mortgage loans to people who cannot afford their homes which in turn is shaking confidence in the American economy generally.

I happen to live in a coop - converted from a rental property in 1979 when coops were rediscovered as a form of property. They had been popular prior to the market crash of 1929 which threw most of them into bankruptcy when members of a coop could no longer keep up their shares of maintenance (what rent is called in a coop). Only when the disasters of yore had been forgotten did coops make a comeback and now much of Manhattan is sprinkled with them -- and many of us have used them as collateral for loans, equity lines, etc. If the economy goes belly up, many of us may find ourselves looking for other housing, as happened during the Great Depression. Little have we realized that what we consider to be our property really depends on the decisions of many others -- particularly governmental regulatory agencies which should have functioned to prohibit our latest economic sub prime mortgage scam.

Be braced. Ed Kent]

OP-ED COLUMNIST
After the Money's Gone
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Anyone who expects the Federal Reserve or anyone else to come up with a plan that makes the current financial crisis just go away will be sorely disappointed.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/14/opinion/14krugman.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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Do Our Children Have a Right to Health Care?

[Manifestly our Congress and current President are divided as to whether all our children have a right to health care? Needless to say Bush's children never faced that problem. Ed Kent]

President Vetoes Second Measure to Expand Children's Health
Program
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG
It was the seventh veto of President Bush's presidency and
the second veto of a children's health bill.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/13/us/13bush.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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Our Medical Insurance Take Away

Many of us over the years have benefited from medical insurance and retirement plans connected with our employment. College teachers particularly have had the best of things with their retirement system, TIAA, and many are currently retiring thanks to it as multi-millionaires

However, one of the tragic expropriations of property that is spreading across the U.S. is the cancellation of both job related medical insurance and retirement programs. General Motors, which has been negotiating with its unions -- under the threat of outsourcing of their jobs -- has asked for vast reductions in benefits, claiming that worker medical insurance adds $1,220 to the price of one of its typical cars, placing it at a competitive disadvantage with overseas car producers.

The dirty little secret here is that the U.S. failure to introduce single payer medicine insurance (out of tax revenues) is both depriving Americans of a basic property right -- medical care -- AND putting our nation at a competitive disadvantage with others who do provide such benefits out of general income and corporate tax revenues.

Thus, our American way of doing things is both unjust and counter productive. All of us are suffering from our aberrant property distribution system.
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Republican 'Cut Your Taxes' Scam

I listened to the 9 Republican presidential candidates debating yesterday with little surprise at their various proposed tax scams to enrich the wealthy and demolish the rest of us. Note how many of them have been making out like bandits.

The core issue with taxes based on personal and corporate income is the quid pro quos that we derive from publicly administered taxes. The libertarians would more or less limit tax uses to such minimums as police and war powers and a few grudging extensions towards small public services here and there to be kept to the minimum.

The vast contrast between the U.S. and our competitor 20 plus developed nations is that each of them uses fair taxation to provide 'property' to their citizens at minimal cost in such areas as medical care, pensions, paid vacations, guaranteed food and affordable housing, and many other rights too numerous to detail in a short report.

The Republican game is to pretend that taxes collected by our governments are disposed of in some sort of bureaucratic black hole rather that they being used to provide us essential public services.

The biggest scam for more than half a century -- when most developed nations introduced universal medical care to their communities -- was that our own American Medical Association -- a voluntary organization made up of wealthy doctors who intended to stay wealthy -- started the ideological games that have sabotaged American medicine ever since. Who has not heard that tax funded medical care is SOCIALIZED MEDICINE? Of course this title only plays on ideological prejudices. The reality is that tax funded medicine in the developed countries is both more efficiently and cheaply directed to all who need medical care, but also does many of the things (e.g. preventive medicine) about which we only chatter. The bottom line is that too many poor people in this country die prematurely because they only get emergency medical care when it is too late to save their lives. And many again of those earning just enough income not to qualify for Medicaid die needlessly either because they can't afford medical insurance or find that their medical insurance does not cover the life-saving procedures called for to save their lives. As a college teacher close to my students and sometimes teaching about this problem, I heard more horror stories than I can want to remember.

Bottom Line. When the Republicans talk about cutting taxes they are really saying that their wealthy friends should be spared the expense of contributing their fair share to paying for the basic needs of all of us. They are stealing OUR property rights and handing them to the RICH.

And then there are the subplot tax games with new names. The so-called "DEATH TAX" would have us believe that the massive fortunes which some have assembled should not be recycled in part in the public good while the rest of us struggle to fund wars with a good portion of our income, small as it may be.

And then there is their new gimmick, a so-called "FAIR TAX" which is just another name for a sales tax. Needless to say, the lower one's income the more of it is stripped away by sales taxes. By some estimates a fair tax system would hit our lowest income families with the loss of as much as 35% of their small earned incomes.

Beware the Republican robber barons. They are hoping to make a comeback and destroy the protections for the rest of us established with the New Deal. Do we need yet another Depression to restore fair property rights in this country? Perhaps so. Greedy economic policies tend to produce them.
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Developers Take Manhattan

[Not the newest game in town, but one that is currently escalating is the takeover of Manhattan by developers with the inspiration of its billionaire Mayor Bloomberg and the consent of too many of its elected officials. One of the tools being used for this takeover is the threat of eminent domain expropriation by private property owners -- the NY Times acquired its new building by this route and so stands above the fray as such institutions as Columbia University makes a grab for 17 acres of lower West Harlem (Manhattanville) for a new campus, the sell out by the new staff at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine of a good portion of its lands (place) to a luxury housing developer) and the threat of super gentrification to all who live in the vicinity of such property grabs. Already residents near the new Cathedral sell out are fighting off rises in rents to $5-6,000 PER MONTH which is about what the luxury units being built there will cost.

Most of us do not realize that our own property rights and obligations are also impacted by such development schemes. Those who own properties or coop apartments -- if not faced with some sort of sub prime or life disaster -- watch their property values rise astronomically. Our coop at 440 Riverside Drive is now offering one apartment for sale at $2.8 million. Fortunately the owner of our remaining rental apartments is not greedy and is not harassing his tenants. However, not so far away landlords are playing all the tricks necessary to evict tenants -- "capital improvements" in a building claimed which permit sudden and unexpected bills to tenants of thousands of dollars. Many other trick or treat tactics are used to expel tenants so as to increase either rents or the salability of buildings to astronomical levels.

Ron Schiffman who posts the report below designed the 197A plan of the local Community Board #9 for Manhattanville in the interest of all those living there and nearby which is being trampled by Columbia and other developer interests sweeping across 125th St. to the East River. If the NYC City Council plays along, as have the other agencies and pols supporting such development, thousands of individuals and small businesses will be driven out of Harlem to find new homes wherever they can.

Right here in liberal NYC we are watching the interests of the super wealthy trumping those of all other residents and business owners
in the area.

Only in Amerika ...!!! Below is Ron's pass along of bits and pieces of this iceberg threatening the shattering of this community. Ed Kent]

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

Subject: Fwd: cautiously optimistic message on former SF Stable
Date: Sun, 9 Dec 2007 17:22:55 -0500
From: Ron Shiffman

Please ask for the preservation of all the buildings cited in CB 9M's
197a and that 3229 Broadway not be taken from its owner and given to
Columbia University. They can expand without it and their plan would
even be better . Please circulate. The issue is not about whether
Columbia should expand it is how they should expand. The City should not
reward arrogance and planning rooted in 60's but should plan for 2030
respecting diversity, community and democratic processes.
Ron

Please circulate to your lists.



Begin forwarded message:

From: MHabstritt@aol.com
Date: December 9, 2007 3:57:10 PM EST
To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
Subject: cautiously optimistic message on former SF Stable

http://council.nyc.gov/html/home/home.shtml

former Sheffield Farms Stable (1903/1909)

The Stable is still in private hands, but there are other worthy
buildings in Manhattanville which Columbia already owns. Please do
ask for landmarking of Prentis Hall and the Studebaker Building. It
is only right that these be preserved long-term since Columbia plans
to let them stand anyway. With the Sheffield Farms Stable, they
would represent Manhattanville's "Dairy District" by retaining key
structures of the largest of the city's milk distributors.
(Remember, Studebaker was a Borden dairy plant for much longer than
it served as an auto service center.)

Prentis Hall, former Sheffield Farms Pasteurization and Bottling
Plant (1909)

Ask that the archeological remains of the Third Avenue Railway be
protected in situ or offered to the Transit Museum. Archeologists
were not asked to look at streetbeds by City Planning, so even when
these remnants were called to the attention of the Landmarks
Preservation Commission's archeologist, they can/will do nothing.
This streetcar company installed the first cable cars in Manhattan
on Amsterdam Avenue and by purchasing other lines eventually owned
one that crossed the island on 125th St. with a turnaround at the
Fort Lee Ferry landing at the Hudson River. The cable cars were
later converted to an underground electric system that was used
nowhere else in this country but downtown Washington DC. Here it
was used throughout Manhattan due to the ban on overhead wires. If
not actually damaged by excavation, they will be beaten to pieces by
construction traffic. Underground portions could tell us more about
how this technology worked. And, it's a lot of fun to puzzle
visitors with why there are artifacts in the middle of Twelfth
Avenue that say "3rd Ave"

Third Avenue Railway remnants (1910?) under riverside viaduct at
Twelfth Avenue

There are other gems, several of which are in the modified 197-a
plan as targets for conversion instead of demolition. These are
already owned or controlled by Columbia. Supporting the modified
197-a plan will preserve these buildings.

Warren Nash Service Center
Despatch Moving and Storage
Meeting with God Church
Skyline Windows
BJ Harrison Chair Factory
West Market Diner

Former BJ Harrison Chair factory (1885). The co. made folding camp
chairs originally for the military in the CIvil War and later for
the leisure market

If you require more information on any of these buildings, please
let me know.

Thank you in advance for your assistance in preserving this
community's built heritage.

For the Manhattanville Preservation Alliance,

--Mary Habstritt
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

About OSE (OutStupidEconomy)

By chance I happened to do my dissertation on property theory. To simplify greatly I discovered that our property does not consist of things that we own, but rather legal rights, powers, duties, and liabilities that we possess. A renter, for example, may 'own' very different 'property' rights to an apartment, depending upon the legal protections that governments have provided, e.g. versus eviction and rent increases, proper maintenance of the apartment, etc. etc.

What we have seen since the Reagan administration is devastating sabotage of such governmental protections. The bottom line today is that we may be facing a serious recession (depression) due to the runaway sub-prime mortgage sellers who have gained greatly while leaving their victims prone to eviction with scarcely understood legal penalties and increases in rents which are also impacting our markets and economy generally -- and thus the rest of us.

I shall try to do brief breakdowns of such things in this context and welcome any and all to join in the lessons that we all should be learning before it is too late.

You may view the group site at:

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


where you will find subscription details if you are interested in getting regular postings.

OurStupidEconomy-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

Shall try to offer approximately one example per day when time permits.

Best, Ed Kent
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OurStupidEconomy
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Monday, December 10, 2007

Mormon Beliefs

Below are several of a number of websites that spell out the details of Mormon beliefs as a religion that holds that it has superseded earlier Western religious views.

http://www.religionfacts.com/mormonism/beliefs.htm


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

--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Media Induced Mass Murders!

It is becoming increasingly clear that the titillating coverage by our media of the latest mass shooting scene by some depressed teen or others seeking suicide by cop is playing a primary role in inducing even more of these horrors. The suicide information left behind now explicitly refers to 'fame' expected by the suicides to follow from such media coverage which is purely designed to capture viewers and thereby up ratings.

I don't know how to halt such accomplices to these horrors except to call them what they are -- accomplices to mass murder. Needless to say such exploitation of murders simultaneously blocks out the serious information needed for well functioning democracies -- what's up in the Middle East or our national and state capitals that is affecting our lives. Such important news plays a secondary or tertiary role to the obscene details of the latest murder and the state of mind of the perpetrator since birth. What we are seeing here is porn of the most destructive and demeaning kind. Pure sex portrayals would be a lessor evil than such exploitation of violent deaths. It is ironic that the former are prohibited while the latter is sponsored by our greedy media outfits. Down with Time Warner and all the degradation brought to us by Murdock and his unholy media cabal. Back to Australia with them!
--
"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 212-665-8535 (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://groups.yahoo.com/group/FindingHumaneJobs
http://BlogByEdKent.blogspot.com/
http://www.bloggernews.net

Banned from Teaching Traditional Theology?

[What this article does not make clear is that the faculty member who has been barred from teaching biology by a fundamentalist college actually holds a traditional theological view of the relationship between divine creation and evolution -- pretty well standard with modern theologians, i.e. there is no reason why G-d should not have used evolution to bring into existence his creation. Pretty ironic to have the fundies now banning their fellow religionists for not following their own narrow and ill informed party line. Ed Kent]

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

http://insidehighered.com/news/2007/12/10/evolution

Academic Freedom and Evolution

Opponents of evolution have of late been trying to frame their arguments as being about academic freedom and free expression. As a result, the anti-evolution Discovery Institute is ecstatic over the recent discovery of e-mail messages among professors at Iowa State University criticizing the views of a pro-intelligent design professor whose tenure bid was denied. “Dr. Guillermo Gonzalez and Academic Persecution” is the title of the institute’s Web page about the case. (Iowa State says that the professor’s views on evolution were not a decisive factor in his dismissal.)
Looking for a job?


The Christian Law Association, meanwhile, frames a lawsuit against the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution by a fired postdoc who does not believe in evolution or want to do work related to evolution as a matter of his being punished for his beliefs.

But the groups arguing for freedom of expression of evolution deniers have not been heard agitating for the rights of Richard Colling. He’s a professor at Olivet Nazarene University, in Illinois, who has been barred from teaching general biology or having his book taught at the university that is his alma mater and the place where he has taught for 27 years. A biologist who is very much a person of faith, these punishments followed anger by some religious supporters of the college over the publication of his book in which he argues that it is possible to believe in God and still accept evolution.

“I thought I was doing the church a service,” Colling said in an interview. He believes that religious colleges that frame science and faith as incompatible will lose some of their best minds, and that his work has been devoted to helping faithful students maintain their religious devotion while learning science as science should be taught.

“You can’t check your intellect at the door of the church,” he said. Colling has tenure and he hasn’t been fired or had his pay cut — which university officials have told the American Association of University Professors means that Olivet Nazarene can’t be accused of violating his academic freedom.

Actually, the AAUP tends to believe that having courses taken away (without due process) and having your books banned generally is a violation of academic freedom, and the association is currently investigating the case while pushing (without success) for the sanctions against Colling to be lifted. The case is in many ways notable because the AAUP gives religious colleges considerable leeway in enforcing religious beliefs and is getting involved here only because of evidence that the university is violating its own stated principles. At the same time, the AAUP says that proponents of intelligent design are not necessarily correctly citing the principles of academic freedom in some other prominent cases attracting attention.

Colling’s career at Olivet Nazarene was successful until the publication in 2004 of Random Designer, his attempt to offer a philosophy in which religious people can study evolution with scientific seriousness, and scientists can embrace faith. The central idea, in short, is that one can believe that God created the universe, and in so doing created the systems that would evolve into everything that exists today. Colling acknowledges that it is not possible to believe literally in the Bible’s creation of the world in six days but argues that this need not diminish the moral force of the Bible or belief in God.

As a biologist, Colling said that he thinks there is simply no argument that rebuts evolution, and that the evidence is overwhelming. But in writing his book, he said that he didn’t think of himself as remotely heretical. In fact, he said that one of the things he admires about the Church of the Nazarene is that — provided one believes in God — the faith embraces science.

Official church policy (confirmed by a spokeswoman for the university) states as follows: “The Church of the Nazarene believes in the biblical account of creation (’In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth ....’ Genesis 1:1). We oppose any godless interpretation of the origin of the universe and of humankind. However, the church accepts as valid all scientifically verifiable discoveries in geology and other natural phenomena, for we firmly believe that God is the Creator.”

Colling’s story (confirmed by AAUP officials who have been investigating the case) is that trouble started last summer, as word about his views spread to some conservative churches in the denomination, and word reached him that some trustees wanted him fired. But President John C. Bowling came to his defense, and nothing happened.

Bowling has also spoken out about how religion and science can be reconciled, arguing that they can interact (although his analysis places more of an emphasis on the primacy of faith). In an address to students last year, Bowling explored these issues. “Christianity should not be viewed as adversarial to diligent science. It is not. God created the natural order and the laws which govern it. Science and faith are not enemies,” he said. “But let’s go a step further. How do we respond when we come to a point of apparent conflict between scripture and science? I believe that at a point, Scripture takes pre-eminence. For example, the miraculous activity of God, ultimately demonstrated in the incarnation (Jesus becoming human), and the resurrection, can never be explained by science; such events do not fit the laws of science. So if we subvert the faith to what can be explained by the laws of science alone, we fall short of the Biblical view of God and salvation.”

On the question of evolution, Bowling said this: “The Christian faith and some understandings of evolution are not necessarily incompatible. However, I want to be very clear in saying that not every articulation of evolution will do; not at all. That is to say, evolution must be understood in certain ways to be compatible with Christian faith. The Christian affirmation of God as Creator affirms God as initially creating, but also continually sustaining, actively interacting, and purposefully directing creation to its culmination. All things come from Him, exist in Him, and move to Him. Evolution, if it is to be held by a Christian, must be considered as a methodology of divine creation within that broader Biblical context.”

This spring, according to Colling, he was called to Bowling’s office and told that because of the controversy over his book, he could no longer teach the general biology course, and that his book could not be taught in the biology department at all. Colling said that he asked Bowling if there was anything in his book or teaching that was inappropriate or un-Christian, and Colling cited nothing. (A spokeswoman for the university said Friday that only Bowling was authorized to talk about the case, and that he was unavailable.)

Colling said that the bans on what he can teach have hurt him deeply because he feels that he was trying to help his church and its students. He stressed that he has never told students what they must believe, but that he teaches “what the science says,” which is that evolution is real. “I have an obligation. If we say we value the principles of academic freedom and we say that all verifiable science is fine, this is verifiable science that should be taught.”

Some students in the past have been troubled by evolution, Colling said, because they fear that if they study science, they must leave their faith behind. “My challenge has been to be a real human being to them and to assure them that the biology does not need to threaten their faith.”

Jonathan Knight, who directs the academic freedom division of the AAUP, said that in cases where religious colleges explicitly require faculty members to reject evolution or other scientific beliefs, the association would not bring academic freedom investigations.

“If a private, church-related institution says that to be a member of this faculty, you must believe in the inerrancy of the biblical account of the origins of life, we would scratch our heads on whether it’s going to be very productive in terms of science education, but we wouldn’t say that they have violated academic freedom,” Knight said. “They are entitled to set out the rules of the game, and they have done so, and so be it.”

Plenty of colleges do just that. For example, the postdoc who was fired at Woods Hole took a job at Liberty University, where the doctrinal statement, among other things, requires the belief that “the universe was created in six historical days.” Knight said that was entirely within Liberty University’s right to state and enforce, as far as the AAUP is concerned.

But what of Woods Hole or other scientifically oriented institutions that may not want to hire people or who may want to fire people who would teach against evolution in the classroom or refuse to do laboratory work based on evolution? The fears are not just theoretical — the lawsuits over such dismissals are very real, and many academics fear that the “Academic Bill of Rights” or similar measures backed by some conservatives would make it hard for them to keep out people whose teachings might run counter to science.

Knight said he could not think of a case where the AAUP had been asked to investigate the claims of anti-evolution professors.

AAUP documents have explicitly and implicitly affirmed the right of departments to recognize evolution as something that is established fact. The association’s recent statement on “Freedom in the Classroom” states that “it is not indoctrination for professors of biology to require students to understand principles of evolution; indeed, it would be a dereliction of professional responsibility to fail to do so.”

And a 1986 AAUP document, “Some Observations on Ideology, Competence and Faculty Selection,” says it is legitimate in some cases for departments to intentionally exclude certain perspectives when doing hiring. “Not just any currently debated approach to a subject has a degree of importance which should guarantee it time in the classroom, and classroom time not being unlimited, choices have to be made,” the statement says. “An institution of higher learning should welcome those who offer to bring it new ideas; but there is not evading the substantive question whether the new ideas a candidate offers to bring it really are that — as opposed, perhaps, to mere passing fads or fancies.”

— Scott Jaschik
Comments
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Another Manifestation of the Careless Cruelty of the Bush Administration

[One of the basic functions of the governments of modern developed nations is to make provision for the basic needs of their citizens -- particularly those variously disabled by medical conditions, injuries, or simply the infirmities of aging. Private charities can and do handle a small fraction of such needs. Some of our national religions pride themselves on taking care of their own -- and simultaneously urge their members to oppose taxes necessary for government to assist others. Simple cost cutting such as illustrated in the article below which has caused massive delays (nearly a million cases now) is but one more way to dodge responsibility for the well being of our fellow humans and particularly citizens of our own country. Ed Kent]

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

Social Security Disability Cases Last Longer as Backlog
Rises
By ERIK ECKHOLM
More people have lost their homes, gone bankrupt or even
died while awaiting an appeals hearing on their Social
Security disability claims, lawyers say.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/10/us/10disability.html?th&emc=th

--
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Sunday, December 09, 2007

Obama'd Way with the (Wealthy) Ladies

Several months back I happened to hear an npr interview with a journalist who has worked closely with and supported Obama since his political career got launched in Chicago. His description of Obama was intriguing at the time who seems to be shadowing forth now the characteristics that he described.

First off he described Obama as a very ambitious guy which he manifestly is -- emerging out of nowhere to run for the presidency. Whether this goal came into being in kindergarten is not the point. Obama is a man hungry to be president.

The other features of Obama's approach to politics that he described was that Obama: 1) had been a tough in fighter in local Chicago politics and 2) was an ingenious charmer of wealthy liberal ladies (he specified some in his description) who could be enlisted to fund his campaigns. These two sides of Obama now seem manifest. I watched briefly the Oprah/Obama trist yesterday and it was clear that he is, indeed, a skillful charmer of wealthy ladies.

The interesting thing to watch will be whether Obama can appropriate the support of women generally which Hillary has enjoyed. I rather suspect that his charm routine will not be universally appealing. I do worry about his skillful presentation of himself as the new wave which can deceive the unwary as to its conservative tendencies -- e.g. not supporting realistic universal medical care per Paul Krugman's recent commentary on it as a future road block to our achieving real medical insurance reforms.

The bottom line here is that Obama is one bright guy on the march. Will Democrats buy him? Will some road kill along his speeding route do him in at some critical point? In some ways I admire him, but in others, he leaves me deeply worried at the ultimate damage that his ambitions may do to us all.
--
"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)
--
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Saturday, December 08, 2007

Romney Dodges and Weaves

Romney's speech defending his identity as a Mormon ended up saying nothing about what Mormons believe -- a wise move most likely as their beliefs are generally beyond belief. Sobeit. But what I found offensive was his total distortion of American church history and the beliefs of our founding fathers -- particularly their religious views which gave us the protections of the First Amendment:

Amendment 1 - Freedom of Religion, Press, Expression. Ratified 12/15/1791. Note

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Our founding fathers were not religious nuts. They were well aware of the harms that such could do, so they took the wise step of separating church and state. No, Mr. Romney, they were neither evangelicals nor Mormons. They were for the most part what you would call "secular humanists."
--
"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)
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American Religious History

[The book review below from tomorrow's NY Times touches on some of the details of our complex American religious history. One of the most informative courses that I had the good fortune to take along the line was that on American Church History taught by Robert Handy at Union Theological Seminary. Without such information, one will not know that the bulk of our founding fathers were "deists" (from the Latin word for g-d, deus, and meaning that there is an orderly universe fit for doing science -- Ben Franklin and his kite experiment) -- but most likely no personal deity) versus "theists" (from the Greek word for G-d, theos, and meaning a personal deity, e.g. that of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, Jesus, Mohammed, and Joseph Smith who based his Book of Mormon on an early penny dreadful American novel).

The other criss-cross of American religion was the on-going competition between theology-based Christianity of the traditional Protestant denominations and Roman Catholicism versus the anti-intellectual revivalists who have produced the evangelical fundamentalists of today. Ed Kent]

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

'Head And Heart: American Christianities'
By GARRY WILLS
Reviewed by PATRICK ALLITT
Garry Wills on the two great threads of America's religious
history.

Review:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/books/review/Allitt-t.html?8bu&emc=bu
--
"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)
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"Pro Life" Is Anti Women!

The whole pro life game is designed to infringe on the rights of women not to be forced to bear unwanted children. There is no biblical sanction for this position. In fact abortion was generally tolerated until well into the 19th century when two forces converged to attack it:

1) the First Vatican Council of the Roman Catholic Church which passed a number of right wing assertions ranging from denial of conscientious objector status to war protesters and the doctrine of "papal infallibility" as well as an attack on abortion.

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&lr=&client=firefox-a&q=Wiki+on+First+Vatican+Council&btnG=Search

2) the gang up of American doctors against their principal competitors, midwives, who had up until then carried out abortions. Until the advent of anti-biotics mid 20th century, abortion was a risky procedure -- but no more so than child birth, itself, (one of my grand mothers died when her third child was born -- a matter of deep family sadness).

Roe v. Wade followed upon the horrors imposed upon women by illegal abortions, all too often carried out by 'butchers' on kitchen tables -- while the well off might often obtain the procedure from doctors who would do it under different names. Those of us who were conscious of such things just prior to the Roe decision know how horrendous the situation was and those leading the abortion reform movement were often clergy -- Catholics who supported abortion were all too often silenced by the Vatican.

Let us hope that the right wing move to dominate the Supreme Court does not throw us back once again to that hell for women.
--
"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)
--
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Gates Juggles Iraqi/Afghani 'Cluster Bombs'

[By all reports, while Iraq seems poised like the calm in the middle of a hurricane -- ready to explode whenever the truce is called off between embittered competing factions -- the situation in Afghanistan continues to disintegrate. Afghanis who originally enjoyed their liberation from Taliban tyrannies are now increasingly welcoming their return to power as an alternative to governmental corruption and oppression and American killings from on high.

These sad people have suffered far too much over the past three decades of chaos in their country imposed by foreign powers. Our restoration of the rule of the warlords is no solution to their problems. We Westerners cannot seem to get it into our heads that the Middle East is divided among a host of tribal communities, rarely at peace with each other. In the case of both Pakistan and Afghanistan there are five separate tribal groups each -- they share only the Pastuns among which many of the radicals are situated and so the chaos on the borders between the two nations. When will our American leaders wake up to the chaos that we have created over there? One doubts that our Marines can make any significant difference. Ed Kent]

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

Gates Said to Oppose Force Shift to Afghanistan
By THOM SHANKER
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has decided against
shifting Marine Corps forces from Iraq to take the lead in
Afghanistan, officials said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/world/middleeast/06gates.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)
--
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American Racism Endures

[Racism seems to be deeply embedded in our nation's psyche. The article cited below reflects the effects of it on our criminal justice system. The new Republican hot button attack on Latino immigrants catches another piece of this abomination. Our family has imposed parental control on the Lou Dobbs racial profanities -- what a way to make his living!. We need more honest media sources of public information to expose such uglies. Ed Kent]

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

Justice Dept. Numbers Show Prison Trends
By SOLOMON MOORE
The data reflect deep racial disparities in the nation's
correctional institutions. In several states, incarceration
rates for blacks were more than 10 times the rate of whites.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/us/06prison.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)
--
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Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Two Views of Iraq: Reporters There verus U.S. Public Here

[I wonder who has shaped the U.S. public's view of Iraq? Ed Kent]

Pew Research Center:

(11/28/07)
The polling outfit has a new survey of journalists working in Iraq, who basically say they are unable to tell the whole story—but from what they can see, things are awful:

Two Views of Iraq

A Survey of Reporters
On the Front Lines
28 Nov 07 Journalists covering Iraq—mostly veteran war correspondents—give their reporting a generally positive assessment but describe conditions there as the most perilous they have ever encountered.

Public Sees Improved War Effort
27 Nov 07 For the first time in a long time, nearly half of Americans express positive opinions about the situation in Iraq and judgments about the overall situation there have been improving steadily since the summer.
--
"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)
--
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Chavez versus Putin

I think it is pretty clear from the election results that there is a vast difference between the political worlds of Putin and Chavez. By all reports one's life is put at risk in Russia today if one opposes the regime which incidentally features multiple billionaires supported by and supporting Putin. Chavez in contrast is one of the first with native American roots to head a government in the Americas and ending poverty seems to be his aim. He lost the referendum because students and some of his supporters lobbied against him assuming dominating powers as potential president for life. Unless oppression becomes his game he is operating within a democratic framework. Had it with the media distorting such basic realities for popular consumption.
--
"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)
--
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Messing Up MY Kids' Minds

[One of the horrors perpetrated by fundamentalists -- whether Christians, Muslims, or Jews -- is that they mess up the minds of kids. To do so with their own is, I guess, their right. But when they invade the space of our public schools with textbooks cheapened with superstition treated as fact, they are messing up MY KIDS' minds along with their own. Such manipulation of textbooks -- with which the publishers cooperate in order to sell their texts -- is a national disgrace. Needless to say many religious persons would reject creationism as well as agnostics and atheists. This is lowest common denominator cultism at its worst being foisted on the public. Read the article below for proof of this very real danger. Ed Kent]

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

Official Leaves Post as Texas Prepares to Debate Science
Education Standards
By RALPH BLUMENTHAL
The Texas Education Agency's director of science was
dismissed for refusing to remain neutral about whether to
teach evolution or creationism.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/03/us/03evolution.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)
--
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No U.S. Strike on Iran?

Two days ago I posted a report on a joint U.S./Israeli plan in progress to strike Iran. Now we hear that all 16 of our U.S. intelligence agencies report that Iran stopped work towards producing a nuclear weapons capacity in 2003. All that stuff from the Bushies about Iran lying about its nuclear developments should call forth some sort of apology -- if ordinary courteses obtain between our nations? Needless to say such will not be forthcoming. But what about all those economic sanctions that we imposed on Iran on a false basis? But what about all those economic sanctions that we imposed on Iran on a false basis?

Frankly I am more worried about the Indian Point nuclear plant scarcely guarded (per its guards) only a short commute north of NYC!
--
"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)
--
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