Category Archives: Society

Redefining Patriotism

To many Americans, it seems that patriotism is the flag-waving unquestioning devotion to the United States and its armed forces. July 4th and Memorial Day bring out these sentiments everywhere, and we are constantly reminded to be patriotic, support our troops, to pledge allegiance to our government above all else, and remember those in the armed forces that died for our freedom.

Many “patriotic” people get mad at those that point out that the United States has never, in its entire history, lived up to those words in the pledge: “with liberty and justice for all.” In fact, when the pledge was written in 1892, slavery was not yet a distant memory. Segregation and racial discrimination were still the norm. White juries, especially in the south, sentenced black men to death on the flimsiest of evidence, while exonorating white lynchers that were clearly guilty. It’s considered “unpatriotic” or “against America” to mention these things, especially around July 4.
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Virginia Law Accidentally Gives People Weekends off

Check out CNN.com – Working for the weekend? – Jul 1, 2004. I’ve just got to ask — what’s so bad about letting people have either Saturday or Sunday off, and 24 consecutive hours off in a week? I think we need to all step back and ask whether the 24/7 lifestyle is really a good thing overall. I think it’s not. And living in a small town where most places are closed on Sunday (and a fair number on Saturday too), I can say that it is easily managable and works just fine.

FDR\’s unfinished revolution

Salon has an article titled FDR’s unfinished revolution detailing FDR’s proposal for a second bill of rights that, more or less, never happened. There’s also some speculation on what would happen should Bush be re-elected: striking down the Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act, right to privacy, Roe vs. Wade, affirmative action, etc. Salon also has an excerpt of the book that prompted that article.

Dumb Words: \”Sticktoitiveness\”

It seems that a lot of people are using the word “stick-to-it-iveness”. There’s even a page for potential authors that lists “stick-to-it-iveness” as a critical trait.

As this excellent rant points out, people seem to ignore that we already have a word for that: tenacity.

Even sadder: Google reports 995 hits for sticktoitiveness, 2810 for stick-to-it-iveness, and more with various other spellings. Argh.

Babylon 5, Sherlock Holmes, and Blogging

I am a person that is easily fascinated. I find the might of a massive steam locomotive almost a century old to be fascinating, and I think that the nanoscale engines now in development are fascinating as well. Programming languages, philosophy, music, other sciences — all are interesting.

But there’s something more fascinating: people. Sometimes they’re annoying (such as anyone on the Jerry Springer show; I’ve failed to grasp the fascination there for years). Sometimes they’re mysterious. Let’s see where this little observation can lead…
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Martin Luther King vs. Bush

“Peace is not merely a distant goal that we seek, but a means by which we arrive at that goal.”

That powerful quote by Martin Luther King, Jr., sums up what those of us opposed to the war in Iraq said, and continue to say today. I agree that a peaceful society in Iraq, free of oppression and murderous rampages, is in the best interests of the Iraqis and the world. I also believe, however, that oppression and murderous rampages are not the right ways to bring about peace.

“The physical casualties of the war in Vietnam are not alone the catastrophes. The casualties of principles and values are equally disastrous and injurious. Indeed, they are ultimately more harmful because they are self-perpetuating. If the casualties of principle are not healed, the physical casualties will continue to mount.” — Martin Luther King, Jr.

If we, the Americans, truly stand for peace, democracy, justice, and the downtrodden, then let it be so. Let’s stand for those values everywhere and extend them to everyone. Through the war on Iraq, we have heard language from the Pentagon talking about “softening the opposition”, which means the slaughter of hundreds or thousands of Iraqi soldiers (and quite likely, non-combatant bystanders). We are encouraged to think of the Iraqi soldiers as “Saddam’s evil thugs” as a way to accept this kind of mass murder; yet we know all too well that most of the Iraqi solders didn’t want to fight the Americans. They faced a sobering choice: resist and be tortured and killed by the Iraqis, or fight and be killed by the Americans.

Do we extend our values of peace only to those whom Saddam has not yet oppressed?

How can we justify killing thousands of Iraqis in the name of saving them? As a Russian commentator recently put it, “It reminds me of the Soviet expansion into eastern Europe. They kept ‘liberating’ countries whose citizens never asked for liberation.”

All of this brings us back to our current administration as well as much of the opposition in Washington. If you interviewed each of the politicians on the House, Senate, and White House, you’d find that they’d almost all claim to admire Martin Luther King and what he stood for, to the point of being in support of a national holiday honoring the man and his principled accomplishments.

Yet many of them, Bush included, have been acting for over a year in ways that directly fly in the face of what Martin Luther King stood for.

King’s message was not solely one of black equality in America. It was one of global equality, of help for the repressed, of peace and justice, and of non-violent ways of improving society. Let us not forget that King’s message was far broader than many people today remember, and let us not fail to work for his goals.

The Military’s Class Divide

An article in the Village Voice discusses the difference between the socio-economic backgrounds of those in charge of the military and those fighting on the ground.

One thing that is clear from this is that the myth that Americans are not hampered by pedigree like our cousins in Europe is just that — a myth. Many of the people in the military are there because college is increasingly returning to being the domain of the rich, and risking their lives in the military is their only hope of making a better future.

Yet we see that, though they are the ones taking the greatest risks, they are rewarded far less than those running things from the comfort of a command and control location in the horrible conditions of Florida.

Fred Rogers stories continue

Since my earlier article on Fred Rogers, A Lesson on Influencing Adults, more people have been doing stories on Fred and his impact (or not) to people.

One of the best was Diane Rehm’s interview with Fred Rogers last December (direct link to RealAudio file here). It was a very touching hour of radio.

Kuro5hin carries an article with Fred Rogers’ theory on corporate corruption, and sparks decidedly mixed reviews from readers. There’s even a link to Paul Harvey on Fred Rogers. Just goes to show you that a commentator I normally can’t stand (Harvey) can occasionally have something interesting to say.

A Lesson on Influencing Adults

When the news broke yesterday that Fred Rogers had died, it was amazing to see how many adults still remembered the Mr. Rogers show and even were personally moved by the show in later life. I think it goes to show that what children watch on TV and at the movies really does matter to their character development.

A number of stories about Mr. Rogers appeared yesterday in addition to those liked above. We saw appreciations, lists of Fred Rogers quotes, links to an old interview with Mr. Speedy Delivery, and even how to talk to children about his death.

NPR has a webpage about Fred Rogers.