Thursday

Got Faith?

Today we have a guest post from Peace Tree friend, Brother Tim. To read all of his work please visit him at Blog of Revelation!

Got Faith?

Evaluating one's faith should be a daily, on-going process.

What is Faith?

Like the wind -- You can feel it and see it's effects, like a tumbleweed rolling across the desert or the awesome power of a hurricane; but you can't physically see it. God, as well as faith in Him, is invisible to our fleshly, carnal eyes. But through the eyes of Jesus, these things are made manifest to us. The Bible tells us that faith is a 'gift' (1Cor 12:9) or 'fruit' (Gal 5:22) of the Spirit. 1Thessalonians 5:19 Quench not the Spirit.

The seed of faith is planted by prevenient grace. John Wesley spent a great deal of time, preaching, and writing about, prevenient grace. This is the initial form of grace, given by God, to all people, at birth. It is that need, or longing, deep inside us, that compels us to seek a higher power. God, Allah, YHWH, El Shaddai, Jesus---- Call Him what you will, it's the same entity. It's that insatiable quest for the meaning of life. It's been going on since the beginning of time, and will continue until time is no more.

Faith is not a black or white concept, as in, 'you either have it or you don't'. Everyone has it; it is hard-wired into our very being, whether we deny it or not. It is at what degree or stage it's at, that is the relevant issue. Some seeds are still in the seed-bag, some are in the ground being watered, some have sprouted to various stages of development, and some are ready for the harvest.

No one is perfect. Paul tells us in Romans 3:23 For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God. We will never be perfect in these earthly bodies. We can only expect to reach perfection when our spirits are one with God. However, we must never cease at striving towards perfection.

Developing faith is like building a house. You start by laying a cornerstone, or foundation, then proceed on to framing, roofing, wiring, finishing, and ultimately, furnishing. We should view our faith in the same light --- A work in progress! I, personally, do not want to go before God, with only a foundation or partially framed house, and expect Him to finish it for me. Rather, I would like my house completed and furnished; so He has only a little re-arranging of the furniture to bring it to perfection. This is love. Doing what you can, to lighten the burdens of those you love. Why would God deserve anything less? After all, He is the one I love the most.

That is why we need evaluation. Evaluation of one's faith is the deepest and, oft times, hardest form of self-examination. As the old saw says, "The easiest person to deceive, is that person staring back at you in the mirror". We can always find, and convince ourselves, of a justification for our actions, as well as our inactions.

The farmer plants his seeds, then waters, fertilizes, cultivates, and watches over them; with the final goal being the harvest. He doesn't sow his seed, ignore them all season, and then return, expecting a bountiful harvest. He watches over them daily, making adjustments, to insure a successful crop.

So too, it should be with our faith. Constantly evaluating it; feeding, nurturing, making the necessary adjustments, as we press on to perfection. Faith will not grow and blossom on it's own. It needs constant loving care. Have you ever noticed that the people with the strongest faith are those that act, work, and think about it routinely and steadfastly? You can't (or shouldn't) keep your faith in the closet, only to bring it out every Easter or Christmas. It needs to be exercised daily, or it becomes flaccid and weak.

Jesus stressed two commandments in Matthew 22:37-40: The first, Love God, and the second, Love thy neighbour as thyself. He said, on those two commandments, 'hang all the law'. It is a very basic and simple concept. Adhering to these two principles, will violate NO laws, neither God's, nor man's.

So I would exhort everyone to nourish your faith, and treasure it. It is the most valuable thing you possess. Spend as much time worrying about your faith, as you spend on worrying about your finances. I can assure you, your rewards will be plentiful. There is no speed limit on the Highway to Heaven.

Drive Safely,
Brother Tim

_________________

Peace Y'all

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Tuesday

P***E On Earth

The Loma Linda Homeowners Association has apologized to homeowner for threatening fines over a peace wreath she hung outside her home in Pagosa Springs Co. calling it a misunderstanding.

They could have taken some time to think about this before they threatened to fine her but I guess one shoots first and asks questions later when a serious attack on the neighborhood rules against any outdoor expression deemed divisive may be in the offing.

Look...it's a symbol of Satanism!

No…it’s a blatant statement against the war in Iraq!

Worse than that even, its a peacenik terrorist sympathizer!!!!!!

That’s nice that they apologized…after the extremist overreaction...too bad they didn’t think about how ridiculous and ugly their behavior was before it went out on the AP wire for all to see.

Maybe they learned something from having that ugliness exposed. I sure hope so.


Colorado Subdivision OKs Christmas Wreath

DENVER - A subdivision has withdrawn its threat of $25 daily fines against a homeowner who put a Christmas wreath shaped like a peace sign on the front of her home.

In this undated photo provided by Lisa Jensen, a wreath is seen in Pagosa Springs, Colo. Pagosa Springs Colorado homeowners are battling over whether a Christmas wreath that includes a peace sign is an anti-Iraq war protest or even a promotion of Satan.

Homeowner Lisa Jensen told The Associated Press on Monday that the board of directors of the Loma Linda Homeowners Association had apologized, called the incident a misunderstanding and had withdrawn its request for the wreath's removal.

Jensen was ordered to take the wreath down when some residents in her 200-home subdivision saw it as a protest of the Iraq war. Bob Kearns, president of the board, also said some saw it as a symbol of Satan.

The homeowners' association demanded Jensen remove the wreath from her house, saying it doesn't allow flags or signs that are considered divisive.

None of the three members of the board in the scenic town 270 miles southwest of Denver was available for comment late Monday. Kearns and colleague Jeff Heitz both had their phone numbers changed to unlisted numbers Monday. Tammy Spezze, the third board member, did not return a call seeking comment.

Jensen, a past association president, said she was overwhelmed with hundreds of calls of support and offers to help her pay the $1,000 fine that would be due if she kept the wreath up until after Christmas.

"We would like to thank everyone who has contacted us with moral support and offers of financial support. We are grateful to hundreds of complete strangers who felt so moved by this story they contacted us," she said.

"It seems whenever someone tries to say 'Peace on Earth' it is met with so much resistance," she said. "The incredible amount of support we have received over the last couple of days really is proof to us of how many people believe in peace and in our right to say it."

________________________

It seems that way because it is that way.

Peace on Earth...even unto the Pagosa Springs Peace Wreath Police.

Peace y'all

Monday

Is Your God a Mean Drunk?

The Peace Tree is pleased to present a guest post today from Matthew Phillips.

Is Your God a Mean Drunk?

At my church, the pastor is leading a forum on God and violence. In the discussion, there was general agreement that we did not want to believe in a God that is randomly violent. But one parishioner asked what we should think of a God that is predictably violent, in that he inflicts certain consequences as a result of certain behaviors.

The pastor compared this sort of God to an alcoholic parent, whose rages are triggered by certain behaviors of the child. Of course it is monstrous to be violent to a child and inconsistent with parental love, and the pastor's comparison implied that such a God was not fully worthy of our worship.

Another parishioner suggested that a God who inflicts violent consequences as a result of certain actions is exhibiting tough love. This is a view consistent with conservative and fundamentalist Christianity, which has to reconcile "God is love" with "Kill all the priests of Baal!" The pastor gave us a question for next week's discussion: What are the consequences of believing in this sort of God?

Then at the coffee hour after the service, there was a Palestinian artist selling olive wood carvings of Christmas decorations and othe religious art to benefit the Christians of Israel and the Palestinian territories. This witness of faith from the forgotten people of a holy land torn by unholy war suggested some answers to the pastor's question.

One consequence of belief in a predictably violent God is that many American christians uncritically support the actions of the government of Israel, no matter how inconsistent that government's actions may be with the best principles of Judaism and Christianity. It means that many Christians believe in God as a sort of cosmic real estate broker, such that only particular sons and daughters of Abraham have any civil rights in Israel and Palestine, for fear that God will not bless them if they do not so believe.

Some of these Christians support an extreme, militant sort of Zionism that will trigger, in their view, a literal battle of Armageddon. And we are meant to believe this will usher in the reign of the Prince of Peace. Belief in the God-who-is-love-unless causes people to try to curry favor with him out of superstitious fear and out of a vision of a blessed world that just does not include those of us who are in the "unless" categories.

This would include those forgotten Palestinian christians, whom Jesus despises, according to this view, in favor of people who reject his messiahship, because these people are just more 'chosen' than they are. Of course, such a view goes against the great weight of most of the teachings attributed to Jesus. This Jesus rejects those preach and prophesy in his name but fail to do justice and love mercy to all. This Jesus gives us the choice to love all or be none of his. This Jesus is perplexed by those who, in his name, oppose the granting of rights to others that they insist on for themselves.

While it may be true that Jeffersonian secularism was never intended to divorce utterly our spiritual values from our political ones, it is probably also true that no one sectarian interpretation of the will of God should be permitted to give absurdity the upper hand over sweet reason. While others may wish to support a political agenda based on belief in a God who is love, except when he isn't, I will not fear hellfire and damnation for pursuing one that is based on the principles of love, peace, and justice for all.

Matt Phillips

Please visit Matt at his home blog

Peace y'all

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Saturday

Sunday Poetry Series: Shroud of Untrue

The selection this week comes from Peace Tree Poets Society member Tina Louise.

and now...

Shroud Of Untrue

I need a voice to believe.
A choice to relieve,
The confusion and countenance,
News fusions and counter stance.

I need a sound that rings true.
Unbound and new,
Light to the dark of this madness,
Bright, stark, showing the sadness.

I need a sense of faith in us.
No fence to trust,
Sides of equal wisdom spouting,
Honest, real, truth accounting.

I need a system of sharing all,
This chasm conceals as we fall,
Deep into the blackness of spoon-fed lies,
Dispirited factions of false denies,
From misguided power crazed types,
Who’ve prided themselves on hype.

Never knowing they follow fools,
Tempted by the glowing baubles
Of wealth and gain and much disdain,
For the unhealthy, unfed, who remain
Veiled and manipulated,
Staled and sedated.

I'm seeking out souls raw with knowledge,
Whose goal is one I can acknowledge,
As being with purpose equal to all,
Agreeing a sequel to this awful
Reign of greed and self serving love;
Satisfying the needs of each of us.

I want a secure home life here on earth,
I’m unsure of the present quality and worth,
I doubt the illusion can be right.
I flout the conclusions on news at night
That peace through war,
Settling a score,
Freedom through law,
Satisfaction
From more, more, more...
Can contain an answer to life’s dilemmas,
Can obtain the clarity of a soul enema,
Can do anything but continue to cover my view,
Cloud, bring shroud of untrue.
____________________________

Please visit Tina Louise at her home blog

Peace y'all

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10 Lessons From The Toilet Presidency of G.W. Bush

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author W. Christopher Epler.

10 Lessons From the Toilet Presidency of George W. Bush:

1. Religious fanatics are now the number one threat to the planet Earth.

2. Fundamentalists no more speak for Christianity than ultra right wing Zionists speak for the Jewish community. And clearly it's a desecration to confuse the Prophet Mohammed with psychopathic terrorists.

3. Once upon a time, we had political representatives who spoke for our values and truths, but there's more spine in the back of a book than in the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council). In short, WE ARE ON OUR OWN. Practically speaking, this is the most important lesson of all, because so long as we assume we have advocates, we won't take responsibility for saving our children and country.

4. We've learned that the American media sells its soul cheap. You can buy television anchors by the gross (the Australian Rupert Murdoch has 10 or 12 of them on his key chain). This can't be said strongly enough: the Judas American press has betrayed us; they have betrayed America. The journalists of yesterday are extinct. American television now grunts like herd of propaganda swine.

5. We've learned that White House stupidity (are you listening, George) is a luxury our species can no longer afford. Global warming is real. Murderous hurricanes are real. 3rd millennia plagues are real. Ozone holes are real. And on and on and on and on. We've learned that anti environmental policies turn Mother Nature into Mother Kali (the Goddess of Death). Climate changes which formerly took ten thousand years are now taking ten. So long as G. Duhbya is calling the shots, our God given environment is doomed. Said differently, it's suicidal for us to keep indulging these Bush Family air heads who have trouble even pronouncing the word science. Science haters are planet killers -- it's that simple.

6. We've learned that most Republicans are fascists (dictatorship of the rich to the max). Perhaps they've been closet Nazis all along. In any case, we now see them for what they are: lying, greed vampires who would sell your children to make a buck. Is this hyperbole and exaggeration? No. Look what they're doing to the planet. Look what they're doing to the economy. Look what they're doing to our children's health care. Look what they're doing to our retirements. Look what they're doing to our infinitely sacrificed for constitutional Republic. No; exaggeration is not the word. Rather, seeing it and saying it like it is.

7. We've learned that financial aristocracies (the "elites") and religious cults are products of social and/or biological inbreeding. And whether due to genetic abnormalities (e.g., the hemophiliac Royal families of Europe) or culturally incestuous interaction, the end result is stunted intelligence. Hence, the Bush/Evangelicals are ruinously clogging our machinery of government with the sludge of raw stupidity.

8. We've learned that George Bush is the liar of the 3rd Millennia. He wouldn't give you a straight answer if you asked him the way to the bathroom. He lied to us about Iraq. He lied to the black community in New Orleans before, during, and after Hurricane Katrina. He keeps lying to us about our hopelessly mortgaged economy and about "leaving no child behind" (which evidently means sending our children to die for Cheney/Halliburton in Iraq). President liar, liar, pants on fire. History will spit on him.

9. We've learned that for Republicans, there is no rule of law. Remember those jerks in high school who were always trying to steal your shoes? It didn't cross our minds that when they got older, they would also steal elections. First they stole the year 2000 Presidential election when Republican brown shirts stormed the Florida election centers. Then they stole several congressional seats in 2002 (seats everyone agreed, even the pugs, that the dems had locked up). And we all know about the year 2004 Presidential election and Ohio and Florida and about 20 other states. What a scam! Diebold, black box, one party voting machines. The exit polls unequivocally gave John Kerry the election, but now you see it, now you don't. We all know with absolute certainly they're going to try to do exactly the same thing in 2008 . . . but this time we'll be waiting.

10. Not a lesson, but a question. Whatever happened to that little black box under Bush's coat during the 2004 Kerry debates? Everyone could see it; we all knew it was there. Shouldn't it end up in a Presidential museum or something? Maybe he'll start wearing it again now that he's lost his smirk.

W. Christopher Epler

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Friday

Between Iraq and a Hard Place

The day of reckoning for Mr. Bush et al. is fast approaching. Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, set to chair the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee when the new Congress convenes in January, has made it clear that the questions being asked by the people of our nation regarding Iraq, torture of detainees, secret prisons and voter fraud, among others, will require some answers beyond those the condescending, evasive, and unchecked executive branch has so far been willing to provide.

Senator Leahy has also made it clear that he would rather not have to issue subpoenas to get the information the congress will be seeking, but that he will put them under oath if the administration refuses to cooperate.

Senator Leahy:

"I expect real answers, or we'll have testimony under oath until we get them. We’re entitled to know these answers, and in many instances we don't get them because people are hiding their mistakes. And that's no excuse."

Mistakes, such a civilized way of putting things like war crimes.

I wonder if Bush et al. were really naïve enough to think could keep their dirty little secrets under wraps indefinitely. Clearly that has not happened and now the balance of power has shifted. Without the cover of a Republican majority in Congress who were more than willing to abdicate their oath of defending the constitution, the Bush unilateral executive will now have to face the music all alone. Those who enabled their actions will be watching from the sidelines. The failures of the Republican majority to check this group have been many, none more evident than the redefining of our responsibilities regarding The Geneva Convention having been left to The Supreme Court to decide instead of having been dealt with democratically from inside the law making body itself.

The people have spoken and yet the administration seems undaunted in their efforts to prevent our system of checks and balances from being applied to them. The Justice Department seems to think business as usual will be the executive order of the day. That certainly seems to be what Brian Roehrkasse, Justice Department spokesman, seems to be saying in this statement.

Brian Roehrkasse:

"The department will continue to work closely with the Congress as they exercise their oversight functions, and we will appropriately respond to all requests in the spirit of that longstanding relationship, when making those decisions, it is vital to protect national security information, particularly when they relate to sensitive intelligence programs that are the subject of oversight by the Intelligence Committees. We also must give appropriate weight to the confidentiality of internal executive branch deliberations."

Continue to work closely with Congress on oversight?
Are you kidding me?
These folks really know how to insult a person’s intelligence.
I am sure the administration would probably like to keep the disturbing reality of Bush trying to deliberate confidential but it is hardly a national secret, given the fact that the nation and the world are already horrendously aware that is not his stength.

So, the Intelligence Committees cannot trust or work with the Judiciary Committee? You never know, those Judiciary folks could be terrorists. Or maybe the problem is they might just insist that The President of The United States and his underlings be required to act within the law, unfortunately, Mr. Bush seems to think the two are one in the same.

Source:

Senate Democrats in U.S. revive demand for classified data

Peace y'all

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Wednesday

Respect for All

The Peace Tree would like to welcome our newest contributing author, Patricia Goldsmith. Patricia is a member of Long Island Media Watch, a grassroots free media and democracy watchdog group. We are very pleased to have the opporunity to present her work.
Her debut post follows.

Respect for All
Patricia Goldsmith

So it seems Republican voters have finally turned. With the arsenal of election-rigging techniques the Republican Party has been working up since 2000—including caging and purge lists, push polls, insufficient machines in Democratic areas, uncounted provisional ballots, robocalls, unfair rules from corrupt secretaries of state—it has long been abundantly clear that Democrats will never take office with a narrow win.

And those are just the surface obstacles. The deep structure of our electoral system tilts to the right: the senate is an anti-democratic institution with empty-box red states getting the same number of senators as far more populous blue states; the mid-census gerrymandering of districts favors Republicans across the country; and the Electoral College’s winner-take-all rules and weighting in favor of smaller states blunt liberal gains.

Given all of that, it’s hard to fault Howard Dean’s fifty-state strategy of putting up conservative Democrats to run in conservative states. It worked. That’s the good news and the bad news.

The good news is obvious but after such a long drought of hope, it bears repeating and savoring. We all have to heave a big sigh of relief at seeing the backside of the likes of Rick Santorum, George Allen, and Mike DeWine—or better yet, let out a whoop of joy and do a happy dance. John Conyers heading the House Judiciary Committee, Henry Waxman with subpoena power, Bernie Sanders in the Senate—it feels like a weight has been lifted.

The bad news is it consolidates the political center very far to the right—to the right of the Constitution, in fact, if recent legislation is not rolled back. If we’re not careful, the Democratic win could end up representing a profoundly pragmatic, middle-manager solution to an all-out assault on our freedom. Impeachment off the table, a return to pay-as-you-go rules, implementing the 9/11 Commission recommendations—these all indicate a return to the Clinton credo of winning by inches when what we have lost is our whole way of life.

In an attempt to hold on to the voters who gave them this political opportunity, Democrats are willing to restrict debate around the question of how we got to this sorry pass in the first place. They want to start cleaning up the wreckage before we have a chance to think about what our recent history means. We can’t let that happen, not least because it would be a mistake to imagine the culture war is over.

But many on the left have never acknowledged its existence in the first place. Progressives like to use the phrase “social wedge issues” instead. Sounds less like a paranoid fantasy. But it is a paranoid fantasy, on a mass level, and we would do well to remember that as we sift through the rubble of our system of checks and balances.

While BushCo has been rolling out one initiative after another in a deliberate effort to transform our entire culture—so fast it literally makes your head spin—the left’s response has been to painstakingly compile evidence of wrongdoing in area after area, slowly connecting the dots of criminal intent and design over the whole expanse of our government and legal system. It’s like doing an ergonomic analysis of a wrecking ball’s destructive swathe through our government—a reaction right-wing culture warriors counted on.

Whereas they are at war. That means, quite simply, that they have rejected the normal rule of law. They do not recognize the legitimacy of secular authority. They are answering to a higher power in a fight against evil. The pagans and the feminists, the gays and the lesbians, the abortionists, People for the American Way, liberals, the Democrat Party—we are what’s wrong with this country.

Not only will they not tolerate us, they consider tolerance itself a great moral weakness, one they do not want taught to their children. The pervasiveness of tolerant attitudes in secular culture is one of the prime motivations behind the culture war: they need to stamp it out. That’s the explanation for the apparently nonsensical fuss over Sponge Bob and Postcards from Buster. As Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council said about the Mark Foley sex scandal: “When we elevate tolerance and diversity to the guidepost of public life, this is what we get—men chasing 16-year-old boys around the halls of Congress.”

In this climate, the defeat in Arizona of a law against civil unions is big news. The fact that a ban on gay marriage passed in Virginia with less than 60 percent of the vote is earth-shattering.

When liberals frame marriage equality as a wedge issue, they answer an obvious question: Why are these initiatives politically useful to the right? We can all see that marriage equality has the ability to set progressive constituencies against each other at the same time that it distracts the whole country from real concerns. But in a recent article titled, “War, religion, and gay rights”, James Carroll asked a better question: “When gay people openly assert their identities as such, whether through parades or the demand for full and equal social recognition, reactionaries cannot stand it. Why?”

The answer lies in that one all-important word: “equal.” The true crux of the religious right’s morality is hierarchical, unequal sex roles.

Not very long ago, rigid sex roles encompassed all the knowledge necessary to be a good man or a good woman, a good citizen, parent, child. Those roles, with strict dress codes to match, enforced patriarchal inequality and went deep into the economy, designating high-paying, high-status jobs for men and lower-paying jobs, if any at all, for women. It took a bloody civil war to break up the slave economy and begin a movement toward racial equality. It’s no wonder that efforts to break up thousands of years of unquestioned male economic and social dominance have resulted in a cold civil war.

Gay marriage equality and insistence on a woman’s right to control her own body are direct affronts to the type of family Christianists see as the foundation of civilization, a family where Mother obeys Father and children obey both parents, a family where unquestioning obedience to authority is seen as the bedrock strength of the society. These societies need to be strong precisely because of their intolerance: there can be only one One True God. All fundamentalist theocracies are, by their very nature, at war with other fundamentalist theocracies and with secular society.

This explains how it is that so many of our fellow countrymen—the most religious among us, if you take them at their own estimation—could enthusiastically support pre-emptive war, torture, and the overthrow of civil liberties, secular society, and the rule of law. In other words, we are where we are today not in spite of Christianist family values but because of them.

Although it may have been politically astute for Howard Dean to follow up the success of his fifty-state strategy with a Saturday Democratic radio address showing that he is not embarrassed to talk about religious beliefs and family values, we would all be better off if we returned our focus to the primary political unit of a democracy, which is not the family but the individual. All individuals should be equal under the impartial rule of law and are entitled to respect.

On the other hand, we are not obligated to respect others’ religious beliefs, especially if they are subversive to the rule of law and infringe on others’ pursuit of happiness. I certainly do not respect the Christianist family values that have contributed to our slide toward authoritarianism. As far as I’m concerned, they are a very big part of the problem. In this age, with its 24/7 spin and media saturation, any culture that does not produce individuals capable of critical, independent thought is already halfway down the road to fascism.

As for me, I take the right-wing culture warriors at their word when they say they will not tolerate us. We defeat them or they defeat us, that’s the deal. And it’s fine with me. Like the Dixie Chicks say, I’m not ready to make nice. Just the opposite, baby.

Gay Old Party Comes Out Rich

_________________________

Peace y'all

Tuesday

SOS to Spiritual Grownups

Today we have a post by Peace Tree contributing author, Bill Epler.

SOS to Spiritual Grownups
By Bill Epler

Sometimes in life you have to remind yourself that it's better to speak from the healthy and positive than rant about the unhealthy and negative.

Institutional religion is arguably the most unhealthy and negative force on planet Earth. Once that original transcendental moment gets gobbled up by the religious professionals and theologians, the institution kills the intuition.

More specifically, when the religious institution (and this certainly includes the 3 great western religions of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam), presumes to "intervene" in your life and assumes the role of being an intermediary between you and truth or reality (you know, the ultimate stuff), then its game over.

It may be ok for religion to play that game with children, since they need spiritual support and protection, but for adults, all that institutional baggage is just dead weight.

And that's the good news! Religion for adults is an unnecessary luxury. Forget the theologians and priests and sheiks, etc. Who needs 'em? We have life itself to relate to.

Spirituality is the name of this game, and spirituality is in its essence always one on one. It was one on one for Jesus, Mohamed, and the Hebrew Prophets, just as it was one on one for the Buddha.

It's also one on one for a Zen Master and your grandmother.

Hence, the tragedy of so much of what's now happening on the Earth (e.g., the Middle East cancer), is a conflict between people who have sold their souls to an institutional religion. They have identified their lives with a set of abstract religious game rules. They have their "masters" and rule books and it never occurs to them that what they need is already hard wired into their being.

Such people relate to religion much as an infant relates to a breast. But they aren't infants, and the abstractions they kill for (in the name of God) aren't breasts.

What would our planet be like if all grown ups related directly to life without the arrogant intermediaries of institutional religion? Wouldn't it be like seeing the full, crystal sky without the blockage of clouds?

Said differently, spirituality should never be confused with religion. Ironically, an atheist is typically the other side of the theist coin. They go together and neither have anything to do with pure spirituality.

So, religion is rejected (or transcended) not because it is so terrible, but because spirituality is so wonderful.

Spirituality is all and it lives in immediacy.

Lastly, and sadly, no one ever kills for "their" spirituality, because no one belongs to or has membership in spirituality.

Many, many humans already know these things, and more, but their numbers are still so minuscule that the planet continues to be destroyed by War in the name of God people -- the "righteous" ones, preaching their monotonous, locus-like certainties.

For spirituality, God is a metaphor for mystery and war is the acting out of fear.

Life without intermediaries is freedom incarnate. Indeed, it is life itself, and there is no path to this place since we are all already there. Religion is not knowing this.

W. Christopher Epler

_____________________________

Here are a few links to some other great reads on the net today.

The Centre Ground is a Barren Wasteland
People of all classes and ages find idealism more satisfying than pragmatism
by Maurice Saatchi

Give Peace Department a Chance
by David Hartsough

We Stand at the Crossroads
by Eileen Fleming

Peace y'all

Monday

What'cha Gonna Do When They Come For You?


Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, Chris Wilcox.
Good question, Chris.
The link to the complete video of the brutal and repeated use of a taser upon Mostafa Tabatabainejad - a 23-year old UCLA senior that was taped by a fellow student follows this post.

What'cha Gonna Do When They Come For You?
By Chris Wilcox

Scary news was all around over the weekend. I am trying to understand what the hell is going on in this country when we witness things like the tazzering of an Iranian-American UCLA student for objecting to being profiled for an id check in the UCLA library. Or, when we see helpless women janitors trampled by jack-booted police mounted on horseback in Houston because they were demonstrating for higher wages. These two horrid examples of police brutality on top the administrations plans to push their warrantless wiretapping agenda through the lame duck congress make me fearful that we are sliding the slippery slope to living in a police state. How did we get to a point where our government will result to physical violence as a means of moving people out of sight that are peacefully expressing that they feel oppressed?

These were not situations where people were belligerently threatening or causing real or potential harm to anybody. In the first example, the student at UCLA objected to a random request to show his student ID to “Community Service Officers” (CSO) because he was singled out for his Middle Eastern appearance. The second example involves Service Employees International Workers (SEIU) in Houston that were beginning to sit down peacefully for a non-violent act of civil disobedience.

The University student was sitting in the library finishing up an assignment which was due this coming Wednesday. He objected to being requested to present his student ID while the numerous white students around him were not approached. The CSO’s left and later returned with police officers. When they arrived the student had already packed his computer and was heading out of the library. The police officers grabbed him by the arm and the student, already disturbed that he had been racially profiled, demanded that the police get their hands off of him. When a second officer approached the student fell limply to the ground as an act of civil disobedience. He was then tazzered five separate times as the police attempted to remove him from the library. It is highly probable, from watching the video, that the young man was incapacitated by the initial tazer shock and unable to leave the library.

Tom Balanoff, the Houston janitors’ chief contract negotiator reported, “The Houston Police Department was contacted prior to today’s demonstration to explain their plan and reasons for demonstrating in order to ensure that exactly this type of incident would be avoided.” What happened was the women workers were violently charged into by mounted police officers in an attempt to disassemble their protest. The Janitors who make $20 a day with no health insurance were risking arrest in order to better provide for their families. Workers report they were stepped on by horses leaving an unknown number of protestors with bruises and other injuries. An 83 year-old janitor from New York City, was rushed to Ben Taub Hospital for an injury sustained on her arm.

While examples of excessive force are not new in America these particular examples are a glaring reminder that we have not evolved as much as we may have imagined. The lessons of Rodney King and Robert Davis, the retired school teacher in New Orleans, have had little effect on police training across the land. You would think at a minimum the police would be aware that no matter where they go there is a great chance that video will record the event. What is particularly cause for alarm at this point in history is that we are witnessing these events while there are plans for our Congress to pass legislation which will diminish our Fourth Amendment Rights. In the most extreme example it is frightening to imagine that the police would have the power to collect information on you with no oversight and then inflict punishment on you without the protections afforded by our Bill of Rights.

Proponents of warrantless spying on Americans living inside the United States claim the President needs authority to conduct warrantless surveillance to counter threats directed at the country from abroad. Opponent’s claim that the absence of congressional checks and balances have led to intelligence powers turning from foreign foes toward domestic political opponents, from real enemies of the nation onto those whose views the executive branch disdains.

Provision is already in place to protect our national security as provided in the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978. (FISA) Under the provisions of FISA the President may authorize, through the Attorney General, electronic surveillance without a court order for the period of one year provided it is only for foreign intelligence information. The act also provides for the interception of communications between foreign nationals and American citizens but probable cause must be demonstrated and a warrant must be acquired. In practice the reality is that the requirement of a warrant has not been a hindrance in gathering intelligence. Between the years of 1979 and 1999 FISC courts granted 11,833 warrants and rejected none. Furthermore there is no obstruction to the gathering of such information because the intelligence agency, with probable cause, can put their surveillance in place and has up to 30 days to obtain the warrant to make the surveillance admissible.

The idea that the government needs an ability to circumvent the Fourth Amendment and deny our protection of unreasonable searches and seizures in light of an increasing occurrence of strong armed police actions should be alarming to every citizen in America. Current laws give the government all of the resources they need to protect us from terrorism. The only possible justification for warrantless spying on Americans would be the prohibition of dissention. The widely misappropriated quote to Thomas Jefferson, “Dissent is the highest form of patriotism” seems antiquated and irrelevant to those who subscribe to the propaganda distributed from the White House. The notion of patriotism has been distorted to deflect criticism and mislead the nation. There are many who would say they do not mind if the government listens to their phone calls because they need to in order to protect us. Others justify their loss of rights by stating that they aren’t doing anything wrong so they have nothing to worry about. Perhaps Benjamin Franklin was ahead of his time when he said, “Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety”

Christopher David Peter Wilcox

______________________

The video.

Peace y'all

Sunday

Has Bush pushed us into the realm of "Meta Politics"?

I am very pleased to announce the addition of the newest (dual citizenship) Peace Tree contributing author and Peace Tree Poets Society member, W. Christopher Epler. My deepest appreciation to Bill for accepting the invitation to join us here and I am sure his considerable insight will make The Peace Tree a much better read for all. His debut post follows.

Has Bush pushed us into the realm of "Meta Politics"?
by W. Christopher Epler

Also posted at Op-Ed News

May I coin a word?

Meta politics is a social dynamic that transcends traditional politics. It's an ALTERNATIVE to the DNC, the DLC, the RNC, and all the rest of those status quo worshiping acronyms.

For example, if you're a progressive, the kiss of death acronym is the DLC (Democratic Leadership Council), since dead enders like James Carville (with his D- record in election success) is already criticizing a meta politician like Howard Dean (who gets an A+ in election success).

Millions of liberal and moderate Americans have suddenly realized that we have TWO enemies here:

(l.) fascist Bush Republicans, and

(2.) fascist DLC type Democrats

You may think "fascist" is too strong a word to fit a DLC Democrat, however since the strict meaning of fascism is "status quo-ism", the shoe fits perfectly.

The real conflict in America is no longer between traditional Democrats and Republicans (Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dumber), but between "status quo-er's" and followers of meta politics; a distinction which cuts across the nonexistent distinction between status quo Democrats and Republicans.

So how do the Bush/Republicans figure into all of this? That's easy. They lunatic fringed us into such a sewer of hypocrisy, hate, and failure that our traditional political protocols simply blew up in our faces.

The 2006 election mandate showed that the great majority of the country had got the message that America's civil liberties, moral/scientific international reputation, financial stability, and stewardship of the planet had been hopelessly flushed down history's toilet. In short, TIME FOR A CHANGE!

But CHANGE is anathema to the DLC and the politicians who have sold their souls to the DLC, e.g., Hillary Clinton and Joe Liebermann come to mind.

Side question: IS there a Hillary Clinton? Granted, there's a life form there but since it never takes a stand about ANYTHING, it might turn out to be a hologram. Hillary Hologram -- has a nice ring to it (but who wants a hologram for a President?).

No, we want flesh and blood fighters against the Bush/Republican Heart of Darkness. We want people who honor (not dismantle) our American Constitution. We want people who nurture (not rape) Mother Nature. And we want people who aren't determined to turn the American middle and lower classes into a doormat for the Bush Royal Family (or is it the Saudi Royal Family – hard to tell!). In short, we want people who haven't sold their souls to status quo elites.

This is the essence of meta politics: meta politics is the knight in shining armor who is now doing life and death battle against corporate fascism, since the mega rich of our country and planet are the literal Kings and Queens of the 3rd millennia.

Said differently, the [status quo] = [a dictatorship of the rich] and this dictatorship is sucked up to by the DLC every bit as much as the RNC, e.g., James Carville does everything but dance around like a status quo court jester (perhaps he actually dresses in motley in Republican private parties).

Meta politics is the vision that only the people can save themselves and the planet, and thus we are turning our backs on never-rock-the-boat politicians (of BOTH parties) and the Judas media.

The good news is that we are discovering that we really don't NEED these Neanderthal, institutional fail safes for the astronomically rich. The good news is that we are finally (ironically, thanks to the obscene excesses of the Bush/Republicans) realizing that traditional political institutions are MORE PART OF THE PROBLEM THAN THE SOLUTION. The good news is that we have the internet and we have more and more progressive politicians. And the good news is that we are FINALLY "seeing through" the Democratic Leadership Council.

The good news is that we are taking in the simple truth that status quo political institutions (of both parties!) are the tails, and we are the dog.

The pragmatics of this quantum jump into meta politics are still being worked out, but much progress has already been made. The internet is now burgeoning with sites in which millions of liberal/progressive Americans stay passionately in touch with each other. Petitions are rife and demonstrations are encouraged and assisted.

Increasingly there is talk of country wide boycotts (the number one unplayed trump card of the middle and lower classes). Arguably, orchestrated boycotts will be the stakes through the hearts of elitist, corporate vampires.

Sometimes in life you have to find out what DOESN'T work before you take responsibility for working out what DOES work, and these last 6 years have taught us that this marriage in hell between DLC Democrats and Bush/Republicans is a cancer which is killing our Constitutional Republic.

It's actually strangely like "alternative medicine". Millions of us have discovered that all too often traditional western medicine settles for anesthetizing symptoms instead of treating causes and so we find ways of healing ourselves by working out ways to get at the causes directly.

Alas, our country is still in intensive care (2006 notwithstanding) and this status quo political hospital is really a prison. Outside this prison live the pig, pig rich of the planet. Inside this prison are 99% of the human race (whose internet-shared frustrations and resentments are approaching critical mass). And our DLC "Doctors" are really status quo guards to keep us in.

TIME FOR A CHANGE.

W. Christopher Epler
Fully functioning idealistic, liberal American.

______________________________

Y'all give Bill a nice welcome to The Peace Tree, won't you.

Peace y'all

Saturday

Most U.S. Soldiers Oppose The War

Today we have a guest post from Peace Tree contributing author, Progressive American.

Most U.S. Soldiers Oppose The War
by Progressive American

I heard part of The Sean Hannity Show a few nights ago. Sean and a caller were discussing what would happen if the media would start interviewing the troops. They actually believed that the troops would show support for the war in Iraq. That is completely wrong. When I heard this, I was infuriated. After hearing right-wingers make this ridiculous claim over and over again, I knew that I had to do this post to tell you what soldiers really have to go through and what they really think about the war. It isn't the wonderful world that right-wingers make it out to be. Here is the truth...

The fact of the matter is that the most recent poll of U.S. soldiers in Iraq, conducted by Le Moyne College/Zogby International, concluded that 72 percent think the U.S. should exit the country within the next year. That is not support. Soldiers have even started signing petitions to be brought back home. And who can blame them? They are not stupid. They know that this war is wrong, unjustified, and not getting America anywhere. U.S. Army Lieutenant Ehren Watada was the very first commissioned officer to publicly speak against deployment to Iraq. “It is my conclusion as an officer of the Armed Forces that the war in Iraq is not only morally wrong but a horrible breach of American law. As the order to take part in an illegal act is ultimately unlawful as well, I must, as an officer of honor and integrity refuse that order,” he said.

Nearly every soldier that I have ever seen or heard interviewed has spoken against the war. There is one reason for this-- THE TROOPS DO NOT SUPPORT THE WAR IN IRAQ! The fact that 72% of "our boys" are against the war should be enough to tell you that. So Sean, don't try to tell me that the results would be on your side if the media would interview the troops. That is impossible and couldn't happen unless Fox News is the one doing the reporting. Which goes to say that no honest News source could truthfully report that our troops are for this war.

But Sean and his entire audience of sheep can ignore plain facts about our troops' blatant opposition of the war if they want to. I just hope they remember that nearly 3,000 of our troops are dead because of the Iraq war. With that many dead, Bush is just as much of a threat to American lives as the terrorists on September 11th were.

How many more lives will we have to lose? Rumsfeld has given the order for about 57,000 more troops to go to Iraq in early 2007. If we have come this far and have accomplished nothing, why can't people see that continuing this war will not accomplish anything either? This has got to stop. Most Americans agree. The main reason Bush's approval rate is only 31% is because most Americans disapprove of the Iraq war.

Plus, has anyone heard about the terrible conditions that our troops have to live in? My aunt's brother is a soldier who is currently stationed in Baghdad (the most dangerous place in Iraq). His unit is living in an abandoned warehouse or something. During a conversation over the Internet, she asked him if it was really as bad over there as it is being reported on the news. He told her that it is actually worse for the soldiers than the news reports. He told her that the abandoned building in which his unit stays has not heating or running water.

He also told her that the only food he had for a few days was chicken that one of his fellow soldiers walked three miles to and back for and paid for with his own money. His unit has been without food for days at a time. Why is our government not providing our troops with food?

No heat, no running water, and no food. Something doesn't seem right. These great men and women are putting their lives on the line, the least the government could do is provide them with food. And it's going to get cold this winter-- why should they have to go without some kind of heating? I bet they would love a shower too but that doesn't look like it's gonna happen.

BRING THEM HOME NOW!!

Visit Progressive American at his home blog.

Help support the Soldiers who oppose this war at Iraq Veterans Against the War

Peace y'all

Friday

Campaign For The Department Of Peace

Greetings All,

The Peace Tree encourages all to check out the campaign for a US Dept. of Peace. This initiative was founded by noted author Marianne Williamson and seeks to develop ways to influence government to act on behalf of peace at many different levels. The Peace Tree is proud to join in the effort to promote this campaign. many of the most respected and powerful organizations in the world along with activists of all types are supporting the goal of crafting a strong and influential alternative voice to war and violence as a means to resolve conflicts within our own borders as well as in our dealings with our greater world family.

Please read the message below from founder, Marianne Williamson and follow the link at the end of this post to find out how you can act locally to promote and support this historic movement to bring the voices of peace to bear from inside our government.

Waging Peace
by Marianne Williamson

In the United States, 12 children each day die from gun violence. Homicide was the second leading cause of death for people ages 10 to 24 in 2001, with rates 10 times that of other leading industrialized nations. In 2005, there were more than 190,000 reported victims of rape, attempted rape, or sexual assaults. Acts of terrorism worldwide are up since the start of the Iraq war. War itself has killed more than half a million Americans since World War II.

A bill before Congress would establish a US Department of Peace. This measure would provide practical, nonviolent solutions for the problems of domestic and international conflict. It would apply the institutional heft of the US government to a serious effort not merely at avoiding war or waging war more effectively. It would take America to the next evolutionary step: It would proactively wage peace.

The problem of violence is a many layered one, and its solution needs to be as well. . . . While no one action -- governmental or otherwise -- will provide a single solution to such an entrenched and deeply rooted problem, the problem must be treated as an all-systems breakdown that requires an all-systems response.

A Department of Peace would address the causal issues of violence -- from human disenfranchisement to societal dysfunction -- thus saving money and human heartache.

Domestically, the department would develop policies and allocate resources to reduce the levels of domestic and gang violence, child abuse, and various other forms of societal discord. The secretary of peace would work with the secretary of education to develop curriculums to teach students alternative conflict resolution techniques and strategies.

Internationally, the Department of Peace would advise the president and Congress on the most innovative techniques and ideas for peace-creation among nations. A peace academy, on par with the military service academies, would train civilian peacekeepers and work with the military in the latest nonviolent conflict resolution strategies and approaches. In short, a Department of Peace would work hand in hand with existing government agencies and structures to help ensure that conflict, when it occurs, does not boil over into life-destroying behavior.

Last month, President George W. Bush said at a conference of school officials, police officers, and youth advocates that communities need a list of "best practices" to prevent and respond to the kinds of school attacks that have occurred in recent weeks. "It seems to me, a lot of our attention should be on preventing" such incidents, Bush said. That would require, he said, "a mosaic of programs." The Department of Peace would give structure and design to the mosaic, providing much-needed assistance to city, county, and state governments in coordinating existing programs as well as developing new programs based on best practices nationally.

Throughout America, there are countless peace-builders and peace-building projects. Those skilled in ameliorating the effects of violence -- from conflict resolution experts to nonviolent communicators -- have proven their effectiveness at treating root causes of violence. Yet these programs receive only pennies in comparison to the tremendous costs of violence.

A 2004 World Health Report estimated the cost of interpersonal violence in the United States (excluding war-related costs) at $300 billion per year. We currently allocate more than $400 billion per year to the Department of Defense, not including the cost of the war in Iraq. The financial cost alone is enough to motivate many to support this bill, but the human carnage is simply a cost that should never be permitted in a civilized society.

Marianne Williamson is founder and chair of the board of The Peace Alliance.

Visit the Peace Alliance to find out how you can get involved.

Its time to work it y'all

Thursday

Mind Your Own Business Gladys...Conservative Pathology

Greetings All,

I am back from Las Vegas and so very glad to be home on the mountain. The past week has left me a bit out of touch with current events and I am working hard to get caught up on all the latest going on in the world.

Was Gladys Kravitz a conservative?

I have been thinking a lot about the interesting shifts going on with conservatism after the "thumping" and I realized that basically, the thing that has always intrigued me about conservatives is the incessant drive they have for everyone else to conform to their view of the world.
Honestly, it has always creeped me way out.

Some of these folks actually feel they have authority from God to kill others who don't think, believe, and live the way they believe they should, all the while proclaiming thou shalt not kill .

Talk about your terrorists.

I would hope that I could retain some autonomy over how I choose to live my life but many conservatives have a big problem with that where it does not coincide with how they think I should live my life. The fact is how I live my personal life is none of their damned business. Period.

I came across this great post from 2003 at The Deprogrammer that really nailed the conservative pathology. A study, funded jointly by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and National Institute of Mental Health at the National Institute of Health (NIH) examined a mindset that the authors were polite enough to refer to as political conservatism.

The full report "Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition"
A great summary and analysis of the report at A Witness

This is very enlightening, which of course is the bane of conservative existence.

Say it with me in your best French accent.

Viva la difference!

I would have done excerpts but the whole post is just too damned good.

Medical science is still seeking a cure
By Bryan Zepp Jamieson 08/16/03

Well, we always knew there was something wrong with them.

A study, funded jointly by the National Science Foundation (NSF), and National Institute of Mental Health at the National Institute of Health (NIH) examined a mindset that the authors were polite enough to refer to as political conservatism. That was something of a euphemism. What they were really studying were the right wing whacks who took over the GOP and threaten to turn America into a third-rate fourth Reich. The paper, titled "Political Conservatism as Motivated Social Cognition" has raised a predictable storm among right wingers, most of whom are yowling and spitting in rage and frustration and throwing their feces, furious that anyone would imply they were emotionally unstable.

A second paper by the same researchers, entitled "Exceptions That Prove the Rule—Using a Theory of Motivated Social Cognition to Account for Ideological Incongruities and Political Anomalies: Reply to Greenberg and Jonas (2003)" is being printed in the APA’s peer-reviewed Psychological Bulletin 2003, Vol. 129, No. 3, 383—393

According to the authors:

"…[W]e consider evidence for and against the hypotheses that political conservatism is significantly associated with (1) mental rigidity and closed-mindedness, including (a) increased dogmatism and intolerance of ambiguity, (b) decreased cognitive complexity, (c) decreased openness to experience, (d) uncertainty avoidance, (e) personal needs for order and structure, and (f) need for cognitive closure; (2) lowered self-esteem; (3) fear, anger, and aggression; (4) pessimism, disgust, and contempt; (5) loss prevention; (6) fear of death; (7) threat arising from social and economic deprivation; and (8) threat to the stability of the social system. We have argued that these motives are in fact related to one another psychologically, and our motivated social—cognitive perspective helps to integrate them. We now offer an integrative, meta-analytic

review of research on epistemic, existential, and ideological bases of conservatism."

—Pg. 352; John T. Jost of Stanford University's Graduate School of Business; Jack Glaser of University of California, Berkeley; Arie W. Kruglanski of the University of Maryland at College Park; Frank J. Sulloway of University of California, Berkeley.

Generally speaking, they find for the evidence. Hope I didn’t spoil the plot for you.

Right wingers proved the researchers right by promptly losing their minds and screaming for the hides of the perpetrators. Right wing radio hosts howled and gibbered that an investigation should be made immediately into the funding these researchers get, and they were accused, in no particular order, and according to no rhyme or reason, of being anti-American and anti-Christian and probably for gay rights and gun control.

The researchers, sensing that this paper might cause a slight discomfort among the more sensitive of our conservative brethren (Really. They went up like rabid baboons with bottle rockets stuffed up their asses!) went to great lengths to reassure one and all that they weren’t calling the right wingers a bunch of psychotic, destructive nuts. Obviously, they weren’t studying the right wingers we see most often on the Internet.

The authors wrote, "Our first assumption, too, is that conservative ideologies – like virtually all other belief systems – are adopted in part because they satisfy some psychological needs. This does not mean that conservatism is pathological or that conservative beliefs are necessarily false, irrational, or unprincipled."

OK, Forget Tom DeLay and Pat Robertson for a minute. There are conservatives who aren’t vicious amoral anti-social whacks. In real life, I know some. I even have conservative friends, although I plan to warn my daughters about them.

But what the researchers were looking at were the group that I’ve been referring to for years as "secular fundamentalists." The political variant of these critters tends to be reactionary, paranoid, authoritarian, intolerant, contemptuous of rules that don’t suit them and overbearing in their observance on behalf of others of rules that do suit them. While there are left wing examples (David Horowitz was a good example in his time) they generally gravitate toward fascism and call it conservatism, even though it’s usually better described as radical reactionaryism.

The authors define the two core principles of conservatism as resistance to change, and acceptance of social inequality. Conservatives, they argue, cling tightly to a status quo, real or imagined, and regard society as hierarchical. Unsurprisingly, they tend to believe they have inherited and/or merited preferential positions in this hierarchy.

The authors address what they call the "conservative paradox" of radical reactionaryism (e.g, Hitler, Mussolini or Pinochet) by pointing out that their calls for extreme inequality in the social order were juxtaposed with promises to lead the country back to an ideal past, one in which "traditional values and morality" prevailed. It occurs to me a good catchphrase for the mawkish and hollow babble that usually accompanies this fraud is "morning in America." Our present-day radical reactionaries continuously harken back to a traditional America that never existed, one where everyone was a god fearing generic protestant, people with accents lived in the poor part of town and never bothered folks, and women and blacks knew their place.

This matches what I consider a hallmark of the fundamentalist mindset: the ability to completely invert a philosophy to suit personal needs. In religion, for example, you have Christianity and Islam, religions that both place high premiums on respect for one’s fellow humans, peace, and personal integrity. Yet fundamentalists are frequently the most violent, dishonest and intolerant people around, and use their religion to completely rationalize this abhorrent behavior. In conservatism you see people who champion the Bill of Rights, unobtrusive government, and a laissez faire approach to industry cheering loudly for the Patriot Act and the tariffs Putsch has placed on steel and timber. This emotional and intellectual dichotomy is how conservatives can condemn dishonest and immoral behavior on Clinton’s part while phlegmatically accepting that Putsch lied his way into a war that does not benefit America while declaring that he is opposed to "nation building." It’s how Republicans can damn Democrats as being fiscally irresponsible even while they ignore Putsch’s disastrous fiscal policies that are driving the nation to new and insane levels of debt. One need only watch conservatives in California vilify Grey Davis for a $38 billion deficit that he didn’t cause while ignoring Putsch’s $600 billion deficit, much of which was fueled by his reckless tax cuts.

One of the more interesting references in the paper is "The Theory of RWA," in which the authors consider the Authoritarian Personality. They state, "harsh parenting styles brought on by economic hardship led entire generations to repress hostility toward authority figures and to replace it with an exaggerated deference and idealization of authority and tendencies to blame society scapegoats and punish deviants."

Angry, repressed, passive-aggressive with a desire to punish those who don’t conform.

Yup, that’s our boys. It could be the platform of the GOP.

Right wingers hate them, of course. But it’s hard to see why. The paper won’t stop people from growing up to be right wingers. Many people can no more choose to be conservative than they can choose to be gay.

_____________________

That's cool...I won't try to tell conservatives how to run their lives if they won't try to run mine.

Deal?

I didn't thnk so.

Oh well, maybe evolution will take a hard left turn for the better.

Peace y'all

Sunday

How Do I Really Feel? Funny You Should Ask...

Our friend and Peace Tree Contributing author, Chris wilcox has a guest post today.

I am currently in Las Vegas and will be back posting next week.

Thanks Chris.

How Do I Really Feel? Funny You Should Ask...

I have done my best not to gloat about the ass-kicking that the enlightened American public has dished out upon the greedy, corrupt and perverted yes-men that make up a large contingent of the Republican Party. Democrats have been gracious in offering bi-partisan outreaches in the hopes of moving this country forward and it seems to be an unreciprocated gesture. The Neo-Cons are bitter and shocked that their schemes of deception have been unveiled. Their desperate and pathetic spin on last Tuesday’s election results are indicative of the very reasons they were thrown out of office. Some are claiming the reason they lost is because they were not conservative enough with regards to fiscal, social or ethical considerations. The loss was all about the war in Iraq or had nothing to do with the war in Iraq. They were not aggressive enough with negative ads or they were too aggressive. Their umbrella was too big or their umbrella was not big enough. The inability of conservatives to agree on the reason they lost the election is exactly why they lost so decisively. They didn’t know what they were doing, where they were going or how to hide their true allegiances.

Suffice to say that when your entire platform is based on lies, corruption, exclusion and ineptitude you will soon discover that the American public is not as stupid as you would believe. The smug and superior character that is the underlying motivation for association with Bush and Roves Republican ideology has run its course. The primary objective of the GOP has been wealth accumulation for their richest supporters and the corporations that benefit from their policies. After six years of chasing acceptance and dollars from the financially gifted the GOP has finally lost its ability to disguise its true mission and ambitions. Middle Class Neo-Cons are reminiscent of teeny bopper groupies that throw themselves at and worship rock stars in their pitiable desire to grab crumbs from under the table of the super rich.

There are obviously many respectable reasons middle class people would support a conservative agenda but the current core of the GOP is so far removed from those values that the baggage of the party was too heavy to carry for many GOP benefactors. So much of what is appealing to the Neo-Cons who are disgruntled with the results of this election is appalling to any who ascribe human dignity as a personal quality worth cultivating. It all seems so hypocritical that the party that claims to be the party of faith and family values is so far from anything resembling virtuous.

It was timely and appropriate that my daily bible read lead me to this passage from the second chapter of James on Wednesday morning: “(5) Listen, my dear brothers: Has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom he promised those who love him? (6) But you have insulted the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who are dragging you into court? (7) Are they not the ones who are slandering the noble name of him to whom you belong?” I kind of figure that unless conservatives divorce themselves from Carl Rove and his Neo-Con agenda they may as well get used to voting Democrat. At least Democrats are going to support and implement policies that will help you meet your daily obligations and achieve your future goals. Sorry to tell you but you maybe had a better chance of winning the lottery than working your way into the inner circle that is the true heart of the Republican Party; the wealthiest of the wealthy.

Sean Hannity was ranting yesterday that he is going to intensify his fight against the evils of liberalism. He is a funny little man.

Good luck Sean.

Christopher David Peter Wilcox

Visit Chris at his home blog Red Hog Diary

Thursday

Neo-Cons and "The Base". Splitting the Sheet

Our good friend here at The Peace Tree, Sojourning Soul, sent me a link to a very interesting post. It seems that Rush Limbaugh has been "carrying water" for the neo-cons and he ain't gonna do it no more, now that they lost their mojo anyway.

This little riff between the The Base and the former HQ is really getting interesting. Losing seems to have put a little "strain" on the relationship. I knew "the base" was getting impatient with Bush and company to consummate their marriage of church and state but now that the honeymoon is over and they have been found to be unfaithful things are getting really nasty.

My previous post on some of the comments coming from the right regarding thier party leaders were down right scary....they should all be hung? Of course that individual was careful to add the caveat "figuratively", but still. No amicable divorce here.

I always heard when you get married for the wrong reasons it never lasts.

So, check out this little story on what Rush had to say to his listeners and I will try to check in while I am in Vegas, if I can catch a wave somewhere.

Be kind to the conservatives....they really thought this guy was telling it to them straight...so to speak...lol.

A former Dittohead reports:

Rush Tells His Audience 'I'm Full of Crap'...Seriously!

You can read the entire transcript of the show over at Limbaugh.

Peace Y'all

Bush Is Still Deaf and Blind

Apparently Bush is just as deaf and blind to the will of the people as he was on November 6th.

Despite the "make nice talk" the scream heard ‘round the world for Bush to listen and see that we want accountability and disclosure of the truth about Iraq has fallen on stone deaf ears.

Bush seeks to replace Rumsfeld with another yes man.

Mr. Gates has a sordid history with the CIA that includes accusations of fixing intelligence. Good choice for Bush, not so good for anyone who wishes to see a change in the way the debacle in Iraq is going to be handled.

It is being reported that Bush wishes to have his guy confirmed in the lame duck session.
Republican politics as usual….. for now.

We shall see what comes of that but Pelosi and the new kids in the power seat need to know that we will not allow them to let this “President” and his potential new ally continue their ways for another two years.

We did not elect them to do that. We have put them there to hold these people to account and we will not accept anything less than that.

Get the full story on Robert Gates and his history via the link below this excerpt from CQ at The Raw Story.

I strongly urge you to consider joining CQ as this site is the online place for critical information about what is happening in the Congress.

It is time to get wise.

Get the tools to educate ourselves.

Never fail to use them consistantly, effectively and by any and all means at our disposal.

Its on, my friends.

Peace Y'all

_______________________________________


Gates’ CIA Past Could Haunt Him in Confirmation Hearings

By Jeff Stein, CQ National Security Editor

“The president’s choice of Robert Gates to succeed Mr. Rumsfeld . . . is deeply troubling,” Rep. Rush D. Holt, D-N.J., said in a prepared statement.

“During his tenure at CIA, Mr. Gates developed a reputation for pressuring analysts and managers to shape analytical conclusions to fit administration positions, a fact that led dozens of current and former CIA analysts to oppose his confirmation as CIA Director in 1991,” said Holt, who will likely chair an intelligence subcommittee starting in January.

Holt alluded to a connection between Gates’ past and his future at the CIA.

“What we need going forward in Iraq is straight talk about the challenges we face, and open-minded leadership that is willing to speak truth about the situation, no matter how unpalatable the news. Mr. Gates confirmation hearing should be thorough and probing.”

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This Is Very Ugly.

I saw a comment over at a liberal blog today from a guy who wanted to make sure we all knew how the conservatives were taking their "thumping" without blaming someone else for it, not crying the way "Liberals" did over voter fraud in the last two elections. This made me curious.

So I decided to take a look at what the right was saying about this national referendum on their party.

What I found was anything but taking a defeat with grace and dignity.

The far right wing republicans are so pissed off they may take Bush and the republican leadership "out" before the ink dries on the first democrat subpoena.

A few of the more graceful and dignified comments:

I quite. I not going to vote again. It's time I gave up on this political bullshit. I just hope the nuke attack comes soon. Let it be on the East Coast where it belongs.

I think this demostrates pretty clearly that voting should be a privilege, NOT a right.

Islam must have a boot smashing into its face forever until it becomes a grown up religion not bent on murdering everyone on the planet...Bush cannot comprehend this or the Donks even less...they do not have the intestinal fortitude for it...

The Virginia Senate Race will head to a recount, and it will be 2000 all over again, with the fate of the Senate hanging in the balance, as crazed politicized recounts will send the country into turmoil for weeks! Expect it to go all the way to the Supreme Court as ballots are challenged.

The GOP leadership needs to be hung!
"Figuratively"

expect the next attack
this will be a big one with many casualties
which is why I moved the family away from the city
I am retiring and never setting foot in DC again too damn dangerous now only good news from it is President Pelosi will have to deal with a whole order of magnitude more casualties than Katrina

And so it begins. Bono of U2 is asking the US Congress to return a Australian in Gitmo to Australia for "a fair Trial"
Terrorist appeasement begins.

The people have spoken.
The people are an ass.

___________________

Sad, very, very sad.

Peace y'all

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