Wednesday

A Little Rumi

Greetings All,

I received the most beautiful kindness and support via e-mail from my dear friend and former partner today in response to my post of yesterday.

She loves Rumi too… she shared a collection of quotes that is so powerful that I had to wait until I stopped crying to post them here.

Please, allow me to share them with you, as well.
I do hope you enjoy them.

a little Rumi.....

When you see the face of anger
look behind it
and you will see the face of pride.

Bring anger and pride
under your feet, turn them into a ladder and climb higher.

There is no peace until you become
their master.

Let go of anger, it may taste sweet
but it kills.
Don't become its victim.
You need humility to climb to freedom.

Anger is a king over kings,
but anger once bridled may serve.

If ten lamps are present in one place,
each differs in form from another;
yet you can't distinguish whose radiance is whose when you focus on the light.

Just what I needed to hear today.

Thanks Serisha : )

Peace y’all

Tuesday

Beyond Anger

Greetings All,

It has been some time since I have had much of my own to say around here.

The Peace Tree Authors Community has graciously provided the bulk of the posting lately and I sure am pleased to present their work and hope to continue to do so.

LOTS happening in my life the past few months, the attendant changes and challenges that have naturally followed have been quiet amazing.


Mostly all of them are of a personal nature and I never really envisioned this blog to be about those things directly so I will spare you that.

The thing is, that somewhere along the line from my first rant against the neo-cons/fascists now running our country I have grown tired of being angry about that.

I still find their actions just as reprehensible as I ever have but somehow the anger and animosity I had for them is quiet.

That was something to ponder, for sure.

One of my dear contributing authors here at the Peace Tree asked me to explain my understanding of the need for focusing our attention on the negative, the horrors, the suspicions and the now almost commonly accepted crimes of our own government.

I said I thought it might be necessary for some people to get angry before they are moved to new thought or action. I still think that is very true. The essays articles and poetry are served up pretty hot at times around here…as they should be. It was just that kind of “in your face” truth telling that awakened the fire of anger in me sometime ago.

Strange too, how so much of that anger turned out to be about the working through of complacency and entitlement issues of my own.

You know the old saying “if you are not part of the solution you are part of the problem”

I lose my anger when I also see that in our world of relativity you cannot have a solution without a problem either.

Perhaps the space in between is where we make the choice to be peaceful or not.
Maybe if I consistently make the peaceful choice……I get to keep the fire of new thought and action but lose the anger? We shall see.

It may be that I shall rant another day…but for now…I just want to enjoy not being angry.

Peace y’all

Thursday

Conscience belongs to the heart, not politicized religion

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

Conscience belongs to the heart, not politicized religion.

What happened to us? Where is America's spiritual common sense?

Why did millions of Americans allow television evangelist types to take over our country? Do we honestly believe such people have a hot line to God? Granted, most of them have a talent for raising money and some of them certainly have colorful sex lives, but shouldn't matters of the heart be between each of us and the mystery of existence.

To be fair, it's not just the Religious Right; it's now virtually all institutionalized religions. Pedophile priests, for example, are still regarded as spiritual authorities! And sad to say, millions of people lost their moral respect for the last Pope; not because they resented his ethical preoccupations, but because they felt his strident moralizing lacked the warmth of ethical wisdom.

The Middle East is a veritable cancer of religious hypocrisy that metastasized to the entire planet. What good can come from conflicts between Muslim "Holy Warriors" (that ultimate contradiction in terms) and the real estate ambitions of a “chosen people"?

How glaring is the contrast between doomsdaying preachers and gentle Jesus. Jesus spoke to our hearts -- as did Mohammed and the Hebrew Prophets (those beacons of Justice). They talked to us as heart travelers into mystery. They didn't lust after political power.

Surely Jesus would be heart broken to see his life affirming compassion and love replaced with death-wishing Armageddon and “Last Days”. And what would he have thought of the lucrative account of his life and teaching in the "Left Behind" sitcoms? His was not the arrogance of the fundamentalists nor the way of might makes right. And certainly not the way of multimillionaire authors!

Jesus counseled us to "judge them by their fruits." And the fruit of murder in the name of God is always poisonous. Such rationalizations for violence are abhorrent and how we long for a return to humanity and kindness.

We also long to be delivered from this money worshipping President. How conveniently the Bush/Evangelicals forget that the only time the founder of Christianity "lost his cool" was when he whipped the money changers out of the temple. Jesus loved the poor in spirit. He also didn't cancel heath benefits for children and under fund their schools in order to give tax breaks to King Herad.

The tragedy is that none of these things should have to be said. The institutions of religion are, at best, footprints of an ineffable and vulnerable journey in which each of us (to borrow a caption from a poignant photograph of Edward Steichen) is "alone with the beating of my heart.”

Sadly, many of us are afraid of this journey, so we huddle together in righteous synagogues, mosques, and cathedrals, desperately trying to define ourselves by what we hate. It has always been so.

The puzzle is why early 3rd millennia earthlings are losing their spiritual nerve. The fundamentalists (of all religions) are a tragic symptom of spiritual regression. Their hubris and contempt for other religions should be a sober warning to men and women of good will.

The perennial truth is that carnivorous cults, Popes and pamphlets, tents and temples are expendable, but our hearts and conscience are not.

So can we return, please, to the America of spiritual common sense?

W. Christopher Epler (Bill)

Visit Bill at his blog The liberation of Realism

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Peace y'all

Wednesday

The Malleable World of the Neo Cons

Today we have the latest essay from Peace Tree contributing author, Ernest Partridge.

The Malleable World of the Neo Cons
Ernest Partridge
The Crisis Papers
February 20, 2007

“A hegemon is nothing more or less than a leader with preponderant influence and authority over all others in its domain. That is America's position in the world today.... [P]eace and American security depend on American power and the will to use it... American hegemony is the only reliable defense against a breakdown of peace and international order. The appropriate goal of American foreign policy, therefore, is to preserve that hegemony as far into the future as possible.”

William Kristol and Robert Kagan

Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Lord Acton

With the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, the United States became the sole remaining super-power. Many saw this extraordinary situation as an opportunity at last for world disarmament, a concerted attack on poverty and disease, and global harmony under a rule of international law.

Not the neo conservatives.

Instead, they announced, this was to be “The American Century” – a “benevolent global hegemony” imposed upon the world by the sole remaining super-power, the United States. In this new world order, the United States would renounce treaties and international law at will if they were found to be contrary to the interests of the “hegemon.” Military action by the super power would be taken “preventatively” if there was a perceived possibility that an upstart nation might resist the “order” with force. Aggressive initiatives would be taken to assure that no rival super power would arise to challenge the global hegemony.

The United States would, in short, become the kind of world empire we claimed that we were struggling, throughout the cold war, to prevent the Soviet Union from becoming.

Much of this neo con program has been implemented by the Bush administration. The test-ban and anti-ballistic missile treaties have been abrogated, along with the Geneva Conventions against torture and the Nuremberg Accords forbidding unprovoked war. The United States has refused to allow its citizens to be tried in the international criminal courts. The military budget has been expanded so that it now equals the combined military budgets of all other nations.

But in Iraq, the neo cons have been rudely awakened from their imperial dreams.

In August 2002, General Tommy Franks gathered a few of his senior officers, and together they predicted what Iraq might look like four years after an invasion and the fall of Saddam Hussein. These projections, assembled in a PowerPoint presentation, were recently obtained by the National Security Archives (a non-governmental research organization) through a Freedom of Information Act request. There we find that had the prophecies of Franks group proved true, today there would be only 5,000 American troops remaining in Iraq, while a representative government would be in place and the Iraqi army would be keeping the peace throughout the country.

But the spectacular failure of these rosy predictions should not surprise us. For at about the same time, Paul Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney were assuring us that the overthrow of Saddam would be a “cakewalk,” and that we would be “greeted as liberators,” with flowers and sweets. The cost of “Operation Iraqi Liberation” (O.I.L.) (oops, make that “Operation Iraqi Freedom”), we were told, would be paid for by oil revenues.

Well, it didn’t quite turn out that way, did it? And why not? Many explanations have been offered. Among these: incredibly poor management by unqualified party hacks, failure to plan for the post-war occupation, failure to involve the Iraqis in the reconstruction. To be sure, all these factors and more have led to the appalling mess that is Iraq today. Underlying all these factors, perhaps, is a mind set of the neo conservatives who successfully urged Bush and Cheney to launch the war and who, before that, drew up and signed the neo con manifesto of 1997: “The Project for the New American Century” (PNAC).

By a “mind set” I mean assumptions that might be so far in the background of the neo cons thinking and planning that they are scarcely aware of them. These assumptions become apparent, not in what the neo cons say, but in how they act.

Three of these “mind set assumptions,” I suggest, are especially significant:

The world beyond the US borders is essentially passive. Nations and peoples can be acted upon, but they will not react unexpectedly or resist effectively. In a sense, then, the “outside world” is like a sculptor's clay, a painter’s canvas, or a writer’s sheet of paper. Action without reaction. (The neo cons appear to have the same attitude toward the American public. But that must be the topic of another paper).

We Americans know what’s best for the peoples of the world beyond our borders. And what is best for them is that they be just like us. Thus they should gratefully accept our bestowal of “truth, justice and The American Way.” The neo cons see themselves as “missionaries to the heathen” – the “little people” desperately in need of enlightenment and salvation, whether they want it or not. (Perhaps this is what Bush had in mind when he carelessly called the “war on terror” a “crusade”). Thus we find “Viceroy” Paul Bremer imposing a pre-formed libertarian “paradise” upon the Iraqis, complete with unregulated free markets, the privatization of public properties, and the abolition of all vestiges of the pre-existing “socialism.”

“Resistance is futile; you will be assimilated.” If the people of any nation abroad resist our “benevolent global hegemony,” this will be of no consequence, since our overwhelming military power will guarantee the endurance of our “hegemony,” and will prevent the rise of a rival global power.

All three assumptions are profoundly false, as we are discovering each day as the PNAC dream unravels.

The World can respond, unexpectedly and effectively. When King George III dispatched the Howe brothers (General William and Admiral Richard) to crush the rebellion in the American colonies, they expected that standard European military tactics would defeat the rebels. And so they did at the first encounter in Long Island when Washington’s colonials obligingly behaved as expected. But then the American patriots responded creatively, adapting and improving guerilla warfare, taking advantage of “home territory,” and eventually seizing the initiative. Thus action is followed by a reaction that is innovative, intelligent, and unexpected. History teaches us that this is a fundamental condition of human conflict. A lesson sorrowfully learned by the British in India, by the apartheid government of South Africa, by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, by the segregationists in the American South, and by the American military in Viet Nam.

No greater error can be committed in war or in peace, than to presume that one’s opponent will respond exactly as one expects them to respond. Yet, as one reads the manifestos and publications of the neo cons, one is struck by how little speculation is found therein as to how the “others” might respond to the “benevolent global hegemony.”

One often hears from the supporters of Missile Defense, the challenge: “If we can put a man on the moon, why can’t we develop as system that will destroy incoming strategic missiles?” The answer is simple: the moon is passive, while a strategic enemy is reactive and resourceful. The moon did not actively attempt to foil the Apollo landing. But any and all improvements in missile defense will result in countermeasures in the missile offense, and the offense has insurmountable advantages.

The people in other nations are the best judge of what is “good for them.” This is a lesson learned by most freshman students of cultural anthropology. Why it evades the notice of the well educated neo cons is a mystery.

Once again, history is a guide: Attempts from outside a culture to improve the lives within that society, however well intentioned those attempts might be, can have disastrous consequences if the culture and history of the “beneficiary” people are not carefully studied and taken into account. And it is doubtful that the interventions of the neo cons are either “well intentioned” or well informed.

Put simply: while the “golden rule” is an excellent guide for conduct within one’s culture, a more appropriate variant for dealing with other cultures and peoples might be: “Do unto others as they would have you do unto them.” This rule requires that the “outsider” be well aware of what “they would have you do unto them.”

“But haven’t American political ideals and culture been widely accepted throughout the world?” Indeed, they have – from national constitutions patterned after ours, to blue jeans and rock and roll. But these cultural importations succeed best when the people within the society decide on their own to accept them and integrate them into their culture. Attempts to force alien ideas and customs upon a society can have disastrous consequences, as missionaries and conquerors throughout history have learned.

Neo cons will tell us that they are trying to “spread democracy and freedom” abroad. (“Freedom is on the march.” G. W. Bush).

This is a cruel hoax, as is evident when one looks past the word to the deeds. There one finds that the “freedom” of the neo cons, is a freedom to exploit, to seize a nation’s resources, and to reap enormous profits with the connivance of the US government.

As for “democracy,” the neo cons are pleased to see nations abroad hold free elections, so long as these elections select candidates that the neo cons approve of. But if the neo cons don’t approve, then they will not hesitate to “correct” the voters’ “errors.” Consider, for example, the overthrow of Salvadore Allende in Chile, the attempt to oust Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, and Hugo Chavez in Venezuela.

To this day, I cannot think of one authentic democracy that has been established through the implementation of neo con foreign policy. Can you?

Iraq provides us with the most recent and vivid test example of neo con “liberation.” As noted above, soon after Saddam was ousted, Paul Bremer was installed as “Viceroy” whereupon he issued 97 “edicts” establishing a libertarian utopia of unregulated free markets and privatization. He didn’t think to ask the Iraqis what they wanted in a post-Saddam Iraq, nor did he invite them to participate in the reconstruction of the country. Instead, Halliburton, Bechtel, et al, swooped in with licenses to steal, as eight billion dollars in cash were shipped on pallets into Iraq and then disappeared, like fresh rain on the desert sand.

The Iraqis responded to these abuses exactly as we would in such circumstances; they rose up in a struggle to drive out the occupiers and to take back their country.

Despite its military might, the United States can be humbled, if “the world” so chooses. The neo cons proclaim that the United States boasts a military that can not be defeated in conventional war. And they are right. But it does not follow that the US military cannot be defeated. It can be defeated through unconventional warfare, as we discovered in Vietnam, and are apparently discovering anew in Iraq.

But more significantly, the American “hegemon” can be defeated without a shot being fired. As I have argued elsewhere (The Vulnerable Giant), beneath the bombast and bluster of the American military lies a pitifully week economic structure. More than half of our eight trillion dollar national debt is in foreign hands (mostly China and Japan). We have dismantled much of our industrial base and shipped it overseas, and the bulk of our strategic resources (primarily oil) are imported. Should our foreign rivals “call” our debts and switch from the dollar to the euro, the value of the dollar will sink like a stone and we will no longer be able to purchase strategic materials. An embargo on imported oil would be the coup de grace.

True, this would create chaos and hardship in the world economy, but grave threats can call for extreme remedies.

Put bluntly, we can be assured that “the world” will not submit to a “Pax Americana” – an American “benevolent global hegemony.” Not when the nations abroad take note of how American political ideals have been compromised and even abolished by the neo con Bush administration, and how this administration has treated American citizens and captured foreigners.

The nations abroad will not stand for this. And they need not stand for this. If the neo con arrogance, threats and bullying become intolerable, the community of nations can, in concert, demolish the American economy and reduce the United States to a ruined irrelevancy.

Hopefully, before that terrible tipping point is reached, the American public will at last wake up, regain its lost liberties, restore the Constitution, and renounce the imperial ambitions of the neo cons.

It is just possible that the sleeping giant is beginning to stir, and that a counter-revolution is afoot.

Let us hope that it is not too little and too late.

Copyright 2007 by Ernest Partridge

Dr. Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He has taught Philosophy at the University of California, and in Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly" and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers". View his book in progress, "Conscience of a Progressive,"
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Peace y'all

Tuesday

The American Table

Today we have a guest post from Peace Tree contributor, Brother Tim.

The American Table

The gluttonous Neo-cons have been feasting for over six years; it's time to clear off the table.

The first thing that needs to come 'off the table' is aggressive military action against Iran. It shouldn't even be a 'last resort', there are too many other alternatives.

Not only do we have Bush, Cheney, Rice, and most of the Republican House and Senate saying, "Nothing is off the table", but a good many Democrats as well. Hillary Clinton and Barrack Obama have both said, "Nothing is off the table". It is inflammatory rhetoric, meant to keep the Military/Industrial Complex's war machine churning.

The American people are sick and tired of war. They're sick of their young men and women dying in a no-win war. They're sick of seeing countless thousands of foreign peoples slaughtered in an aggressive, illegal war. And they're tired of draining the treasury to fill the pockets of obscenely rich corporations with the immoral, unGodly Neo-con fantasies.

In his February 10th speech at Munich, Russia's Vladimir Putin said:

February 12, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered an impassioned address at the annual security conference in Munich on February 10, in which he blasted the United States for trying to impose what he called its "unilateral" vision on the world. Saying the United States had "overstepped its boundaries in every sphere," Putin chided the European Union for doing little to check U.S. influence.

Read the full text in English here.

My Grandaddy would have simplified it by saying, "They're gettin' too big for their britches"

Putin has also agreed to supply Saudi Arabia with Nuclear technology and 150 Russian T-90 battle tanks. He has already provided Iran with an anti-missle defense system and nuclear technology.

China has also been helping Iran in their nuclear quest.

It doesn't take a geo-political genius to see where things are heading. Does anyone honestly believe that Russia and China will sit idley by while we try to decimate Iran like we did Iraq? What will that prompt all the other Arab countries to do, as they watch America's Imperialistic drive on the Middle-east? They'll be wondering, "Who's next?". To make matters worse, if we use a nuclear strike, even a limited one; Tehran is on the 35th parallel, at which the prevailing winds are west to east. Do you believe India and Pakistan are going to stand still for us contaminating their countries?

The only time the 'Frat-boy-who-would-be-king' ever told the truth was in 2000, when he said he was a 'Uniter', unfortunately, for six years he has been uniting the wrong people.

There are many other things that should be 'taken off the table', such as making the tax cuts for the wealthiest permanent and his no-win wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

When the table is cleared, we can put back 'on the table' more important and pressing things our country needs, like Impeachment, Habeas Corpus, Posse Comitatis, the Kyoto Agreement, and repealing that Constitutional Rights-stripping Patriot Act.

Praying for Divine Intervention,

Brother Tim

Visit Brother Tim at Blog of Revelation

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Peace y'all

Sunday

Just Tell Someone

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, Lori Hahn.

Just Tell Someone
Lori Hahn

We had a little Valentine’s Day excitement in the area this year. The Clerk of Courts for neighboring Yolo County (home of ultra left wing UC Davis) decided to get her political opinion moxy on and announced she would be handing out “Certificates of Inequality” to queer couples unable to marry under California law. Obviously, it was viewed by some as a publicity stunt. Duh.

Freddie Oakley, a married mom of some kids, and the clerk in question, is entitled to have a political opinion, and to prepare such certificates with her own time and money. She ran for office as a politician with an opinion—why her deciding to observe the event in this way on the holy Hallmark day of love is pretty apparent—she wanted to be heard. And, the press came out. Most importantly, I agree with her, for the most part.

Protesters carrying those pesky little California polite protest signs showed up at the courthouse as predicted. Several couples took advantage of the offer of the certificate. More press ensued. And, it really didn’t make much difference either way—today.

Few minds were changed on Valentine’s Day because of this stunt. But, for every public official, celebrity, civic leader, church group and individual (hey, that’s you I’m talking about) who voice their disagreement with the continuing unequal treatment of taxpaying, consenting adults who love and have made a commitment in responsibility to a person of the same sex, it brings us that much closer to victory. All those faux-Family Values types just don’t get it—we’ll keep raising our families, whether we get your sanction or not—and they’ll turn out just fine­—we’ll just do it without health insurance, mutual Social Security benefits, and Federal tax benefits, but we shouldn't have to--my tax money is as good as yours. I’m heartened that people like Freddie Oakley aren’t afraid to stand up and inevitably be accused of all sorts of skullduggery—you can be sure she’s even been pummeled with comments like, “You must be GAY!” Oh, the horror.

If you feel that this continuing inequity is wrong—tell someone! Try it out in front of the mirror--see how it rolls off the tongue--not so bad, huh? Then, try it out on your congregation, your neighbors, your friends, and your family. Tell your Congressman and Senators. Tell your loved one. Post it on your blog, send a Letter to the Editor of your local paper, tell your postal carrier. You can make a difference. You can. Just tell someone. Say the words out loud. Do it today, then do it again tomorrow. If you’re not afraid to speak up, then maybe they won’t be either.

“I think it’s time to end all discrimination against Gays, Lesbians, Bisexuals, and Transgendered people.” That’s all you have to say. Let’s call this the JUST TELL SOMEONE project. Pass it on. I’m counting on you.

Bigotry's birthplace is the sinister back room of the mind where plots and schemes are hatched for the persecution and oppression of other human beings. ~Bayard Ruskin


Visit Lori at Hahn at Home

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Peace y'all

Saturday

Sunday Poetry Series : I Am The Water Planet

Today we have a selection from Peace Tree Poets Society member, Kristen S. Boyesen.
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I attended an Original Think™ workshop with Jan Philips, author of The Art of Original Thinking. One activity was to write a message to the world as inspired from a nature photo. I was spirit-guided to chose from a pile of upside down photos, a scene of waves tumbling in on a beach. I have a great feeling of protectiveness for our planet’s water resources, so I was guided well. Here is my poem:

I Am the Water Planet
By Kristen S. Boyesen

My oceans, rivers, lakes and streams
Are here for life.
For all life.
You waste their bounty, and care not.

Water is the carrier of nourishment
For all living things,
And the lifeblood
Of all my earthly systems.

All who live on me are in danger of death
By thirst,
By hunger,
By drought.

Wake up, all who have power!

... ALL have power.

All humans have power
To keep water safe
In their daily choices
And uses of water.

Treat water as precious!
Because it is.

Human actions are responsible
For the future
Of all earthly life,
And the planet called Earth.

Every wasted drop of water
Is a Crime against Nature.

I Am the Water Planet.

Please visit Kristen at her home blog White Light of Peace

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Peace y'all

10 Appalling Questions Americans Never Dreamed We'd Have To Ask

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

10 Appalling Questions Americans Never Dreamed We'd Have To Ask

(1.) Did elements in the Bush administration in any way actively encourage 9/11? Remember, before 9/11, George Bush was in a political toilet, but after 9/11, he was media transformed into a cardboard hero (but why -- for cowardly hiding out while reading children's books upside down?).

(2.) Has America's foreign policy been taken hostage by another country? Specifically, has the Lukid Party become the true control center of the United States of America? It's now self evident to barnyard animals that the neocon lobby isn't lobbying for the well being and national security of OUR country.

(3.) Is George Bush deliberately trying to kill our one and only planet Earth to "speed up" his pathological, Armageddon death wish? Said differently, is Bush ignoring the international scientific community, not because he thinks they're wrong, but because he's afraid they're right, and thus resists any rational strategy to slow or stop global warming, widening ozone holes, polluted air, water, and food, and the general rape and murder of Mother Nature by Texas energy companies.

(4.) Why did only high profile Democrats receive anthrax in the mail and what are the true circumstances of the tragic death of courageous Senator Paul Wellstone? Remember, his circumstantially preposterous death gave the Senate to the Bush/Republicans.

(5.) And just what funny business is going on between George W. Bush and Osama bin Laden? Remember, bin Laden's "photo op" before the 2004 Presidential election dramatically helped Bush to steal the election more than any other factor (always nice to have friends, isn't it?). And why has the collective fire power and intelligence capabilities of our country been unable to find ONE man in going on seven years? Also, why were members of the bin Laden family flown out the United States a mere few hours a fter 9/11 (service with a smile!)? And why was bin Laden allowed to escape from Afghanistan. Questions, questions, questions . . . but no answers.

(6.) Have the Republicans factually stolen the last two Presidential elections (plus several 2002 midterm elections) with corrupt voting machines and illegal dem/progressive voter-trashing tricks? According to the exit poll international standard for measuring voter fraud, John Kerry is now unequivocally President of the United States. In short, is the Bush/Republican administration systematically (and rapidly!) murdering our Constitutional Republic, which is based on free and fair elections?

(7.) Is our country, after all, a mere a Dictatorship of the Rich? Are we in denial about how less than 1% of America controls nearly all of the wealth? How many jobs do you now have to keep your kids in school and put food on the table? Think of where you were six years ago, before the Republican greed vampires took over our country with a stolen election.

(8.) How much of the 20th Century Nazi Party is still alive and well in the sewers of the Bush/Republican Party? 1945 may seem like a long time ago, but the beat goes on with transcendental evil, and the MO of the Nazis was absolutely identical to the MO of this administration, i.e., hypnotic propaganda (e.g., the American Judas media), fascist/corporate dictatorship, and cultural totalitarianism. Multitudes of Nazis were scattered all over the planet after WW2, and they have surely been proliferating like viruses, perpetuating their Heart of Darkness horrors. And what better host th an an army of greed obsessed, Republican psychopaths? This is not empty speculation, as study after study has revealed that an international network of fascist/Nazis (the name is irrelevant) is still living, monster like, deep in the infrastructure pits of human civilization.

(9.) Once and for all, who are dem centrists like Hillary Clinton really answering to? They certainly aren't speaking for progressives and the American middle and lower classes. Maybe the bottom line is that "centrism" is fascism light, since they are the court jesters of the America's astronomically rich. The problem with Hillary is that no one knows if she's really there, since she has never taken a stand about ANYTHING. Hopefully, her all glitter and no guts DLC politics will be annihilated in the context of 2008 life and death issues. When civilization is desperately fighting for its life, centrists are the luke warm ones Jesus said he would spit out of his mouth.

(10.) And lastly, for a little comic/serious relief, what's the story about Senator Joe Lieberman? This likudnik Arron Burr is betrayal incarnate. The fact that he's the only congressman George Bush ever kissed (in public) says it all. Boy, that kiss sure reminds you of Judas, doesn't it? Except it wasn't given by Christ, but by the 3rd millennia's number one candidate for the anti-Christ.

Visit Bill at his home blog The Liberation of Realism

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Peace y'all

Thursday

Recommended Reading

Greetings All,

I have some really great stuff coming down the pipeline from the awesome contributing authors, here at The Peace Tree but today I want to let you all know about a blog I have come to highly respect and heartily recommend…This Free Nation.

I checked him/her out briefly a few weeks ago when I saw a few hits from my link at this blog. I have added this site to my blogroll of daily reading because I paid a few more visits following my site meter link and every time I do, there is something worth reading.

No comments…just some great insight.

So check out Saorsa at This Free Nation…I highly recommend it.

"Saorsa" is Gaidhlig for "Freedom"

Freedom….yeah.

Freedom from phone calls like the one I got tonight from an anonymous group asking me to answer recorded political survey questions framed from an extreme right wing perspective would be nice. I had to hang up…I was getting nauseated.

Then you know I had to wonder, is this a new tool in the war on domestic terror?

Anyone else had one of these yet?

Mr. Gates, the Rummy replacement (seems so long ago does it not?) feels it is imperative to focus on Americans who are a threat to National Security otherwise known as BushCo Worldwide Enterprises. Every Corporation should be so lucky as to have an army in control of their marketplace. Except things are not turning out quiet as expected. Some folks see Team Bushco as International Outlaws who have wrapped themselves in a flag wearing ever thinner. Their actions mock the flags arriving home from Iraq they do not honor them.

The Soldier dies fighting for peace.

Ask yourself...is it peace in the heart of Bushco or something else entirley?

Peace y’all

Wednesday

Can You Feel The Love

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, Christopher Wilcox.

judg’men’tal (adjective) – tending to judge or criticize the conduct of other people.

big’ot (noun) somebody who has very strong opinions, especially on matters of politics, religion or ethnicity, and refuses to accept different views.

There have been only a few occasions in my life where I personally witnessed prejudice to the point that I was literally taken aback. I’m not sure if that is a reflection on the sheltered life I have been afforded or if it is indicative of a callousness to what most likely happens everyday around me but which I am conveniently oblivious. I claim being unaware of bigotry around me as convenient because when you open your eyes to it, when you see it in its naked unabashed vulgarity it is diminishing to the integrity of our humanity. It gives me a sense that I am dirty by association and it disgusts me that I don’t have better tools to combat it, to shake sense into the small minded, insecure and pathetic nature of it all.

Perhaps the most alarming thing about the two incidents that I witnessed Tuesday was my utter sense of ineffectiveness in convincing either perpetrator that their thinking was completely unacceptable. The sense of helplessness this failure evoked in me was one of defeat and rage until I realized that the myopic lack of character I witnessed is most assuredly the exception rather than the rule in this day and age. At least I pray to God that is the case.

Both incidents were brought on as a result of my support for Barack Obama as a candidate for President of these “United” States. I have to wonder if those closest to the campaign are learning as I learned Tuesday that we most likely will see America at it’s ugliest and most reprehensible self in the coming months. I can not imagine what it would be like to work closely with this remarkable candidate, believing in his message of the audacity of hope, supporting his unifying message when they run face to face with hatred, intolerance and ignorance. I can not imagine what it will be like for his family as protecting them will prove difficult in this age of instantaneous electronic communication.

Self described Christian men, with faces contorted by hatred and anger as they passed judgment on the sincerity of Obama’s religious conviction claimed he was unworthy and despicable because his father was a Muslim. It seems there are people out there that think Obama is a Christian of convenience for his political ambitions to which I wondered how that would make him different from many other politicians. I was asked in the typical neo-con fascist tactic, “Just answer me this one thing. Would you or would you not be willing to vote for a Muslim for president?” I thought it was a joke because the extreme right loves to try to press non-sensical questions when they think they can get you to say something they can hold up for scorn and retribution. I would vote for anybody that demonstrates leadership and shares the hopes I have for this country. I can admit I would not want a person who did not share my faith to be the pastor of the Christian church I attend but that is about the limit to my exclusion of any specific religious belief for any particular endeavor.

All of this was just so stupid in my mind. What were we talking about? I would be willing to venture that neither of these judgmental bigots has ever met a Muslim. And where do they get off questioning the faith of another man anyway? Yet the reality of it all was that these men were actually unable to help themselves in their way of thinking. This world has a long way to go before we will ever see the peace that so many of us are longing for.

Visit Chris at his home blog...Red Hog Diary

Peace y'all

Tuesday

Just A Little Love

Greetings All,

My Valentine gift to you....
A little poem from one of my favorite poets.

The Intellectual
Rumi
The Sufi Poet of Love

The intellectual is always showing off;
the lover is always getting lost.

The intellectual runs away, afraid of drowning;
the whole business of love is to drown in the sea.

Intellectuals plan their repose;
Lovers are ashamed to rest.

The lover is always alone, even surrounded with people;
like water and oil, he remains apart.

The man who goes to the trouble of giving advice to a lover gets nothing.
He's mocked by passion.

Love is like musk.
It attracts attention.

Love is a tree, and lovers are its shade.



My friends, thanks for all the love you have shown me, you are the best.

May you find yourself in the arms of one whose desire is to show you how beautiful you really are and may you open your heart and believe them.

Peace y'all

Monday

The Limits of Tolerance

Today we have a guest essay from writer and activist, Patricia Goldsmith.

The Limits of Tolerance
Patricia Goldsmith

With the words, “I’m in it to win,” Hillary Clinton tossed her hat into the ring—and gave us the motto of the Democratic Leadership Council, the group that launched her husband’s presidency and continues to dominate Democratic Party strategy. In the mid- to late-eighties, at the height of the Reagan Revolution, this group of Democratic politicians and strategists realized that unless they could figure out a way to start winning elections again, they would not have political careers.

So instead of bucking Reaganomics, they hitched the Democratic Party to the Republicans’ bumper, like a string of tin cans bouncing along in the dust. They declared that business and government would henceforth be friends and partners. They had found a third way, a new center. No more unseemly scuffles.

In practice, however, it turned out to be a very lopsided partnership. If the average citizen won by inches during Bill Clinton’s tenure—with his popular family leave bill, for example—big business won by light years, especially with the passage of NAFTA. (This is the same Bill Clinton, by the way, who chose to leave the Kyoto global warming protocols unsigned at the end of his term.)

Hillary’s current war chest shows just how handsomely the move to a business-friendly party has paid off in cold hard cash—at least for people named Clinton. Rupert Murdoch actually held a fundraiser for Hillary over the summer—which just goes to show that corporate moguls know the value of having two parties to choose from. But not everyone has the billions it takes to put a down payment on a president. And the price is going up.

Senator Clinton has opted out of public financing, the first candidate to do so for both the nomination and the general election campaigns—which, according to experts, will probably be the end of the current voluntary system for regulating big money in presidential campaigns.

Since the passage of NAFTA, we’ve seen the same effects in the US that we’ve seen with globalization all around the world: increasing economic inequality. Monetary agreements are harshly enforced, but there is no corresponding enforcement of labor, human rights, or environmental standards. Free trade has, in fact, turned out to be a very efficient vehicle for concentrating wealth in a few private hands at the expense of whole societies. It’s a privatizing, planet-eating machine.

As the war in Iraq should make clear to the least attentive among us, where resources cannot be obtained through unequal trade and debt agreements, they are being taken at gunpoint. Iran is next.

FDR and LBJ talked openly about class war. Like his cousin Teddy before him, FDR warned about monopolies that corner markets, fix prices, lie, cheat, and chisel in a relentless and single-minded quest for profits. Johnson, for all his sins, pointed out the shameful relationship between race and poverty. Not the DLC. In an attempt to woo back Reagan Democrats, Clinton constantly intoned the mantra of the little guy who “works hard and plays by the rules”—a culture war pitch.

Let’s forget for a minute that effort and obedience are more properly attributes of a robot than a citizen in a modern republic, and consider the fact that the same centrists who tell us that big business is our friend are also telling us that we have to be tolerant and respectful of “deeply held beliefs”—for the sake of winning.

I might actually go for that, if I thought the culture war was about gay marriage or immigration or abortion. But it’s not. The culture war is not about any particular conflict. It’s about the ground rules for deciding differences.

One way is based on equality, the primary assumption of secular government. The first sentence of the Declaration of Independence declares all men equal and endowed with certain inalienable rights. Over a hundred years later that promise of equality was extended to black people with the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law for everyone, a promise many state constitutions also make. Constitutional guarantees are bedrock, not to be voted away—in the same way that we can’t simply vote slavery back into existence.

The other way to settle differences is to give more weight to “good” people. We decide issues not on the basis of evidence and expertise, but on the basis of values and moral authority. For example, when it comes to gay marriage, a lot of citizens are very happy to see family values prevail over scientific expertise and equal rights. They’re quite willing to amend their state constitutions, or even the Constitution of the United States, to make an exception to the requirement of equal rights for all.

The problem is, gay marriage isn’t the only decision we’re making that way. We’re making decisions about when and how to go to war in the exact same way.

During the run-up to the war on Iraq, we heard a lot about George W. Bush’s character, his faith and steely resolve, his instincts and ability to recognize and confront evil, his refreshing black-and-white moral clarity. Evidence and expertise were very much in the background. Not only that, but this “good” Republican president, a faithful evangelical Christian, wasn’t pressed for corroboration in the same way that a “bad” Democratic secularist like Clinton was when, for example, he sent American troops into Somalia.

The culture war is about manufacturing the attitudes required for people to accept endless resources wars and extremes of economic inequality. The culture-warring right isn’t asking for tolerance. It demands submission.

It certainly wasn’t tolerance when President Bill Clinton sat on his hands as Republican operatives wielding baseball bats stopped votes from being counted in Florida in 2000.

It’s the class war that has the potential to unite us. Hatred of George Bush has brought together a very broad coalition of unconscious class warriors. Now it’s time for us to realize that hatred of Bush is really hatred of the ruthless corporate oligarchy he represents.

The good news is that the increasing economic insecurity of the middle class in this country is reaching a critical mass. As Princeton economist and Hamilton Project participant Alan Blinder puts it, “There’s a whole class of people who are smart, well educated and articulate, and politically involved who will not just sit there and take it.” I’d like to think I’m one of those people, and I know a lot of others who fit that description. We have an opening.

It will be an uphill battle. Centrist Democrats are working as hard as Republicans to protect free trade, while the deregulated corporate media continues to block most discussion of class inequality—and almost no one is pointing out the connections between culture war and class war inequality.

It’s also likely that there are those Republicans who, having shot government in the head, would be quite content to see it flatline on a Democrat’s watch. They’re already getting the Dems in the new Congress to do their dirty work. While the GOP continue their insatiable shrieking for more and more corporate welfare, Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid are returning to PAYGO standards—a move which would, without a return to fair taxation for the rich and big business, require that Democrats slash the remaining tatters of our social safety net.

No way. That’s not winning. We need a complete turnaround, not a slight course correction. Roll back obscene corporate welfare. Pass universal health care. Drop out of NAFTA, sign Kyoto, withdraw from Iraq. Return to FCC fairness and equal-time rules, and begin enforcing the Sherman Anti-Trust Act again, beginning with the big media monopolies. Real public financing of elections and paper ballots.

If grass- and netroots Democrats can re-ignite the class war, the culture war will lose its wallop, and we might just stand a chance of, at least, beginning to think about the problems that are threatening our very survival.

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Peace y'all

Friday

Impeachment Now! – A Recantation

Today we have the latest essay from Peace Tree contributing author, Ernest Partridge, Ph.D.

Impeachment Now! – A Recantation.
Ernest Partridge, Co-Editor
The Crisis Papers
February 6, 2007

"I am ... unwilling to endorse demands for immediate bills of impeachment against Bush and Cheney, for the simple and compelling reason that such an approach is less likely to succeed. Recent history teaches us that the direct route to impeachment may not be the most effective.”

I wrote this, and believed this, last December 5. Intervening events, and some sober reflection, have convinced me that I was wrong.

The intervening events. Since I wrote those words, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has told the Congress, under oath, that the Constitution does not guarantee the protection of habeas corpus to the citizens of the United States. If he believes this and acts accordingly, Gonzales has violated his oath of office. So too the President and Vice President if they endorse Gonzales’ opinion. Congress must demand that Bush, Cheney and Gonzales repudiate the Attorney General's pronouncement and reaffirm their oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. If they refuse, then they must be removed from office.

In addition, both Bush and Cheney have expressed their determination to add more troops to the Iraqi occupation force, despite the opposition of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, an accumulating roster of the military, both active and retired, the Iraq Study Group, the American Public, and the Congress. By announcing that nothing, not even an act of Congress, will deter them, the Bush/Cheney team have, in effect, proclaimed themselves dictators. If this proclamation is to fall short of an implementation of rule by decree, the Congress must promptly and decisively reinstate its co-equal status with the Bush Administration, and it must send back that message to the White House with an explicit threat of impeachment.

Finally, over the past two months it has become apparent that Bush and Cheney might launch an attack on Iran. Most informed observers agree that this would be an act of insanity, that would unite the world against the United States, probably sharply curtail the production and shipment of oil from the Persian Gulf throwing the US and the world into a depression, and just possibly igniting a third World War. This attack might be prevented by an act of Congress refusing to fund such an attack and proclaiming explicitly that the Congress, in accordance with its Constitutional authority, forbids the President to launch an attack against Iran. That act of Congress should state that failure of the President to obey this act would result in impeachment.

There is no need for the Congress to “build a case” against Bush and Cheney. Two months ago, I believed that if Bush and Cheney were to be impeached and convicted by the Senate, investigations would have to take place, with the amassing of evidence, testimony under oath, and extended debate in Congress. Such was the case with Nixon and with Clinton.

However, I have come to realize that the situation today is substantially different. The evidence is public, indisputable, and even, in some cases, freely admitted by Bush and Cheney. As John Dean has pointed out, when Bush announced that he had authorized secret wiretaps in direct violation of the FISA law, he had, in effect, confessed to an impeachable offense. In addition, the use of torture violates the Geneva Conventions, and the launching of an aggressive war against a nation, Iraq, that did not attack or threaten to attack us, constitutes a war crime in violation of the Nuremberg Accords. Both of these treaties have the force of law, and thus their violation merits impeachment. Finally, Bush’s “signing statements,” many of which state explicitly a Presidential prerogative to ignore acts of Congress at will, contradict the Constitutional requirement that the President “shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed.”

There are many additional “high crimes and misdemeanors” that justify impeachment and conviction, but some of these require investigation and debate. However, those listed above are both indisputable and sufficient. All that remains, then, is the will of Congress to do its duty. While extended debate on all these issues might be desirable under ordinary circumstances, these are not ordinary circumstances. The Bush/Cheney administration has caused enormous damage to the American economy, to its international reputation, and to its Constitutional order. And it appears quite likely that this administration is about to precipitate a calamity of unimaginable severity upon the nation and the world. Time is of the essence.

Why not “impeachment now”? In a carefully articulated essay in The Nation, Professor Sanford Levinson of the University of Texas Law School argues against impeachment, not withstanding his belief that Bush is “quite possibly the worst President in our history.” He raises three essential points:

  • The Constitution provides us with a language to get rid of a criminal President, but it provides us no language, or process, for terminating the tenure of an incompetent one.”
  • “There is simply no possibility that Bush will actually be removed from office in the twenty-four months that unfortunately remain to him.”
  • There is a “highly legalistic” question as to “what exactly constitutes ‘high crimes and misdemeanors,’” which the Constitution stipulates as grounds for impeachment.

I believe that all three objections can be successfully rebutted. If so, then given the gravity of the crimes and misdemeanors, only partially listed above, the impeachment of Bush and Cheney becomes both feasible and urgent.

First of all, Prof. Levinson appears to assume that there is a clear distinction between incompetence and criminality. But doesn’t criminal law recognize a crime of “depraved indifference” – which might amount to “voluntary incompetence”?

Granted that Bush is incompetent. But surely much of that incompetence is by his own choice – by his own culpable choice. Bush has spent an inordinate amount of time on vacation. He chooses not to study and deliberate about legislation and policy. He refuses to accept advice or listen to contrary opinions, and those who dare disagree with Bush’s “gut” are summarily dismissed. All of these are indicators of Bush’s incompetence, yet he freely chooses each of them. And those choices constitute a willful “depraved indifference” to the duties and responsibilities of his office. A “high crime and misdemeanor,” I would submit.

Cheney, on the other hand, is not incompetent: he has proven himself to be extraordinarily skillful in achieving his diabolical objectives. Thus he is even more culpable and vulnerable to impeachment than Bush.

As for the problem of “possibility:” I am reminded of a slogan from the World War II military: “The difficult can be done right away, the impossible takes a little longer.” And history testifies to the success of numerous hopeless causes, and of the heroes that led these struggles, persevered and prevailed: Washington, Gandhi, King, Mandella, Sakharov. And do not forget, that Richard Nixon’s eventual departure began with a “third-rate burglary,” and no expectation of impeachment. Then followed the firing of the Special Prosecutor, Archibald Cox and the disclosure of the White House taping system. In short, events often have a way of taking control, whereby "the impossible" may be transformed into "the inevitable."

No President and Vice President in our history have been more deserving of impeachment and removal from office. The case is strong, valid, public and beyond dispute. If the public demands impeachment, as apparently more than half of the public does, and if the public makes this demand forcefully and persistently, it may eventually have its way.

Finally, there is the question of the “legalistic” question of just what constitutes the “high crimes and misdemeanors” that justify impeachment and conviction.

While I am not qualified to dispute the learned law professor, I can cite several lawyers and law professors of a contrary opinion. And as I vividly recall, from both the Nixon and the Clinton cases, the pronouncement by such experts was that “impeachment is a political, not a judicial, act.” The Constitutional grounds, “high crimes and misdemeanors” are vague and even, in a sense, contradictory. Perhaps deliberately, so that the Congress might be empowered to deal with extraordinary emergencies. In the body of law, “misdemeanor” means a petty crime, in contrast to a “felony.” So if misdemeanors are petty, how can there be a “high misdemeanor?” Is it not possible that the Framers of the Constitution meant by this phrase that a President might commit a grave offense against the Republic that does not fall directly under the body of law? If so, who better to judge the severity of that offense than the body authorized to make and enact the laws – the Congress?

Professor Levinson writes, “thanks to the Founders, we were given a Constitution that perversely makes us ‘better off’ with a criminal in the White House instead of someone who is “merely” grotesquely incompetent.” He neglects to mention a third possibility: a megalomaniacal President who is deranged to the point of near insanity, who is detached from “the real world,” who claims to be an instrument of the Almighty, and who is convinced that he can, by his will, create a reality of his choosing. The Twenty-Fifth Amendment (1967) stipulates that the President’s cabinet and two-thirds of both houses of the Congress might declare such a President to be incompetent, over the objection of the President. But what if that cabinet refuses to initiate this action?

Put bluntly, is Professor Levinson telling us that the United States, through its Congress, has no defense against a President run amok? Or a President surrounded by skillful lawyers who manage to keep the Chief Executive within the letter of the law, as that Executive proceeds to dismantle the law?

As this layman understands it, impeachment is an extraordinary procedure – a political act with few precedents and outside the strict letter of the law. To some degree, the Congress makes the law as the process goes forth. As the House of Representatives draws up articles of impeachment, and as the Senate deliberates its vote, there is no judge to rule on the strict legality of the articles or the legal propriety of the Senate’s vote. Not the Chief Justice, who simply “presides” over the Senate trial. And there is no appeal to a decision of the Senate to remove a President, Vice President, or subordinate executive officials from their offices.

Perhaps the late Gerald Ford put it best: "...an impeachable offense is whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a given moment in history."

As the nation approaches the calamity that must surely follow an illegal and unprovoked attack against Iran, is there no escape? Or are we about to discover that we have all booked passage on the Titanic, with a deranged captain locked in the bridge and determined to “stay the course”?

There is an escape, though it appears to be a long-shot.

The Congress must, without delay, draw a line in the sand, and send a clear message to the White House: "You are hereby forbidden by law to launch an attack on Iran without the permission of the Congress. And if you do so, you will immediately face impeachment, trial, and removal from office."

We must not go gentle into that dark night that is directly ahead of us.

Copyright 2007 by Ernest Partridge

Ernest Partridge is a consultant, writer and lecturer in the field of Environmental Ethics and Public Policy. He has taught Philosophy at the University of California, and in Utah, Colorado and Wisconsin. He publishes the website, "The Online Gadfly"
and co-edits the progressive website, "The Crisis Papers". View his book in progress, "Conscience of a Progressive".

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Peace y'all

Tuesday

Sleeping Beauty (a hopeful fairy tale)

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing atuhor, W. Christopher Epler, Ph.D.

Sleeping Beauty (a hopeful fairy tale)

A beautiful country was once bewitched into a deep, deep sleep.

Then her spacious skies and purple mountain majesties were polluted and raped by corporate, Texan dragons of greed. Her fruited plains and amber waves of grain were bled dry by Bush/Saudi greed vampires who wouldn't know what a plow or furrow looked like if they stumbled over one while shooting friends in the face while duck hunting in the deadly Swamps of Cheneyburton.

And forget the crown of brotherhood from sea to shining sea, since the Christian Fundamentalists hated everyone. Captain Insecticide (a former killer of bugs), said dont Delay, we know the way, while the usurper King sold the countrys soul to a neocon lobby which is now captaining Americas Ship of State -- but NOT for the well being and national security of the United States of America.

The spinner magicians tried their best to keep the Prince of Truth from kissing the Sleeping Beauty. Their thorns were everywhere and many knights lost their way in the mists of Judas media.

However, very gradually reality rain washed and nourished the land and after many kisses from the more courageous knights, the Sleeping Beauty is finally awakening and some day soon will sing America the Beautiful.

W. Christopher Epler (Bill)

Visit Bill at his home blog.

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Peace y'all

Monday

A March A Ride and A Funeral

Today we have a post from Peace Tree contributing author, J.C. Shakespeare.

A March A Ride and A Funeral

Last Saturday (January 27) my conservative, biker, blogger friend Robbie and I attended two different events, and in one sense, they were at opposite ends of an ideological spectrum. In an oversimplified nutshell, he thinks we need more killing to achieve peace, whereas I think we should just stop the violence and start working on the peace right now. But the more I've thought about these two events, one a funeral for a young man killed in Iraq, and one a peace march in downtown Austin, the more I've come to question the reality of "opposing" viewpoints. Yes, there are very real and important differences in our points of view. But there are also points of common ground, and I'm wondering if it might be worthwhile to explore those for a change.

I encourage you to read Robbie's post about the funeral of Captain Sean Lyerly, who died when his Blackhawk was shot down in Iraq. Robbie and the Patriot Guard Riders rode to meet the coffin at the airfield and escort it to the church for the funeral service. I can only imagine the emotional charge of being a part of such a display of power, pride and solidarity. There was much military fanfare at the funeral, with cadets from A & M, a large police contingent, the PGR's, a 21-gun salute, and a Blackhawk flyover. I have no doubt that it was a tremendously stirring tribute to a brave soldier.

At the same time that service was going on, I joined several hundred people in the streets of downtown Austin. My wife was walking next to me, pushing our daughter in her stroller, and my daughter was waving and flashing a little peace sign at the drivers and passengers in the cars forced to wait by the throngs in the street. As we moved down Cesar Chavez in a sea of colorful signs, banners, and T-shirts, I too felt a surge of pride and solidarity, a sense of connectedness to a greater purpose, a feeling that we were expressing a noble and worthy desire to end violent conflict as quickly and immediately as possible. I felt a sense of hope, of optimism, of peace, and these feelings were reflected back to me, both in the faces of my fellow citizen marchers and in the overwhelming positive response from the vast majority of people whom we passed on the way to the Capitol. I don't know what effect, if any, these demonstrations have on politics, on public opinion, on the war, on the troops, on the enemy. But I know what effect they have on me. The sense of unity and of community gives me hope that the peace, goodwill, and moral common sense of the American people will eventually be brought out to such a degree that war will no longer make sense.

I can't imagine anyone in America who wouldn't think that a soldier dying before his time, leaving behind a wife and a three-year-old son, is anything other than a tragedy. Somehow, to me though, this continued glorification of militarism just doesn't make sense. How our fighting men and women can still follow this president astounds me. All of the rage that's directed at people who are against the war seems sorely misplaced to me. I watched the video of Josh Sparling heckling peace marchers until some of them, unfortunately, took the bait of his goading and responded with rudeness and anger. Then he was paraded all over Fox News and the rightwing blogosphere as a media darling who just proved that anyone who doesn't support perpetual war hates the troops, hates America, hates God, and loves Islamic fascists who hate us because we're free. I'm tired of the way the pro-military people in our culture believe that they can dictate what my motivation for wanting peace is, or who I hate and who I love. They don't know me. They don't speak for me. They don't seem to make any attempt to understand me. But is "our side" doing any better?

Could we please wake up, people? President Bush keeps telling us we're fighting an ideological war. It seems to me that an ideological civil war has already broken out in this country. And if we call ourselves peace workers, and if we are "fighting" for peace -- whatever the hell that means -- then we've got to start working right here at home. We who believe in the immediate cessation of an immoral war have to start treating our "enemies" at home with compassion, dignity and respect. Christ did not raise up an army and smash the Roman Empire in order to achieve peace. In effect, he said, "Forgive them Father, for they know not what they do." When we sink down to name calling, hateful speech, and vitriolic attacks based on anger instead of fact, we have already lost peace. I know it's infuriating to listen to the arguments that don't make any sense to us. I know people are dying because of our delusional obsession with military might as the only way to act in the world. But we can't wait for the "other" side to come around to our point of view, and we can't change their minds by spitting insults, or even "facts" back and forth. Nor can we do what is tempting; ignore them, hope they go away, and say to ourselves, "What's the use? There's no talking to those people." We have to take the harder path, the moral high ground, and return hate with kindness, abuse with compassion, outright lies with gentle demonstrations of truth. Continue to articulate a positive vision of what a more compassionate world, a more compassionate society, a more compassionate model of civil discourse looks like. We're not rolling over and playing dead, but we need to live, breathe, and act peace in each moment that we can remember the essential truth of ALL religion and, in light of quantum physics, all science as well . . . WE ARE ALL ONE.

I believe in my heart that Robbie is a good person in his heart. He writes things on his blog that absolutely make me cringe, and yet there are moments in which he writes things that reveal a good heart and a seeking mind. I have a firm belief that every person operates to the best of his or her ability, and makes decisions and choices to the best of his or her ability, with the level of consciousness currently available to them in each moment. Everybody's looking at the world through a different set of perceptions, beliefs, and cultural conditioning. The world looks different to each of us. But we have to realize that there is not a single human being on the earth that has a handle on Absolute Truth. Absolute Truth is beyond human comprehension. If we think we know it, possess it, that's proof that we don't. So, without giving up our deepest core values, I think it might be wise to relax the rigidity of our positionality, our all-black or all-white thinking, and find a way out of these deep, divisive ideological trenches from which we're gunning each other down like meat puppets on the Maginot line.

We have to make the first move, friends. Join me in asking ourselves at the end of each day, "What have I done to make this world more peaceful today? Who have I touched, and how? Have my actions been in keeping with my expressed principles? How can I do better tomorrow?" There can be no peace out there until I find peace in here. I'm pointing at my heart. And now I'm going to bed.

Visit J.C. at his home blog

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Peace y'all

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