Friday, August 21, 2009

are you paying attention?

Bueller? Bueller?

Are you paying attention? So yesterday we learn that the W administration was even more morally bankrupt than previously realized.



Incredible.

And while the terror levels kept rising and the billions became a trillion, education and healthcare only got worse and nobody said a damn thing about how much money we were spending because we were fighting to defeat the Terror over there in Iraq. Funny how fear can interfere with rational thought and reconfigure one's priorities. Fear is a powerful thing, and the Republicans have become masters of fear-based manipulation.

Meanwhile, with Obama and the Dems attempting to do something constructive in this country (as opposed to something so horribly destructive in the Middle East) and actually help sick people - help sick people! - the GOP continues to raise the fear level with more lies and more distortions. Damn, it is frustrating. Come on folks. Get with the program here. This is a moral issue. It's an issue about the long-term flourishing of our communities and our nation. It's an issue where Love can conquer Fear. We can do this. Yes we can.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

the new ride in

Saturday, June 13, 2009

june 7 2009 at cheekwood


ivy will be 5 in july
eden will be 3 in august
oakley is 5 months

photo wizardry compliments of jay koch
music compliments of miles davis

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

today is the day


Vanderbilt isn't the most politically active campus in the country - not even close. This despite the fact that Ross Perot and a number of big players in DC have been known to send their kids/grandkids to school here (Ben Quayle was in my law school class). But I was impressed on the ride in when I cut across the lawn in front of the library and came across this bit of sidewalk chalk graffiti. Well done, 'Dores. Way to represent for change. Yes we can.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Prof. Balmer

This morning, after the drive in (it was 48 degrees and raining hard), I had the chance to attend the Cole Lecture at VDS and to hear (and to meet) a scholar of American religious history who has been influencing me since I first encountered his book Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory as a college sophomore in the Fall of 1994. If you, like me, grew up in the South and/or in the Evangelical subculture, you have to read Randall Balmer. Just stop whatever it is you are doing at this moment, and click here to order this classic and brilliant book.

These days he writes as a "jilted lover" who acknowledges being nurtured as a child and sustained as an adult by an evangelical faith that, as Denise Richards might say, is complicated. Although I would not say along with Balmer that I am still sustained by an evangelical faith, I do find myself largely in agreement with just about every word that came out of his mouth this morning and most everything I have read in his recent book, Thy Kingdom Come: An Evangelical's Lament, about which he was speaking this morning and wherein he notes that right-wing zealots have distorted the gospel of Jesus, defaulted on the legacy of nineteenth-century evangelical activism, and failed to appreciate the genius of the First Amendment. He continues:

"[Preachers of the Religious Right] appear not to have read the same New Testament that I open before me every morning at the kitchen counter. . . . They have led their sheep astray from the gospel of Jesus Christ to the false gospel of neoconservative ideology and into the maw of the Republican Party. . . . I challenge my fellow believers to reclaim their birthright as evangelical Christians and examine the scriptures for themselves--absent the funhouse mirror distortions of the Religious Right. For those equal to the task, I suggest a form of shock therapy: juxtapose the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7), arguably the highest expression of Christian ethics, with the platform of the Republican Party. Would Jesus, who summoned his followers to be "peacemakers" and invited them to love their enemies, jump at the opportunity to deploy military forces, especially at the cost of so many civilian lives? How do we reconcile reckless consumerism and tax cuts for the affluent with Jesus' warnings against storing up "treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal"? Is the denial of equal rights to anyone--women or Muslims or immigrants or gays--consistent with the example of the man who healed lepers and paralytics and who spent much of his time with the cultural outcasts of his day? I suspect that when Jesus asked us to love our enemies, he probably didn't mean that we should torture or kill them. I doubt that the man who expressed concern for the tiniest sparrow would approve the systematic despoiling of the environment in the interest of corporate profits. Jesus calls his followers to a higher standard."

This is good stuff that gets to the heart of my own existential conflict with the religious experiences and worldview of my adolescence and young adulthood. Again, if you aren't familiar with Balmer, he's very much worth getting to know.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008