24 January, 2010

Words have Meaning

Buried in a political polemic is something sadly profound about one of the many things that separate "elites" from the rest of us.

Mark Steyn discusses the newly-elected Senator Scott Brown's truck in the middle of an article about President Obama's use of words and his astonishingly high number of speeches in the last year:

The truck wasn’t just any old prop but a very particular kind: “In some places, there are codes, there are images,” [Newsweek editor Harold Fineman] told MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann. “You know, there are pickup trucks you could say there was a racial aspect to it one way or another.”

...Whenever aspiring writers ask me for advice, I usually tell ’em this:

Don’t just write there, do something. Learn how to shingle a roof, or tap-dance, or raise sled dogs. Because if you don’t do anything, you wind up like Obama and Fineman men for whom words are props and codes and metaphors but no longer expressive of anything real.

As I've watched my elders continue to struggle with the racism they learned in their early years, I can usually understand their angst at least a little bit. But hearing Fineman last week say that pickup trucks were racial code truly made me laugh aloud. It's so utterly absurd, a Rorshach test that says so much more about Fineman than about the truck itself.

The older I get, the more aware I am of what divides us. And in this case, how little it seems I and the people I know have in common with someone like Fineman...

But Steyn knows the remedy for such silliness: do something. If you've only got words to play with and never dip into the real and substantial of life, reality can begin to warp. Such people tend to wrap themselves in the insubstantial effervescence of words, living in a world of their own creation rather than the one that stares them in the face. Their world becomes a place where words--and by extension the things and beings they truly do represent/embody--are merely pawns in service to the users' goals and desires.

"Words, just words," said President Obama during the campaign...

Read More......

23 January, 2010

Tragic

As woman who had no man in the house from age 11 onward, this makes me unbelievably sad:

"Going the sperm-bank method is definitely not my first choice, but I am not willing to give up my dream of having a child just because I can't find Mr. Right.

As a single woman barreling into the steep back end of my childbearing years with no husband in sight, I am not indifferent to the desire for a child. But unlike the single woman described above, I am also not indifferent to the needs of a child for a father in the house.

To grow up without a good father who is under the same roof as the child and available for both quality and quantity time (quality moments don't happen on a schedule) is a tragedy. To purposefully create such a tragedy (in order to meet one's own emotional needs!) is immoral.

As the article briefly mentions, adoption is another option. Adopting a child who would suffer and die in another country, or an older child who is not as readily-adopted as an infant/toddler, is a noble act--to have a loving mother without a loving father is far preferable to having no family at all. But I have the terrible suspicion that the majority of women taking the adoption route are looking for a spot in the line of people waiting for newborns.

When I read articles about this problem, I always hear a chant running through them: "Me, me, me... I, I, I."

I try to be sympathetic here, and I DO understand--the call to reproduce is both biological and emotional. I think of my own father and the impact I know he had on me for the few years he was in my life, and I would love to have a baby who shared his lineage and on whom I could bestow the rich heritage he gave me. And I would love to experience the joys Sarah writes about so beautifully.

But at the expense of the child who wouldn't even exist were I not intentionally bringing him or her into the world to meet my needs while suffering the absence of a father?

Empathy is at war with judgment, but how can there ever be justification for such self-centered cruelty?

Read More......

10 January, 2010

BDS Lives!

...in the realm of sports, at least.

This morning I scanned a discussion of the Philadelphia Eagles' pathetic playoff performance against the [boo... hiss!] Dallas Cowboys yesterday. Got to the bottom of the article and found this most-recent comment:

whoooduh (1/10/2010 at 7:45 AM)
cowboy hyped ... i bet the eagles were told to lose by jerry's pals ... bush and the secret service ... god i hate the cowboys

Me too, but I tend to have a slightly stronger grip on reality.

Although... the Bushes were in attendance at the game... Bwahahahahaha!

P.S. Go, Chargers!

Read More......

06 January, 2010

Insanity?

Sometimes I honestly think a frighteningly large number of people "out there" are absolutely nuts.

Let's get it out of the way: I'm a Christian Pastor's daughter. Me, I'm not the type to publicly encourage people to convert to Christianity, but I wouldn't believe in it if I didn't think it was the best way to live my life--not because of a promise of heaven (whatever heaven actually is), but because I believe the precepts of Christianity make for a better life both today and in the life to come. If I truly believe that, would I not want others to believe similarly... with the thought that it would make their lives better?

With that in mind, would I be offended if someone suggested to me that their (different) religion would be of benefit to me in a challenge I'm facing? No! Assuming they follow their chosen path with conviction and devotion, I would take their suggestion as a generous mark of caring/concern, even if I rejected it. Frankly, I'd expect at least a broaching of the subject in any friendship within which our religions were very disparate--such as Christianity and Buddhism or Christianity and Islam, for example--ending in an agreement to disagree.

Though brought up in a conservative religious environment, I was taught that as fallible beings we were in frequent danger of misunderstanding God or failing to see what he was trying to teach us; our best effort was required to learn/understand, but ultimately we had to be humble enough to accept the possibility of error even while attempting to follow what we believed was right. We could be blinded by ego, by experience, even by a personality that might naturally be resistant or attracted to certain teachings. In other words, not being all-knowing, we could never be entirely sure of our choices.

Thus it was vital we use conscience and intellect in choosing a religious practice, but we should never look down on kind folks who had come to different conclusions. My father himself spent a lot of time talking to and learning from people of other religions because in doing so he tested his understanding and conviction in his own beliefs (it made him a better Christian because in being challenged he had to decide whether or not he really believed what he claimed to, and whether it all made sense).

A commenter at Hot Air said it beautifully:

I have been an ardent Buddhist and still love many of it traditions and technologies of the mind. And I am not a Christian. But I do understand what Hume was emphasizing. Even the Buddha taught that you had to provide the correct medicine for the current affliction of the mind. For someone who has so sullied his reputation and life, Tiger Woods really could use a hearty dose of Christian forgiveness, redemption and healing and usually this comes only by entering the Christian faith. Buddhists should not be too attached to Buddhism; it sometimes is the wrong medicine. The Passion of the Christ, the drama of the resurrection from Death is sometimes the best and only way to renew ones life.

As a Christian who was taught that one is either Christian or not--no fence-straddling, I don't relate to the the kind of religious flexibility the commenter displays ("Buddhists should not be too attached to Buddhism"), but I share his/her belief that the uniqueness of each individual affects that individual's religious experience.

That there are people out there who find this commenter's and my father's engagement in religious exploration and polite challenge/analysis offensive continues to surprise and confuse me.

Was Brit Hume wise to use a public forum to suggest someone convert to a particular religion? Probably not (the ensuing outrage was predictable). Was it offensive or rude? Not the way he phrased it, no. Or rather, only offensive to those who whose faith (verb) or faith (noun) are so fragile that the idea some people think them incorrect is enough to destroy a believer's worldview.

This is in line with the same silliness in which extremist islamists) threaten to kill people for "un-islamic" behavior (how can unbelievers' unbelief damage your own belief if you think your religion is the right one???), and something I honestly do not understand.

Yes, it's an emotional topic (one of the reasons Hume was perhaps unwise to bring it up), but have we truly become so PC that to acknowledge we've made judgments in our own lives is taboo?

I'd think the problem is a lack of humility about oneself and one's own beliefs, a lack of the humility that was modeled to me as a child... except I'd think religious pride/confidence would make the believer feel LESS threatened and offended by challenge, not moreso...

Are they all really that insecure?

I could see it as a matter of very proper manners, maybe: offense is taken at broaching such a personal subject in a public forum. But then the response Hume has received would belie the valuing of such careful manners...

I honestly don't understand it.

I CAN understand it on a case-by-case basis as insecurity or a personality that doesn't allow for challenge (I am right and you're wrong!), or as a cover for some sort of "issue" the threatened person can't cope with (i.e., "I despise myself, but being right in my religion gives me value and justification for being alive, so how dare you suggest I don't have the most correct religion!").

But I see no corporate/society-wide explanation... other than that the paragraph above is an accurate representation of what is driving the hysterical response to Hume.

If so, they're all genuinely nuts.

I suggest therapy so that they can get their heads on straight, learn to be kind to people different than them, and develop some self-confidence in their own choices.

Good grief, people!

[The above was written at 11 p.m. on a screen viewed through barely-open eyes, so take it for what it's worth.]

Read More......

I Love Americans

Jonn Lilyea said that seeing so many Americans welcoming his son home from Afghanistan "brought tears to my wife’s eyes and it was hard for this old infantryman to hold my own back. Still."

Just reading about the work of Operation Welcome Home Maryland in the Baltimore Sun brought tears to mine (read it all, and note the faces in the picture accompanying the article).

The volunteers of OP Welcome Home Maryland are another terrific example of the beautiful grassroots, can-do spirit of American generosity that sees a need and acts to fill it.

Hats off to the patriots of Operation Welcome Home Maryland!

Read More......

03 January, 2010

Getting Old?

Perhaps this is just a function of age and the truth that wisdom only comes paired with an accumulation of years (no, I know I've only accumulated less than half of my expected years), but a couple of interesting things came together for me this evening...

Cassandra wrote a wonderful post about personal responsibility, politics, government and marriage. And no, I doubt you can guess her point--or even her subject--from that list of topics. As with everything Cassandra posts, it's well worth your time.

We put too much faith in institutions. I think we do this because we get used to them, and because depending on someone or something else is much easier than holding ourselves accountable all the time. It's much easier than taking responsibility for our own happiness; than facing the strong likelihood that we're (as my friend spd so trenchantly put it once) responsible for at least half of every disappointment we encounter in life.

Of course, she's right. But usually when I think of aversion to personal responsibility, I chalk it up to a desire to avoid the consequences ("It's not my fault that ______! I'm a victim!"), or just plain laziness ("If it's my fault, then I have to ________ to fix it"). Today I realized there's another reason to avoid accepting responsibility...

I had a very personal epiphany not too long ago that has changed many things about how I view myself (and by extension, the rest of the world). It's been a very good thing, but it also has made me look back at certain moments and times in my life with a bit of sadness. Today's vision means I can see the missed opportunities and the self-imposed wounds of the past (as well as forgive myself for some of the mistakes--as I think back to certain of those moments and recognize that AT THAT TIME I probably wasn't capable of understanding or seeing my options any differently). But I find it all so frustrating! So amazing to see how much of those moments--even when I truly was a victim of circumstances--were shaped by my response to them. In some cases, I doubt any response could've "fixed things," but at other times my responses (no matter how considered before acting) made things worse.

I've always understood the idea of "If I knew then what I know now." I've just never felt it so acutely.

And so I wonder if part of our reluctance to accept personal responsibility is that there's a great deal of disappointment in accepting the truth that we weren't as smart or clear-headed as we'd like to think we were back when... and a great deal of fear in accepting that today we aren't as smart or clear-headed as we'll hopefully be tomorrow.

Read More......

Writing Roundup

These titles tickled my funny bone when I encountered them recently...

From The Campaign Spot: Ah Yes, That Dainty, Sensitive, Dovish Dick Cheney We've Heard So Much About -- never thought I'd see those adjectives in a discussion about our former Vice President!

Also from The Campaign Spot: Americans Begin to Learn 'Change' is Not a Synonym for 'Improvement' -- better late than never...

From Neptunus Lex: Smearing Jocks -- It wasn't until I re-encountered that title a day after I read it that I realized Lex was being clever. What can I say? I'm neither male nor an athlete, so that initially went right over my head. What else can I say? "Gross!!!"

From New Scientist: Sex and Shopping -- It's a Guy Thing -- The article is actually broader than that, covering both male and female activities and preferences when in a dating/mating frame of mind. Very interesting to see the differences between the sexes in display behaviors... and more proof that despite feminist ideals, there are certain things that seem to be hard-wired in most of us.

These didn't tickle my funny bone, but I thought you might appreciate them...

Proof that Anything Can be Deep-fried
-- Have your cholesterol meds handy while you read drool.

The Top 10 Conservative Movies of the Last Decade -- I don't watch enough movies to give my opinion on the list, but I've seen a couple of similar lists recently, and have been struck by the realization that one thing sets these lists apart from the critics' more general lists of best movies of the decade/year: almost every one of the conservative movies was extremely well-received by the movie-going public. My quick and casual explanation is that conservative movies tend to feature themes that speak to the heart and dreams of humanity: triumph over adversity, success amid challenge, courage/heroism/sacrifice, self-sufficiency, redemption, and good versus evil. I probably haven't thought it through enough, but it seemed interesting...

Lessons of a Weekend of Free Health Care -- A fascinating and heart-rending article. Fascinating because it's an AP story that actually gets into the real reasons these people either don't receive adequate health care (none of which the recent congressional actions address), or why they are sick in the first place. The stories of the 5% of people who truly have no other options are both tear-jerking and inspiring, as are the good hearts trying to help them.

Read More......

Chickens

Victor Davis Hanson outlines the roost potential for 2010.

Need anything to keep you awake tonight?

Read More......

01 January, 2010

Politics Can Get You Killed...

...If you're in the 5/2 Strykers.

Greyhawk has the details. Short version: You take a group of soldiers superbly-prepared for urban warfare in Iraq, decide at the last minute that for "optics" they should be deployed to Afghanistan while another brigade's deployment is quietly stepped up to fill the gap created in Iraq units... and soldiers in that formerly-superbly-prepared group are killed at alarming rates.

No, you didn't misread that. It's simply a collection of verifiable, undeniable facts.

I keep thinking of Lady MacBeth... but I sadly I doubt the people responsible for this are suffering the pangs she did.

These days the phrase "God help us" often echoes earnestly in my mind on topics of national importance. In this case: God help those soldiers. One of them is my "adopted" soldier, and six weeks ago he was moved to assist the company of the 5/2 that has suffered the highest KIA rate of them all...


Read More......

Finding Meaning in the Bottom of a Coffee Cup

...Apparently, there are people out there who've been doing that for quite awhile and are just devastated to find that their discovered meaning is actually as empty as the coffee cup itself.

It [Starbucks] brought us exotic places and sounds, exposed us to an underground in the safety of a cushy seat: teaching us about places where our coffee came from, and new music and literary voices. It tried to be our cultural guide and helped us feel good about our environmental footprint through its green campaigns and aid to farmers, even if Starbucks did little and we did nothing but buy coffee. It did so consciously, purposefully manipulating our desires, hopes and aspirations, all the while making us feel good about ordering up a venti soy latte.

But, we also knew, on some level, that it was all a delusion we actively participated in. “Starbucks worked as a simulacrum,” Simon writes, “it stamped out the real essence of the original idea of the coffee house and, through proliferation and endless insistence, became itself the real thing for many bobo and creative types.” Even as we believed we were being individuals, demonstrating our sense of style, we were just following the javaman’s master plan.

As Grim says, "Good lord, people."

The above is from a review of the new book, Everything but the Coffee: Learning about America from Starbucks. The first reviewer on Amazon adds some additional insight:
As the author states in the Afterword[...] "I stopped seeing the company as an engine of community. Instead, I saw it as a mythmaker offering only an illusion of belonging...." What the reader will find is a well-written, well-researched work that will be an eye opening experience for those who have loved or hated Starbucks. Eric Schlosser's "Fast food Nation" opened the first decade of the 21st Century with an expose of McDonalds and the fast food industry. Bryant Simon ends the decade with a dissection of Starbucks and the abdication of consumer responsibility.

In other words, as so beautifully illustrated in the first quote, a certain type of people bought into Starbucks as something other than a company offering a good product in a manner that carved out a great niche for itself:
It offers what it claims is premium coffee, at a premium price. It offers you the chance to 'upgrade' your purchase by allowing you to buy 'fair trade' coffee. Some people want to do that, so they find themselves with a niche market, and they make a good living. Meanwhile, you buy the coffee (and, perhaps, the good feelings) you want.

What's the hypocrisy? Starbucks is making you a fair offer; you're free to accept or reject it.

I shared this all in conversation with my mother and she pointed out that the coffee is "good," the people serving it usually do a great job (and are friendly and speedy--all employees are part-owners), and you can get it exactly how you want it--in its seemingly infinite variations... all in a pleasant and clean environment in locations around the world amenable to people-watching, business over a cup of a coffee, or computer time with free wireless. In other words, a nice product well-delivered. That people took it to be more than that is a riot. Such pretension! I think the author and various reviewers are accurate in pointing out that some people believed drinking Starbucks coffee helped them meet their self-imposed social/environmental obligations, willfully ignoring the reality that Starbucks coffee is ultimately a consumer product no different than clothes or cars, and that the company is going to be run on basic capitalist principles.

One thing that jumped out in the first link above is the reviewer's use of "we." It definitely rubbed me (and Grim's commenters) the wrong way. It's amusing to think that people who bought the illusion are so sure they're typical middle-American types and that the rest of us see things just the way they do. I wouldn't presume to speak for all of middle-America; why do they?

In truth, they aren't middle class/middle America; they're elitists. I know there are people who DO think like that, but I--as a person steeped and currently smack-dab in the middle class life--don't personally know anybody of my class who goes to Starbucks for reasons of morality or social responsibility. They go (as my mother pointed out) because it's a good product delivered in a way/environment they enjoy. The morality aspects--when they do come up among the Starbucks fans I've encountered--are always secondary or tertiary; It's always, "I love their coffee, and isn't it cool that they ________, too?!"

I keeping thinking of that old line: "People who believe in nothing will believe in anything." I am convinced that people are "wired" to find meaning in their lives. Deprive them of the primary bonds of family, religion, community, and a cohesive moral/ethical philosophy (all of which are solid organizing schema for finding meaning in one's life) ... and they'll conjure something out of thin air to fill that gaping hole inside them. That they chose a successful corporation to fill their need to believe the choice of coffee had deep meaning and impact is sadly ironic.

Funny that of all topics that should bring me out of blogging retirement, it's coffee--which I don't really care for and is a non-military topic. Although come to think of it... I don't believe the military could function without its ration of coffee. So see, I AM milblogging again! ;)

Read More......