Sunday, December 11, 2005

A fine fellow, former Minnesota Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, has passed on, but he will not be forgotten

A fine fellow, former Minnesota Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, has passed on, but he will not be forgotten anytime soon in my house.  The following narrative is taken largely from the AP report today.

Former Minnesota Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, whose insurgent campaign toppled a sitting president in 1968 and forced the Democratic Party to take seriously his message against the Vietnam War, died Saturday. He was 89.

McCarthy was born March 29, 1916, in Watkins, a central Minnesota town of about 750. He earned degrees from St. John's University in Collegeville, Minn., and the University of Minnesota.

He was a teacher, a civilian War Department employee and college economics and sociology instructor before turning to politics. He once spent a year in a monastery.

He was elected to the House in 1948. Ten years later he was elected to the Senate and re-elected in 1964. McCarthy left the Senate in 1970 and devoted much of his time to writing poetry, essays and books.

With a sardonic sense of humor, McCarthy needled whatever establishment was in power. In 1980 he endorsed Republican Ronald Reagan with the argument that anyone was better than incumbent Jimmy Carter, a Democrat.

In recent years, McCarthy was critical of campaign finance reform, winning him an unlikely award from the Conservative Political Action Conference in 2000.

In an interview when he got the award, McCarthy said money helped him in the 1968 race. "We had a few big contributors," he said. "And that's true of any liberal movement. In the American Revolution, they didn't get matching funds from George III."

After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, McCarthy said the United States was partly to blame for ignoring the plight of Palestinians.

"You let a thing like that fester for 45 years, you have to expect something like this to happen," he said in an interview at the time. "No one at the White House has shown any concern for the Palestinians."

In a 2004 biography, "Eugene McCarthy: The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism," British historian Dominic Sandbrook painted an unflattering portrait of McCarthy, calling him lazy and jealous, among other things. McCarthy, Sandbrook wrote, "willfully courted the reputation of frivolous maverick."

In McCarthy's 1998 book, "No-Fault Politics," editor Keith C. Burris described McCarthy in the introduction as "a Catholic committed to social justice but a skeptic about reform, about do-gooders, about the power of the state and the competence of government, and about the liberal reliance upon material cures for social problems."

On his 85th birthday in 2001, McCarthy told the Star Tribune of Minneapolis that President Bush was an amateur and said he could not even bear to watch his inauguration.

In an interview a month before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, McCarthy compared the Bush administration with the characters in the William Golding novel "Lord of the Flies," in which a group of boys stranded on an island turn to savagery.

"The bullies are running it," McCarthy said. "Bush is bullying everything."

McCarthy was an advocate for a third-party movement, arguing there was no real difference between Republicans and Democrats.

In 2000, he wrote a political satire called "An American Bestiary," illustrated by Chris Millis, in which high-level advisers are portrayed as park pigeons -- "they strut and waddle" -- and reporters are compared with black birds who flock together.

He blamed the media for deciding who is and is not a serious candidate and suggested he should have kept his 1992 candidacy a secret, since announcing it publicly did no good.

McCarthy also ran for president in 1972, 1976 and 1988.

For McCarthy, the 1950s and 1960s were the Democratic Party's high points because it pushed the Civil Rights Act through Congress and championed national health insurance programs such as Medicare and Medicaid.

"I think he probably would consider his work in civil rights legislation in the 1960s to be his greatest contribution," his son said Saturday.

The bad times, Eugene McCarthy said, began with America's increased involvement in the Vietnam War and the simultaneous failure of some of Johnson's Great Society social programs.

Instead of giving people a chance to earn a living, McCarthy said, the Great Society "became affirmative action and more welfare. It was an admission the New Deal had failed or fallen."

My early involvement during high school to encourage the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was my first exposure to Eugene McCarthy who has been recognized publicly by this nation as a singular force in civil rights legislation
Eugene McCarthy has exemplified the highest standards of public service and dedication to constitutional principles through his efforts to shape legislation on civil rights,
 
From Section 1. Findings, (3),  S. 663, To authorize the President to present a gold medal on behalf of Congress to Eugene McCarthy in recognitioin of his service to the Nation.,  IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, March 29, 2001
 
Campaign activities for Gene McCarthy, George McGovern, and Edmund Muskie form the backdrop of many of the best years of my early and middle twenties back when it seemed possible to turn the behemoth we call American culture at least partly in a better direction.  But, now the words of Emerson in "The Method of Nature", An Oration delivered before the Society of the Adelphi, in Waterville College, Maine, August 11, 1841 seem to ring more true than in the day they were written
The land we live in has no interest so dear, if it knew its want, as the fit consecration of days of reason and thought. Where there is no vision, the people perish. The scholars are the priests of that thought which establishes the foundations of the earth. No matter what is their special work or profession, they stand for the spiritual interest of the world, and it is a common calamity if they neglect their post in a country where the material interest is so predominant as it is in America. We hear something too much of the results of machinery, commerce, and the useful arts. We are a puny and a fickle folk. Avarice, hesitation, and following, are our diseases. The rapid wealth which hundreds in the community acquire in trade, or by the incessant expansions of our population and arts, enchants the eyes of all the rest; the luck of one is the hope of thousands, and the bribe acts like the neighborhood of a gold mine to impoverish the farm, the school, the church, the house, and the very body and feature of man. -read more-

Once upon a time Democrats and Republicans alike could inspire young men and women to noble action, but lately the only inspiring actor on the political scene for me has been Barack Obama who has yet to find an enduring national audience.  McCarthy is an enduring inspiration, a man whose life and thoughts are well worth reading into if you're not old enough to have been involved in his presidential campaigns.

Monday, November 28, 2005

Just when you think

Just when you think you couldn't find a better gift than say the John Bobbit signature set of Ginzu knives along comes

Who could resist it at just less than a c-note? I must write to Lorena, I know she'll just love it. And, our thanks to RJ for pointing out this little gem and others that are so necessary this time of year.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Beautiful and not so beautiful

There is a place in China, Harbin, where from time to time some beautiful things happen, namely the Harbin Snow and Ice Festival which has been recorded in magnificent detail in 2003 and 2005 by R. Todd King.  Over the years with the changes in the political and economic climate Harbin has fallen on some hard times
It was once a bustling hub of heavy industry, but many of its people have been out of work for years after local state-owned enterprises collapsed under the pressure of economic reform.
and most recently some very hard times
Wen visits Harbin; Russia offered sorry AP 200511270918 from China Daily
 
China's premier visits waterless city 20051126
 
with the recent spill of over one hundred tons of benzene in the Songhuajiang River several hundred miles upriver from Harbin at Jilin.  One hundred tons of benzene is an enormous amount of benzene by any measure, a large economic loss for those who spilled it, and a huge environmental and public health disaster for all those along the river. The immediate and future potential harm this benzene spill can have for millions of people is simply immense.  The sheer ugliness of this chemical spill in every dimension stands in stark contrast to the great beauty that you can see in the photographs we've linked above from the Snow and Ice Festival.  As China races headlong into the industrialized future, one she will likely dominate soon in the region and perhaps globally, the tension between economic and human values will only increase.  We can only hope that broad public exposure of events like the recent ones in Harbin will help to achieve a better balance between the economic and human values.  China will perhaps prove in the near future to be the ultimate test of how large societies can balance economic growth through free market systems, or nearly free market systems, with a broader concern for basic human values like adequate sources of clean water.  What has happened here in China will affect the entire length of the Songhuajiang River downstream from Jilin through China, on through Russia and out into the North Central Sea of Japan which washes the shores of not only China, Russia, North Korea, South Korea and Japan, but also ultimately the Pacific Rim and the rest of the world.  This is a global event that bears watching closely not only for the Chinese response but also the responses of all those affected.
 

Saturday, November 26, 2005

More of one thing leads to another

More of one thing leads to another was demonstrated this morning while reading
An Oration delivered before the Society of the Adelphi, 
in Waterville College, Maine, August 11, 1841
by R.W. Emerson
we came across the word inchoation
The method of nature: who could ever analyze it? That rushing stream will not stop to be observed. We can never surprise nature in a corner; never find the end of a thread; never tell where to set the first stone. The bird hastens to lay her egg: the egg hastens to be a bird. The wholeness we admire in the order of the world, is the result of infinite distribution. Its smoothness is the smoothness of the pitch of the cataract. Its permanence is a perpetual inchoation. Every natural fact is an emanation, and that from which it emanates is an emanation also, and from every emanation is a new emanation. If anything could stand still, it would be crushed and dissipated by the torrent it resisted, and if it were a mind, would be crazed; as insane persons are those who hold fast to one thought, and do not flow with the course of nature. Not the cause, but an ever novel effect, nature descends always from above. It is unbroken obedience. The beauty of these fair objects is imported into them from a metaphysical and eternal spring. In all animal and vegetable forms, the physiologist concedes that no chemistry, no mechanics, can account for the facts, but a mysterious principle of life must be assumed, which not only inhabits the organ, but makes the organ.
and knowing from the context that inchoate can't possibly have any meaning we look up inchoation and find a caution about the age of the definition and the age of the source of the definition
Quick definitions (inchoation)

  • (n.) Act of beginning; commencement; inception.

    (This definition is from the 1913 Webster's Dictionary and may be outdated.)
  • And, of course who can ignore such cautions, so we are led to,
    inchoation : Webster's 1828 Dictionary
    which is nearer the year of Emerson's address and very likely his reference.  And, what do we find but
    where from the tone of the other books available from Christian Technologies I would doubt that the folks at CTI would be much in line with me or dear old RWE in terms of theology, but I would bet my bottom dollar that CTI claims American culture as Christian in origin.  In fact we find on the page titled The American Student's Package on CD a note at the bottom of the page
    *American Quotations includes a comprehensive compilation of nearly 4,000 quotations throughout American history from Presidents and historical figures plus biographies, all based on the US Christian heritage; passages and phrases influencing early and modern American history, referenced according to their sources in literature, memoirs, letters, governmental documents, speeches, charters, court decision and constitutions.
    which if it doesn't give the game away certainly begins to make my speculations more solid, eh?  When will these dunderheads realize that Jefferson, Franklin, Emerson, Parker and scores of others were Christians whose theology would mystify if not totally appall the modern American Fundamentalist Christian?

    Recently we saw the movie Kingdom of Heaven, and it wouldn't seem to me to be much of a stretch to me to give a sound Biblical basis to a line from the movie, where Balian hammers home the point about the supremacy of religious tolerance when he hands over the Holy City to Saladin, he tells his followers

    God is in your head and your heart, not in any particular place.
    And, we might logically add not in any particular book. It would seem easy to me to use no more than
    Luke 12:34 For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.
    and one of the last verses of Matthew
    Matthew 6:33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.
    to give Balian's line a Biblical basis.   As we mentioned yesterday, the only unforgivable sin Jesus spoke of
    Matthew 12:31,32 And so I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven. Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come.
    was to deny the presence or power of the Holy Spirit. So it would seem to me that the only dispute would be the manner in which I choose to see that power and presence expressed and the mode of my connection to it. But, then what do I know, the RC church excommunicated the likes of me a long time ago.

    Jesus remains to my mind one of the best kept secrets of the Bible and the most unknown figure of Christianity.  And, America's Christian heritage remains the best kept secret of American history.  A little more reading of American history wouldn't hurt anyone, and a good deal more reading of Emerson and Jefferson would be of great benefit to the "Christian Heritage of America" crowd, they just might realize that they are not in the same room with these folks.  Or, Praise God!, they just might become Christian Deists, or Christian Transcendentalists, or, wonder of wonders, Christians tolerant and accepting of another view of the world.  For a good take on the simplified view of life try "A Little Knowledge" from our friends at Outer Life.

    Read more Emerson!

    Who knows one thing might lead to another for you too.

     

     
     

     

    Friday, November 25, 2005

    Miracles and Metaphors

    A number of people seem to be reading Erik Reece's recent essay in the December Harper's "Jesus Without The Miracles: Thomas Jefferson's Bible and the Gospel of Thomas" and writing about the essay. The two best that I've seen so far are


    "Thomas, Jefferson, and Stewardship", posted November 24, 2005 at The Daily Blague

    and

    "The gospels of Thomas", posted November 23, 2005 at Philocrites

    Particularly interesting from Philocrites was the link to R. W. Emerson's 1838 Address to the Divinity School. These three pieces have reminded me once again how small, how absolutely petty, and contentious the legalists can be and they, the rabbis dancing on the head of a pin as I like to call them, can absolutely suck the life out life itself leaving a hollow tasteless husk that they will claim to be the essence of life when in fact it is nothing more than the wrapper. And, before the metaphorical apologists get started on wrapper, let's set that straight, I said wrapper, not peel or skin. Wrappers are external to a product and of no substance, peels and skins are integral to a fruit, vegetable or animal and do contain nutrients. But, we said wrapper didn't we, so don't start with the wrapper having the life in it, eh? The richness of Emerson's language and the depth of his thought along with the interesting takes on Christianity by the blog authors and Reece which again have a good deal of depth and richness stand in stark contrast to the tedious legalism of the Fundamentalist Christians and their tag alongs who have recently been seen featured in the national news magazines and other venues cheerfully wanting to explore the arguments about the origins of life from a point of view they want to term "intelligent design" so as to some how separate it from the arguments of "creationism". The "intelligent design" arguments real flavor can best be tasted in the near charlatanism of the Discovery Institute's Center for the Renewal of Science and Culture and its director, Dr. Stephen Meyer, in the position paper THE WEDGE STRATEGY the opening introductory paragraphs of which would be nearly laughable if only they weren't presented seriously, and especially if they didn't have the ear of a number of members of the current administration in Washington. We have been down these roads before with the conservatives so perhaps there is hope in this instance, but the road was last time a bit of a rough ride down to the intersections where reason was available and there is no guarantee that this time we will not be swallowed by one of the potholes the conservatives have created like the War in Iraq.

    The only unforgivable sin Jesus spoke of

    Matthew 12:31,32 And so I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men, but the blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven. Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come.
    was to deny the presence or power of the Holy Spirit. So it would seem to me that the only dispute would be the manner in which I choose to see that power and presence expressed and the mode of my connection to it. But, then what do I know, the RC excommunicated the likes of me a long time ago.

    Jesus, the best kept secret of the Gospels and the least known figure of Christianity.

    I am rambling again. In any event read R. W. Emerson's 1838 Address to the Divinity School and the other items I've cited above and then compare them to what passes for thought with the creationists. Consider the broadness of Emerson's view and the narrowness of the current administration's view of life in general and then perhaps you can wonder as I do if the root causes of the conservative malfeasance in thought and policy like we've seen from the Bushies are not really spiritual in nature. Miracles and metaphors are in many ways the same and as I recall the mircales were not for those who had eyes to see and ears to hear, but for those to whom the Gospels would appear as foolishness.

    Thursday, November 24, 2005

    Honk, if you like "Horn Of Plenty" aka www.hornofplenty.co.uk

    Recently, we wrote to the author of Horn of Plenty, a site well worth your time I belive.


    Mr Quink,
     
    Honk, if you like "Horn of Plenty" aka www.hornofplenty.co.uk.
     
    We held this sign up recently on my block and the noise was deafening.  Of course mine is the only house on the block.
     
    A small typo you might want to attend to under the Parodies heading
    As we always tell our lawyers, writing a parody does not involve stealing someone else's ideas. It involve stealing their ideas, ...
    might better read
    As we always tell our lawyers, writing a parody does not involves stealing someone else's ideas. It involves stealing their ideas, ...
     
    I found your site attempting to chase down the "Horn of Plenty" link on the sign in page from GMail this morning.  I think I have gotten the far better end of the deal in finding your site rather than whatever GMail was trying to show me with their dead link.  Whatever free time presents itself today will likely be spent in further digging into the strange twists and turns of your mind. What a fine piece of work the collection of parodies on Horn of Plenty is, thank you.
     
    We have our own not so nearly interesting nor well done blog, The Quality of the Light, largely as the result of encouragement we have received from an old roommate and far more accomplished blogger who writes, The Daily Blauge.
     
    I expect a good deal of resonance from reading your work since I have a number of old workmates who are UK expats and who now live in Texas, an ex in Maidstone who works for the National Health Service, a deep affinity for Guiness and good Scotch Whiskey, and I also spent eight years under the care of the nuns, mainly the good Carmelite sisters and the Sisters of the Incarnate Word. Who could possibly forget a grade school principal whose name was Sister Mary of Perpetual Help. 
     
    I think we'll just post this note on my blog to make the world a bit more aware of your site. 
     
    Again, thanks for your effort with Horn of Plenty, we look forward to spending more time with you today.
     
    Best regards,
     
    George
     

    Saturday, November 12, 2005

    Re: Southern Girls

    Recently, I had some correspondence with a friend about GRITS, she is from Huntsville,Texas and I am from Red Hill, Texas.

    Charlotte,


    A clean copy with a bit more material can be found at


    G.R.I.T.S. - Girls Raised In The South

    All of the entry is good, but if you just want the text scroll down to

    I have a friend from Bawston, bless her heart, who thinks it's hilarious when I say I've got to "carry" my daughter to the doctor or "cut off" the light. She also gets a giggle every time I am "fixin" to do something. And, bless their hearts, they don't even know where "over yonder" is, or what "I reckon" means! My personal favorite was my aunt, saying, "Bless her heart, she can't help being ugly, but she could've stayed home."

    Southern girls know bad manners when they see them:
    a. Drinking straight out of a can.
    ...

    and go on from there. As you may or may not be aware this is also the title of an exellent book

    Grits (Girls Raised in the South) Guide to Life (Illustrated)
    By Deborah Ford, Edie Hand
    Hardcover / 224 Pages / E P Dutton / April 2003 / 0525947264

    Thanks for reminding me of a wonderful text that's been passed around the net for quite awhile and the book, which I really do need right now for another question.

    I don't think of myself as being from the South do you? I don't find much in common with the Southerners, people who constantly remind you that they are from the South, from AL, MS, GA, SC, AR, VA. I do find a good deal of resonance with people from rural backgrounds or from families where the immediate parents are from rural backgrounds. I think of myself as being from East Texas, The Big Thicket, Texas, but not a typical TEXAN not the loud JR from Dallas type, perhaps more Billy Bob Thorton is my style. As I learned to say in South Texas where I lived for over a decade,

    Yo soy un Tejano gringo puro, y yo soy un viejo vacquero tambien, verdad

    I am a pure Texas gringo and an old cowboy as well now, ain't that so.

    Keep'em coming in Charlotte. You got any fat back so I can make beans tomorrow. Just a bit, if you've got it, please. I've looked the beans and changed the soak water once, tomorrow morning I'll change the water again, throw out the floaters and start them to boiling. You comin' for navies, cold sliced purple onions, chow-chow, bacon and corn bread tomorrow for dinner. And, you know dinner will be after church in the middle of the day don't you now. Supper, the meal closer to sun down than noon, is often skipped on Sundays since dinner is usually big and always after church, generally around two or three, eh? But, lately I've heard people refer to this same meal as Sunday supper and that distresses me, since if they invite me for Sunday supper this time of year I probably won't show up until five or six in the evening.



    On 11/12/05, Bioniclady
    Subject: Southern girls

    > > Southern girls appreciate their natural assets:
    > >
    > > Clean skin
    > >
    > > A winning smile
    > >
    > > That unforgettable Southern drawl
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their manners:
    > >
    > > "Yes, ma'am."
    > >
    > > "No, sir."
    > >
    > > "Thank you darlin."
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls have a distinct way with fond expressions:
    > >
    > > "Y'all come back!"
    > >
    > > "Well, bless your heart."
    > >
    > > "How's your Mama?"
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their summer weather report:
    > >
    > > Hazy


    > >
    > > Hot
    > >
    > > Humid
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their vacation spots:
    > >
    > > Hilton Head beach
    > >
    > > Daytona beach
    > >
    > > Panama City beach
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know the joys of summer:
    > >
    > > Golden tans
    > >
    > > Flip-flops in every color


    > >
    > > Strapless sun dresses
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know everybody's first name:
    > >
    > > Honey
    > >
    > > Darlin'
    > >
    > > Sugar ("Shugah")
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know the movies that speak to their hearts:
    > >
    > > Fried Green Tomatoes
    > >
    > > Driving Miss Daisy
    > >
    > > Steel Magnolias
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their religions:
    > >
    > > Baptist
    > >
    > > Methodist
    > >
    > > Football
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their country breakfasts:
    > >
    > > Red-eye gravy with country ham
    > >
    > > Grits
    > >
    > > Homemade biscuits with mama's homemade jelly
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their cities dripping with Southern charm:
    > >
    > > Charleston (Chawl'stn)
    > >
    > > Savannah (S'vanah)


    > >
    > > Atlanta (Adlanna)
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their elegant gentlemen:
    > >
    > > Men in uniform
    > >
    > > Men in tuxedos
    > >
    > > Rhett Butler, of course!
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know their prime real estate:
    > >
    > > The Mall
    > >
    > > The Country Club
    > >
    > > The Beauty Salon
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know the three deadly sins:
    > >


    > > Having bad manners
    > >
    > > Cooking bad food
    > >
    > > Wearing too much makeup in the summer
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > Southern girls know men may come and go, but friends are fo'evah!
    > >
    > > Now, darlin', send this to some GRITS (Girls Raised In The South)
    > >
    > > or ones who wish they had been!
    > >
    > >
    > >
    > > If you're a Northern transplant, bless your heart, honey, fake it.
    > >
    > > We know you got here as fast as you could.



    --
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    Checked by AVG Free Edition.
    Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.12.8/163 - Release Date: 11/8/2005


    --
    No virus found in this incoming message.
    Checked by AVG Free Edition.
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    --
    George
    www.qualityofthelight.blogspot.com

    Saturday, October 29, 2005

    Up and down, very nice all around, home safe and sound

    Up and down, very nice all around, home safe and sound. A fine day with the family up in the air, calm and clear with visibility unlimited and down in the ground, dark and cool with silver mold and the hibernating bats. Days like this are made in heaven but enjoyed on earth.

    Monday, October 24, 2005

    One thing leads to another, walk don't talk

    Recently, a friend posted a piece on precocity, Malcolm Gladwell at The New Yorker Festival in which two paragraphs really caught me

    Malcolm Gladwell argued, quite persuasively, that the qualities that produce precocious children are not in synch with the qualities that distinguish productive adults. Children learn things to the extent that they mimic doing them, and precocious children are just faster mimics. Mimicry, however, is obviously not an important, or even desirable, trait in adults. Somewhere along the line, the outer-directed (or -focused) precocious child must grow into the inner-directed adult, and quite often this doesn't happen. One of Mr Gladwell's examples was the Hunter College Elementary School, an extremely selective institution that was designed to nurture future Nobelists and the like. It hasn't produced them. What it has produced is a crop of happy and successful people, but few superstars. Mr Gladwell's hunch is that these kids were so smart that they grasped the great sacrifices that aiming for the top requires - and decided to go for happiness instead. It seems clear that precociousness is not the fruit of ambition; it's simply an inborn characteristic. So it may well be that the gifted children at Hunter lack the deep competitiveness that drives some people toward the attainment of honorable fame.


    The downside of privileging the precocious is that it demotes the importance of work. Of practicing an instrument. Of editing a text toward perfection. Of doing all the research that a project requires, unstintingly. Of leaving no stone unturned. Now, you can regard such work as drudgery, the necessary evil associated with achievement. Or you can look at it as the whole point. Achievement? There is no such thing as achievement, not for the achiever. Achievement notifies other people that something remarkable has been done, but it's the doing, not the having done, that matters. The only thing that we ever achieve is, as the French have it, death itself. We are achieved. At the risk of appearing to reinvent an "Eastern" philosophy, I am opening myself up to the idea that mindful work is the thing that counts most, perhaps even more than love. Perhaps the two go together.

    And, then later I answered another friend who had written in conjuction with the care she is giving one of our other friends. She takes great comfort in the Christian Bible and was perplexed about someone dear to her who though an avowed athesist had lit candles in the church recently for their parents

    Ch-------,

    Oh, there is never enough on that subject, we just have other things to do and it is very complicated. Everyone has a religion even if that religion is no religion. We are as a group, a group of thinking primates, apparently compelled to pose and answer the questions, "What does it all mean?" and "How do I make sense of it all?" Why do people light candles and deny a belief in God? I don't really know, I can speculate, but it serves no purpose. I have found from decades of observation that the best thing to do is to keep your beliefs to yourself and do what you think is right, I emphasize you here, not your church, not your family, not your friends, not anyone but you. And, that is a process we spend a lifetime getting down. I can tell from what you've said here that you are actively engaged in the process, and when you say

    try to live by God's word that that is what matters

    you have got it exactly right as far as I'm concerned. As we say in East Texas where I'm from, up just to the Southwest of Texarkana in Red Hill, Texas

    Bring me the baby! I don't want to hear about no labor pains, bring me the baby.

    and even more to the point

    If you be talkin' 'bout it you no have no time to be doin' it, and if you be doin' it, you no be havin' no time to be talkin' 'bout it, and if you gets to it and you can't do it, well, brother, there you is.

    These instructions were generally prefaced by the phrase, "Lil Mark" and followed by the phrase, "Now get yo lil' white butt back out there in that garden and get them weeds pulled and hauled out before noon so's you can come in here and eat lunch like a proper person." Beulah Haskins was about ten years older than my grandfather, black and the caretaker of my grandfather, father and myself when all of us were around the age of ten. Beulah spoke these words to me often when I came in from the summer garden chores complaining about some difficulty, generally the heat or the bugs, in completing my assigned tasks. She has proven, as I get older to be one of the wisest people I have ever known. Beulah went to the Gum Springs Baptist Church north of Red Hill. One of the first 'uppities to not go to our church' as my relatives used to say about Beulah. My family had at one time several sections of land northwest of Red Hill and on the plot that remained, just slightly less than a section, where I went to visit in the summers, there was the family cemetery and the family owned church, St. Luis. Note that I said family owned, we never ceded the church nor the property that my great grandfather built in 1868 to the RC church. We had the Diocese of Dallas and later the Diocese of Texarkana send a visiting priest on Sundays to say mass and on request to say funeral masses, but the church and it's grounds always remained firmly in the hands of my family. Often times we buried our own and the funeral mass was later on when it was convenient for the priest to come out, I've been told. In Red Hill you had four choices for a last name, Henderson, Lambert, Blackwell, or Haskins. If your last name was Haskins, the other three of us used to own your relatives at one time in the past. One thing that Beulah always said and that has held true over the years in my experience is that you can talk all day about God and Jesus but unless you get out there with your mouth shut and show people God and Jesus through your life, you are wasting your time and very likely just might send people running the other way unless you are very careful. I've taken her message to heart and so it seems have you. One of my favorite verses is

    1 John 3:18
    Dear children, let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth.
    1 John 3:17-19 (in Context) 1 John 3 (Whole Chapter)

    If everyone who is so quick to quote Jn 3:16 at the drop of a hat would take 1Jn3:18 to heart then perhaps we could all follow this verse more completely

    Hebrews 10:24
    And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.Hebrews 10:23-25 (in Context) Hebrews 10 (Whole Chapter)

    I leave you with the best blessing I know

    Romans 15:13 (New International Version)
    13May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit,

    George

    Later that same day I wrote a comment on the Gladwell piece noted above in which I said

    Love is no more and no less than the mindful work of constantly holding another in what Abraham Maslow so wonderfully called unconditional positive regard. I do not believe that you have so much reinvented Eastern philosophy, especially a narrow branch of Zen, as you have come to live it, understanding it is beyond all of us.

    And, now the same friend who wrote the Gladwell piece has written today Wunderkammer where he makes reference to an article on the web that characterizes blogs as Wunderkammer

    A Web log really, then, is a Wunderkammer. That is to say, the genealogy of Web logs points not to the world of letters but to the early history of museums -- to the "cabinet of wonders," or Wunderkammer, that marked the scientific landscape of Renaissance modernity: a random collection of strange, compelling objects, typically compiled and owned by a learned, well-off gentleman. A set of ostrich feathers, a few rare shells, a South Pacific coral carving, a mummified mermaid -- the Wunderkammer mingled fact and legend promiscuously, reflecting European civilization’s dazed and wondering attempts to assimilate the glut of physical data that science and exploration were then unleashing.

    Well I don't think I qualify as either well off or learned, though we hope gentelman applies, but this posting and this blog as a whole are if nothing else certainly a Wunderkammer.

    As my friend, the author of DB, is so fond of saying, "It's all about connections."

    As I say, "one thing leads to another." We hope if for no other reason than to honor the memory of Beulah Haskins but also we hope for larger reasons, as well, that we are "having no time to be talking about it", that in fact the talk has lead to the walk, at least more often than not. We fervently hope that this Wunderkammer would serve in some way to amplify the verse cited above

    Hebrews 10:24
    And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds.Hebrews 10:23-25 (in Context) Hebrews 10 (Whole Chapter)
    Yes, let's consider how we might do that spurring. Talking it up is good, but walking it up is better. Given the choice walk quietly rather than talking while standing still.

    Friday, October 14, 2005

    Mere talk

    In Proverbs in the chapter which is the same as today's date we find
    22 Do not those who plot evil go astray? But those who plan what is good find love and faithfulness. 23 All hard work brings a profit, but mere talk leads only to poverty. 24 The wealth of the wise is their crown, but the folly of fools yields folly.

    And, in the news we find

    Scandals Take Toll On Bush's 2nd Term
    A series of scandals involving some of the most powerful Republicans in Washington have converged to disrupt President Bush's agenda, distract aides and allies, and exacerbate political problems for an already weakened administration, according to party strategists and White House advisers.


    Jitters at the White House Over the Leak Inquiry
    These days, the routines are the same for the White House. But everything, in the glare of a criminal investigation, is different.

    Need we say or compare more? And, just to put the jittery humanists at rest, we do not intend to imply any inerrancy or predictive power to the Bible nor any special weight that you might not want to take from the Bible verses, but rather that what is known as the Wisdom of Solomon seems in a few short words to capture the tone of the times, just like any piece of good writing. Mere talk? Perhaps, you decide, you think about it.

    Thursday, October 13, 2005

    Just in case you didn't get the message yesterday

    Just in case you didn't get the message yesterday


    Sassoon's protest, "A Soldier's Declaration," written on June 15, 1917:


    I am making this statement as an act of wilful defiance of military authority, because I believe that the War is being deliberately prolonged by those how have the power to end it. I am a soldier, convinced that I am acting on behalf of soldiers. I believe this War, upon which I entered as a war of defence and liberation, has now become a war of aggression and conquest. I believe that the purposes for which I and my fellow-soldiers entered upon this War should have been so clearly stated as to have made it impossible for them to be changed without our knowledge, and that, has this been done, the objects which actuated us would now be attainable by negotiation.

    I have seen and endured the sufferings of the troops, and I can no longer be a party to prolonging those sufferings for ends which I believe to be eveil and unjust.

    I am not protesting against the military conduct of the War, but against the political errors and insincerities for which the fighting men are being sacrificed.

    On behalf of those who are suffering now, I make this protest against the deception which is being practiced on them. Also I believe that it may help to destroy the callous complacence with which the majority of those as home regard the continuance of agonies which they do not share, and which they have not sufficienct imagination to realise.

    Read before the House of Commons, July 30, 1917, printed in The London Times, on July 31, 1917 (ironically -- perhaps appropriately -- the first day of the Third Battle of Ypres, Passchendaele).

    How little we have learned in nearly one hundred years.

    Wednesday, October 12, 2005

    Write, listen, speak the truth

    Write, listen, speak the truth,

    14 From the fruit of his lips a man is filled with good things
    as surely as the work of his hands rewards him.
    15 The way of a fool seems right to him,
    but a wise man listens to advice.
    16 A fool shows his annoyance at once,
    but a prudent man overlooks an insult.
    17 A truthful witness gives honest testimony,
    but a false witness tells lies.
    18 Reckless words pierce like a sword,
    but the tongue of the wise brings healing.
    19 Truthful lips endure forever,
    but a lying tongue lasts only a moment

    these traits alone would seem from the text above, taken from the 12th chapter of Proverbs in the Christian Bible, to serve well enough that perhaps nothing else is required. Believer or not these verses should give even the most radical agnostic or atheist some food for thought for the balance of the day. For you old RC types today is Wilfred Owen's namesake saint's day, today is St. Wilfrid's day. Any of Owen's work should give even the stoutest Neo-Con sufficient pause today to reconsider the course of the war in Iraq. And, likely this piece will give any sane person sufficient pause to wonder what the hell is running through my head. In response all I can say is, "Likely better things in the course of the day with this start than you might see without it." Have a good and thoughtful day. For further reference along the lines of what you think is what you are try Paul's note to the Phillipians in the 4th chapter where he suggests that thinking positively is good
    Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.
    No matter what you might think of the apostle or Christianity it is difficult to argue against the exhortation to think on whatever is good rather than the converse. Certainly, nearly a century of secular psychological thought and research would agree with Paul. As far as Wilfred Owen giving pause to anyone, it does to me particularly when I think that the thirty something mother of one of my son's playmates is in Iraq. It puts a different twist on Owen's work when mothers, just a few years short of retiring from the military, are the endangered ones. Mothers who have grade school and middle school children at home. Especially, when home is on the otherside of the world from where the mother is, eh?

    Tuesday, October 11, 2005

    Second Languages, you should have one

    Second Languages, you should have one.  If you've not heard the NPR Talk of the Nation Program today, you should.

    Nation

    Americans and Learning a Second Language

    Talk of the Nation, October 11, 2005 · Learning a second language is not necessarily required or expected of students in America -- but virtually everywhere else in the world, it is. What factors determine what second languages Americans choose to learn?

    Guests:

    Rosemary Feal, executive director of the Modern Language Association

    Michael Long, professor of Second Language Acquisition, and Director of the University of Maryland's School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

    Richard Brecht, director of the National Foreign Language Center in Washington, D.C.

    Professor Long's comments and area of specialization are especially worth noting and applying to your own life.  In my experience nothing enriches your life more than some knowledge, no matter how limited, of another language than English.  And, increasingly research is revealing that multilinguals are less prone to dementia not to mention far more interesting folks.  You are never too old to learn a new language and the idea that adults have a harder time is largely unfounded.  The attitude of the language student towards acquistion of a second language seems to be equally as significant as age. 

    Enjoy this and have a good day, my friends.

    Goce de esto y tenga un buen día, mis amigos.
    Appréciez ceci et ayez une bonne journée, mes amis.
    Насладитесь этим и имейтесь хороший день, мои друзей.
     
     

     

    Saturday, October 08, 2005

    There was a time

    There was a time over forty years ago when what happened in the pages of the NY Times about theatre and dance in particular was the most interesting thing I knew.



    It was back when the quality of the light was a daily occupation as well as a career goal. Back when I wanted to know and light people like Merrill Ashley and Suzanne Farrell.








    Back when Maria Tallchief's name might have appeared in the a piece like a friend commented on recently.



    But, long before anything like NNDB started tracking every name in the news in the entire world. How much more interesting would it have been with computers to assist us then?



    Well, enough nostalgia. The quality of the light remains to this day the most interesting feature of the day throughout the day.



    And, then comes the night.



    Saturday, October 01, 2005

    Dog flu, not to worry

    Recently, I've heard a lot of talk about dog flu and the internet seems to be filled with some disturbing but fundametally incorrect information.  Below is an excerpt from a recent CDC teleconference on the issues surrounding dog flu.  You should read the complete transcript to get all the details, but basically the message is not to worry and act with common sense.

    Media Briefing on Canine Influenza
    Note: This is a verbatim transcript. There may be errors.

    Monday, September 26, 2005
    2:00 p.m.

    -a portion of the transcript- 

    MR. SKINNER: Thanks, Dr. Donis. Now, I'll turn the call over to Dr. Cynda Crawford from the University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine, who will spend three or four minutes sort of giving us the big picture in regards to canine influenza in the veterinary community.

    DR. CRAWFORD: Thank you. And I would like to underscore what Dr. Donis has already pointed out and on a couple of occasions that this is a newly emerging pathogen in the dog population. And we have managed to accumulate quite a lot of information on this new canine influenza virus over a relatively short period of time, and this was largely due to the multi-institutional collaborative work that has involved numerous people from the CDC Influenza Branch. I would like to thank Dr. Donis and Dr. Jackie Katz, and Dr. Alexander Klimov. And it involves colleagues at the University of Wisconsin's College of Veterinary Medicine and at Auburn University's College of Veterinary Medicine, and, of course, Dr. Ed Dubovi at Cornell, who has been the biggest key I think in discovery of this new viral pathogen in the dog population.

    And with regard to what veterinarians will be interested in knowing is that this virus can cause a respiratory disease that mimics a syndrome that we call kennel cough.

    Now, kennel cough is just a syndrome, and it can be due to a myriad of infectious agents--bacteria as well as viruses. So the most common cause of kennel cough has been a bacterium called bordetella bronchiseptica and with information that we have to date, this still may be the most common cause of respiratory infection in dogs.

    So the canine influenza virus is really the new kid on the block for veterinarians to consider in their differential diagnoses for kennel cough. They should consider canine influenza if a dog presents to them with a cough. They may have a nasal discharge and a fever also.

    And because kennel cough really is an infectious disease, and it's a contagious disease regardless of the cause, whether it's bordetella bronchiseptica or canine influenza virus or other viruses, these dogs should be handled with some precautions, precautions that veterinarians normally use when they are treating a patient that has a potential infectious disease that is contagious to other dogs. So this type of precaution would involve the isolation of the respiratory disease or at least protection of other dogs in their clinics, while this particular dog with respiratory disease is undergoing diagnosis and treatment and potentially hospitalization.

    I'll also stress that despite the rumors that are out on the Internet and other such sources, this disease is not as deadly as people want to make it. Although it's a new pathogen in dogs and nearly all dogs are susceptible to infection based on our knowledge about the virus to date, about 80 percent of them will have a mild form of disease, just characterized by cough and maybe some nasal discharge that will resolve over time with appropriate therapy.

    Only a minority of dogs, a small number of dogs, experience complications such as pneumonia, just like the humans infected with influenza, certain populations of humans are more prone to development of pneumonia. And it's a small number of humans compared to everyone else.

    So that is the same with canine influenza virus. It's a small population of dogs that will develop complications, most likely bacterial complications and these dogs do need to be--have their treatment supervised by a veterinarian.

    In addition, since not all dogs will show a clinical syndrome, showing that they have a respiratory infection, there is a minority that are infected with the virus, but will not show clinical signs to announce to everybody that "I am sick." And it is very difficult to find these dogs in the dog population. And we're working on a more rapid means of identification.

    And lastly, I want to emphasize most of all that this is not the deadly virus that certain sources have played it up to be.

    We have a very low mortality rate. And this is a disease that I would characterize as one of high morbidity and low mortality. Thank you

    Also more complete information can be obtained by reviewing a simple search on
    with Google or any other search engine.


     

    Monday, September 19, 2005

    Add to your wish list

    You know all those web sites like Amazon.com and JR.com and countless others where you see "Add to your wish list". Well, here's a thought: Anything that you might have thought about giving to me for my birthday or Christmas send the same amount for Katrina Diaster Relief and send me a note showing you donated in place of any presents.  And, if you want to wait until near the occasion, that's fine too, I'm sure money will be needed for a good long while in the future.  Quite possibly you could do this for a number of other people as well, just a thought.

    Numbers to Call and Web Sites for Relief Donations

    1-800-833-2660

    1-800-HELP-NOW
    1-800-435-7669

    1-800-SAL-ARMY
    1-800-725-2769

    Sunday, September 18, 2005

    If you've not heard this, you should.

    Higher Ground Hurricane Benefit Concert



    Laurence Fishburne hosted the five-hour concert from New York's Rose Theater. The line up is simply incredible
    Wynton Marsalis Septet: 'Ain' No'

    Renee Fleming with Mark O'Connor and Eric Reid: 'Amazing Grace'

    Shirley Caesar: 'You're Next for a Miracle,' 'He's Working It Out for You,' 'This Joy'

    Aaron Neville: 'Go to the Mardi Gras'

    Herbie Hancock: 'Eye of the Hurricane'

    Wynton Marsalis & Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra


    Bette Midler, Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra: "Is That All There Is?"

    Abbey Lincoln: "For All We Know"

    Joe Lovano: "Blackwell's Message"

    Diana Krall: "Basin Street Blues"

    Marcus Roberts: "New Orleans Blues"


    Paul Simon: 'That Was Your Mother'

    Dianne Reeves: 'The House I Live In'

    Irvin Mayfield, Ronald Markham: 'Just a Closer Walk With Thee'

    Norah Jones: 'I Think It's Gonna Rain Today'

    McCoy Tyner

    Elvis Costello and Allen Toussaint: 'Freedom for the Stallion'

    Buckwheat Zydeco: 'I'm Gonna Love You Anyway'

    Wynton Marsalis Septet: 'Dippermouth Blues'

    James Taylor: 'Never Die Young'

    Toni Morrison reading various passages from her novel Jazz

    Jordan Family: 'Here's to Life'

    Terence Blanchard: 'Over There'

    Marsalis Family: 'Twelve's It'

    Jon Hendricks: 'This Love of Mine,' 'Tell Me the Truth'

    Peter Cincotti: 'Bring Back New Orleans'

    Lincoln Center Afro-Latin Jazz Orchestra: 'Havana Blues with Salt Peanuts'

    Cassandra Wilson w/Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and Mark O'Connor, violin: 'Come Sunday'

    Closing: Music from Duke Ellington's 'New Orleans Suite'
    Fishburne's and Toussaint's comments, both New Orleans residents and natives, are particularly touching and insightful.

    Numbers to Call

    1-800-833-2660

    1-800-HELP-NOW
    1-800-435-7669

    1-800-SAL-ARMY
    1-800-725-2769

    The first one of you to reduce this to MP3 should then take the CD's and trade them for cash. And, if you have to ask me what to do with the cash, we really need to talk.

    Saturday, September 10, 2005

    Anybody remember these?



    devoted both to the collection of packs and the history of package artwork is avaialbe in both French and English. What memories some of these images bring back. Hopefully we did not dose ourselves long enough with the evil toxins from the contents of these packs to do any real harm, hopefully.

    It all changes so quickly, but sometimes just to circle back to the same place again.

    It all changes so quickly, but sometimes just to circle back to the same place again also. The piece I want to point out is more historical now than timely, but still very good

    Reporters Give Voice to Post-Katrina Desperation

    NPR.org, September 2, 2005 · You don't have to listen very closely to the news to register the striking tone coming from many of the journalists involved in covering the floods along the Gulf Coast. They're passing along public anger.

    They are slicing through talking points, reflecting instead -read more-

    For some brilliant and brief insight into the current situation try

    The Brown Maneuver

    The Daily Blague, September 10, 2005 · Anybody who's wondering how Michael D Brown can be relieved of his "Gulf Coast duties" while remaining head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency hasn't been paying attention. The White House has been so profoundly reconceived that the President, while remaining the Chatterbox-In-Chief, was relieved of his duties from the start. This arrangement allows -read more-

    And, finally another friend writes from Austin, Texas recently

    CNN just reported that Michael Brown, the acting head(ache) of FEMA has just been removed from his post in charge of the Katrina Gulf coast relief (disaster) efforts. A multiple choice question is appropriate here. Check to see how politically you savvy are...

    Question:

    Was Michael Brown removed from his FEMA charge as head of the Katrina disaster relief efforts because?

    a. he was incompetent

    b. he was a little "light in the loafers" , if you know what I mean

    c. he was the "throwdown" scapegoat for "W" and his clan (could this be true?)

    d. all of the above

    The answer of course is D. all of the above. If you answered it correctly, you win a prize. I will buy a free beer for all winners on the second Tuesday of next week at 10pm. See you there...

    *********

    Don’t get whinny. I just checked the FEMA website, there are 2 Tuesdays next week... don’t believe me...

    Go to the following site: FEMACAN’TFINDITSASSWITHBOTHHANDS.COM

    See, I'm not alone in thinking this is a mess. Unfortunately, the FEMACan'tFindItsAssWithBothHands.com URL doesn't exist but it should. From what I hear, and painfully know from decades back, the bozos at FEMA could cook an agenda with two Tuesdays in next week, if it suits their purposes. If you want some truly enlightening reading try the enabling legislation for FEMA. The link I've just given is hardly complete but it does point up how things have and have not changed in some ways.

    FEMA's enabling legislation, the Stafford Act, provided FEMA officials with powers that the bureaucrats didn't exercise. "We found that without state requests, FEMA could assess the catastrophic area, assess what assistance the state needed, start mobilizing that relief, present its recommendations to the governor, and, if necessary--as Andrew Card did--get in the governor's face to force the issue of accepting federal help. Before Hurricane Andrew, FEMA officials took almost none of these steps. Consequently, when a disaster occurred, FEMA's relief efforts were inevitably too little, too late." -read more-

    I will try to follow up this week or next with more complete references to the actual bills and laws that are available online. From my experience nearly forty years ago with early bureaucratic and administrative structures that would coordinate government post disaster actions among military and civilian agencies FEMA is connected at the highest levels to government apparatus with the most frightening powers. FEMA can if necessary rule the USA under the right conditions, the conditions being a simple declaration by whatever authority survives a civil emergency to make such a declaration. That an agency which is vested with power and supposedly resources beyond the comprehension of the average American could perform so poorly in the current situation is simply appalling. No face saving weasel like recall of some department head from the field to Washington, D.C. will fade the heat on this one. You would think that the nutless bean counters, silver tongued spin masters and Machiavellian Mother Rapers that stand behind Bush would have had enough sense to at least fire Michael Brown. What a bunch of spineless weenies, or are they? Perhaps they have bigger plans, eh? Tune in! Turn on if you like, but I think at this advanced age it's counter productive. Do not drop out, tune in and stayed tuned in, the next few months up to November 2006 are very important.

    Tuesday, September 06, 2005

    One more thing

    If one person criticizes them, or says one more thing, including the president of the United States, he will hear from me. One more word about it... and I -- I might likely have to punch him."
    -- Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., on ABC's 'This Week' defends sheriff's department.

    "They've had press conferences. I'm sick of the press conferences. For God's sakes, shut up and send us somebody."
    -- Aaron Broussard Jefferson Parish president pleads for help on NBC's 'Meet the Press' Sunday.

    Monday, September 05, 2005

    Another thing: they were all full of gratitude.

    Another report from Austin


    9/04/05

    I don't care much for the word evacuee to describe the Americans displaced by Katrina. The word is bandied about so much in the media. It adds an uncomfortable distance and shields us from a reality. If I have a buzzword, I can talk about it with little sensitivity, without thinking so much about what an American evacuee really feels. We have become so accustomed to soundbites in America and their numbing effect.

    So, let me say, I met several Americans today who have survived the aftermath of Katrina that flooded their homes, their community, their city, and their lives. The experience humbled me.

    They made their way to Austin by bus and plane. Some by choice, others had run out of choices. They all had a story to tell and every story was a mixture and harsh reality and hope. That they had hope seemed a miracle to me. Another thing: they were all full of gratitude.

    I woke up this morning to the sound of my youngest daughter reminding me of my commitment to go with her to volunteer at Brackenridge Hospital for the relief efforts set up for victims of Katrina. She had signed me up to be with her and one of her good friends, a Muslim American, whose youth group had organized to help out. At 9:00 am I am standing in the midst of 25-30 Muslim youth from across the city whose average age could not have been more than 19-20. All eager, all orderly and anxious to help wherever they could. The effort was a little bit disorganized at first, because there has been an overwhelming outpouring of volunteers in Austin. An overabundance of volunteers at 9 on a Sunday! All the volunteer stations in Austin were filled with back up lists. Austin is responding. But the need will go on for months. The donations throughout the city the last few days were everywhere, so much of the early help was sorting an organizing the clothes, the bedding, the toiletries, the food. Literally mountains of donations! The kids took off to do just that. The group leader asked me to help out in greeting, consoling, and welcoming the displaced as they were cleared by the medical triage teams. The next step in their journey being the ride down to the Convention Center to a more permanent facility. At first, I didn't consider the position of greeter- counselor to a good fit for me, but I didn't show up with requirements that I be used for certain tasks. I showed up to help where the help was needed.

    Ill fitting or not, for the next 4 hours I got close to some of the survivors. I listened and they talked. A few were still visibly frightened and very uneasy with being in a place that was not home, with a future out of their control and in doubt, at best. Because I was at the Brackenridge station, the people I saw either had medical issues or had family with them that had medical problems. They were white, brown, black. They were of Asian, Mexican, central American descent and some, second and third generation Louisianans. You name it. If there was a common thread, it was socioeconomic. It wasn't race, nor religion, nor color. The people I met didn't get out because they literally had no place to go to. To my amazement, I read yesterday that 19% of the residents of New Orleans make $ 10,000.00 or less per year. Today, I met some of them.

    I met real volunteers too. There was Mary Fran, Terry, and Sabiha. All social workers here in Austin and all expert at what we were assigned to do. They tutored me and I watched and followed their lead. We owe much to these people. I don't know how they do it day in and day out. But I am grateful they do.

    I listened as man around 25 tell me he tried to stay and help as long as he could, but the smell of the death finally got to him just before the National Guard came into his area. He said he had floated to higher ground a few elderly people on an air mattress through his streets that had become a lake. Barney showed up with his 20 year old daughter, Stacy, who had cerebral palsy. His house had been broken into by 3 men in the middle of the night . They stole his TV and VCR. Another man of about 45 told me of how he had rushed to his parents home in lower N.O. and had moved them steadily higher to the second floor, then the attic and described a harrowing night of not knowing whether the water would reach the attic in which they had then become trapped. The good news is that it did not and both he and his parents are now in Austin. A young mother and her 5 year old, told of how they camped out with others on I-10 between Baton Rouge and N.O. with little food or water for 3 1//2 days before being rescued. Yet another showed me his Harrahs' employee card and said in broken English that his direct deposited paycheck for September 1 had not made it to his bank. He had no savings, no home and no job to go to after Katrina.

    These Americans need our money and our help. The rebuilding of homes, communities and lives will take months. I urge each of you to volunteer a few hours per week, or as much as you can

    You can call the Red Cross Hotline:

    American Red Cross: 1-800-HELP-NOW

    There is nothing that can be added to this good report except to encourage you as strongly as possible to contribute in someway to the relief effort. Pray, volunteer, send money, take in a displaced person, provide a job, do something, please.


    Is that really America or some third world impoverished country?

    I'm not the only one irritated by what I've seen recently in the Katrina disaster. A friend writes from Austin

    There's "W" on the TV with his appearance a day or two late and several million dollars short. We have grown to expect his lack of leadership. His speech yesterday provided more proof that he is disconnected and, too many times, clueless. He is supported by a cacophony of politicians and administration wonks first wringing their hands then telling us that all the forces that the US can muster are "on it" as they speak. But of course, the media shows vividly that the catastrophe is broadening, that lawlessness prevails in many parts of N.O., that Americans—our relatives and our friends—are suffering greatly. Is that really America or some third world impoverished country? It is sad to acknowledge that it reminded me of pictures from the tsunami crisis just a few months ago.

    You are not "on it", Mr. President. You are –"behind it and in the way of it", just as you were in the weeks and months preceding 911. Being "on it" is providing the leadership that would not have cut the millions in spending that was needed to shore up the levee system in N.O., leadership that would not consistently challenge as heresy the settled world scientific view of global warming, leadership that has too strain to find National Guard troops to help out because you have sent these American men and women to fight a war in Iraq that your own children will not.

    It is just a suggestion, but you might consider that the presidency is not just another job where you get perks like flying around on Air Force One and take extended vacations in Crawford. Throw away your tired moniker as a Compassionate Conservative. The media pictures of what is actually happening on the ground and your canned response to a true American crisis prove otherwise.

    Yes, America will rise to this challenge. We will beat this crisis in spite of poor leadership. But let us not forget in November 2006 and November 2008.

    Thanks, friend, for another clear voice. Indeed, let's not forget our outrage over the current situation in the area devastated by Katrina, especially New Orleans. Take your outrage to the polls, make a difference, vote to change this sorry administration as soon as possible from the ground up at every level. It's not too soon to begin ramping up to the November 2006 elections.

    loonytunes rotating empty space: Landings updating rotating spaces

    loonytunes rotating empty space: Landings updating rotating spaces

    Sunday, September 04, 2005

    I am in total agreement with Mayor Bill White of Houston, but the sad facts are, the city of Houston will be sued. The groups and lawyers will line up looking for money from the far right to the far left. Bill White should run for President and show the country what true leadership looks like. Instead of these hem haw around lets not look bad politicians. Look George W. This is your last time in office stand up and act like you should. -read more-

    See, I'm not the only one irritated by the mess in NOLA and the rest of Katrina'a path. A few million more of like LoonyTunes and we'll be heard loud and clear. Loony has taken the words right out my mouth today, I couldn't have said it better, "Look George W. This is your last time in office stand up and act like you should." And, knowing LoonyT as I do, I can tell you from personal experience he knows about stand up guys, being one himself. Believe me, you would go anywhere with LoonyT. If LoonyT is telling Dubya it's time to be a stand up guy, we just might be headed in the right direction, right LoonyT?