"Welcome to the fallout, welcome to resistance. The tension is here... between who you are and who you could be, between how it is and how it should be. I dare you to move... like today never happened before." -Switchfoot
ReCallingTomorrow
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Name: ReCallingTomorrow
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Interests: Attached Homeschooling Father to 4 boys; follower of Jesus; student of philosophy; seller of technology; brother of a RockStar; Sleepwalker to my wife, fromscatteredtribe


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Member Since: 7/3/2006

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Tuesday, September 12, 2006

What we have learned...

When I remember 9/11, it is as part of a generation who had the luxury to grow up in relative naivete.  We believed that America was invincible, and that things (both good and bad) would continue on here as usual - in isolation from whatever happened to the rest of the world.  My reflections on the past five years are generally well encapsulated in the newspaper editorial below - with the caveat that I am somewhat encouraged and surprised at the restraint shown by the current administration in light of our response to Pearl Harbor, which included carpet bombing German cities and incinerating two in Japan.  My hope is that we can come together again as we did after the attacks, but this time sharing a positive vision of what can be accomplished at home and around the world as a result of our unity.

Editorial

9/11/06

The feelings of sadness and loss with which we look back on Sept. 11, 2001, have shifted focus over the last five years. The attacks themselves have begun to acquire the aura of inevitability that comes with being part of history. We can argue about what one president or another might have done to head them off, but we cannot really imagine a world in which they never happened, any more than we can imagine what we would be like today if the Japanese had never attacked Pearl Harbor.

What we do revisit, over and over again, is the period that followed, when sorrow was merged with a sense of community and purpose. How, having lost so much on the day itself, did we also manage to lose that as well?

The time when we felt drawn together, changed by the shock of what had occurred, lasted long beyond the funerals, ceremonies and promises never to forget. It was a time when the nation was waiting to find out what it was supposed to do, to be called to the task that would give special lasting meaning to the tragedy that it had endured.

But the call never came. Without ever having asked to be exempt from the demands of this new post-9/11 war, we were cut out. Everything would be paid for with the blood of other people’s children, and with money earned by the next generation. Our role appeared to be confined to waiting in longer lines at the airport. President Bush, searching the other day for an example of post-9/11 sacrifice, pointed out that everybody pays taxes.

That pinched view of our responsibility as citizens got us tax cuts we didn’t need and an invasion that never would have occurred if every voter’s sons and daughters were eligible for the draft. With no call to work together on some effort greater than ourselves, we were free to relapse into a self- centeredness that became a second national tragedy. We have spent the last few years fighting each other with more avidity than we fight the enemy.

When we measure the possibilities created by 9/11 against what we have actually accomplished, it is clear that we have found one way after another to compound the tragedy. Homeland security is half-finished, the development at ground zero barely begun. The war against terror we meant to fight in Afghanistan is at best stuck in neutral, with the Taliban resurgent and the best economic news involving a bumper crop of opium. Iraq, which had nothing to do with 9/11 when it was invaded, is now a breeding ground for a new generation of terrorists.

Listing the sins of the Bush administration may help to clarify how we got here, but it will not get us out. The country still hungers for something better, for evidence that our leaders also believe in ideas larger than their own political advancement.

Today, every elected official in the country will stop and remember 9/11. The president will remind the country that he has spent most of his administration fighting terrorism, and his opponents will point out that Osama bin Laden is still at large. It would be miraculous if the best of our leaders did something larger — expressed grief and responsibility for the bad path down which we’ve gone, and promised to work together to turn us in a better direction.

Over the last week, the White House has been vigorously warning the country what awful things would happen in Iraq if American troops left, while his critics have pointed out how impossible the current situation is. They are almost certainly both right. But unless people on both sides are willing to come up with a plan that acknowledges both truths and accepts the risk of making real-world proposals, we will be stuck in the same place forever.

If that kind of coming together happened today, we could look back on Sept. 11, 2006, as more than a day for recalling bad memories and lost chances.



Tuesday, August 15, 2006

"That's how I roll."

This phrase has a fairly intuitive meaning, but just in case here's an entry from the Urban Dictionary:

-----------------

That is how I like to do things.

I know I'm always wearing a bathrobe but that's how I roll.

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This can be either a helpful or harmful mantra.  It can indicate an acceptance of bad habits and facilitate continuation in a rut due to the unwillingness to change.  Or it can be a way to put a stake in the ground and begin anew.

I may have been like that before, but now...

'cause that's how I roll!


Sunday, July 16, 2006

What is The Matrix?

Anything we want it to be.  That is part of the appeal of the films.  Most of us believe that we are part of an exclusive group of individuals who understand reality - whether it be political, social, religious, etc.  Everyone else is either dense or deluded.  Maybe it's not a bad idea to take both the red and the blue pills.  The Matrix is real too - or many realities.  =)


Friday, July 07, 2006

Ken Lay and Corporate Power

It is an assumed "fact" today that large, especially multi-national corporations have more power than governments.  As a group they may have more power over international commerce than any single government, and certainly some individual corporations have more power than some of the weaker governments combined, but as a general statement I think that is false. 
However the influence over millions of lives (not to mention billions of dollars) that a single corporation can have is quite significant.  And so, of course, is the potential for good or harm.   Ken Lay was only the most obvious symbol of a culture of corruption in corporate America that slowly resurfaced and gained prominence over the latter half of the 20th century (following the sobering effect of the labor movement and two world wars).  Looking back, there were many signs that he was willing to lie, cheat, and steal to succeed, but he was only rewarded for it until it got to a fever pitch and someone (Enron accountant Sherron Watkins) finally blew the whistle.
My hunch is that plenty of Wall Street bigshots smelled a rat but didn't let on, figuring they could sense when the stench was getting stronger and sell at the right time.   It's the small investors who believed those same firms' stock ratings who really got burned - along with the Enron employees who were out of the loop, although I'm guessing there was a lot of willing ignorance outside of the executive suites as well.
It's no secret that sometimes bad guys win, but I find it interesting that some of their closest allies and most enthusiastic fans (for example in Lay's case President Bush) feign complete shock while disowning them if it is somehow leaked that they are bad.

Power is only amassed and maintained as long as it is implicitly granted. 


Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Independence Day

The United States of America, more than any other nation-state in the history of the planet, symbolizes and actualizes independence - and in a larger sense, freedom.   Independence is a certain kind of freedom, and all of the other kinds depend upon it.  It is the quintessential "freedom from" and the requisite launching point for all of the other "freedom from's" and "freedom to's."  (It has been said that the line between these two types of freedoms is one way to look at the difference between the Republican and Democratic party ideals - and this could partially explain why both sides bring value to the democratic process.)

Even though the concept and practice of democracy began in ancient Greece, its taking root and flourishing in the United States represents a complete break with the past.  It is unprecedented in scale, sophistication, and scope.  And as is sometimes pointed out by advocates of socio-economic change, it is still in the experimental stages.  The novus ordo seclorum is still new, and perhaps we will always be working it out in the face of new challenges and evolving interpretations.
But on Independence Day we look back, as well we should.  We have much of which to be appreciative and proud.  And much to preserve.  The freedoms we have come to take for granted must not be given away out of fear.  Those who have sacrificed - and those who sacrifice today -  for these freedoms must not be dishonored by having them dilluted and allowed to decay.  In our history we have taken many positive steps toward inclusiveness and effectiveness of our freedoms, and we have also regressed.  My hope is that we have not embarked on another period of regression.  Whether by the encroachment on personal liberties and privacy through misdirected security measures, or by the reactionary increase of enforcement to prop up a broken and inadequate immigration system, we must not become backslidden.  We should be honest about our dysfunctions and put in the hard work it will take to fix them.
My hope is that we would always be looked to, and accurately viewed, by the masses around the globe as the gold standard for liberty - and not as a threat to independence.  That we would still say "Give us your tired, your poor, and your weak..." because in America we are not fearful, but independent, and free, and STRONG!"  (And since this sounds more like a speech than a blog - I'll get better at this - I'll end it like a speech.)
 And may God bless America!     





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