Immigration, The Bible, and Monstrous Races

We’ve all heard of the phenomena of human migration, and most have been directly affected by immigration of people into their home country or by family members migrating to another country. Speaking of the constituents of the United States, one would have to be 100% Native American to claim that he or she is where s/he is today not dependent upon the immigration of ancestors to this country. We are all here because of the phenomena of immigration. Often times, one is too quick to acknowledge this when approaching the topic. We must recognize that the phenomena is just as valid today as it was centuries ago or even decades ago when our ancestors made the journey to the New World. The reasons for the migration of people groups today are the same that prompted the Mayflower to set out and the same that invoked early man to cross the Bering Strait: Persecution, based on religion, race or tribal/political affiliation; and Scarcity of resources- economic, agricultural, etc. More often than not it is a combination of the two categories. Our own past should serve to humble us, no matter from which side of the argument we engage the subject.

 

Phoenix Arizona artist, Francisco García aka GRAFFTRUTH

In order to properly address the current social issues that arise out of the phenomena of immigration, attention needs to be addressed to how one group (the “in group”- in this case, citizens of the US) views another distinct group (in this case, non-citizen immigrants). This is often referred to as the “us-them” syndrome. It is a binary discrimination that characterizes much of the dominant forms of cognition within the Western world. In writing about the issue of immigration, I’d like to examine biblical texts as well as a text that predates the biblical tradition, paying special attention to their treatment of the “other,” and of the construction of Monster and how the “foreigner” is often denoted as Monster.

Many literary texts deal with the “other,” the “strangers,” and demonstrate the natural tendency toward such binary discrimination. Going back as far as we can trace the archiving of human consciousness, to the earliest writing of epic proportions, the Epic of Gilgamesh, we can see how people some millennia ago that were just beginning to acquire literacy treat this sensitive topic. The two main characters in the Epic of Gilgamesh are Gilgamesh and Enkidu. Gilgamesh is Conan meets Hugh Hefner. He is the quintessential testosterone-filled male hero. He makes the boys squall with his never-ending brawls and the women swoon with his sexual exploits. Nothing is out of his reach of domination. The text begins by stating that he has seen and done it all: there was no match too great for Gilgamesh. On hearing the cries of the daughters and sons of men the gods decide to make a match for Gilgamesh. Thus Enkidu is made by the gods to be an equal (yet simultaneously very different) match for Gilgamesh. Enkidu’s home unlike Gilgamesh’s in the city, was in nature, in the wild. Not only did Enkidu differ from Gilgamesh in his choice of habitat, but also in his physical appearance. Enkidu was covered in hair and fought for not the taming and subduing of creation, but in defense of nature. Enkidu was trusted with uprooting the trapper’s traps and putting a log in the advances of deforestation. Enkidu, as viewed from within his ancient context, shares many affinities with a Laḫmu, a character in Eastern Semitic myth that possesses superhuman strength and is depicted with locks of braided hair (cf. Samson in the Bible), but never can fully assimilate to culture, the civilized way of life. This figure though, is often represented within the confines of civilization, as if it were somehow domesticated, guarding points of entry and exit for the bourgeois. Though they may be domesticated and used as a sustainer of culture, Laḫmu will always be destined to be referred to as “other.”

This description makes me think of how classes will use those from outside (Buber’s I-It relationship) their borders to give form to and maintain their empire, yet never grant them status as citizens. These characters are forever relegated to status of foreigner. This occurs throughout the story of mankind over and over and over again, as if the vinyl of human history had been given a scratch and we repeatedly hear the same story, over and over and over again as it skips into infinity. And then just when we think we’ve heard it all, there’s a cry- a cry that reinitiates history, like the one that we read of in Exodus. . .

The Epic of Gilgamesh beautifully captures the age-old conflict between the wild and the civil, and on a more cosmic level, order and chaos. This theme is extremely important to ancient civilizations of the Near East. This concept as known to the Hebrew peoples is ședeq and is similar to the neighboring Egyptians concept of ma’at. Chaos and Order are constantly waging battle within Creation. My inquiry is to what extent is this narrative still a part of our being and becoming as individuals and collectively on a societal level? After millennia of the record of human history playing, we now come out of the womb hard-wired with this narrative. It was all too easy for a former President to tap into our predisposed constructs of reality where binary discriminations reign in order to garner support for rigidly dichotomizing the geo-political community as we then knew it and allow that to inform an entire nations foreign policy concerning the “axis of evil.” I think I’ve read this story somewhere, and the record keeps on spinning. . . A lot of deconstruction is in order.

Do we at times think that we are aiding in the eviction of Chaos, holding together the lacerated flesh of the heavens to keep the floods of disorder from once again inundating the physical plane of existence, are we helping support the pillars of Boaz and Yachin from buckling up under the vices of evil, the powers and principalities? Are we a part of a cosmic game? If this plays out in the public arena, no wonder fences are constructed to keep out those that threaten our consistency of life, with good reason centers are constructed to detain persons that threaten the very order of our existence. The axis of evil/disorder/chaos has now broadened to incorporate not only North Korea, Iraq, and Iran, but Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, oh yeah the Jews, Blacks, Mexicans, Gays and Lesbians too while we’re at it. The litany at any point in history could be without end. The point is simply this: Monsters do exist and they are the henchmen that grind away at order.

A monster represents an extremity of the category of “the other.” They are wonderfully depicted in art and literature throughout the ages. Many hybrid monsters make their first appearances in the Epic of Gilgamesh. Monsters are ways people distort strangers and are used to explain the proliferation of chaos. Foreigners, those that a particular people group know (intimately) little about, make a great target for monstrous labels and grotesque narratives. Monsters, just as foreigners, in culture lurk at boundaries. Hollywood movies are born out of scenarios of monsters transgressing their lairs and entering the world of civilization. Villages often build forts to keep monsters out, likewise countries raise fences and build walls to inhibit the entrance of foreigners/monsters. Today’s monsters are peoples and races that we do not identify ourselves with and peoples of other faith traditions. This fuels much of the fear that runs rampant in today’s world. In the last century (not to discredit the stories of eastern Europeans that also immigrated) in the U.S. alone we have witnessed the atrocities of concentration camps against the Japanese during WWII, illegal raids and deportations of legal documented U.S. citizen Mexican-Americans (note especially The Mexican Repatriation 1929-1939, and Operation Wetback 1954), the Civil Rights Movement of the 50s and 60s and the suffering that the black community had to endure, the so-called “White-flight” of the 1970s from many urban cities to establish more white-concentrated suburbs (which many are gated), and more recently detention centers for Arabs, and the admonishment for teaching monoculturalism in public schools in numerous states (What then happens when our children’s socialization entails a deeper ingraining of “us-them.” Is this beneficial for humanity or are we still riding that same scratched piece of vinyl into we know not what?), and legalizing racial profiling (AZ SB 1070). The same propaganda is always employed: “They’re going to eat our culture! They don’t assimilate! They are Evil! Monsters!“- Mary Shelley had it right. Mary Pipher does too:

Language is weaponized when it used to objectify, depersonalized, and dehumanize, to create an “other.” Once a person is labeled as “not like us,” the rules for civilized behavior no longer apply.

Today, we are no different than our counterparts of antiquity. There were those in classical Rome that used to identify peoples of new religions with monsters, going to extremes of telling stories of how they would partake in incestial orgiastic love feasts were they would also consume human flesh and blood. Christians created quite a name for themselves in the Pre-Constantinian Roman Empire. Oh sure, today we may not be as blunt about it- though at times we’re pretty damn blunt, try watching Fox News- we try to seem accepting and welcoming, “Sure come in, just speak the way I do, dress the way I do, eat what I eat when I eat, and adopt many of the other mannerisms that I have so I won’t feel threatened. Today, our society likes to conjure up many images for the immigrant, muslim, homosexual, etc., you fill in the blank. What have you been socialized to associate with any of the aforementioned peoples? If you are honest, truly honest I think you would be able to recall a time in which you equated a people group with a Monster. grrrrrrrrrr.

“Ok so what? I am a Christian. I am counter-cultural.  Those old books or even international relations don’t influence me, I let the Bible guide my life. It’s a light to my path and a lamp to my feet. Besides, my religion teaches me to love my neighbor.” If you find yourself aligning with this statement, then perhaps the question should be asked: “Does the Bible- the most authoritative text in the Western world- legitimize a worldview that repeatedly demonizes the foreigner and labels them as Monster?”

My answer is partially yes. Conceivably, this could help enforce why this over-exaggerated binary distinction keeps cropping up in our western (I personally cannot speak of Eastern cultures, although I suspect they experience similar phenomena, due to my limited knowledge I chose not to overstep realms of experience) cultures. One must remember that the Bible is multiphonic and multivalent.  There exists many voices within the Biblical canon and it is imperative that not one voice triumph over the others at any given time- history can be a grim reminder to us when that has happened- but rather they all must be allowed to be held in tension, not as one coagulated harmony, but rather as many traditions keeping the other in constant check.

Within the Bible we find monstrous races (aside from flat-out monsters, which are many to behold). In Canaan exist the giants from Hebron, the Anakim; in Jordan, Og of Bashan; in Philistia, perhaps the most famous monster of all, Goliath. All these accounts represent demeaning racial generalizations taken to their extremities, superfluidity of digits and enormity is caricatured in many passages. And as so elegantly put forth by the Deuteronomic Historian and the Priestly Visionary, they should all be exterminated (see the genocidal campaigns against the Amalekites in Exodus, the book of Judges, and Josiah’s reforms in Kings for primers), for the sustaining and proliferation of dominion/order of course. In Ezra-Nehemiah, intermarriage was more than frowned upon, force was used upon the people of Israel to “purify/cleanse” them from all things foreign, and even the texts makes out an ally to interracial relations to be a monster, stating that “Tobiah tried to frighten us,” which is what monsters do best. It is of no consolation to think that this anti-miscegenation concept is at best archaic and far removed from our modern situation when it wasn’t until 1967 that it became legal in my state of birth for a person to marry outside of their race. So it seems as though these “biblical” concepts have followed us throughout the millennia. But are they biblical? Or are they part of a larger natural narrative that just so happened to be a part of the biblical inventors landscape, just a part of the backdrop. If this is the case we must listen more acutely to distinguish more radical and subversive voices- voices that have either gone unnoticed because they are nearly muted by the mundaneness of everyday life that speaks to us from the pages, or because they were intentionally quietened for the service of some status quo.

As Westerners, these narratives have been imprinted on our consciouses whether we choose to admit it or not. Thankfully the Bible is multivalent and offers texts to counteract this treatment of the other, narratives that function to disassemble the normative. Within the many voices of the biblical corpus exists a Ruth, and no tradition should have the right to extinguish her voice. Her voice is one of compassion and inclusivity. And across that skipping vinyl record of human history her story is on par with the Exodus event (note Ex. 12:38 attests to the formation of Israel as a mosaic consisting of many peoples), though you must strain to hear it. Her complete and total acceptance as a stranger/foreigner coupled with statements from the Holiness Code (i.e., Leviticus 19:33-37), and Jesus’ ethic of open commensality table fellowship should be held in tension over against the above narratives concerning the treatment of strangers. One such text, Exodus 18, deserves special attention. In it a foreigner, a Midianite, Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law, imparts the knowledge of self governance and judiciary law to the camp of Israel. He’s an outsider! Israel began to govern using a “foreign” pattern Not only that, he was the first individual to witness and give testimony concerning the great acts of YHWH post-exodus. It states that “Moses listened to his father-in-law and he did all that he had said.” (Augustine’s was on to something when he stated: “All knowledge is God’s Knowledge.”) By the way, Moses had married this guy’s daughter, a Midianite, uhm. . .

We need to come to terms with the monsters, confront them and find out for what reason they were constructed, what purpose do they serve the dominant narrative, the status quo? Why am I supposed to be afraid of homosexuals, of Muslims, of Arabs, of Mexicans? What purpose is it serving that I buy into over-exaggerated stereotypes and drive the wedge of binary discriminations deeper into collective human consciousness? Do I project grotesque labels onto people groups that are unlike me? Do I describe “the other,” with monstrous physiognomy,  projecting horrid things from narratives of uncertain origins onto peoples that I have yet to have had the opportunity with whom to experience an authentic subjective relationship. Do I realize that my biases might be naturally working to exaggerate differences to protect my own “in-group.” This is a plea to be brutally honest. A theology of monsters can go a long way in adding to ministries of reconciliation, how faith communities approach immigrants, and can help inform interfaith dialogue. Monsters and humans are not in the end enemies, but are really brothers. This can be seen not only in biblical texts, but if we go back to the ancient story of the Epic of Gilgamesh, we see Enkidu and Gilgamesh befriending one another, having life long adventures with one another, loving each other, making love to each other, and in the end Gilgamesh laments over Enkidu’s deceased body and feels as though a part of himself has died. This is the moral: To see the Monster within and see ourselves in others. As with all things, a little epistemological humility can go a long way. And this brings us back to GRAFFTRUTH’s piece of art: “Who’s the Illegal Now?” for you were once slaves in Egypt, you walked many miles sharing the same moccasins. . . This too is a narrative that we have the power to choose.

-mlw


RESOURCES

    To Read:

Books:

  1. Timothy K. Beal - Religion and Its Monsters
  2. Martin Buber - I and Thou
  3. Richard Kearney - Strangers, Gods, and Monsters: Interpreting Otherness
  4. Lawrence M. Wills – Not God’s People: Insider’s and Outsiders in the Biblical World
  5. Miraslov Volf - Exclusion & Embrace: A Theological Exploration of Identity, Otherness, and Reconciliation

Articles:


Bumper Art

FDR has been credited with saying, “A conservative is a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned to walk forward.”

This sentiment rings true here in the Bay area of California where it is shared by many of its residents who don’t mind voicing it either. This can be noticed especially in the expressive fine art of bumper stickers. You can browse many open galleries in the bay area at many local Whole Foods or Trader Joe’s store parking lots. You may find stickers of many shapes and sizes plastered to such makes of cars as the popular Toyota Prius, the Honda Civic, and many European models, such as the Swedish makes of Saab and Volvo. I must say it is rare to find such blatant art gracing more refined German makes, (unless it happens to be an older model diesel). I say “Bay area,” because I’ve noticed a peculiar phenomena when it comes to San Francisco: I see less bumper stickers there. I assume the reasoning behind this is that those that would espouse such forms of artistic expression use bicycles within the city which don’t have bumpers and it has yet to become fashionable to display political thoughts on the rear of one’s trousers- in the event that it does, I’m sure the city would be adorned with such “bumper art”. For the time being, within the city one may find more verbal and active expression as to the more silent type stamped passively, although coolly, onto one’s car in the North Bay. Concerning those aforementioned staple foods store parking lots, I do concede in saying that it can be sheer joy to be put on parking lot duty as a Trader Joe’s employee, because with it comes free admission to a host of liberal thinking art extravaganzas. I will share some of my more favorite expressions, of which would be the group that I would be tempted to plaster on the rear of my Volvo station wagon- that is, if I ever were so inclined to so blatantly voice my political stances, or if I were the type to intentionally stick things to the clearcoat of my car. I do feel compelled to add that some are disturbingly inspirational, be warned. (I tried to display the images, however this proved to be far too laborious, all stickers may be found at www.stampandshout.com).

  • Coexist
  • “Be the change you wish to see in the world” -Gandhi
  • World Peace
  • When Jesus said love your enemies, he probably didn’t mean kill them”
  • Think outside the Fox
  • “Actually, I never said that.” -God
  • Dangerously overeducated
  • F*ck Wal*Mart
  • The last time Republicans cared about my rights I was a fetus
  • Well-behaved women rarely make history
  • “Speak your mind, even if your voice shakes.” -Maggie Kuhn
  • Democrats are sexy- Whoever heard of a nice piece of elephant?!
  • “We are the ones we’ve been waiting for, we are the change we seek.” -Barack Obama
  • “We are each guilty of the good we didn’t do.” -Voltaire
  • Illegal Immigration began in 1492
  • Am I a Liberal, or just well-informed?
  • I like big books and I cannot lie
  • People Before Profits
  • “The arc of History is long, but it bends towards justice.” -MLK, Jr.
  • Pro-Life and Pro-War? I’m an Anti-Hypocrite, thanks.
  • Enlighten up
  • Bush Lies!
  • “Our Lives begin to end the day we become silent about the things that matter.” -MLK, Jr.
  • Republicans love you. . . until you’re born
  • Be nice to America or it will bring democracy to your country
  • it’s sexy to have a tiny carbon footprint
  • Viva la evolution!
  • “Injustice anywhere is a threat to Justice everywhere.” -MLK, Jr.
  • killing for peace is like fucking for virginity
  • may the fetus you save be gay
  • I’m already against the next war
  • liberal Christian- able to think and pray at the same time
  • American Evolution (jest in image)
  • if they waterboarded you, you would call it torture
  • Defend biblical marriage (jest in image)
  • Please don’t assume that I believe in your god
  • Pro-Life? Or just Pro-Embryo?
  • The people who don’t believe in evolution are the ones who need it most

~mlw

International Trade Action Day

christopher_columbus8

Here’s some recommended reading for this a very special day:

Witness for Peace Oct. 12th: International Trade Action Day

Jobs erased, farmers displaced.
Environment polluted, democracy diluted.

NAFTA at Fifteen

&

My post: 1989-2009 ~ Drugs, Mexico, The Failures of Neoliberalism, & The Beginnings of a Post-Imperial New Era

It’s time for change.

1989-2009 ~ Drugs, Mexico, The Failures of Neoliberalism, & The Beginnings of a Post-Imperial New Era

This is entry #8 and the final one in a series of entries that can be found in the category U.S.-Latin American Relations.

The 1980s was a decade decidedly marked with drugs and blood (just rent the movie Scareface).  At the close of the decade the U.S. decided it was time to try direct military force again; this time against Panama’s brutal and corrupt dictator Manual Noriega (who by the way, received some of his military training at non other, you guessed it: the School of the Americas- one of its many blowbacks).  He served the CIA in counterintelligence issues and by laundering drug money to the U.S.-backed Contras.  However, in 1989 when the CIA discovered that he was also a double agent serving his own self-interests (selling arms and intelligence to the Sandinistas), the CIA no longer had any use for the monster that it had created, and when psychological warfare proved to have no affect in removing him, President George H. W. Bush ousted him.  This involved a full out invasion, Operation Just Cause, of Panama overseen by Colin Powell, that resulted in thousands of civilian deaths and tens of thousands displaced and homeless.  This would prove to be a significant stepping stone for Bush Jr.’s Operation Iraqi Freedom. Last year one of my students confided in me that she and her family emigrated to Mexico during this invasion due to the U.S. attacks and bombings in her neighborhood in Panama.

The 1990s saw the U.S. covertly and overtly sticking its greedy little hands in the Nicaraguan elections. Washington shamelessly and openly used taxpayer’s money to illegally fund the opposition coalition.  An escalation of the so-called “War on Drugs” took the limelight, where it became honorable to obliterate a third-world country’s cash-crop.

In 2000, as part of the so-called “War on Drugs”, the U.S. initiated Plan Columbia, a military aid program that pumped 1.3 Billion USD into the Colombian military to combat what would later be dubbed as the “War on Terror”.

In 2002, the U.S., with Bush at its helm, backed a coup that sought to take Hugo Chávez out of power- no wonder Chávez addresses him as the Devil! This is ironic as most conservative evangelicals thereafter were worshiping Bush and asking for Chávez’s head to be presented on a platter (See the previous post in this series for Bush’s tactics for garnering support of the evangelical Christian base). Perhaps Chávez was one of the first to catch on to little Bush’s ‘cowboy and Indian’ game of secret “executive assassination rings” which were operating in dozens of countries that Pulitzer prize-winning journalist, Seymour Hersh later brought to light.

This brings us to the year 2004.  This is a pivotal year in relation to the situation that currently plagues Mexico.  In 2004 Bush allowed the decade-old assault weapons ban to expire, which allowed for greater ease of trafficking heavy arms across the border into Mexico.  Senator Kerry, who has continued to champion the ban’s reinstatement, could but then exclaim that yet again Bush had failed. He had failed the Inter-American community, and as a result has the U.S. along with Mexico paying direly.

Circa 40 Billion USD in drugs crosses US border per year.  Almost all of it comes from one of the most corrupted countries on Earth: Mexico.  Mexico, where mordidas or bribes (nearly 3 Billion USD worth in 2007 alone) and impunity to anything that faintly resembles law are the only manners in which the country conducts its business- it is the rule.  If that fails there’s always a last resort in the country where there are more assassinations than many countries in the middle east combined (murders actually rose 117% from 2007 to 2008, and thus far 2009 looks like we’re in for much of the same). After all, in 2008, 10% of all journalists that were assassinated in the world were assassinated in Mexico.  All of this has been a long process in the making and in 2008 Mexico officially underwent “Columbianization”.  It is the new battleground for the “War on Drugs”; if you’re not already corrupt, your life expectancy has just been cut in half.

In 2008 over 6,500 people were murder due to drug/gang related violence (mostly in the north, in and around Ciudad Juárez), often times in very public displays like beheadings and grenade attacks- last august there was a person found decapitated for every day.  Also in 2008, Mexico claimed the crown for kidnapping capitol of the world.  On independence day last year (September 15th) a terrorist attack took place in the square of Morelia, Michoacán injuring many civilians, sending the message that if the government did not back off, civilians would be intentionally targeted.  One for the books: the Mexican Drug Czar was indicted for selling Mexican intelligence to the Pacific Cartel at a rate of $500,000USD a month (he would be enjoying a nice exchange rate right about now, had he not been the one given up to the wolves). 2008 was the year President Felipe Calderón began to openly wage war against the cartels.

The beginning of 2009 saw the capture of Teo el Pozolero, who worked for the Pacific Cartel; his job position required him to melt bodies in acid- all in all totaling to more than 300 bodies in his Mexican town of Tijuana which borders San Diego, CA.  Forbes list also inducted its newest Billionaire this year: Joaquin “Chapo” Guzman of the Sinaloa Cartel. Mexico is a mess!  In Ciudad Juárez recently, where at the height of the violence there were as many as 10 murders per day, the police chief was forced to resign by the cartel-  they were murdering one police officer per day until he did.  The mayor’s family is now living in Texas and President Calderón has sent 7,500 soldiers and 2,500 federal police to Ciudad Juárez where the brunt of the combat is taking place and an additional 45,000 soldiers throughout the republic- though he is standing firm in stating that no territory has yet been lost, as was the case in Columbia not too long ago.  A cartel/gang member has stated to CNN’s Anderson Cooper that “We stick ice picks in feet, burn flesh with blowtorches and acid, cut off testicles; it just takes $100USD to kill a person in Mexico, $500-1000 to kill someone in the States- no one is immune. We have operations in 250 U.S. cities, even in Alaska.” One of my students just recently returned from Juárez and all he could say is that “it feels like it’s the twilight zone- no, better, a war zone, the morgues are overflowing, you don’t go out at night.” And this war zone is beginning to know no borders, as the cartels develop their own intelligence operations and increased violence is beginning to infiltrate the States across the border.  This is, as Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano has stated, “The States’ number one national security threat.”

All of this is due to drug trafficking and of course a long history of corruption by one party and consumption by the other.  80% of the cocaine that is consumed in the U.S. is brought through Mexico and much of Marijuana is as well.  It’s not only a 40 Billion dollar a year industry, it’s Mexico’s and the State’s War. I’d like to share some statistics from a March 26th ed. of a respected periodical:

The News- March 26, 2009

  • “9 out of 10 guns found at crime scenes and raids are traced to U.S. dealers.” -(Obama reiterated this in a speech)
  • Anywhere from hundreds to 2,000 guns move from the States to Mexico everyday.
  • ATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives) say there are 6,700 licensed firearm dealers along the Southwest border, and in 2008 they were only able to inspect 28% of them.

I’d also like to share some sayings of President Obama and Secretary Clinton during Secretary Clinton’s visit to Mexico this March.  Their statements starkly contrasted those put forth by the Pentagon, implying that Mexico was on the verge of becoming a failed state:

We need to do more to make sure illegal guns and cash aren’t flowing back to these cartels- that’s part of what’s financing their operation, that’s part of what’s arming them, that’s what’s making them so dangerous.” –President Obama, 24 March 2009

We recognize drug trafficking is a shared problem. . . Mexico is not a failed state. . . we have to do a better job. . .obviously our demand for these drugs is what motivates these drug gangs ” – Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, 25 March 2009

And again, after President Obama’s visit to Mexico City (Marine One was outside of my window more than once), speaking before the Summit of the Americas:

I have a lot to learn and I very much look forward to listening and figuring out how we can work together more effectively.

We can overcome our shared challenges with a sense of common purpose, or we can stay mired in the old debates of the past. For the sake of all our people, we must choose the future. Too often, the United States has not pursued and sustained engagement with our neighbors. We have been too easily distracted by other priorities and have failed to see that our own progress is tied directly to progress throughout the Americas. My obama_chavezadministration is committed to renewing and sustaining a broader partnership between the United States and the hemisphere on behalf of our common prosperity and our common security.

It seems as though we are moving forward.  Hopefully, if this drug problem leads to an intervention, it will be one of another type; one of hands extended for a pursuit of mutual benefit, not arms extended to take what God has destined for the white man- it’s a welcome and long overdue contrast, would you not agree?  This is change I can believe in. Though we must recognized the failed policies of the past- yes, even the economic ones- particularly those of the likes of Milton Friedman and the travails of “shock therapy“.  Perhaps so many are finding their way into the drug industry because neoliberalism and globalization has utterly failed them?  Is it that U.S. enforced policies have forced millions of peasants off of their land because of forced entry into free-trade agreements and that they can no longer compete with the U.S. agro-industry?  Is it that the U.S. would rather burn a nation’s cash crop than face their own consumption problem and moral schism at home?  Is it that “free-trade” has actually increased the cost of living outside of the U.S.? Is it that the U.S. has brought this travesty upon itself?  Why is it that in 2002, 58% of the Argentine population and 1 in 5 Chileans were below the poverty line? Why is it that the U.S. pumped over 10 Billion dollars into Nicaragua and El Salvador during wars of the 1980s, yet did not feel compelled to help reconstruct? Why is it that 20,000,000 million people live in poverty in Central America today?  Why is that absolute poverty and severe malnutrition and inequality exist in the hemisphere that is the “light to the world”? Why is it that NAFTA has actually increased poverty in Mexico? Why was the President of Bolivia, Evo Morales targeted for an assassination attempt this year? Why can’t we have a fair-market instead of a free-market?

These are the questions that I hoped to raise along with the more simple question of “Why do they hate us?”  We must learn to become responsible global citizens and think critically.  Albert Einstein has been credited with saying, “Never stop questioning.”  I hope we heed his wisdom. For example, what would happen if we follow Colorado’s and California’s precedent and legalize marijuana? What impact could this have on our struggling economy and on the escalating drug-related violence?  Maybe we should question people that have been affected by the drug and economic wars, perhaps we should listen to their voices.

If there’s one thing to learn from our shenanigans in Latin America is that behind every ‘nation-building’ project there are a lot of bananas. I sit here at my desk and recall the words of our current President on the morning of his inauguration:

To the people of poor nations, we pledge to work alongside you to make your farms flourish and let clean waters flow; to nourish starved bodies and feed hungry minds. And to those nations like ours that enjoy relative plenty, we say we can no longer afford indifference to suffering outside our borders; nor can we consume the world’s resources without regard to effect. For the world has changed, and we must change with it.

Now it is our job to hold him responsible, just as we are now holding Bush responsible for shaming this country.  Let us urge President Obama and the 111th congress to reason from their ethical centers and say no- not to drugs, but to the continuation of detrimental and broken relations with Latin America as we enter into this new era of change.  Let’s make an effort to reinstate the assault weapons ban as we assist our neighbors to the south, lift the 47-year trade embargo against Cuba, and rally the closure of  WHINSEC (formerly the School of the Americas) which continues to train Latin American soldiers in tactics of war and counterinsurgency.  These acts (coupled with Obama’s acceptance of Eduardo Galeano’s book Open Veins of Latin America from Hugo Chávez) can prove as significant symbolic and concrete actions of construing an alternative reality or as President Obama puts it: “choosing the future”.

-MLW

Jubilee Economics

To finish out the month of February, I think it apropos to post concerning that which has been taking up most of the news media coverage in the States this month: The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, or more commonly referred to as the 2009 economic stimulus plan.  As reports come in of the U.S. economy reaching lows that it hasn’t seen in more than 26 years (that’s before I was born) and with a new announcement today that the economy shrank by 6.2% in Q4 of 2008, which surpasses the 5.4% estimate, more than ever people world over are watching what Washington is doing.

With the ARRA toting a $787 Billion USD price tag, Republicans are griping about its gargantuousness and pointing to the surmounting national deficit.  I only have one question: Where was that concern- that ‘fiscal conservativeness’ when we had ‘cowboy expenditures’ under the Bush administration? Some reports show that Bush spent 11.5 Trillion USD during his two terms.  In fact, in 2001 the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy in themselves totaled 1.35 Trillion dollars (It is my understanding that this total includes the second cuts in 2003), which expire in 2011.  Many claim that they have done next to nothing in aiding a stifling economy. The ‘trickle down’ methodology has been revealed as mythology.  And had McCain been elected, we would have been headed for more of the same (see this article describing the differences of philosophies between President Obama and his former contender McCain concerning taxation). With that put into perspective, President Obama’s stimulus plan is considerably smaller than Bush’s tax cuts.  An article from Think Progressive, goes to greater lengths to ‘put it into perspective’ for us, detailing the economic differences between then and now.  It’s also interesting to note that in 2001, 28 House Democrats and 12 Senate Democrats voted for its passage, and in 2009, 0 House Republicans and 3 Senate Republicans backed the President’s stimulus bill.  I smell partisanship. . .

However, when one asks a Republican governor for his or her opinion, one finds that the partisan dissonance stays in Washington.  Those that are in the trenches of the economic turmoil, have quite a different opinion on the use of tax dollars.  One finds two faces of the grappling and restructuring GOP:  Congressional, one that is trying to return to a more fiscally conservative, neo-orthodox, anti-spending platform to try to rebuild its party base after a devastating election year and a formidable outlook in 2010; and Governing, another one that is not wanting to play the politics game, supporting the stimulus plan, and wanting to start saving jobs and for their respected states.  “It’s funny how the question of stimulus isn’t actually as partisan in real life,” remarked Tom Ryberg, a fellow blogger and concerned citizen.

So Where is the Money Going?

moneychart

Above, it can be seen the supposed break-down of the ARRA.  This can be accessed at www.recovery.gov. I must admit, that I haven’t read the 1000+ page act, nor do I have intentions to, as I am preparing for studies of another sort- although you can here.  Some things that it entails excite me.  Things like, rail train for transportation (have you ever been to a country that uses train for transportation- one word: amazing.), investment in infrastructure like roads, bridges and airports (paraphrasing President Obama, “if you think we don’t have an infrastructure problem, fly into Shanghai), hydro and solar power, the replacement of governmental fleets with hybrids, the digitizing of medical records, education etc.

In regard to the concerns the congressional Republicans are now expressing, cracking down on the national deficit should be a priority and not dismissed. Just this past week President Obama announced that he has plans of cutting the national deficit significantly by 2013.  This will come about through a number of factors. Two worthy of mentioning now are the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq in 2010, and the expiriation of the Bush tax cuts in 2011. I, for one am concerned with the increasing amount of our debt that is now being owned by countries such as China, Japan, and oil-producing states. Our nation is addicted to debt- on both an individual and national level. The only time in American history in which there was no national debt was in 1835. A paradigmatic shift in the way the U.S. approaches national debt has been long overdue. As of February 25, 2009 the total national debt was 10.837 Trillion USD, or 65.5% of GDP- $37,851 per capita. Though, we have seen worse times, for example after WWII in 1946 the national deficit rose to and peaked at 122% of our GDP, President Obama states, “We can’t generate sustained growth without getting our deficits under control.”  For more pertaining to this lurking problem and the bleak future that awaits us lest we do enact a paradigm shift see the documentary that was released last year: I.O.U.S.A. the Movie.

I think it’s safe to oversimplify inorder to state that Republicans feel safer with the money in the hands of the wealthy (often times their campaign contributors) to do with what they deem fit- a continuance of the ‘trickle down’ effect; and Democrats would rather see some form of government administration and distribution of tax dollars, investment in government programs, and- although its become taboo to say- when necessary, redistribution.  That’s what excites me most about our President and the 111th Congress.  Look at item #4 in the above chart: “Protecting the Vulnerable.”

…the moral test of government is how that government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; those who are in the shadows of life; the sick, the needy and the handicapped. ~ Hubert Humphrey, 38th Vice President of the United States

A nation’s greatness is measured by how it treats its most vulnerable members. ~ Mahatma Gandhi

For all those born-again Christians, wealth distribution is a biblical concept.  Try reading Deuteronomy 15:1-18 for starters. It’s amazing how the Bible holds up the poor, the widows, the orphans, and the immigrants.  Perhaps, biblical teachings were not just used to form lofty theological concepts of the metaphysical, but were also used to inform one’s politics and social ethics, forming concepts for the physical. Helping the poor was paramount to the faith of ancient Israel and should be no different today for those of us that share in the Judeo-Christian heritage.  We need a healthy dose of Jubilee economics. As I see it, a $1,000-per-child tax credit for the working poor is a step closer to a just society.

Recently, the President made public a good first step to enact such an economy of Jubilee. His health care plan, which consists of a $636 Billion USD  ‘down payment’ over a 10-year period, will lead us closer to universal health care than we have ever been.  Right now, the U.S. is ranked 37th in health care by the World Health Organization.  Many say the political milieu is much different than 15 years ago when universal health care was proposed by the last democratic President, and with many of the previous members of opposition now on board, it could become a reality.  The time has come when not only the murderers and rapists of this country should be guaranteed health care, but also those in the dawn of their life, for those in its twilight, and for those that are in its shadows.

There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your brothers and toward the poor and needy in your land. ~ Deuteronomy 15:11

-MLW

A Call to Shut Down the School of the Assassins!

I would have to commend President Obama on his setting a timetable for the closing of Guantanamo’s Detention Facilities.   That’s a start.  But I, personally would also like to see a timetable set for termination of the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security and Cooperation (WHINSEC) at Ft. Benning, Georgia, to further our supposed message of being “the new ushers of peace” to the international community.

The U.S. has had a long history of meddling in the affairs of Latin America. I wish I could thewarondemocracy2uh0-768573elaborate, but I will not permit myself to do so here as the focus is limited.   This particular story begins when the States opened the Latin American Training Center in Panama in 1946- later renamed U.S. Army School of the Americas in 1963.  It was used to influence and train Latin American states and their militia during the cold war to combat communism and further the American agenda.  In 1984 it was relocated to Ft. Benning, Georgia in compliance with the Panama Canal Treaty. This transpired during the Reagan administration, the same time the U.S. was supporting a terrorist government and fueling a brutal civil war (even training boys as young as 12 to engage in combat) in El Salvador that claimed the lives of over 75,000 people and displaced over a quater of the country’s population as refugees (yes, the same administration that takes credit for the Iran-Contra affair that involved Nicaragua).

About 1,000 Latin American soldiers are hand selected and invited to be schooled in the tactics of sabotoge and carnage at WHINSEC every year.  More than 60,000 Latin American soldiers and generals have gone through the school (while in Panama and in Georgia), including many that were involved in the Salvadoran Civil War. It has also been involved in controversies concerning the use of tactics of torture.  The U.S. has trained (and often times silently supported) some of this hemisphere’s most vile and vicious dictators and violators of human rights. For example: Argentine dictator and initiator of the “Dirty War” that entailed the disappearance of more than 30,000 people, Leopoldo Galtieri was trained there; Manuel Noriego Noriega of Panama; among many others. Even some of Pinochet’s officers were trained there. The graduates of WHINSEC excel in suppression and oppression.

Who pays for this?  Why American tax payers of course. Recently there has been much talk concerning President Obama’s executive order in which he overturned the Mexico City Policy and Assistance for Voluntary Population Planning act that placed broad conditions on government grants.  Many people are complaining about U.S. tax dollars being spent (which non-governmental NGOs receive as grants) for furthering planned parenthood and the legalization of abortion both inside and outside of the U.S. borders, specifically because of the threat to life that it represents (although in most places legal abortion saves the lives of the women that would have had an abortion anyway, yet could have died under the knife in a black market operation had the safeguards of legislation not been in place).  But why are the same people not raising hell or at least questions about their tax dollars being used to train Latin Americans to exterminate people in mass? Especially if the crux of the issue is life.

democracy-200x200In 2004 Hugo Chavez withdrew all of Venezuela’s participation with the school and in 2006 Kitchner of Argentina followed suite.  Since then Costa Rica, Uraguay, and more recently Bolivia have decided WHINSEC is not the answer. Why are we not joining them?  What do we still stand to gain?

Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkin’s, during her sermon at the National Prayer Service, called President Obama and us to reason from our ethical centers.  Let us look deep within ourselves and find the voices of all those thousands and thousands of voices that have been muffled or silenced due to the operation of this school of death.

If you wish to use your voice to halt oppression and shut down the school of assassins, write to your congressman or woman.  SOA Watch is a non-violent organization that protests the existence of WHINSEC and has a very informative webpage and useful resources concerning steps that can be made in regards to legislative action.

Various legislative attempts have tried to shut down the school: in 2000, 2005, and 2007. In 2007, the legislation to cut funding for WHINSEC was barely shot down: 203 ayes, 214 noes. Let’s see what the 111th congress can do.

-MLW

Hosea 4:1-3

Update: Check out my new series on U.S.-Latin American Relations, that further addresses the issues that surround the School and American Foreign Policy.

U.S. Intervention Map

Let Us Listen

Obama in his first interview with an Arab television station (Al Arabiya, a 24-hour Arabic-language news channel based out of Dubai) yesterday, showed that he was serious about his campaign rhetoric concerning change.

President Obama told Al Arabiya.

“My job to the Muslim world is to communicate that the Americans are not your enemy.”

He seems to be following through with his bold statement in his inaugural address:

To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual interest and mutual respect. . .

Obama is serious about modeling a style of leadership that will pave the way for the States’ role of ushering in peace.  Perhaps the Obama Doctrine truly is a start of an “era of responsibility.” Though no location has been specified, President Obama has pledged to address the Muslim world from a Muslim capital sometime during the first 100 days of his presidency. In the same stride, kudos on Gitmo’s timetable! Forward we march!

Let us take example from Obama, and set aside childish things and learn better ways of reaching across the table.  Not everything can be chopped up cleanly into a strict dichotomy and classified as ‘forces of good and forces of evil.’ This is childish and only leads to isolationism.

The President has said in reference to the States’ role in the Middle East:

The United States will start by listening, not by dictating. . .

Paul Tillich can be quoted saying “The first duty of love is to listen.” A prophet long ago taught us that it is our mission to love our enemies.  It is fantastic that we are already taking the step of removing labels such as ‘enemy’, ‘war’, ‘evil’, etc. from dialogues to further a climate of understanding and to more readily demonstrate our capacity to love.  Let us mimic our leader and extend our hand on the micro-scale; let us sit down with our enemy neighbor without preconditions; let us listen.

-MLW

“He who has been stealing must steal no longer, but must work, doing something useful with his own hands, that he may have something to share with those in need.  Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.”

-Ephesians 4:28-29

Feeding the Wolves, Rebuilding Our Ruins

Yesterday I was joining the World as it exhaled, the mountains as they broke forth in singing, and the trees of the fields as they applauded, as if they had never exhaled, sung, or applauded before. This inauguration has been riddled with firsts. For example: the first African-American took the oath of the highest office in the land; the first openly gay and lesbian parade group participated in the inaugural parade; and this morning Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkins  was the first woman ever to deliver the sermon at the National Prayer Service.  Kudos to all the firsts that were experienced in the past few days! May they serve not only as new tidbits of history trivia, but to help bring down walls that have too often driven wedges in between us as a people, stifling our advancement as a society.

Today I’d like to focus on the first that was accomplished by Rev. Watkins and the fruits brownthat she brought with her.  In the United States, it wasn’t until 1853 that the Congregationalists ordained the first woman, Antoinette Brown, as a Christian Minister.  Since then it has been a long road traveled by women in the clergy.  Even today, many denominations condemn the ordination of the female sex. And still some, the participation of women all together in their services (To see how this developed, I recommend reading Samuel Terrien’s Till the Heart Sings: A Biblical Theology of Manhood and Womenhood).   Yet, sharonbioheadshotObama has recognized this battle and decided to give it credence, with the calling upon Rev. Dr. Sharon E. Watkins, the General Minister and President of the 700,000+ member Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), to deliver the sermon at the National Prayer Service.

The National Prayer Service is a tradition that dates back to the first President.  More recently, it pools together diverse religious leaders and representatives of many faiths to bestow upon the President and Vice-President prayers and blessings. It includes the reading of scriptures, singing of hymns, and a central message.  This year’s theme was “Tolerance, Unity, and Understanding.”  It was held at the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. and marked the conclusion of the inaugural events that began on Saturday.

To view a full list of the participants see the President’s Inaugural Committee Announcement.

I must say that I very much enjoyed Rev. Watkins’ message.  It is loaded. She takes us from Cherokee wisdom to Lady Liberty.  Yet rather than comment on it myself, I am providing links so that you, yourself might view it.

Part I

Part II

As it is stated on “Liberty Enlightening the World”:

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!” -Emma Lazarus

An abundant state still are we.  Let us not withdraw the torch, let us reach out to our fellow citizens and global neighbors, let us plant fig trees and rebuild our ruins.  Let us ‘reason from our ethical centers,’ feeding the wolf of love. . .

May we once again choose the fast that is worthy. Yes we can!

-MLW

“Is not this the fast that WE choose:
to loose the bonds of wickedness,
to undo the straps of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and to break every yoke?
Is it not to share OUR bread with the hungry
and bring the homeless poor into OUR houses;
when WE see the naked, to cover him,
and not to hide ourselves from your own flesh?
Then shall OUR light break forth like the dawn,
and OUR healing shall spring up speedily;
OUR righteousness shall go before US;
the glory of the LORD shall be OUR rear guard.
Then WE shall call, and the LORD will answer;
WE shall cry, and he will say, ‘Here I am.’
If WE take away the yoke from OUR midst,
the pointing of the finger, and speaking wickedness,
if WE pour yourself out for the hungry
and satisfy the desire of the afflicted,
then shall OUR light rise in the darkness
and OUR gloom be as the noonday.
And the LORD will guide US continually
and satisfy OUR desire in scorched places
and make OUR bones strong;
and WE shall be like a watered garden,
like a spring of water,
whose waters do not fail.
And OUR ancient ruins shall be rebuilt;
WE shall raise up the foundations of many generations;
WE shall be called the repairers of the breach,
the restorers of streets to dwell in.   -
Isaiah 58:6-12

Dreams Realized

Let this Martin Luther King Day be a day of immense reflection. Where would we as a people be without the prophet?  Tomorrow will be a grand culmination of many persons’ longings (see my post We Shall Overcome.) Yet there is much to do, still too many people groups crying out.  Let us not stop short of the finish.

The Dream goes on at The King Center

-MLW

This is what the Lord says: martin-luther-king_discurso-22e65
“Give justice to all people,
and do what is right,
because my salvation will come to you soon.
Soon everyone will know that I do what is right.
The person who obeys the law about the Sabbath
will be blessed,
and the person who does no evil
will be blessed.”
Foreigners who have joined the Lord should not say,
“The Lord will not accept me with his people.”
The eunuch should not say,
“Because I cannot have children, the Lord will not accept me.”
This is what the Lord says:
“The eunuchs should obey the law about the Sabbath
and do what I want
and keep my agreement.
If they do, I will make their names remembered
within my Temple and its walls.
It will be better for them than children.
I will give them a name that will last forever,
that will never be forgotten.
Foreigners will join the Lord
to worship him and love him,
to serve him,
to obey the law about the Sabbath,
and to keep my agreement.
I will bring these people to my holy mountain
and give them joy in my house of prayer.
The offerings and sacrifices
they place on my altar will please me,
because my Temple will be called
a house for prayer for people from all nations.”
The Lord God says—
he who gathers the Israelites that were forced to leave their country:
“I will bring together other people
to join those who are already gathered.” –
Isaiah 56:1-8

Signs of Growing Discontentment in a Failed State

Yesterday’s Shi’ite demonstration in Baghdad caught my attention due to the play on irony.  Therefore I decided to bring myself up to date concerning some of the numbers surrounding the Iraqi war.

saddam_topples_2

This is a photo taken April 9th, 2003 during the toppling of an effigy of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad during Operation Iraqi Freedom.

This photo depicts a demonstration similar to the one this Friday that drew nearly 20,000 congregants which hoisted an effigy of President Bush to the Afghanistanvery same place on the pedestal where the former effigy of Saddam was toppled by the U.S. military.  The protesters beat it with their shoes until it was dismantled and then set it aflame. This falls on the 5th anniversary of the huge anti-war demonstration and toppling of the Bush effigy in the UK. The irony involved in this recent demonstration is a telltale sign of the growing discontentment in the failed state of Iraq as well as the similar escalating sentiments felt world-wide.

  • IBC (Iraq Body Count) reports civilian deaths in Iraq relating to violence stemming from the onset of the war in 2003 to be approaching numbers upwards to 90,000.
  • Iraq Coalition Casuality Count totals 4,204 American military deaths to date (4,518 including non-American military).  This surpasses the 2,998 that were killed in the 9-11 attacks.

military

  • As of recent, the Baghdad cabinet wants most combat soldiers out of Iraq by mid-2009, and wants absolute no presence of an American military come 2011.  This stands in stark contrast to McCain’s proposed withdraw in 2013.  This falls more in line with Obama’s proposition (see his Blueprint for Change Iraq), which according to this very recent report the U.S. is currently heeding as it is now in agreement with the Baghdad cabinet.  Perhaps the difference in this issue, including various economic and social issues as well, played a key role in Obama winning by such a wide margin in the outcome of the presidential election.  The American people spoke and stated  that they were tired of Bush’s failed and broken foreign policies.
  • A war that the Pentagon first estimated at $50 Billion USD now has an outlook of surely reaching 1.2 Trillion and some are speculating even more, as does this Washington Post article by David Leonhardt. The article tells of Bush firing a dissenting White House economic adviser when he produced a more realistic estimate of $200 Billion for the total cost of the war.  How little that now sounds. . .
  • 1.2 Trillion USD could have gone a long way for increasing our security at home, financing the war in Afghanistan, college stipends, beefing up our health care system, and providing preventative measures against genocide in Darfur. Even the provision of universal pre-school could have been thrown into the mix. And lets not neglect the housing market. . . now the world is feeling the repercussions.
  • For a more in depth analysis and scholarly consensus of the total price tag of the war I suggest you read this article co-written by Linda Bilmes of Harvard University, and Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel laureate and former Clinton Administration adviser.
  • The CRS Report to Congress on October 15th, 2008 reported a total to date approved expenditure by Congress for the war at $864 Billion USD.  It definitely looks like we’re on track to those big numbers. .

The total costs of the war, including the budgetary,100306iraq
social and macroeconomic costs, are
likely to exceed $2 trillion. As large as these
costs are, an equally large set of costs have
been omitted. We have not included the costs
borne by other countries, either directly (as a
result of military expenditures) or indirectly
(as a result of the increase in the price of oil.)
Then there are the intangible costs – the cost
of our reduced capability to respond to national
security threats elsewhere in the world,
and the cost of rising anti-American sentiment
in Europe and the Middle East. Americans
have long taken pride in fighting for
human rights. But our credentials have been
badly tarnished by the Iraq war, leading to a
sharp decline in America’s “soft power.” On
issues from trade negotiations to global
warming to the international criminal justice
system, this decline will have a continuing
impact on the United States’ ability to have its
point of view prevail. -Bilmes & Stiglitziraqi_children21

  • Bilmes & Stiglitz earlier this year readjusted their calculations, attaching a 3 Trillion plus price tag to this thing we call war.

I would also have to add that the war has played a decimating affect on the psychological stability of the people of the region, especially plaguing children as can be determined by the photo.

In part, this post is deeply saddening, with signs of internal discontentment in Iraq on the rise and the realization of our surmounting debt to the world- both financially and morally- but in a way it is part celebratory as we count down the days of our lame-duck President and his imperialistic policies: 58 days and counting.  And as we look forward to a future with a horizon of hope: hope of energy dependence, a better international reputation, the restoration of little to some, as we strive to achieve greater world justice in the close of one dark political chapter and the opening of one that is promising Change.

Remember it’s not what’s real or tangible, but what is imaginable.

–MLW

Isaiah 5:7

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