Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Response to a fellow Green

My friend and fellow Green James O'Keefe recently posted a letter from Jeremy Cannon, explaining why he was voting green in this election. This is a passionate and well written letter. My response is as follows:

I have a couple of issues with this letter, well written and earnestly offered as it is.

First, as one of many people who volunteered for Ralph Nader in 2000 and worked as a staffer on the campaigns of 3 Greens running for state office,I understand how Jeremy feels. I agree that Democrats, even liberal ones, fall far short of our ideals.

However, I have to say that any similarities between McCain and Obama are superficial at best. I've heard this refrain before. It was wrong in 2000, and it's wrong now. If you think there is no difference between McCain and Obama, the Democrats and Republicans, you're simply not seeing the world as it is. Democrats are not as progressive as Greens, but they are very different from republicans.

As for your comment:
"I, no longer, have to wonder what will happen to the poor family that can't afford healthcare, the working mom that just can't make enough money, the gay couple ready to tie the knot, the brother in Iraq, the children who need to learn, the conversations I have in private, the planet I love to live on, the money I spend, the people I vote for, and the unchecked corporate fat cats that have squandered our future for their own gain."

I assure you, if you truly care about these issues, and I believe you do, John McCain's presence in the White House will be disastrous, far more than an Obama presidency. You DO have to worry about these issues. Voting Green doesn't give you a free pass. Until we Greens can build upon our successes at the local and to a lesser extent state level, we won't be able to be effective players on the National scene. Voting for someone who can't win may seem like a principled act, I know from experience that it certainly feels that way. But, in an election that is this important,that will likely be decided by razor thin margins and be marred by voting irregularities , every vote can make a difference.

Jeremy, I share your passion for Green politics and values.I understand how you feel. Many Greens I know are deeply conflicted about this election. I urge you to consider your choices carefully. I hope on November 5th we can talk about these issues without a Republican victory hanging over our heads.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Vote your hopes, not your fears on Tuesday

Shockingly, the (Lawrence) Eagle Tribune has endorsed John McCain, for President, citing the very real threat of terrorism and an increasingly hostile global village that the United States inhabits. The Eagle Tribune editorial states that the first role of a President is that of Commander-in Chief, a role that John McCain does appear to be uniquely well suited for. Eagle Tribune columnist Taylor Armerding in a similarly surprising twist, admonishes voters to vote against Obama to defend against the imposition of socialism on the rugged individuals who, while being less than 10 percent of the citizenry, apparently are the only ones who mater in the mythological laissez-faire libertarian paradise that Mr. Armerding believes once existed in America.

The choices in this election are stark despite what my Green Party brethren insist are the core similarities between Democrats and Republicans. While I do not regret campaigning for Ralph Nader in 2000 (nor do I accept blame for Al Gore’s defeat), We progressives could not have been more wrong about the real differences between Bush and Gore in 2000. I hope Greens and progressives will not be so blind to these contrasts on Tuesday. None of the issues Greens are concerned with will be well served by a protest vote, especially one that, if you are in New Hampshire or another swing state, may well help John McCain.

Voting for McCain/Palin will mean years of military overspending and no clear end to the War in Iraq, while Al-Qaeda, our mortal enemy, roams free in Afghanistan. With at least 2 likely openings on the U. S. Supreme court, far more than a woman’s right to reproductive freedom is at stake. Everything from Labor rights (the few we have left) to the governments regulatory authority over food and drugs, workplace safety, the environment and the financial industries will be threatened. With the very real chance that John McCain may succumb to any number of health problems during his first term, the very idea of a Sarah Palin presidency should frighten any truly patriotic citizen. Should Sarah Palin with her extreme right wing beliefs assume the presidency, she would likely be used as a stalking horse by the far right to advance a neo-conservative ideology that boarders on fascism.

John McCain is an honorable man who has served our nation with incredible bravery and honor. No one can doubt his patriotism and his good intent. Unfortunately John McCain simply is not the man to be our next president.

Barack Obama is that man and his platform of change is desperately needed in America. If you are concerned about the environment, access to health care for all citizens, reproductive choice, social justice, education reform, meaningful economic opportunity, ending the senseless war in Iraq and restoring America’s greatness and leadership on the global stage, Barack Obama deserves your vote. America needs your vote for Barack.

The Eagle Tribune is wrong on an important point; the most important job of the president is to lead. The greatest need this country has is to rebuild its civic culture, to reclaim our role as the greatest democracy. We need to grow what Ralph Nader called a “deep, deliberative democracy” yet again. America’s greatest challenges come not from an enemy outside out boarders. but our own complacency and atrophied civic institutions. We need to create a 21st century “New Deal” liberalism and restore genuine prosperity to ALL Americans, not just the top 10 percent that Taylor Armerding seems so concerned with.

I hope you will join me, Michelle and my daughter Desiree (voting in her first election) in supporting Barack Obama on Tuesday.

P. S. Please….vote NO on Question 1 and YES on Questions 2 & 3.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Carl Sagan's "Baloney Detection Kit"

For future reference. Reposted from Skeptic Magazine online as quoted from "A Demon Haunted World"



HomeSkepticism

October, 2002


In his book, "The Demon-Haunted World", Carl Sagan provides tools for skeptical thinking. This excellent list is a strong tool to weed out the bad seeds in science.

Quoting ad verbatim:

Tools

  • Wherever possible there must be independent confirmation of the "facts".

  • Encourage substantive debate on the evidence by knowledgeable proponents of all points of view.

  • Arguments from authority carry little weight - "authorities" have made mistakes in the past.
    They will do so again in the future. Perhaps a better way to say it is that in science there are no authorities; at most, there are experts.

  • Spin more than one hypothesis.
    If there's something to be explained, think of all the different ways in which it could be explained. Then think of tests by which you might systematically disprove each of the alternatives. What survives, the hypothesis that resists disproof in this Darwinian selection among "multiple working hypotheses," has a much better chance of being the right answer than if you have simply run the with first idea that caught your fancy.

  • Try not to get overly attached to a hypothesis just because it's yours.
    It's only a way station in the pursuit of knowledge. Ask yourself why you like the idea. Compare it fairly with the alternatives. See if you can find reasons for rejecting it. If you don't, others will.

  • Quantify.
    If whatever it is you're explaining has some measure, some numerical quantity attached to it, you'll be much better able to discriminate among competing hypotheses. What is vague and qualitative is open to many explanations. Of course there are thruths to be sought in the many qualitative issues we are obliged to confront, but finding them is more challenging.

  • If there's a chain of argument,everylink in the chain must work (including the premise) - not just most of them.

  • Occam's Razor.
    This convenient rule-of-thumb urges us when faced with two hypotheses that explain the data equally well to choose the simpler.

  • Always ask whether the hypothesis can be, at least in principle, falsified.
    Propositions that are untestable, unfalsifiable are not worth much. Consider the grand idea that our Universe and everything in it is just an elementary particle - an electron, say - in a much bigger Cosmos. But if we can never acquire information from outside our Universe, is not the idea incapable of disproof? You must be able to check assertions out. Inveterate skeptics must be given the chance to follow your reasoning, to duplicate your experiments and see if they get the same result.

Fallacies


Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Dear Ben Stein,

Dear Ben Stein,

I had the misfortune of seeing your "documentary" Expelled on opening day at the Leow's theater in Methuen, MA. Let me state from the outset that your film was one of the worst I've ever sat through. The constant cutting from interview segments to snippets of the holocaust, the construction of the Berlin Wall, 1950's educational film footage, science fiction movies etc. was not just annoying, it was childish. I expect such production techniques from a Saturday morning children's program, not a documentary claiming to take on the corrupt scientific establishment.

The factual errors in your film are many. They go to the very heart of your argument and are well documented. This isn't a matter of conflicting opinion, you are lying to people. Enough has been said about Expelled already, I won't belabor the point by reciting the myriad of falsehoods you foist on an American movie-going public that is, sadly, scientifically illiterate. The most damning aspect of your film is also the most absurd, the belief that acceptance of the scientific truth of evolution lead to the rise of fascism and the holocaust. Implicit in all of this of course is that, while you claim the conflict between "Darwinism" and "Intelligent Design" is purely about science, you make the case throughout the film that evolution is a denial of God, and pure empirical science a rejection of religion. Sadly, this isn't an original argument. Dinesh D'souza constantly makes this "Atheism leads Nazi's, Communism etc."argument, though admittedly in a more eloquent fashion. I can think of no assertion more intellectually or morally bankrupt.

What more can I say Mr. Stein? You lie, fabricate, misquote and mislead the viewer throughout your film. You deceived many of the credible scientists appearing in your film in order to secure their interviews. You stole sophisticated animation depicting cell biology. You used at least 2 pieces of copyrighted music for your film without permission.You staged the speaking event at the opening of your film and the incident where you were "thrown out" of the Smithsonian. I expected a documentary, I got science fiction. The Blair Witch Project was a more honest (and better made) film than Expelled.

I would ask for a refund,but given your demonstrated dishonesty, you'd probably claim you didn't make the film.

Friday, April 18, 2008

I can't believe I paid money to see that...

OK...so I saw Expelled today. I'm still trying to digest it. I don't think I've ever been so offended by a movie before. I'm not ready to write a critique yet but suffice it to say that Expelled is the biggest piece of shit I've ever had to sit through. More later ,but trust me, It's worse that I thought it would be.

Monday, April 14, 2008

FAUX weather, just as bad as FAUX news.

Just when you thought it was safe to watch the weather report on your LOCAL station, it becomes clear that the "foxifacation" of news even extends to the weather. Check out Kevin Lemanowicz's blog on MyFoxBoston. Now, as we all know, weather and climate are two very different things. When meteorologists start opining on climatology, hold on to your hats. Lets hit just a couple of the flaws in poor Kevin's argument. First, Kevin seems to be unsure if a. climate change is happening and b. if human activity is causing it. Well it's been fairly well established that a. the climate is changing in ways unprecedented during the current geological age and that b. human generated Green House Gases are the cause. Kevin would do well to visit our friends at Real Climate or peruse the IPCC 4th assessment report.

Kevin also seems in a tizzy about the "disrespect"sic of Dr. Bill Gray, a respected hurricane forecaster who seems not to mind being in over his head on climate change. Dr.Gray likes to snipe from the stands apparently and in my pinion, got exactly what he deserved. Dr.Gray is no longer content with hurricane forecasting and likes to dabble in global warming denial. Dr.Gray is free, as is any other scientists in the contrarian camp, to submit his ideas to peer reviewed journals. He, like Richard Lindzen and Roy Spencer, are free to submit their earth shattering research proving global warming to be a sham. The only problem is, they don't.

The arguments over climate change and hurricane activity are pretty heated and this seems to be one of the areas where there is genuine debate and disagreement. Does this debate have anything to do with the basic, factual premise that the earth is warming because of our GHG emissions? In a word, no.

As for arguments that climate models are inadequate, this article on realclimate.org seems to address that fallacy. The fact is,the more research we do, the clearer it becomes that climate models are pretty accurate.

Kevin Lemanowicz's real crime here isn't that he has an opinion, or even a poorly informed one. The problem is that he's a respected public figure with scientific credentials who is misleading the public. By providing only his opinion, and short video snippet from a conference without explaining the context or providing an evenhanded treatment of this complex subject, Mr Lemanowicz mislead the public and gave then a poorly written, 4th grade level commentary. At a minimum, Mr Lemanowicz should have provided a link to some objective, primary source material (as I have here).

Sunday, April 13, 2008

"Expelled" flunks out.

We will be hearing quite a bit about Ben Stein's new "documentary", Expelled this week. The controversial film opens on April 18th at selected theaters nationwide and, lucky us, one of those selected theaters is the Loews theater at the Loop in Methuen.

Now...I am loathe to talk about a film I haven't seen and given the thrashing I gave many global warming deniers who savaged An Inconvenient Truth without seeing it, I think I'm obliged to see the film before offering a critique. I hate the idea of forking over hard earned money for a propaganda piece and I'm hoping some intrepid soul will "hook me up" with a bootleg. That being said, there are resources aplenty from people in the scientific community who have seen advanced copies and the most damning reviews come from the staff at one of America's most esteemed magazines, Scientific American (S.A. is not a peer reviewed science journal but it's editors, writers and contributers are scientists and science journalists and S.A. is very highly regarded by the scientific community). The S.A. website has an entire section devoted to the film. Most damning, and revealing, is a complete, unedited discussion (mp3 format) of the film between the editorial staff and Expelled associate producer, Mark Mathis.

Since I haven't seen the film yet I won't offer any commentary on it's merits, or lack thereof. I promise a review will be forthcoming. I do want to make one point. The manufactured controversy over evolution vs creationism/intelligent design is getting far more traction that is should. If there were anything of merit to ID, any empirical evidence, anything that could be seen or observed in nature, anything that could be tested or quantified, anything you could model, ID would be given very serious attention by scientists and laypersons alike. The problem here is that ID and creationism (they really are the same thing) aren't scientific concepts. ID isn't a theory or a hypothesis, it's not supported by evidence, it doesn't adequately explain anything we observe in nature. The appearance of design isn't evidence of design. ID is merely a scientific sounding way to sneak GOD into the classroom.

One thing is clear, the theory of evolution is the only rational, scientific explanation for the rise and speciation of life on earth. Every living thing on earth, from microbes in soil to human beings, descended from simple, single celled organisms, growing in primordial ooze over 2 billion years ago. As Carl Sagan said, "extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof". To claim that the universe and specifically (and especially) man, must have been designed, is an extraordinary claim, one that is not supported by anything other than human conceit and fear.

I'll have more, much more, once I've seen the film.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

More on the Environmental Bond Bill

I just received this regarding the Bond Bill from another Senior Fellow at ELP:


HI, Tennis -

Thanks for posting this! As one of the organizers of the Rally I
can only add that if 5 people contact their legislator on an
environmental issue, it's a landslide! Your call WILL make a
difference. To find out who your state Representative and
Senator are, go to
http://www.wheredoivotema.com/bal/myelectioninfo.php and click
on "Who are my Elected Officials".

Bernie McHugh, Coordinator
Mass. Land Trust Coalition
www.MassLand.org

The Open Space Bond Bill

One of my favorite scenes from the West Wing is when president Bartlet (played brilliantly by Martin Sheen) is running for reelection and is debating his Republican opponent, a conservative, and not too bright Governor (sound familiar?). During a response to a question about taxes and government spending, the republican rails against, of course, big government. President Bartlet, during his rebuttal, rattled off the impressive list of government spending and programs that help the republicans home state of Florida (it's a lot of money). President Bartlet looks at Governor Ritchie and says, "I have just one question...Can we have it back, please?"

Regardless of your views on what the proper role of government is, or how "the taxpayer's money" should be spent, there is no arguing that government spending, when its done well, can do a lot of good. Arguably, that spending is best done at the state and local level, where government can be most effective and democratically accountable. Here in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, much of our considerable spending on protecting and conserving the environment is tied to the Environmental Bond Bill (H4561). Issued every 5 years, the bond bill authorizes the funding for a host of environmental capital spending above the day to day operational spending by state agencies, much of it critically important to us here in the city of Lawrence.

The rebuilding and expansion of the Wall Experimental Station on Shattuck St. is dependent on funding from the current bond bill. The Urban Self Help program has provided nearly $2 million since 2005, those funds helped the city and local non-profits leverage over $3 million from other non-state funding sources to help Lawrence construct 2 new parks along the Spicket River and refurbish another existing park. The design and planning of the Spicket river Greenway was funded by the state Riverways Program. The Gencorp/Gateway brownfields project, the first brownfields revitalization in the U.S., would not have been possible without state funding. Even our local farmers market benefits from state Bond Bill funds. Brox Farm in Dracut, was purchased with help from the state APR Program.

With a third new park planned for the former Covanta Incinerator site on the Spicket River, planned renovations to the Haden Schofield Playstead "in the pipeline" as well as the planned for river walk on the Merrimack River a host of improvements to existing parks and playgrounds throughout the city, the importance of bond bill funds for the Urban Self Help program is obvious.

Statewide, over the next 5 years, the Bond Bill will fund recreation and parks ($630 million), land conservation ($171 million), agriculture and forestry protection ($102 million), wildlife and fisheries programs ($119 million), coastal and marine resource protection ($102 million), water quality and drinking water supply ($183 million), and pollution reduction and clean up($50 million). Over $1.6 Billion dollars of investment critical to the entire commonwealth, especially here in Lawrence.

Passage of the Environmental Bond Bill is a major focus of the environmental community and of many cities and towns throughout Massachusetts. I will join many members of conservation commissions at a rally to support the bond bill tomorrow at the State House in Boston. Conservation Commissioners, environmental activists, local government officials and non-profits will be lobbying our representatives and state senators to support passage of the bill. If you agree that this spending is important and beneficial, please call your state senator and representative, express your support for the bond bill (H4561) and ask them to vote in favor of it's passage.

Friday, April 4, 2008

FAUX NEWS

"Real news is the news we need to have to remain free", Bill Moyers

Nobody on Hannity and Colmes batted an eye or saw the sick irony in Ann Coulter's chortling mockery of suspended Air America radio host Randi Rhodes for her catty and mildly offensive commentary referring to Geraldine Ferraro as a whore. Ann Coulter, the xenophobic, homophobic, quasi-fascist, elitist pig who called John Edwards a "faggot" (and cried censorship when she was rightly called out for it) sat there heaping scorn without anyone mentioning the immeasurable amount of vile, offensive, fear mongering, insulting filth that's poured out of the gaping maw of that wretched, anorexic harpie. The only thing to counter the orgy of Randi-bashing was Alan Colmes, the most impotent and ineffectual token liberal ever employed by right wing media.

THIS is insightful commentary during the most important election of my lifetime? THIS is what Fox News thinks is important? THIS is real news?

Fox News represents the low point in the already shallow gene pool of cable TV news programing. With the glowing exception of C-SPAN, cable offers nothing that can compete with any of the news and public affairs programming on public broadcasting. ( Since C-SPAN is operated as a non profit, independent network funded by cable and satellite networks and subscriber user fees, it has been argued that CSPAN is a form of public broadcasting, or at least cable TV's version of it) Does anyone really believe that CNN, MSNBC or Fox offers programming comparable to Bill Moyers Journal, McNiel-Leher news hour, Frontline, Washington Week, NOW? Is there ANY program on for-profit broadcast radio comparable to anything you'll hear on NPR, PRI or Pacifica Radio? (for that matter, is Bravo or A&E comparable to Masterpiece Theater or Live From the Met, is the Discovery Channel really better than NOVA or Nature ? )

During this election, at a time when the very concept of reason is under assault, when so many of our fellow citizens don't understand what it really means to be an American, we are in desperate need of what Ralph Nader called a deep, deliberative democracy.

Is such a need well served by the offerings of the cable news trinity?

Are we citizens getting REAL news?


Thursday, April 3, 2008

Lies Lies Lies, Yeah...

The old saying goes, "Tell a lie often enough and it becomes the truth". As we have seen over the past 7 years of creeping crypto-fascism, that old saying is true. There are few examples of this more obvious than the misinformation campaign being waged against the harsh reality of Global Climate Change.

Recent commentary from media sources (Lawrence Eagle Tribune, Michael Graham on WTKK FM, assorted websites affiliated with townhall.com) would have us believe that global warming/climate change either: a. stopped happening 10 years ago and is being replaced with global "cooling" or, b. isn't really happening and is all due to mathematical errors by scaremongering scientists and Al Gore. The post from "The Natural Truth", a blog by Michael Graham illustrates this problem|(I hate to give Graham a plug, he really is a nit-whit):

" The verdict on catastrophic man made climate change is still out, but the one thing we know for sure: Global warming kooks have no interest in facts. Point out the fact that the earth hasn't warmed at all since 1998--they don't care. Point out the fact that all four international temperature monitoring sources tracked a record DROP in temperatures last year--they don't care. Point out that there are record amounts of ice in the Antarctic and record numbers of happy, health polar bears--they don't care. And on and on. The facts, by the way, aren't hard to find. This news story, for example, is easy to read and understand and contains almost no speculation of any kind. Just the facts about the latest trends in our actual weather:
"No, actually, there has been cooling, if you take 1998 as your point of reference. If you take 2002 as your point of reference, then temperatures have plateaued. This is certainly not what you'd expect if carbon dioxide is driving temperature because carbon dioxide levels have been increasing but temperatures have actually been coming down over the last 10 years."
Be sure to read the part about the information we're now gathering from a new NASA satellite tracking water temperatures. It's all "wrong," if you're Al Gore. Then again, Al Gore has no use for such information. He's too busy predicting with certainty what our weather will be like 200 years from now to pay any attention to the fact that he's wrong about the climate right now."

and:

"As I've already shared with you on this blog, NASA has updated its figures on global temperatures, correcting previous errors. The warmest year on record is 1934. Five of the 10 warmest years were before 1954. And temperatures have been flat since 1998, despite ever-increasing levels of carbon in the atmosphere. In fact, the biggest 12-month drop in temperatures ever recorded is happening right now."

So, What's wrong?

All of it...every point is either an outright fabrication or a grotesque intentional misrepresentation of the facts. Let's take this one step at a time.

  • NASA has updated its figures, the rankings are all wrong.
The truth is that NASA made corrections to U.S. TEMPERATURE readings to account for an error in combining different data sources. The adjustments were on the order of hundredths of a degree, changing the U.S. RANKINGS slightly but having NO IMPACT ON GLOBAL TEMPERATURE DATA.

  • Global warming stopped in 1998, temperatures have remained flat since 1998.
The truth is that short term trends are meaningless. You can pick any point in the temperature record and find a 2 to 5 year trend to suit your need. That's called weather, not climate. Moreover, Global warming doesn't require, nor do any climate models predict, constant year round, global warming year after year with every year hotter than the last. This reflects an adolescent view of science and the climate. A graph illustrating this point from NASA GISS data brings the data into better perspective|:


As anyone can see, the long term climate trend is going in one direction. The official assessment from NASA's Goddard Institute sums this up nicely( it's a little long but it illustrates the difference between an ideological viewpoint and a scientific one):

"The year 2007 tied for second warmest in the period of instrumental data, behind the record warmth of 2005, in the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) analysis. 2007 tied 1998, which had leapt a remarkable 0.2°C above the prior record with the help of the "El Niño of the century". The unusual warmth in 2007 is noteworthy because it occurs at a time when solar irradiance is at a minimum and the equatorial Pacific Ocean is in the cool phase of its natural El Niño-La Niña cycle. ....The cooler than normal equatorial region just to the west of South America is a reflection of the ongoing La Niña phase of a phenomenon dubbed the Southern Oscillation. In the La Niña phase of the El Niño-La Niña cycle the equatorial winds in the Pacific Ocean blow with stronger than average force from the east, driving warm surface waters toward the Western Pacific. This induces upwelling of cold deep water near Peru, which then spreads westward along the equator....The Southern Oscillation and the solar cycle have significant effects on year-to-year global temperature change. Because both of these natural effects were in their cool phases in 2007, the unusual warmth of 2007 is all the more notable. It is apparent that there is no letup in the steep global warming trend of the past 30 years (see 5-year mean curve in Figure 1a)."Global warming stopped in 1998," has become a recent mantra of those who wish to deny the reality of human-caused global warming. The continued rapid increase of the five-year running mean temperature exposes this assertion as nonsense. In reality, global temperature jumped two standard deviations above the trend line in 1998 because the "El Niño of the century" coincided with the calendar year, but there has been no lessening of the underlying warming trend.|"

  • Global cooling has started, the current cooling trend is the largest 12 month drop in temperatures in recorded history.
The global cooling idea has already been partially addressed, it's the difference between climate and weather. There will always be short term fluctuations in weather, this is the "noise" in the data that surrounds the "signal" of climate. The current cooling is caused by a combination of la Ninia with a naturally occurring low point in the cycle of solar radiance. This was predicted a year ago. The assertion that the recent drop in mean temperatures is somehow unprecedented or record setting, is simply false.

Once people abandon reason, turn away from primary sources, ignore science and search for news that comports to their ideology(and comforts them from the harsh reality), they can be spoon fed vast amounts of bullshit. Whether the issue is climate change, the decision to go to war, economic policy or education, America has embraced this bankrupt, quasi-religious dynamic of comfortable self-delusion. If we, as a people, cannot return to the enlightenment principles of reason, honest and open dialogue and a search for objective truth...the future of our nation is in grave danger...a danger that no election can save us from.


Interested in more info? Go to: www.realclimate.org a site run by climatologists at NASA.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Stop the madness!

The saga of Barack Obama, Jeremiah Wright and the nonstop drumbeat of negativity coming from right-wing media (especially our local wing-nuts on WTKK) is threatening to swift-boat the Obama campaign.

You don’t have to agree or disagree with anything Rev Jeremiah Wright said, or Barack Obama’s membership in his church. The question people should ask is why any candidate for public office should be held accountable for their private religious beliefs or for every statement their pastor, rabbi or minister makes. I find some of Rev Wright’s comments offensive, others not so. I am more concerned with Obama’s PUBLIC life, his public statements, what he says and does as a public official. Until recently, there has been an assumed line separating an elected officials personal religious beliefs and their public actions. I don’t care if someone is a Christian, Jew, Muslim, Buddhist or atheist. I only care that in doing the peoples business they are secular, rational and act in the public interest.

If there is a god, I’m fairly sure that he/she/it is something far beyond our comprehension. If there is a god (and I’m open minded, though skeptical on the subject), I’m also fairly certain that he/she/it does not bless or damn any nation or take sides in the endless, senseless slaughter we insists on visiting on each other. The constant chatter about what sect is really following “gods law”, or is the true faith, or knows what rules the supreme being of the universe wants us to follow or how to get to heaven strikes me as, in all honestly, absurd. I view the reassurances of candidates that they are people of faith as trivial and insulting as should any rational person. Having faith and going to church have nothing to do with ones ability to serve the public interest. Some of the most moral and decent people I know are atheists, some of the most amoral and vile people I know are devout, church going Christians.

That being said, it is a dangerous road to start on when we scrutinize a candidates faith, their houses of worship and their spiritual leaders. Who decides what the right religion is, or the right church, or what sermons are acceptable? Where is the line drawn? Should public officials feel compelled to walk out of church whenever a minister says something that some special interest group may be offended by? This whole manufactured controversy is absurd. What issues aren’t we talking about while wasting time on this witch hunt? Shame on every pundit, reporter, editor and commentator who helped carry on this farce.

America faces serious challenges, this is the most important election in my life time. We need to get back to looking at the people who are actually running for office and discuss issues relevant to running the country.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Thoughts on Barack Obama and manufactured controversies.

I recently posted some lengthy comments on the Barack Obama/Rev Wright controversy on the (Lawrence) Eagle Tribune blog the day after his now famous speech on race: http://blogs.eagletribune.com/soapbox/2008/03/18/obamas-clintonian-triangulation/#comments

Since this is my first "official" blog, I thought this would be a good place to start:

Barack Obama delivered one of the best political speeches I’ve ever seen, on a topic that rarely gets more than lip service by most politicians. The last time I heard a presidential candidate speak coherently about race in America was when Bill Bradley talked about white skin privilege in the 2000 race.

The unpleasant truth is that we’ve never had an honest conversation about race and class in America or reconciled with the darkest moments of our past. Given how our nation is becoming more diverse (that means less white), its a fair question to ask how we can move forward as a nation until we’ve excavated some of these issues and looked honestly at them. Race and class are unpleasant issues to talk about and many people are uncomfortable with the idea but talk about them we must. After last night, I’m convinced that the only person who can lead that national conversation is Barack Obama. Hillary Clinton can’t do it and I doubt John McCain even views this as an important issue.

The story of America isn’t just the mythology we’re spoon fed in grade school or the (slightly) deeper understanding we gain from the all-too-superficial lessons of high school or the polemic “peoples history” many of us learn in college. America’s story is embodied in the ever present tension between what we SAY America stands for and what we actually do, the tension between the PROMISE of America and the reality of everyday life for most Americans. What I saw last night was, finally, a politician who doesn’t just understand that, but can speak to those truths with clarity and eloquence. For the first time in my adult life, I have heard a candidate who can win, who doesn’t talk down to me or spew fluffy patriotism. True patriots don’t just love their country, they are loyal to what their country is supposed to stand for. Someone once said a patriot must always be ready to defend their country against their government.

We ask for a president who will stand up for the essential goodness of America and Americans. How can anyone unwilling to honestly see our faults and admit our wrongs claim essential goodness? Can a president who ignores, justifies or trivializes our greatest wrongs, now or in the past, be taken seriously? How can eloquent, passionate praise of America be seen as anything but empty rhetoric if they are mouthed by a president who does not deal honestly and forthrightly with the darker side of our national nature?

America is not perfect.We have sins to atone for and wrongs to make right. All of the greatness we embody, all of the good we do, all of the evil we have stood against, cannot pay off the innocents we’ve killed, the thugs we have aided or the injustices we turn a blind eye to in our own backyard. That our good far outweighs our bad, that we’ve done the right thing more often than not, doesn’t absolve us, as a nation or a people, of our collective obligation to take responsibility for ALL that we do, and do not do, both good and bad.

Only a man like Barack Obama, a true patriot, who knows well, our shortcomings and our sins yet still loves America dearly, can do that.