Friday, February 29, 2008

Myth 6 - Immigrants Send Most of the Money They Earn Out of the Country

  1. Myth
    1. 90% of immigrant wages are spent in-country.
  1. Part of the Global Economy
    1. 60% of Latin American immigrants send about 10% of their income home. This represents about 50-80% of the household income for the recipients.
    2. Because of the complexity of the global economy, it is hard to figure out exactly who benefits from the wages sent out of country. Some of what is spent in the home country comes back in the form of low-cost imported goods. Some of it is spent on goods imported to the home country from the U.S. Both scenarios benefit the U.S. economy.
    3. Remittance money is more efficient than foreign aid.

Myth 5 - Immigrants are a Drain on the Economy

  1. The myth
    1. Immigrants do not consume more federal services than they pay in taxes.
    2. Immigrants, being prime working age and ineligible for many public services, tend to contribute more than they use.
    3. The services that they do tap into are local ones (schools, transporation, ER).
    4. Undocumented immigrants are less likely to use services for fear they will be found and deported.
  1. Food Stamps
    1. The only public service that immigrants use at higher rates than natives is food stamps, not for them (they are not eligible), but for their U.S. born children, who are citizens.
  1. Successive Generations
    1. One study shows that undocumented workers pay 75-80% of the state and local services they use in state and local taxes. The primary reason they don't cover all is because their very low wages results in low income tax withholding.
    2. Each generation of legal immigrant pays more taxes so that by the second generation, the immigrant is paying more in taxes than they are using. Within 15 years, they have not only paid their own services, but paid for all that new immigrants use.
    3. If an immigrant worker works their prime years in the U.S., then returns back to their home country, as is their usual goal, then the home country bears the real burden of their care as they age…the U.S. got all the benefit of their labor with very little of the burden of care in the later years.
  1. Discrimination
    1. Because of their status, undocumented worker wages remain low no matter how long they stay, whereas documented immigrants have been able to improve their income each year they remain. These low wages guarantee a continued secondary market of cheap labor for businesses.

Myth 4 - Immigrants Don't Pay Taxes

  1. Yes they do
    1. All immigrants, regardless of status, pay sales tax, real-estate tax, gas tax, etc.
    2. Some immigrants working in the informal labor market get paid "under the table" and don't have fed/state income tax withheld, but so do many non-immigrant workers (nannys, housecleaners, the self-employed).
  1. Informal/Secondary market
    1. Businesses, through elaborate systems of subcontracting, have increasingly moved jobs to the informal market (especially textile manufacturing) in order to produce cheaper goods.
  1. Formal/Primary market
    1. Many immigrants, including "undocumented" ones work in the formal market and pay income tax like everyone else. They do so by presenting false SSN #s to employers. Social Security Admin estimates 75% of undocumented workers do this. So 75% of "undocumented" immigrants are paying taxes just like everyone else. Money taken via false SSN#s is kept and lumped into a single bucket.
    2. These payers are not entitled to hardly any direct public benefits like social security or unemployment benefits that their taxes pay for .
    3. "illegal imigrant workers…are providing the system with a subsidy of as much as $7 billion a year" (38).

Myth 3 - Unions Oppose Immigration Because It Harms the Working Class

  1. Goals of Unions
    1. The goals of unions like AFL-CIO were not to improve conditions for all the working class (like increased minimum wage, etc.), but instead to improve conditions only for union members through improved private contracts with employers.
    2. This created an "elite" working class that actually depended on the dual-labor market that made cheap products for union members to buy.
    3. Further, immigrants working in the unregulated secondary market were non-union members, so most actions that improved their conditions "hurt" the greater benefits enjoyed by union members.
  1. Racism in unions
    1. While some unions in the early days did promote improved conditions for all, the ones that prevailed were racist.
    2. AFL Samuel Gompers, "caucasians…are not going to let their standard of living be destroyed by negroes, Chinamen, Japs, or any others" (31). These groups were "semi-savages" that must be kept out of our country.
  1. Now Support Immigrants
    1. Starting in 1993, because of race changes in the 60s and restructuring of labor since the 70s, AFL-CIO started reaching out to immigrant workers as a means of survival, stating "immigrants are not the cause of our nations problems" (35). These unions began focusing on labor reform policies that helped all workers, including immigrants.

Myth 2 - Immigrants Compete With Low-Skilled Workers and Drive Down Wages

  1. Wages have gone down since the 70s because of increasing economic inequality: increasing inequality created demand for immigrant workers and spurred immigration. Businesses oppose regulations that give workers rights in order to keep wages low
  2. Racism contributes to inequality and reluctance for governments to give immigrants more rights
  3. Immigrant workers
    1. Immigrant workers have few rights and are willing to work long hours for low wages under poor conditions because:
      1. many immigrants are working temporarily to save money to go back to their home country
      2. Some immigrants who are working long hours for low wages are still better off than in their home country
      3. Some immigrants plant roots and bring their families over and establish lives here. As they do, they are less willing to work under poor conditions and they demand rights.
    1. Government regulations continue to exploit a dual-labor market, a "primary" market that is regulated (safety, wages, hours, overtime, unions) and a "secondary" market that is unregulated. Businesses like it this way because it keeps wages low, products cheap and profits high. This is especially true now in the services industries (housecleaning, etc.). Racism and profits keeps this secondary market alive.
  1. Changing regulations
    1. Decisions and policies by the US government is the primary factor that determines wage levels and global and local inequalities have allowed economies to sustain dual-labor markets.
    2. Over the years, laws have been changed so that immigrant workers who have been here legally for decades were suddenly illegal with no laws available to make them legal.

Myth 1 - Immigrants Take American Jobs

  1. Two Fallacies
    1. There are no "American " jobs. Nearly all industries are global now. Impacts to American Jobs are based on global economic shifts, not immigration.
    2. Immigrants don't reduce the number of jobs available.
      1. Number of jobs is not finite--it is elastic with population.
      2. By being here, immigrants create new jobs simply by living and consuming resources
      3. Immigration has shown to have no influence on the historical unemployment rate
      4. Changes to the number of available jobs that immigrants perform are due to global factors unrelated to the number of immigrants because those industries are global, not local.
  1. Exploitation
    1. Businesses will exploit people to keep wages low.
    2. So businesses move industries out of the country. (Of course, this is not the fault of immigrants).
    3. Government creates programs like Operation Bootstrap that legalized exploitation of workers in other countries like Puerto Rico.

Immigration


I've been reading They Take Our Jobs! by Aviva Chomsky. The next few posts are my notes from the first 6 chapters.

Beannacht



On the day when
the weight deadens
on your shoulders
and you stumble,
may the clay dance
to balance you.
And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colours,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.
When the canvas frays
in the currach of thought
and a stain of ocean
blackens beneath you,
may there come across the waters
a path of yellow moonlight
to bring you safely home.
May the nourishment of the earth be yours,
may the clarity of light be yours,
may the fluency of the ocean be yours,
may the protection of the ancestors be yours.
And so may a slow
wind work these words
of love around you,
an invisible cloak
to mind your life.

~ John O'Donohue ~

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Mexican Riviera - Day 3 - 2nd Sea Day

Had breakfast at the Blue Lagoon, a 50s-style small restaurant shoved into a long corridor on Deck 12. Good food though. Strange though--they serve baked beans for breakfast. What's that about?! Anyway, it was much better than eating at the overcrowded buffet. Had french toast and sausage.

Had coffee afterwards on our balcony, while doing that, we saw several dolphins next to the ship. 3 came out of the water at the same time. Exciting! Couldn't get a picture though, it just happens too fast. Walked around the ship with the rest of the family on the promenade deck. Aftewards, bought some pictures of us from dinner last night and bought a pair of sunglasses for cheap at the Galeria shops. Had a brat for lunch at the pool with the rest of the family and caught up on journaling.

In the evening, Captain announced that he was diverting to Puerto Vallarta because of a critically sick passenger and no helicopter was available. Arrived at about 7L30. No one was able to get off the ship. Took pics of the skyline (below). Went to see the late show -- a review of Andrew Lloyd Webber songs. Liked Evita and the Jesus Christ Superstar numbers.

Mexican Riviera - Day 2 - Sea Day



Woke up early and sat in our balcony enjoying the wonderful weather. The picture is of Tony taken from our balcony look at him on his balcony. Very nice morning with a bit of a chilly breeze from time-to-time. Had lunch at the pool and read a book.

In the afternoon, Dean and I attended a lecture on Mexican history and the conquest of Cortez. Information was intersting, but the presenter (a former ambassador to Mexico) was very boring. He has another lecture scheduled for tomorrow, but I won't bother, he's just not a good speaker. He may as well have been giving financial information instead of telling a story of conquest, gold, war, etc.

Dinner at the Aqua Restaurant. They serve 5-course meals, delicious and perfectly portioned (by which I mean, small courses, not huge like most restaurants). Had skirt steak yesterday and today spaghetti carbonara for my entree. Dessert was a chocolate mousse with raspberry coulis. Yummy!

The evening show was a comedian who also juggled. It was alright, but not great. After the show, I was really beat, so I just went to bed and zonked out for the rest of the night.

Nancy Pelosi sends letters

This one's a little interesting...I swear, why this isn't far worse than Watergate, I don't know. I guess it's because it's not a secret--it's just out in the open law-breaking.


February 28, 2008

The Honorable Michael B. Mukasey
The Attorney General
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W
Washington, D.C. 20530-0001

Dear Mr. Attorney General:

In accordance with 2 U.S.C. § 194 and the attached House Resolution 979 (adopted on February 14, 2008), I have today sent a certification to the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeffrey Taylor, advising him of the failure of former White House Counsel, Harriet Miers, to appear, testify and produce documents in compliance with a duly issued subpoena of a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee and of the failure of Joshua Bolten, White House Chief of Staff and custodian of White House documents, to produce documents in his custody as required by a duly issued subpoena of the House Judiciary Committee.

Under section 194, Mr. Taylor is now required "to bring the matter before the grand jury for its action." The appropriate grand jury action is a criminal charge for violation of 2 U.S.C. § 192, which provides: "Every person who having been summoned as a witness by the authority of either House of Congress to give testimony or to produce papers . . . willfully makes default . . . shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor" and shall be subject to a fine and "imprisonment in a common jail for not less than one month nor more than twelve months."

According to the testimony of your predecessor, former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and your recent testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, the Justice Department intends to prevent Mr. Taylor from complying with the statute and enforcing the contempt citations against Ms. Miers and Mr. Bolten. You claimed that "enforcement by way of contempt of a congressional subpoena is not permitted when the President directs a direct adviser of his... not to appear or when he directs any member of the executive not to produce documents." Hearing on Oversight of the Dep't of Justice Before the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 110th Cong. 87-88 (Feb. 7, 2008). You purported to base your view on a "long line of authority," but cited no court decision that supports this proposition.

There is no authority by which persons may wholly ignore a subpoena and fail to appear as directed because a President unilaterally instructs them to do so. Even if a subpoenaed witness intends to assert a privilege in response to questions, the witness is not at liberty to disregard the subpoena and fail to appear at the required time and place. Surely, your Department would not tolerate that type of action if the witness were subpoenaed to a federal grand jury. Short of a formal assertion of executive privilege, which cannot be made in this case, there is no authority that permits a President to advise anyone to ignore a duly issued congressional subpoena for documents.

Your press spokesman has stated that you will "act promptly" to review this matter and reach a final decision. We will appreciate your acting with appropriate dispatch on this important matter. I strongly urge you to reconsider your position and to ensure that our nation is operating under the rule of law and not at presidential whim. If, however, you intend to persist in preventing Mr. Taylor from carrying out his statutory obligation to present this matter to the grand jury in the District of Columbia, we respectfully request that you inform us of that decision within one week from today, so that the House may proceed with a civil enforcement suit in federal district court.

Thank your for your prompt consideration and attention to this matter.

best regards,


NANCY PELOSI
Speaker of the House


Update: This didn't take long. The AG has already formally refused to permit the U.S. Attorney to move forward with charges. The next step is that Congress can take it to court. In the past, the courts have refused to intervene saying, "work it out yourselves." Congress could utilize "inherent contempt," but they won't. So this matter is now essentially closed.

Equality

When the founding fathers wrote that "all men are created equal," they meant only U.S. citizens.

Male, caucasian, U.S. citizens.

Right?

And they were right, weren't they?

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Mexican Riviera - Day 1 - Departure

We take a limo to the pier and check-in is pretty painless. We came prepared with everything we needed, and nobody forgot anything. Tony's luggage is still missing. Now they don't know where it is. They think it's still in Kansas City. The key piece of information, Tony's claim tag, was taken by the Rep, who did not write it down on the claim form (he wrote down the claim tag his bag SHOULD have had, but didn't), and now nobody knows where that claim tag is, and according to two people Tony talked to, now there's no way to find out where his bags are. Upsetting, but Tony is taking it pretty well.

We set sail at 4pm. On the pool deck, XCite, a carribbean band, plays music for a set-sail pool party. As we pull away, there is an amazing view of a sunset with mist and a singular lighthouse that we pass close by. I got several shots.

The evening show is a review of all the lounge acts playing on the ship. One of the better ones is a lounge act who sings several Sarah McLachlan tunes pretty well. Afterwards we go to Gatsby's bar for a "champagne and chocolate covered strawberries" event only to find that you have to buy the champagne for $11 + 15% gratuity to get a strawberry free. So we got nothing. This is a foretaste of much of the cruise--there are literally thousands of ways that the cruise ship tries to get you give them more money -- liquor, coffee, soda, jewelry, art auctions, even playing bingo costs $20 minimum. While some of the entertainment choices are free, the majority are not. We wander around the ship, exploring, and then go to bed.

Oh...late in the evening, Tony finally manages to reach an intelligent person at the lost luggage department who determines immediately that his luggage is indeed in Seattle, and that person arranges to have it on a flight to Acapulco, our first port in 2 days, and the cruise ship will send someone to go pick it up when we get to port. Crossing our fingers.

Mexican Riviera - Day 0 - LA


The next few posts will be from my journal I wrote on our trip.

Arrived at L.A. the day before the cruise in early afternoon. Tony's luggage is missing. Attendant figures out it is in Seattle cuz Tony's claim ticket is someone else's bound to Seattle.

Arrive at HoJo hotel and have lunch at the hotel restaurant, a cheap chinese buffet. Nothing to wow about.

We decide to go on an L.A. evening tour, mostly because there isn't anything else to do, and the hotel is too rundown to want to spend any more time in it than necessary. The tour visited Universal Studios, Grauman's Chinese Theater, Sunset Strip, Rodeo Drive, Walk of Fame. It begins during rush hour and the traffic is HORRIBLE. Of our 4 1/2 hour tour, the first 1 1/4 hours is driving in traffic. Finally we get to Universal, and the lights at night are pretty cool. On the way to Grauman's we go up a hill and see the L.A. skyline and its beautiful in a strange way. At Walk of Fame & Grauman's (next to each other), we look at the famous names and I snap pictures.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Clinton/Obama on the Issues


Eventually I'll get to blogging about the cruise. Really. In the meantime, what seems to be lingering in the news right now is a tiff between Clinton and Obama over Clinton's health care policy.

Now I have no doubt that this is mostly false umbrage (how dare he say...how dare she say...that's just totally out of line...is not!..is too!).

But what interests me about this round is that, instead of being a character assassination (Clinton is an unemotional-emotional, overbearing weak woman and Obama is a secret muslim terrorist not-black-enough thin-lipped African black guy who wears a turban when you're not looking), this particular piece is actually about an ISSUE!

What I don't know, is who is being more accurate. None of the CNN stories I've read have talked about the accuracy of Obama's statements. So I don't know if he's being truthful, exploiting a momentary slip of tongue, or just outright lying. I don't know if Clinton is being truthful or denying her own policy when it's inconvenient.

Rather, CNN, and most of the news outlets I read, are focusing on capturing the reaction and counter-reaction of the two: i.e., voyeurism instead of journalism. It's really very irritating.

UPDATE: This article is actually much more helpful than CNN is on this.

Monday, February 25, 2008

They Take Our Jobs!

I haven't read the book yet, but a glance through the table of contents looks very interesting. From
They Take Our Jobs and 20 Other Myths About Immigration by Aviva Chomksy:

Immigrants and the Economy
Myth #1: Immigrants take American jobs
Myth #2: Immigrants compete with low-skilled workers and drive down wages
Myth #3: Unions oppose immigration because it harms the working class
Myth #4: Immigrants don't pay taxese
Myth #5: Immigrants are a drain on the economy
Myth #6: Immigrants send most of what they earn out of the country in the form of remittancese

Immigrants and the Law
Myth #7: The rules apply to everyone, so new immigrants need to follow them just as immigrants in the past did.
Myth #8: The country is being overrun by illegal immigrants
Myth #9: The US has a generous refugee policy

Immigration and Race
Myth #10: The US is a melting pot that has always welcomed immigrants from all over the world
Myth #11: Since we are all the descendants of immigrants here, we all start on equal footing
Myth #12: Today's immigrants threaten the national culture because they are not assimilating
Myth #13: Today's immigrants are not learning English, and bilingual education just adds to the problem

Immigration and US Policy
Myth #14: Immigrants only come here because they want to enjoy our higher standard of living

The Debate about Immigration
Myth #15: The American public opposes immigration, and the debate in Congress reflects that
Myth #16: The overwhelming victory of proposition 187 in CA shows that the public opposes immigration
Myth #17: Immigration is a problem
Myth #18: Countries need to control who goes in and who goes out
Myth #19: We need to protect our borders to prevent criminals and terrorists from entering the country
Myth #20: If people break out laws by entering our country illegally, they are criminals and should be deported
Myth #21: The problems this book raises are so huge that there's nothing we can do about them

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Pictures!

There's so much work to do to get the pictures from the cruise uploaded. I've done a hatchet job of it over the past 4 hours or so.

Anyway, here is a batch of them:

In LA: http://travel.webshots.com/album/562590258cWXpXT

Sea Days: http://travel.webshots.com/album/562589009KTkKXc

Zihuatenejo: http://travel.webshots.com/album/562589009KTkKXc

Puerto Vallarta: http://travel.webshots.com/album/562589230ThjxnT

Still working on getting Cabo San Lucas uploaded and the return trip back to LA and the pictures we bought from the ship photographers. No captions yet. Commentary in the next couple of days. I need to dig my journal out of my baggage.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Ralph Nader



I swear, if Ralph Nader runs again, I will give him such a noogie!

Update: Nader's in, and I sent him an e-noogie. We're one step closer to saying hello to President McCain. All I can hope for is that he won't be able to get enough volunteers to put him on the ballot in the key states.

Sentosa Nurses


Compare this article from SF Chronicle: Nurses Who Quit Face Criminal Charges
with this article from SF Global Nation Inquirer: Myths of Sentosa/Avalon

Ah, Journalism... (...and racism and exploitation and...).

We're BAAAAAACKKK!

Back from the cruise. Back from 88 degree weather to 18 degree weather. Started work yesterday. Getting a cold. Pictures and commentary from the cruise later on today and tomorrow.

P.S. I see that politics hasn't changed since I've been gone....

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Christians Wrong About Heaven

Great interview of N.T. Wright about heaven. Right on the money.


Christians Wrong About Heaven, Says Bishop

heaven

It therefore comes as a something of a shock that Wright doesn't believe in heaven — at least, not in the way that millions of Christians understand the term. In his new book, Surprised by Hope (HarperOne), Wright quotes a children's book by California first lady Maria Shriver called What's Heaven, which describes it as "a beautiful place where you can sit on soft clouds and talk... If you're good throughout your life, then you get to go [there]... When your life is finished here on earth, God sends angels down to take you heaven to be with him." That, says Wright is a good example of "what not to say." The Biblical truth, he continues, "is very, very different."

Wright, 58, talked by phone with TIME's David Van Biema.

TIME: At one point you call the common view of heaven a "distortion and serious diminution of Christian hope."

Wright: It really is. I've often heard people say, "I'm going to heaven soon, and I won't need this stupid body there, thank goodness.' That's a very damaging distortion, all the more so for being unintentional.

TIME: How so? It seems like a typical sentiment.

Wright: There are several important respects in which it's unsupported by the New Testament. First, the timing. In the Bible we are told that you die, and enter an intermediate state. St. Paul is very clear that Jesus Christ has been raised from the dead already, but that nobody else has yet. Secondly, our physical state. The New Testament says that when Christ does return, the dead will experience a whole new life: not just our soul, but our bodies. And finally, the location. At no point do the resurrection narratives in the four Gospels say, "Jesus has been raised, therefore we are all going to heaven." It says that Christ is coming here, to join together the heavens and the Earth in an act of new creation.

TIME: Is there anything more in the Bible about the period between death and the resurrection of the dead?

Wright: We know that we will be with God and with Christ, resting and being refreshed. Paul writes that it will be conscious, but compared with being bodily alive, it will be like being asleep. The Wisdom of Solomon, a Jewish text from about the same time as Jesus, says "the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God," and that seems like a poetic way to put the Christian understanding, as well.

TIME: But it's not where the real action is, so to speak?

Wright: No. Our culture is very interested in life after death, but the New Testament is much more interested in what I've called the life after life after death — in the ultimate resurrection into the new heavens and the new Earth. Jesus' resurrection marks the beginning of a restoration that he will complete upon his return. Part of this will be the resurrection of all the dead, who will "awake," be embodied and participate in the renewal. John Polkinghorne, a physicist and a priest, has put it this way: "God will download our software onto his hardware until the time he gives us new hardware to run the software again for ourselves." That gets to two things nicely: that the period after death is a period when we are in God's presence but not active in our own bodies, and also that the more important transformation will be when we are again embodied and administering Christ's kingdom.

TIME: That is rather different from the common understanding. Did some Biblical verse contribute to our confusion?

Wright: There is Luke 23, where Jesus says to the good thief on the cross, "Today you will be with me in Paradise." But in Luke, we know first of all that Christ himself will not be resurrected for three days, so "paradise" cannot be a resurrection. It has to be an intermediate state. And chapters 4 and 5 of Revelation, where there is a vision of worship in heaven that people imagine describes our worship at the end of time. In fact it's describing the worship that's going on right now. If you read the book through, you see that at the end we don't have a description of heaven, but, as I said, of the new heavens and the new earth joined together.

TIME: Why, then, have we misread those verses?

Wright: It has, originally, to do with the translation of Jewish ideas into Greek. The New Testament is deeply, deeply Jewish, and the Jews had for some time been intuiting a final, physical resurrection. They believed that the world of space and time and matter is messed up, but remains basically good, and God will eventually sort it out and put it right again. Belief in that goodness is absolutely essential to Christianity, both theologically and morally. But Greek-speaking Christians influenced by Plato saw our cosmos as shabby and misshapen and full of lies, and the idea was not to make it right, but to escape it and leave behind our material bodies. The church at its best has always come back toward the Hebrew view, but there have been times when the Greek view was very influential.

TIME: Can you give some historical examples?

Wright: Two obvious ones are Dante's great poetry, which sets up a Heaven, Purgatory and Hell immediately after death, and Michelangelo's Last Judgment in the Sistine chapel, which portrays heaven and hell as equal and opposite last destinations. Both had enormous influence on Western culture, so much so that many Christians think that is Christianity.

TIME: But it's not.

Wright: Never at any point do the Gospels or Paul say Jesus has been raised, therefore we are we are all going to heaven. They all say, Jesus is raised, therefore the new creation has begun, and we have a job to do.

TIME: That sounds a lot like... work.

Wright: It's more exciting than hanging around listening to nice music. In Revelation and Paul's letters we are told that God's people will actually be running the new world on God's behalf. The idea of our participation in the new creation goes back to Genesis, when humans are supposed to be running the Garden and looking after the animals. If you transpose that all the way through, it's a picture like the one that you get at the end of Revelation.

TIME: And it ties in to what you've written about this all having a moral dimension.

Wright: Both that, and the idea of bodily resurrection that people deny when they talk about their "souls going to Heaven." If people think "my physical body doesn't matter very much," then who cares what I do with it? And if people think that our world, our cosmos, doesn't matter much, who cares what we do with that? Much of "traditional" Christianity gives the impression that God has these rather arbitrary rules about how you have to behave, and if you disobey them you go to hell, rather than to heaven. What the New Testament really says is God wants you to be a renewed human being helping him to renew his creation, and his resurrection was the opening bell. And when he returns to fulfil the plan, you won't be going up there to him, he'll be coming down here.

TIME: That's very different from, say, the vision put out in the Left Behind books.

Wright: Yes. If there's going to be an Armageddon, and we'll all be in heaven already or raptured up just in time, it really doesn't matter if you have acid rain or greenhouse gases prior to that. Or, for that matter, whether you bombed civilians in Iraq. All that really matters is saving souls for that disembodied heaven.

TIME: Has anyone you've talked to expressed disappointment at the loss of the old view?

Wright: Yes, you might get disappointment in the case where somebody has recently gone through the death of somebody they love and they are wanting simply to be with them. And I'd say that's understandable. But the end of Revelation describes a marvelous human participation in God's plan. And in almost all cases, when I've explained this to people, there's a sense of excitement and a sense of, "Why haven't we been told this before?"

Church

Just got back from church. Great service. The altar space that Dean and I designed looked great, and others told us that they enjoyed it too. Connie Meyers presented a 20-minute powerpoint presentation that traced the history of building the new church. It was *really* well done, and brought tears to many eyes. You could tell that she spent months on it.

Anissa hasn't been feeling well, so I pinched-hit as liturgist. Since we had to cancel Ash Wed. services for weather, Michael had a little sermonette about it at the beginning of the service.

Now we're making final preparations to go on our cruise tomorrow morning. Couple more loads of laundry and we'll be able to pack.

I'm having a tough time deciding which books to take on the cruise...deep and spiritual because I'll finally have the time and space to read them properly, or light and fun because it's a vacation? Hrrmph.

Primaries

Glancing through the returns, it looks like Obama won all 3 states yesterday. Also at a glance, it seems that when Obama wins, he's winning by huge blow-outs (60-40, 70-30, 80-20), whereas Clinton wins seem to be a closer contest (55-45, 52-48), the exceptions being NY, AR, TN. KS was 75-25 Obama, CO 70-30, ID 80-20.... If it weren't for Clinton's super-delegates, Obama would be in the lead. It's probably going to go down to the wire, but Clinton needs to start picking up some states if she's gonna win this.

I'm wondering if we're going to have one of those total meltdowns--where one candidate or another gets desperate and starts putting out really horrible attack ads.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Big Pimpin' Style

So let me get this straight ...

When Romney's 5 boys campaign for him, and when Cheney's, Bush's, and McCain's daughters stump for their dads, it's great--good patriot, civic duty.

But when Clinton's daughter Chelsea campaigns for her mom, she's pimping?!

I'm glad NBC suspended Shuster. What a jerk.

Senator Set to Intensify Investigation

Not one of the televangelists have complied with Grassley's request for financial documents. Indeed they are digging in their heels. It is sad that an investigation into fraud might hurt the "values voters" in the upcoming election. How utterly two-faced. How demoralizing.

One wonders if Jesus had this kind of thing in mind when he overturned the tables of the moneychangers or when he talked about living in the darkness.


From Tampa Bay Online:

TAMPA - U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley is increasing pressure on five large ministries that have refused to respond to his financial inquiry even as political watchers say the investigation could hurt Republicans in the upcoming election.
...

Responding From The Pulpit

In December, Randy White, pastor of Without Walls, took a defiant stand, telling his congregation that the senator's questions were an assault on their faith.

Kenneth Copeland has declared a holy war. He has said he will never release the information and that he gave Grassley "a lesson in no...." "You can go get a subpoena, and I won't give it to you," Copeland reportedly says. "It's not yours, it's God's and you're not going to get it and that's something I'll go to prison over. So, just get over it. ... And if there's a death penalty that applies, well, just go for it."

Thursday, February 07, 2008

4-Year Old Calls 911 to Save Mom

This is way cool:

Boy Saves Mom

Mitt ends campaign

That was surprising to me. I know he didn't do really well on Tuesday, but didn't expect him to quit. I suspect it is for financial reasons. He hasn't even tried to raise very much money, and I guess he decided that he's not going to be the next president, and that this was turning out to be too expensive of a game for him to play with his own cash. Probably smart.

There's no way that Huckabee will win, so this just decided the Republican nominee. McCain was almost inconceivable this summer. Funny how a few months changes things.

I think that McCain is the strongest contender for any Democrat. Against Romney, I think that a Democrat president was assured. Against McCain, I think it's back to 50-50 against either Clinton or Obama. I still think that it will probably be Clinton--an "Insider vs. Insider" campaign. "Change" is a red herring. People don't want change. They want stability.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Illusions of Authority

ILLUSION: possession
  • A common illusion is that authority is a possession of the leader.
  • This picutre hides the relational character of authority. Authority expresses our agreement to be together.

ILLUSION: unaccountable
  • When authority is misunderstood as a private possession, authority becomes unaccountable. If authority is "mine," then I have no need to give an account of it to anyone. As a personal possession, the leader's authority does not come under the community's review.

ILLUSION: privilege
  • Authority distorts social power into privilege. Rather than a function of community service, authority becomes a special status.
  • Once authority is imagined as a personal and privileged possession, mutuality and accountability are forfeit. When the leader is thus distinguished "from the rest of us," we are literally dispossessed of our own power.
IDOLATRY
  • Such distortions spawn idols of obedience ["patriotism"!]. Obedience becomes a virtue for followers only.
  • When the community's obedience is addressed to the leader or ideology that the leader represents, obedience is no longer a virtue of leadership.

OBJECT of OBEDIENCE
  • There is a crucial confusion here: the leader shifts from being seen as the servant of the larger good and becomes identified instead as the object of obedience. The process of social -power is short-circuited. The energy of the group is diverted from the pursuit of its larger purposes, to the pursuit of social control.
  • When Mahatma Gandhi and MLK challenge this idol, their disobedience safeguards a deeper obedience to the greater good at its core.

What is authority? What is obedience?

  • Authority is an interpretation of power.
  • Authorities--persons, laws, customs--arise from our judgments about power. We decide together as a group which persons hold final responsibility in this organization, which of these ancient writings are the Word of God, which of these directives have the force of law.

  • Obedience is our response to these decisions.
  • Obedience is the voluntary accomodation of myself in the face of a larger good.
  • Where willing obedience is refused, authority is an empty claim.
  • But willing obedience is mature only in response to legitimate authority.

  • To set aside my own purposes or seriously modify my behavior for something less than legitimate authority is servility or simply cowardice.
  • The reputations of authority and obedience rise and fall together.
  • Neither authority nor obedience is good in itself. Each becomes legitimate by its connections with the larger good.

Five Faces of Power

Two main points of the five faces of power is this:
first, that I need to think of power in broader terms than I usually have, and
second, that each face of power can be either holy/creative or distorted/destructive.

Because of my negative experiences with power, I have generally considered it to nearly always be negative. But even when I am protesting against "The Powers", I am exercising power. More on that later.

Back to the book...

Power On -- this is basically the power to do things, to influence my environment and circumstances, to "run my life". Lack of power leads to over-dependence. Too much leads to the illusion of autonomy (I can do this all by myself).

Power Over -- the strength to take charge, to give direction, to manage the power of others. Distortions include constraining and coercion, manipulation and the pursuit of private gain.

Power Against -- the strength to test myself, to learn that I can fall without being shamed, to deal constructively with conflict, to be able to stand in the face another person's power and survive. Distortions are obvious.

Power For -- the strength to pursue someone else's benefit, to further the goals of a group, the strength to nurture and minister. Distortions include dominance and the distortion of "I know best what's good for you".

Power With -- the strength to share in mutual empowerment, to collaborate, be dependable and to be able to depend on others, to receive and benefit from others' power, to recognize my limits.

Five Faces of Power

Mode

Experienced As

Needed In

Power On

Initiative & influence

Adult competence

Power Over

Coordination & Control

Organizational leadership

Power Against

Competition & Conflict

Assertion & negotiation

Power For

Service & nurturance

Parenthood & ministry

Power With

Mutuality & collaboration

Interdependence & dependability

What is Power?

  • Power is about strength, which comes in various shapes and different contexts of our lives.
  • It is misleading to treat power as a thing, as thought it were an internal packet of energy.
  • Power is not an entity, but a way of interacting.
  • Power is something that happens between people, something going on, an interaction, a way of relating.
  • Power has both personal and social dimensions.

Lord Acton: "Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely." Shall we succumb to such a narrow view of power? Power is destructive and creative, demonic and holy. The word "virtue" means, simply, "power."

Lord Acton's complement: "Power tends to heal, and absolute power heals absolutely."

Notes on Power

I've been reading a book for Souljourners that has an interesting chapter on power and authority that is making me reorient some of my thinking. I'll be including some notes from the book in the next few posts.

Cooking with Whisks

For some reason I thought this was funny. From the Onion Store:

Gift Box: Pro Whisk Set

New from Sal Romano's Cook Goods kitchenware, this 28-piece professional whisk set is perfect for mixing, beating, folding, blending or stirring! World-renowned chef and owner of The Dolce Escargot, Sal has perfected the art of whisking. Now, he shares his passion with you. Includes 30 of Sal's favorite recipes that use whisks and the DVD Cooking With Whisks—let Sal walk you through which end of the whisk to hold!

No, the products aren't real. But the empty boxes are. Wrap your otherwise forgettable gift in an Onion gift box, and watch as they struggle to feign enthusiasm for an unmanageable number of whisks. Or take joy as their faces fall upon realizing there is no such thing as a 28-piece professional whisk set—just a crappy bric-a-brac inside you waited until the last moment to buy.


  • Gotcha Gift Box: Pro Whisk Set

Kansas Caucus

I did not go caucus last night. I just wasn't feeling well. So I stayed home. If it were as simple as going to the local library and casting a quick vote, I would have done it anyway. But I just didn't have it in me to trek over to Lawrence in the bad weather and caucus for a couple of hours in a huge crowd of people. So I didn't.

Luckily for me, Obama won handily (which is who I would have voted for). By something like 72%. It seems to me that Obama/Clinton votes are basically going to whoever a person internally identifies with the most-- women with women, blacks with blacks, younger for Obama, older for Clinton, and white middle-aged males pretty evenly split. Latinos seem to be slightly more for Clinton (which is interesting because Latino is technically an ethnicity, not a race).

Dobson Whacks McCain

From David Kuo:

And there, in a nutshell, is the Christian worldview as James Dobson pronounces it:

- cutting taxes
- a Constitutional amendment "protecting" marriage
- elimination of embryonic stem-cell research
- a US Senate stripped of the very powers that the Founders gave it
- not cursing.

Damn. Is there a more succinct and stunning summation of the reason why evangelical voters are throwing off self-appointed evangelical mullahs like James Dobson? And why, according to a new Barna study, 40% of evangelicals would vote for the Democratic candidate if the election were held today (versus 28% for the Republican candidate).

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Psalm 97


I can't even see the sun this morning.
The coastland fog has blotted out heaven's light,
making the early hours cold and damp.
But God is here--in me and around me--
and I will rejoice in Him.

I hear no angel choirs.
No church bells summon me to worship.
Only the thunder of four-wheel vehicles
and the acrid odor of exhaust greet me
as men and women rush to their unnumbered shrines.
But God is here, and I will rejoice in Him.

I cannot see the mountains or smell the flowers
or even hear the songs of birds.
I cannot love the people who bustle around me.
I see unhappiness and injustice and depravity.
I hear the ear-grating sounds of pain and complaint.
I feel the stifling pressures that suck me
into the stream that rushes by my door.
But God is here--in me and around me--
and I will rejoice in Him.

Our great God does care for His creatures.
He secures forever those who are His.
He is here--in us and around us.
Let us all rejoice in Him!

--Leslie F. Brandt, Psalms/Now

McSkillet Burritos


Dean and I are fond of McDonald's Sausage McSkillet burritos. They are quite yummy, although they are a bit on the spicy side. Dean and I figured out how to make our own that is even yummier and not quite as spicy. Here's our recipe:

Ulysses & Dean's Skillet Burritos
Serves 2

3 eggs scrambled
1/2 package (9 oz) Jimmy Dean Sausage-Style Breakfast Skillets mix
2-3 Tbl Old El Paso Fresh Mexican Style "Smooth Chipotle" Salsa, medium
2-3 Tbl shredded cheddar & pepper jack cheese
2 burrito-size flour tortillas (warmed)
1 Tbl oil

1. Heat oil in large 12" skillet over medium heat.
2. Cook Jimmy Dean Breakfast Skillets about 7 min, stirring occasionally.
3. Push to the side of skillet
4. Add eggs and stir to cook 1-2 minutes. Combine with rest of mixture.

To assemble:
1. Spread 1/2 of skillet mixture onto tortilla
2. Sprinkle with cheese
3. Top with salsa
4. Fold and enjoy!

Monday, February 04, 2008

Winners and Losers


So Bush has submitted his budget to Congress. CNN has a funny little interactive called "Winners" and "Losers".

The winners: the military, the shiny new concrete "keep-out" wall around Mexico, and the FDA.

The losers: "domestic appropriations" (i.e., AMERICA), healthcare, and education. Why CNN thought they needed the extra 2 tabs for healthcare and education I can't fathom.

Good grief.

Interview with Brennan Manning


Below is an audio interview with Brennan Manning, a person whose books on the True vs. False Self (or what Manning calls the Imposter) has probably been the greatest positive influence in my life. The interviewer is not very good, but I still like what Manning manages to say. The interview talks about the interior life, contemplative and ignatian prayer, some tidbits about his life and the imposter.

Mirrors and Windows

"Jesus is both a mirror to our humanity and a window to divinity, a window revealing as much of God as is given mortal eyes to see. When Christians see Christ empowering the weak, scorning the powerful, healing the wounded, and judging their tormentors, we are seeing transparently the power of God at work. What is finally important is not that Christ is Godlike, but that God is Christ-like. God is like Christ. That's what we need to know, isn't it?"
-- William Slone Coffin

New church building


Yesterday morning we consecrated our new church building. Wonderful service. Everything came together beautifully. A few hiccups here and there to remind us of our frailty. I wish I had taken pictures, but I did not remember to bring my camera.

Saturday, February 02, 2008

Living Slowly


God help us to live slowly:
To move simply:
To look softly:
To allow emptiness:
To let the heart create for us.
Amen.

-- Michael Leunig

Wisdom

A review by William C. Placher of Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love by David Ford.

"What is wisdom? He never gives a single answer. But some themes keep emerging. We should love God for God's own sake. Theologians should listen hard to cries--of suffering, joy, bewilderment and gratitude. Theology should operate in all five moodsd: indicative (affirming what we believe), imperative (calling to obedience), interrogative (struggling with hard questions), subjunctive (exploring possibilities, as Jesus' parables do so well) and optative (desiring in hope). Theologians have too long limited themselves to the indicative and the imperative."

Friday, February 01, 2008

Frances' funeral

Dean and I went to his grandmother Frances’ graveside funeral service today. It was a nice service, but very cold and windy. I about froze my toes. Dean did really well right up until they sang “I’ll Fly Away” and then had some trouble. Afterwards we visited with the family before driving home.

Dean and I feel especially sad for Frances' husband George (they just got married 3 months ago). His son was at the funeral, and apparently it's the first they've seen each other in years.

Exxon shatters profit records

From CNN: "Oil giant makes corporate history by booking $11.7 billion in quarterly profit; earns $1,300 a second in 2007. Exxon Mobil made history on Friday by reporting the highest quarterly and annual profits ever for a U.S. company, boosted in large part by soaring crude prices."


Can someone please explain to me (again) why we still give Exxon $11.6 billion dollars of our tax money each year in welfare (aka energy subsidies) when they make that much PROFIT in a quarter?? And can somebody explain why we can't afford to give some of that money to fund SCHIP, the program to give poor children healthcare?

Seriously.

Okay, at least ask McCain and Romney.