Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts

Thursday, April 13, 2023

We Must Discuss Race If We Love This Country


The following is just part of a thought-provoking post by Theodore R. Johnson in The Washington Post:

I write about race because I care about America. That sentiment might come as a shock to some. It is rare today to hear someone who talks forthrightly about the ills of structural racism lead with a declaration of patriotism or pride in the nation’s progress. But this is squarely within the tradition of Black America, from historic stalwarts Ida B. Wells and Langston Hughes to modern-day activists such as the Rev. William J. Barber II and Colin Kaepernick.

Race isn’t the problem with the American experiment so much as it is the best indicator of the experiment’s structural problems. Consider slavery: It’s not the nation’s original sin because a significant number of White Americans enslaved Black people; it looms so large for America because the nation was supposedly founded on the idea of human equality yet allowed this grossest of inequalities to persist and expand.

The criminal justice system doesn’t need reform because it disproportionately confronts and punishes Black, Native and Hispanic Americans, but because abuse of power by the state should not be tolerated in a nation founded on the idea of government by and for the people — all people.

The racial inequalities we see in health care and education outcomes — even when controlled for class — do not exist because of Black Americans’ race or some imagined cultural carelessness, but because those systems are from a different era and poorly designed to account for Black people’s distinctive American journey. As structured, they hinder the ability to pursue happiness, stability and security unless they are tailored to the communities they serve. The democratic backsliding the nation is experiencing today is an indicator of the way race factored into the cultural, political and legislative conflicts of the past three decades.

The nation’s trouble is not that it has a racist bone that simply needs removing but that it is disturbingly slow to recognize that racism is the sharp pain that helps us locate the fractures. I write about race because finding the fractures in our society and our democracy is a necessary step toward healing and strengthening, not destroying, the whole of the nation. . . .

I write about race because you cannot love America and avoid the issue. Yes, there are other topics — some of critical importance — but nothing reveals where the nation is most vulnerable like the question of race. If we want a United States that more fully realizes its potential, and I believe most of us do, fixing the structural flaws revealed by race presents the most promising path.

Tuesday, October 02, 2018

Trump And Kim Are "In Love"

(Cartoon image is by Marian Kamensky at cagle.com.)

Trump actually made the following remark last Saturday at a rally in West Virginia:

"I was really being tough, and so was he. And we would go back and forth. And then we fell in love, okay? No, really. He wrote me beautiful letters, and they’re great letters. We fell in love."


Sunday, October 06, 2013

Love Thy Neighbor

This image is from the Facebook page of God. And the sentiment is one that even an atheist can agree with. What's strange to me though is that it is not shared by many fundamentalist christians who, regardless of what their holy book (with its 10 commandments) tells them to do, prefer to pick and choose which neighbors they will love (and which they will hate without justification).

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Violent Religion

(Image found on the blog of Yellowdog Granny.)

Three major religions sprang from the descendants of Abraham -- judaism, christianity, and islam. And even though they all claim to believe in a loving god, they are the bloodiest religions in the modern world. They all have a history of condoning violence, especially against the other Abrahamic religions, and that violent hatred persists today. Frankly, I don't understand it. How does a loving god spawn such violent religions? Do the adherents of these religions really think hatred and violence spring from love?

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Killing For God ?

This is one thing I have never understood about religion. Almost all religious people claim to believe in a loving god -- but they are willing to kill people (especially those who believe in a different religion) in that god's name. Is this what a truly loving god would want? Or is it just what those people want, and they are hiding behind religion to accomplish it? I think the latter is much more likely -- and probably why humans invented religion in the first place.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

It's Not Your Place To Judge

Personally, I've never thought it was any of my business to worry about who other people choose to love, and I don't believe it's any of your business either -- even if you're a fundamentalist who wants to use your religion to judge others. And by the way, doesn't that same religion say you are not to judge others? Why should you care about the love expressed by others? It doesn't affect you or your marriage in any way -- and if you think it does, I would love for you to explain how to me.