This song by George Strait ought to be a holiday standard.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Country Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck: Christmas Cookies
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Labels: Country Club, country music, holiday music that doesn't suck
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Country Holiday Muic that Doesn't Suck: Lucinda Williams and Holly Cole 'If we make it through December"
Merle Haggard's "If We Make It Through December"
is not only one of the Hag's great songs, but it is on its way to becoming a standard. It has not only been covered by mainstream country artists like Alan Jackson and Marty Robbins, but also by roots musician Lucinda Williams and the Canadian jazz-pop Holly Cole. (Here's my post on the Hag's version.)
Holly Cole
Posted by Unknown at 7:36 AM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music, holiday music that doesn't suck, Holly Cole, Lucinda Williams
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Country Holiday MusicThat Doesn't Suck:: Steve Earle "Christmas Time in Washington"
Some might say it's not aholiday song, but rather a protest song. Some might question whether Steve Earle is a country artist. I say, it's a damn fine song and close enough to country for me.
Posted by Unknown at 8:33 PM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music, holiday music that doesn't suck
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Country Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck:Joe Nichols "Let It Snow"
You may know Joe Nichols from his 2005 Billboard Number One hit "Tequila Makes Her Clothes Fall Off,"one of his four career hits, but he deserves a more thorough listen/ He might remind listeners of Alan Jackson or George Strait with a little more rock sound. Nichols, unlike too many other country artists, keeps his holiday music country. This is a 2006 performance at the Grand Ole Opry. If you like this you might look for his 2004 CD A Traditional Christmas.
Posted by Unknown at 8:17 PM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music, holiday music that doesn't suck
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Country Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck: Wille Nelson "Pretty Paper"
Willie wrote this.
Posted by Unknown at 6:43 PM 0 comments
Fox News Presents "It's a Wonderful Life"
From the Jimmy Kimmel Show. Trailer sarts at about 2:12/
Posted by Unknown at 6:20 PM 0 comments
Labels: Faux News, Fun stuff, greed, It's a Wonderful Life
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Country Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck: Alan jackson "Please,Daddy, Don' Get Drunk This Christmas"
Alan Jackson covered this tune first recorded by the schmaltzy John Denver in 1973 on his highly regarded 1993 album Honky Tonk Christmas.
Posted by Unknown at 6:01 AM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music, holiday music that doesn't suck
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Country Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck: George Strait "Christmas Time in Texas"
A pretty simple video, but a great song from George Strait.
Posted by Unknown at 6:23 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Country Holiday MusicThat Doesn't Suck :Merry Christmas from the Family
Robert Earl Keen is a Texas singer-songwriter associated with the Americana movement. His songs have been covered by Lyle Lovett and many others. Here is his humorous take on Christmas.
Posted by Unknown at 6:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: holiday music that doesn't suck
Saturday, December 07, 2013
Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck Retrospective
I was in a store the first part of this week that was playing a radio station devoted to Christmas music. It reminded me of just how dreadful, how dreckish far too much of our holiday music is. And, why I created the "holiday music that doesn't suck" series the last two years. Before launching two series for 2013 (one for country and one for blues/jazz/and R&B), I thought it would be nice to reprise. There are play list videos for each years selection and link to the individual posts that have a little background information.
2011 Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck
Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #1
Sonics "I Don't Believe in Christmas"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #2
Louis Armstrong, "Zat You, Santa Claus?"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #3
Denise LaSalle "Santa's Got the Christmas Blues"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #4
Charlie Parker "White Christmas"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck # 5
Holly Cole "Santa Baby"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck # 6
Merle Haggard's "If We Make It Through December"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #7
Miles Davis and Bob Dorough "Blue Xmas (To Whom It May Concern)"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #8
Amos Milburn "Christmas Comes But Once a Year.Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck # 9
Charles Brown "Merry, Christmas Baby."2012 Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck
Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #1 (2012 edition)
Lowell Fulson "Lonesome Christmas"
Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #2 (2012 edition)
Ella Fitzgerald "White Christmas"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #3 (2012 edition)
The Moonglows "Hey Santa Claus"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #4 (2012 edition)
Dexter Gordon "Christmas Song"Holiday Music that Doesn't Suck #5 (2012 edition)
Ms. Jody "It's Christmas. Baby"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #6 (2012 edition)
John Coltrane "Greensleeves/What Child Is This?"Holiday Music That Doesn't Suck #7 (2012 edition)
Sonny Boy Williamson II "Santa Claus"Holiday Music That Doesn't Such #8 (2012 edition)
Blossom Dearie and Bob Dorough. "Baby, It's Cold Outside"Holiday MusticThat Doesn't Suck #9 (2012 edition)
The Modern Jazz Quartet - England's Carol or God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen.Posted by Unknown at 8:25 AM 0 comments
Labels: holiday music that doesn't suck, music
Wednesday, December 04, 2013
My books of 2013
It's the time of the year for "best" and "top" lists. As in 2012, 2011, 2010, and 2007, I've
looked back over the books I've read this year to come up with . I'm
considering only books I read for the first time this year and ones
published fairly recently, basically in 2012-2013. For the most part, as I did last year, I have excluded all but a few books on economics and unions which deserve separate list. Maybe I'll get a post done on labor and economic books from 2011-2013.
I have a large stack of books bough but not read in 2013 and late 2012. There are undoubtedly some that might have made this list had I been more diligent. There's a good chance they'll make next year's list.
This is an entertaining and enlightening take down of the right wing's distortions of the founding fathers and the Constitution. Austin has carefully read David Barton, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, and other right-wing pundits and the Federalists and anti-Federalists, so you don't have to. But you are most likely going to encounter the specious arguments of the right-wing from co-workers,. neighbors, and family. That's when Austin's book comes in handy. I think it would make an excellent gift.
Austin has also written an e-book supplement, That's Not What They Meant About Guns
2. Andrew Levison, The White Working Class Today (Amazon )
As a young leftist, I was a big fan of Levinson's 1974 book The Working Class Majority.. Now, almost three decades later, he has written a follow-up of sorts, a more examination of the white working class. This is a chock full of data analysis with many important insights. It is pitched at Democratic Party electoral strategists, but has lots to say to community and union activists.
Levison and Ruy Texeria present a summary of the analysis in a New Republic article
To create a stable Democratic majority, Democrats need to win the support of a significant group of voters who are now part of the Republican coalition. As the 2012 elections demonstrated, the group that has perhaps the greatest potential in this regard is the white working class.Moreover,
a significant group of white workers who currently vote for the GOP are “open minded,” not progressive but persuadable, on a wide range of issues including many traditionally associated with conservatives and the GOP. Such issues range from assistance for the poor and the need for government regulations to attitudes about social, ethnic and religious tolerance. Many white workers, while not Democrats, are also not Rush Limbaugh/Fox News conservatives.
3. Frank Dikotter, The Tragedy of Liberation (Amazon )
The title of this important readable book recalls Harold Isaac's classic book on 1925-27 The Tragedy of the Chinese Revolution (on-line from Marxist archive).Isaacs was a Trotskyist political activist who later became of college professor of liberal or social democratic views. Dikotter is a professional historian.
Dikotter builds his book around official Chinese government and party documents thatr have become available in recent years, but he presents his findings in a lively way.
Some takeaways. First, the early years of Chinese Communist rule exerted a tremendous human cost. The millions who were killed and the millions others who were sent to prison camps would have made Maosit China, even before the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution, one of the worst violators of humanity in our past bloody century. Second, there was no economic miracle. By many measures, the living standards of Chinese workers and peasants declined after Liberation. Third, there were widespread. struggles from workers, peasants, and citizens against the dictatorial policies of the new rulers.
4.-5.s Robert Kuttner, Debtor's Prison (Amazon ) and Mark Blyth, Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea (Amazon )
Mark Levinson wrote a tandom review of these two in Dissent's summer issue. Unfortunately, it's available on-line only to subscribers. I assume that Kuttner is familiar to most of my readers, but if you want to know more about Debtors Prison, Richard Eskow has a great review on Huffington Post.
There's an excellent review of Blyth at the London School of Economics website. Declan Jordan writes
At times I wondered if it was a contradiction in terms to enjoy so much a book about austerity. This is an intelligent, well-written book that is recommended for anyone wishing to understand, in both practical and intellectual terms, how the global economy has found itself in crisis.
We have heard the common mantra “austerity is not working” so often that it has now become cliché. The most irksome element of that mantra, at least for this reviewer, is that so often it is not clear what austerity means and even what would it mean for austerity to ‘work’. This is why it is refreshing for Mark Blyth to offer his definition of austerity early in the book, when he says it is “a form of voluntary deflation in which the economy adjusts through the reduction of wages, prices and public spending to restore competitiveness, which is (supposedly) best achieved by cutting the state’s budget, debts and deficits” (p.2).
The author argues that austerity is a dangerous idea for three reasons: it can’t work in practice, it imposes a disproportionate burden on poorer households, and it ignores the fallacy of composition that says that all countries cannot be austere simultaneously.
6..William Jones, The March on Washington (Amazon )
A history of the 1963 March on Washington which stresses the role of black trade unionist and the radical economic message of the march.
.
7. Sasha Abramsky, The American Way of Poverty (Amazon )
On the 50th anniverary of Michael Harrington's influential The Other America, Sasha Abramsky has written a very useful and information-packed book. He combines vignettes, analysis, and policy prescriptions.
8. Nader Hashemi and Danny Postel (editors) The Syria Dilemma (Amazon )
A wide-ranging collection of views about Syria from a variety of mainly US leftists.
9. Blaine Harden Escape from Camp 14: One Man's Remarkable Odyssey from North Korea to Freedom in the West (Amazon)
The publisher describes the book this way
The heartwrenching New York Times bestseller about the only known person born inside a North Korean prison camp to have escapedNorth Korea’s political prison camps have existed twice as long as Stalin’s Soviet gulags and twelve times as long as the Nazi concentration camps. No one born and raised in these camps is known to have escaped
No one, that is, except Shin Dong-hyuk.
In Escape From Camp 14, Blaine Harden unlocks the secrets of the world’s most repressive totalitarian state through the story of Shin’s shocking imprisonment and his astounding getaway. Shin knew nothing of civilized existence—he saw his mother as a competitor for food, guards raised him to be a snitch, and he witnessed the execution of his mother and brother.
Hardin interweaves Shin Dong-hyuk personal story with historical and sociological analysis of the North Korea prison state to make this a very readable and educational book. It has received almost 1000 reader reviews on Amazon with an average of 4.5 out of 5 starts.
Harden gave a book talk at Watermark Books in Wichita in the Spring. It was a good talk. During the pre-talk socializing, Harden confirmed that much of the machinery of North Korean machinery was learned from Stalin's Soviet Union.During the Q&A period after Harden's talk,, I asked about B.R. Myers' research showing that the North Korean ideology is based on racism and has more in common with Fascism than with the left.. Harden had good words to say about the relevance of Myers' views.
10. John Curl, For All the People (Amazon )
The subtitle sums it up: "Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America." There is much in this book that I knew from the edge from readings about the American labor and socialist movements, but here it is front and center. There has been a powerful and enduring impulse in the American people to seek cooperative and communal alternatives to capitalism. Curl does an excellent job in exploring that history. For my taste, there is a little too much on the intricacies of co-op and communalism in the counter-culture of the 1960s and beyond.
11. Peter Dreier, The 100 Greatest Americans of the 20th Century: A Social Justice Hall of Fame (Amazon)
A very useful collection of biographical essays about the 100 Americans Dreier judges to have contributed the most to social justice in the 20th century. i would have had slightly different choices and I was disappointed that Dreier down played or ignored controversial and unfortunate aspects of some of his selectees. Nonetheless, I recommend it highly.
Posted by Unknown at 11:04 PM 0 comments
Labels: books, My books 2013
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Country Club 26: Hazel Dickens
Here's a wonderful song about working from the great Hazel Dickens. If you like old-timey country and bluegrass and have left-wing politics, you probably like Dickens.
Hazel Jane Dickens (June 1, 1935 – April 22, 2011) was an American bluegrass singer, songwriter, double bassist and guitarist. Her music was characterized not only by her high, lonesome singing style, but also by her provocative pro-union, feminist songs. Cultural blogger John Pietaro noted that "Dickens didn’t just sing the anthems of labor, she lived them and her place on many a picket line, staring down gunfire and goon squads, embedded her into the cause." The New York Times extolled her as "a clarion-voiced advocate for coal miners and working people and a pioneer among women in bluegrass music." With Alice Gerrard, Dickens was one of the first women to record a bluegrass album.(wikipedia) [See also the allmusic.com biography.]
Posted by Unknown at 5:47 AM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music, Hazel Dickens
Sunday, November 24, 2013
The Global Labour Movement: a review
Here's a book review I recently posted on Amazon and Good Reades
The Global Labour Movement: An Introduction: A Short Guide to the Global Union Federations, the Ituc, and Other International Bodies by Edd Mustill
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
"Workers of the world unite" is a phrase that most every leftist knows, not to mention. plenty of non-leftists. Today, more than 175 million workers are members of unions affiliated with the ITUC (International Trade Union Confederation), This short guide to the global union federations (GUFs) of the ITUC belongs on the bookshelves of union activists, CLCs, state feds, international unions, and their equivalents outside the US. It is particularly important for US Americans who are not as exposed to the international cooperation of unions as our European comrades to have this knowledge.
In addition, to profiles of the GUFs, there are enlightening interviews with union campaigners from the UK and Nepal and short contributions from the head of the UK TUC's international department, Dave Spooner of the Global Labour Institute, Amnesty International's labor adviser, and the director of the International Centre for Trade Union Rights.
There are longer books on global unionism, but this short guide contains the basics. I think it would be a natural not only for labor educators, but also for many international studies classes.
If you've ever said or thought that unions need to respond to capitalist globalization by going global themselves, you owe it to yourself to get this book.
View all my reviews
Posted by Unknown at 1:01 PM 0 comments
Labels: books, Global Labour Movement, global unions, LabourStart, unions
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Country Club 25:Brandy Clark
I've got a feeling we're going to be hearing a lot from Brandy Clark. Her debut album,12 Stories, released in October of this year started at number 28 on the country chart has the air of a classic. Clark has written hits for other artists, including; an earlier Country Club featured Miranda Lambert's Momma's Broken Heart.
Will Hermes writes in his Rolling Stone review
In short it's an excellent CD. "Stripes" is perhaps the most commercial song on the CD and it has a great video. Enjoy
further proof of commercial country's sea change. Her debut is all airtight craftsmanship, sly wit and precise detailing that treats mainstream style like artisanal fast food. ...mostly her ear is unerring and her characters true — the kind of talent who makes the term "alt-country" unnecessary.
"There's no crime of passion worth a crime of fashion.
The only thing saving your life is that I don't look good in orange and I hate stripes."
Posted by Unknown at 9:59 AM 0 comments
Labels: 12 Stories, Brandy Clark, Country Club, country music
Thursday, November 21, 2013
My November 22, 1963 Memory
I can't remember whether I was in the fifth or sixth grade when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, but I know exactly where I was. Once I week, on Fridays, I rode my bicycle six blocks to take piano lessons during our lunch hour. I had turned north from 12th Street onto Gary that in three blocks would take me to our house and Stevenson Elementary which was right across the street. A classmate rushing to school shared the news that Kennedy had been shot. Oswald shot Kennedy at 12:30 pm, so the timing is right.
My class would have started at 1:00 pm. the same time that Kennedy died and about forty minutes before the news was broadcast that Kennedy was dead. I'm sure that we were told that the President was dead fairly soon after classes resumed. Likely we were allowed to listen to radio broadcast, but I don't remember for sure. Nor can I remember whether they let school out early or not.
I think I was watching on Saturday when Jack Ruby shot Lee Harvey Oswald.
I also remember that we had the Vaughn Meader Kennedy impersonation LP and that after the assassination, we bought a memorial book from Time or Life. Another memory is that during that the Cuban missile crisis, I remember taking the garbage to the trash can in the ally --in a sprint and back.
Posted by Unknown at 9:52 PM 0 comments
Labels: JFK, John Kennedy
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Albert Camus at 100: reclaiming his radical,democratic legacy
But I am thinking that Camus is not passe and am pleased to see that others agree.
Sean Carroll, in the Huffington Post explains "Why Camus Has Endured"
World War II produced a pantheon of great statesmen who rallied their countries in their hour of need. But even the immensely popular Churchill and de Gaulle promptly fell out of favor after victory. One prominent voice of the war, however, managed not only to grow in influence in peacetime, but continues to enjoy widespread admiration and popularity today: the writer Albert Camus.
On the centennial of his birth into a poor family in Algiers, and more than 50 years after his tragic death in an auto accident, Camus and his works still attract intense interest around the world. The struggles in which Camus fought -- World War II, the Cold War, Algeria -- have long passed, why has he endured so well?
University of Houston history professor Robert Zaretsky, author of Albert Camus: Elements of a Life (2010) and A Life Worth Living: Albert Camus and the Quest for Meaning (2013) had two very interesting interesting articles on Camus published about Camus on Huffington Post and In These Times
On Huffington Post he concludes 7 Things You Didn't Know About Albert Camus
Camus was not George Orwell's twin who, separated at birth, was raised in French Algeria. Orwell was taller and wore tweed. The rumor is, however, understandable. Both men smoked relentlessly, both men were tubercular, both men died too young and both men acted on their political convictions: Orwell during the Spanish Civil War, Camus during World War II. (Camus had also wanted to join the republicans in France, but his tuberculosis prevented him from doing so.) Both men remained on the Left, despite the very best efforts of the French and British Lefts, mesmerized by communism, to disown them. Both men, with their moral lucidity and personal courage, were essential witnesses not just to their age, but remain so for our own age as well.
Arab voices have begun to echo the man who was once seen as an apologist for French colonialism. The Moroccan magazine Zamane recently identified Camus as the “moralist missing in this new century of fear,” while the Tunisian intellectual Akram Belkaid, discussing the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi—the foundational act of Arab Spring—exclaimed: “Yesterday it was Camus, today it is Bouazizi: He is no longer part of our world, but he is not silent. His cry is primal: he demands the right to dignity.” And though Algeria remains quiet, its writers increasingly turn to Camus. Assia Djebar, for one, has placed Camus in the pantheon of Algeria’s—not French Algeria’s—political martyrs. The Algerian writer Hamid Grine published a novel titled Camus dans le narguilé (Camus in the Hookah), in which the narrator discovers that his biological father was none other than the author of The Stranger. This leads to his odyssey for both his real father and the literary legacy lost to Algeria.
The November 7 NPR report on Camus narrowly focused on Camus' Algerian connection and included the strange comment that "Though he hailed from the left, today he's embraced by conservatives." This is a clumsy formulation that implies Camus started on the left, but ended up somewhere else.
Camus, in fact, was a man of the left. He resigned from UNESCO in protest when Franco's Spain was admitted. This was not an isolated protest. Even after he became a best-selling and affluent author, Camus wrote for and served on the editorial boards of small journals of the non-totalitarian left.
Lou Marin, a European anarchist activist and writer, has written a very useful and informative essay The Unknown Camus: Albert Camus and the Impact of his Contributions as a Journalist to the Pacifist, Anarchist and Syndicalist Press ( (I suspect that Marin's essay may neglect Camus' relationships with other segments of the left.)
Here are a few quotes
In 1948 Camus set up an organisation to help political prisoners in Franco’s Spain, the Soviet Union and other authoritarian regimes, the Groupes de liaison international (GLI) (International Liaison Groups)....the proletarian activists and the intellectuals collaborating within the GLI were positioned somewhere in between Trotskyite and anarchist milieus, but were working together in this campaign.It sees that Camus adopted a "third camp" position on the Cold War. Camus was on the editorial board of
La Révolution prolétarienne
which warned of a new world war in the Cold War era of the 1950s and worked for a concept of peace based on anti-Stalinist premises.Marin also provides important information about Camus and Algeria which is usually ignored.
an additional appeal by Camus, dated October 1957, in which he condemns the assassinations of the armed Algerian Liberation Front, Front de Libération nationale (FLN), and the murderous campaign it was waging against the syndicalists of the Algerian independence movement under Messali Hadj (1898-1974). In this appeal, Camus poses crucial questions. For example: do these assassination tactics against fellow nationalist-syndicalists suggest a totalitarian character on the part of the FLN? Every syndicalist killed, Camus argues, reduces the legitimacy of the FLN a little further. He considers it a duty for anarchists to speak out publicly against the good conscience’ of an anti-colonialist left that justifies everything, and against political murder within their own ranks in the first place.And the conclusion
While we are happy about the Camus renaissance in France – after two decades of decided neglect by the pro-Sartre European left of the 1970s and 1980s – and while we welcome a rehabilitation of Camus’ critique of violent tactics and nationalism in the face of a civil war in Algeria, we nevertheless reject this kind of opportunistic appropriation of Camus by French New Philosophers such as André Glucksmann and others, who are nowadays nothing more than cheap apologists for the ruling capitalist system and the French right. To present Camus as a right-wing critic of totalitarianism is to put him back in the bipolar context of the Cold War, where Sartre and Jeanson wanted to place him during the debates of the 1950s, and from which Camus always wanted to flee with the help of his anarchist friends and the relationship he maintained with anarchist, pacifist and syndicalist periodicals.
(Another account of Camus and anarchism can be found here.)
Posted by Unknown at 10:24 AM 0 comments
Labels: Albert Camus, anarchism, democratic left
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Country Club 24: Busted
I heard John Conlee's version of "Busted" on the radio this week. Both the deejay and I thought of it as a Ray Charles song. But it was actually written by the great country songwriter Harlan Howard.It was a #13 coutnry hit for Johnny Cash in 1963 and a #4 Hot 100 hit for Ray Charles in the same year. And John Conlee reached #6 with it on Billboard's Hot Country Singles chart in 1982.
Here's Johnny Cash
And,Ray Charles (with some great horn lines that I suspect were borrowed on many a blues and r&b tunes.)
Posted by Unknown at 12:24 PM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, country music
Messiing Up Big Time on Univeral Declaration of Human Rights
Upworthy is a great for progressive memes,videos, infographics and the like. While I recommend it highly, a recent infographic on the Universal Declaration of Rights is almost great, but it contains a major mistake, misrepresenting the UDHR and promoting a retrograde, reactionary definition of a fundamental right. And to make matters worse the infographic has a copyright notice on behalf of the UN. Which means that the UN has, whether intentionally or, endorsed a most controversial simplification that rewrites the UDHR.
The infographic by Zen Pencils is introduced by Ray Flores with these words:
Did you know that the United Nations outlined what basic rights and freedoms we are entitled to? It's called the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. I’m really glad Zen Pencils drew up this simplified version, because it sure looks like a lot of countries need a refresher. Yeah, America, I’m looking at you, too!
Can you spot the problem with the infographic?
How about in this enlargement?
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance. (emphasis added)."The right to belong a religion" is a poor simplification of these 47 words. A better simplification would be "Everyone has the right to choose a religion." One fewer word. And it is big difference.
It seems that Zen Pencils and the United Nations need their own refresher course.
Some of the worst religious persecution is done by those who believe you have a right to belong to a religion as long as it is their religion or the religion you were born into. But no right to join a new religion or to reject religion.
Wikipedia's article on religious freedom notes
Among the most contentious areas of religious freedom is the right of an individual to change or abandon his or her own religion (apostasy), and the right to evangelize individuals seeking to convince others to make such a change.Another wiki article notes
Other debates have centered around restricting certain kinds of missionary activity by religions. Many Islamic states, and others such as China, severely restrict missionary activities of other religions. Greece, among European countries, has generally looked unfavorably on missionary activities of denominations others than the majority church and proselytizing is constitutionally prohibited.[68]
many modern Hindus are opposed to the idea of conversion from (any) one religion to (any) other per se.[39]
...conversion out of Hinduism is not recognized.[44]
Historically, the overwhelmingly dominant position in Islamic jurisprudence applies the death penalty to apostasy (from Islam). Both law and public opinion in contemporary Islamic societies still impose heavy penalties on those who wish to change theirw religion or to have no religion at all.
See this article on "Apostasy in Islam" on wikipedia. for some details, including poll results on the public attitudes towards religious freedom in Islamic societies.
A 2010 poll by Pew Research Center showed that 86% of Muslims in Jordan, 30% in Indonesia, 76% in Pakistan, 6% in Lebanon and 51% of Nigerian Muslims agree with death penalty for leaving Islam.Let's hope Zen Pencils and the United Nations will fully embrace the full concept of religious freedom enshrined in the UDHR and not a watered down version that de facto enables religious discrimination and persecution. How about changing the wording on this infographic and creating one dedicated to the full meaning of religious freedom in the UDHR?
A 2007 poll by Policy Exchange revealed that 31% of British Muslims believed that leaving the Muslim religion should be punishable by death.
Posted by Unknown at 9:55 AM 2 comments
Labels: religious freedom, UDHR, Universal Declaration Rights, Upworthy, Zen Pencils
Saturday, November 09, 2013
Country Club #23: George Strait
George Strait won his third CMA performer of the year award earlier this week.In May 2013, "Give It All We Got Tonight" became his sixtieth number-one single,the most of any country artist ever. Next year, he will have a 25 city retirement tour The Cowboy Rides Away. For those who are not close followers, that is the title of an early Strait single and his set closer.
I highly recommend Strait's career 4-CD box set Strait Out of the Box
There are lots of great Strait songs to pick from.I have chosen an early Strait single his third number one hit and his first video, "You Look So Good In Love" It's a beautiful love song--to the one that got away
Posted by Unknown at 11:20 AM 0 comments
Labels: Country Club, George Strait