British Train Bombing

Democracy Now posted an article (London Subway and Bus Explosions Kill 37, Injure 700, dated Thursday, July 7th, 2005) including interviews with some of the passengers from the London trains that were bombed. One passenger, Angelo Power, said:

ANGELO POWER: The others I saw, physical injuries, some had marks to the face. The carriage windows had punctured their skin. Others were physically lying on the floor, because they basically suffered smoke inhalation. Others in the main carriage, as I understand, are severely injured, if not dead. So, but at the end of the day, I honestly thought I was going to die. I’m just grateful to be alive.
REPORTER: It is looking increasingly as though this was a concerted terror attack. What do you think about the people behind this, having lived through this nightmare yourself today?
ANGELO POWER: Well, as a barrister, all I can say is, you know, I wait for the evidence before I can make any or jump to any conclusions as to who it may be. But all I can say is, you know, whoever’s responsible for it, I take pity on them.
REPORTER: Pity?
ANGELO POWER: Yeah, pity, because whoever has perpetrated such a wicked act, you know, needs pity, right?

Thank you, Mr. Power, for an expression of what the political rhetoric of the “War on Terror” is missing. In pity for the person who did a “wicked act,” there is the thread we have lost, the sense of our common humanity.
We will never have enough money or enough people to guard everything all the time, so we can never create a society in which 1) people are free to make choices about their own lives and 2) such acts as the London bombing are impossible.
And we can’t get rid of dissidents by shooting them.
If we lined all the terrorists up and shot them this afternoon, tomorrow their friends, families, and students — those who knew them and shared their world view — would all be terrorists.
If we shot everyone who was not a Christian today, the Christians would have a war among themselves tomorrow.
If we shot everyone who was not a Muslim, — oh, wait. Muslims are already fighting themselves. And most of the world is helping one side or the other or both.
If we can dredge up some sense of our common humanity that doesn’t require everyone to be exactly like us, maybe there is a hope of creating a world in which bombs don’t explode on trains because nobody feels it is acceptable to blow up trains full of people.
We could start by trying to get hold of what Angelo Power knows — people who commit such acts disserve pity. They are people driven by the political and religious delusions of a war that will not end until all of the infidels are buried. Could we work on our delusions a little here and quit exchanging bombs for a few days?

Grapes




Grapes38

Originally uploaded by Sarah Williams.

Watching the grapevine this year is more interesting than politics. Things keep moving along there, and it is beginning to look like there will be a return on investment.

Politics is getting really frustrating. It seems that by now voters would have hit upon the idea that if we want better intelligence, then we ought to elect some. Who knows, with some better intelligence in the right place, we might be able to get government off their theocratic high horse and back to the business of taking care of people and the environment — medical care, building roads, creating jobs, worker safety, disaster relief — things like that. Maybe we could even find a way out of the Iraq mess this administration has made, where we are involved in a civil war abroad where nobody is on our side, our people and theirs are dying every day, and we can’t even explain what we are doing.

On the Social Security thing, if you are young enough, bright enough, and have enough income, start yourself a stock market account that you can manage yourself. That way you won’t be giving your money to the Neo Cons to give to their cronies. The money we pay in taxes and in Social Security contributions should do something for the common welfare of people. That is the proper function of government —
domestic tranquility and the common good of people.

Now I have to go and see if there are any bugs eating the grapevine…

Peach_Tree




Peach_Tree

Originally uploaded by Sarah Williams.

Of course I don’t get tired of watching my plants grow through the seasons and taking photos of them!

The peach tree has a fair number of peaches this year. The white planter has three grapefruit tree seedlings that are about two or three years old. It was on the bannister above. A thunderstorm last night with some strong wind knocked the planter off, and I found it this morning, upright and unharmed, sitting under the peach tree.

Millie




Millie

Originally uploaded by Sarah Williams.

This is Mildred all tired out after a long session of ignoring me.

Still in the Parallel Universe

In an AP story published in the Bristol Herald Courier on Friday 6/17 related to yesterday’s post, Houston lawyer Bruce Shortt (a sponsor of the proposal to encourage Southern Baptists to take their children out of public schools) is quoted as saying that “churches should look into whether schools are teaching acceptance of homosexuality”:

“Much of this is deceptively labeled as anti-bullying, diversity, safe schools, AIDS/HIV awareness,” Shortt said. “For those who care to investigate, homesexual activists with their agenda are moving through the public schools like freight trains. It’s a problem I think too many denomination leaders don’t understand.”

According to the AP story, Bobby Welch, SBC President and a Daytona Beach Florida pastor, does not support the proposal. He says:

I believe that public schools offer the greatest mission field….We are put on this planet as change agents. It seems contrary to me we would draw back from the opportunity to make a change. Public schools are a great place to make a difference.”

The story also quotes Robert Parham, executive director of the nonprofit Baptist Center for Ethics:

[Parham] said many SBC leaders fear a backlash from public school teachers and an “awakening within churches about the extremism of their world view.”

Does this mean that he believes that the ordinary lay member Southern Baptist should sleep on and not trouble their mind about what the church is doing? Or that the Southern Baptist public school teachers (of whom there are many) might not like being called “godless”? He continues:

“These SBC leaders who are resisting the resolutions engage in the worst sort of moral duplicity,” Parham said. “They oppose the anti-public school resolutions while they send their own children to Christian academies or homeschools.”

Working around the multiple negatives of opposing the anti-public school resolution being a moral duplicity, it appears he believes that the resolution should be supported in spite of the risk of awakening and backlash.
This is going to be an interesting conversation.

Where do these people live?

Okay, the Southern Baptists are shrinking away to nothing, their children leaving the church in droves, as liberal education leads them astray. No, wait. I heard they were growing by leaps and bounds, controlling more and more areas of business and politics — even elected one of their own to the highest office in the country, where he has appointed other like-minded faithful to high offices.
It occurs to me that there may be two realities, and I am caught in one of those Star Treck episodes with a parallel universe….
<a href="http://www.washtimes.com/national/20040511-111759-5766r.htm&quot;
Southern Baptists eye exiting public schools By Julia Duin in THE WASHINGTON TIMES

A resolution urging Southern Baptists to remove their children from public schools has been proposed by an Alexandria man for the denomination’s annual convention in Indianapolis next month.
Thomas C. Pinckney, a retired Air Force brigadier general and former second vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention, and Bruce Shortt, a Houston lawyer, co-submitted the resolution on April 29.
“It dawned on us that academics were going downhill,” said Mr. Pinckney, who edits the monthly Baptist Banner newspaper, which he said has a circulation of 20,000. “That was the beginning of our awakening.”
The resolution urges Southern Baptists to “remove their children from all government schools and see to it they receive a thoroughly Christian education.” It also instructs the denomination, which is the nation’s largest non-Catholic sect at 16.2 million members, to “counsel parents regarding their obligation to provide their children with a Christian education.”
It notes that public school students receive “an anti-Christian education,” that public schools teach the acceptance of homosexuality and that student-run clubs friendly to homosexuals are spreading in public schools.
Quoting a biblical passage comparing children to “arrows in the hands of a warrior,” the resolution notes: “Just as it would be foolish for the warrior to give his arrows to his enemies, it is foolish for Christians to give their children to be trained in schools run by the enemies of God.”

If SBC’s Resolutions Committee decides to present the resolution to the full convention (June 15-16), it will need a simple majority to pass. If the committee rejects it, Mr. Pinckney can still introduce it on the floor, but it would need a two-thirds majority vote to pass.

He [Mr. Pinckney] said many Christian parents eventually will boycott public schools.
“Some public schools are doing a good job, as are some teachers who are Christians,” he said. “But they are in a system that is officially and legally godless.”

Mildred ignoring me




Mildred_2

Originally uploaded by Sarah Williams.

This is a photo of Mildred ignoring me. She does not pay much attention to me unless she wants brushed, wants the water turned on in the bathtub, wants Arby’s roast beef (her favorite food) or, of course,if I am sitting in her chair. If I am nearby and she thinks I might want the chair, she makes it a point not to notice me, even if I have the camera.

Supporting Organizations and Charity

If you are following the developing story about the charitable vs. the tax advantage aims of Supporting Organizations, Philip Cubeta at Gift Hub has a good anecdotal definition of the issue.
The government issue paper (.pdf untitled document) is at http://www.cof.org/files/Documents/ Government/ 2005%20Issue%20Papers/05_FOTH_ Supporting_Org_-_ FINAL.pdf. (That’s the kind of URL that makes you appreciate links.)
And if you have 10 million dollars (minimum) you can find assistance in setting up an SO at National Philanthropic Trust.

Florida Shooting

So did that pizza delivery person in Florida who was shot and still went on delivering the rest of his pizzas before he went to the hospital have medical insurance? Maybe he needed the money from the next few pizza deliveries to pay the hospital.

Tipi




tipi5int

Originally uploaded by Sarah Williams.

This is the exhibit tipi at the Native American Festival at Sycamore Shoals State Park today. We could get into the entrance far enough to see the interior, but we could not walk in. For this shot I just held my camera at arm’s length and shot toward the top of the tipi.