Monthly Archives: December 2013

The appropriate popular response

Seen in Atlanta airport, Dec. 18, 2013.

Seen in Atlanta airport, Dec. 18, 2013.

The Church teaches us the Way of holiness by pointing us to the truth. The government “teaches” us what the “appropriate” response to something is by spending millions of dollars on PR campaigns (i.e. via very sneaky and highly effective propaganda).

“To preclude a recurrence the Vietnam Syndrome during the GWOT, the Pentagon conducted an astonishingly vigorous and comprehensive public relations campaign that provided it with public visibility and with a familiar, readily accepted presence across a wide array of popular cultural activities.45 During the Bush administration this included a program specifically designed to encourage Americans to support US troops, and to create among US military personnel an impression that their efforts and sacrifices are valued back home and that the American public stands behind them as they continue the occupation of Iraq and the indefinite war on terror. This double-edged sword aimed at both a public and a military audience was called America Supports You (ASY).

…According to American Forces Press Service (AFPS), “The Defense Department launched [ASY] in November 2004 to showcase support for the country’s men and women in uniform from the American public as well as the corporate sector.”46 With the aid of a multimillion dollar contract with a private public relations firm, a private foundation called the America Supports You Fund, over 35 major corporate partners such as Anheuser-Busch, Wal-Mart, and Microsoft, and hundreds of local affiliate groups, ASY organized mass ‘Freedom Walks’ in dozens of cities nationwide to commemorate 9-11 and encourage patriotism and militarism as the appropriate popular responses.”

“Support the Troops”: Populist Militarism and the Cultural Reproduction of Imperial Power, Mark Rupert, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University

Is Katniss Christlike?

This “Catholic meme” perfectly encapsulates pervasive misunderstandings about the Hunger Games on the part of the Christian community, which I wrote about at length hereBelow is a photograph of St. Maximillian Kolbe, who volunteered to die in place of a stranger in the Nazi German death camp of Auschwitz. He is being compared to Katniss in the Hunger Games. This is obviously a reference to the scene where Katniss volunteers to go to the “games” in place of her sister. Many Christians call Katniss a Christ-like figure because this was an act of self-sacrifice.

"Catholic meme" with St. Maximillian Kolbe

“Catholic meme” with St. Maximillian Kolbe

There is one very important difference between Katniss and St. Maximillian Kolbe: St. Maximillian Kolbe was a nonviolent individual who never, as far as I know, killed anyone. Katniss is a killer, no matter which way you slice it. Many people would surely say that the difference between them is so obvious it does not even need to be pointed out, but to borrow a line from Neko Case, the difference between these two tributes/martyrs/heroes is “so clear it is almost invisible.” And there are those who wish to make that difference invisible, so as to be better able to propagate untruths and half truths, so as to serve their own dark ends.

There is a difference between offering to suffer in place of another and offering to kill in place of another. There is also a difference between person A being willing to sacrifice his own life so that person B can live, and person A being willing to kill person C (and maybe persons D, E and F) so that person B can live, even if person A is risking his own life in the process. In a certain light, both can be seen as acts of self-sacrifice, but only the first one is Christ-like. The second is not.

Stop the Cavalry

Hey, Mr. Churchill comes over here
To say we’re doing splendidly.
But it’s very cold out here in the snow
Marching to and from the enemy.
Oh I say it’s tough, I have had enough,
Can you stop the cavalry?

I have had to fight almost every night,
Down throughout these centuries.
That is when I say, oh yes yet again,
Can you stop the cavalry?

Mary Bradley waits at home,
In the nuclear fallout zone.
Wish I could be dancing now,
In the arms of the girl I love.

Wish I was at home for Christmas.

Bang goes another bomb on another town
While the Czar and Jim have tea.
If I get home, live to tell the tale,
I’ll run for all presidencies.
If I get elected I’ll stop
I will stop the cavalry.

Wish I was at home for Christmas.

Wish I could be dancing now,
In the arms of the girl I love.
Mary Bradley waits at home,
She’s been waiting two years long.

Wish I was at home for Christmas.

–Jona Lewie, Heart Skips Beat, 1980

Nun in Jail

“The 83-yearold Rice has chosen to spend the final chapter of her life behind bars. She faces a possible 30-year prison sentence on charges of interfering with national security and damaging federal property, resulting from an act of civil disobedience she committed in July last year.”

Radical Nun Says Answering Her Christian Calling Landed Her In Prison, Al-Jazeera America, December 16, 2013

Anti-nuclear activists Gregory Boertje-Obed, Sister Megan Rice and Michael Walli in Knoxville, Tenn., on Feb. 6, 2013. Linda Davidson/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Anti-nuclear activists Gregory Boertje-Obed, Sister Megan Rice and Michael Walli in Knoxville, Tenn., on Feb. 6, 2013. Linda Davidson/The Washington Post/Getty Images

 

Paul Mayer, Rest in Peace

Paul Mayer

Paul Mayer, 1969

Paul Mayer, 82, Ex-Priest and Peace Activist, DiesThe New York Times, Nov. 29, 2013

“In the 1960s and ’70s, Mr. Mayer helped the Berrigan brothers plan some of their highly publicized antiwar sorties, including the 1968 raid on a draft board office in Catonsville, Md., to remove and burn draft files in the parking lot outside. He also coordinated underground support for the Berrigans when they went into hiding, hunted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as among its 10 most wanted fugitives.”

Muslims Help Rebuild Catholic Church

Christ the King Chapel in Zamboanga. Photo from http://asiafoundation.org

Christ the King Chapel in Zamboanga. Photo from http://asiafoundation.org

“We have not heard of any Muslim helping build a chapel before,” Villaflores  said.

But before the Christians could say anything to the Muslims, they went to  work, sawing lumber, driving in nails and doing other things to rebuild the  chapel.

Click here for the full story.

http://empire.is/

Josh Begley has started a website that is mapping the United States’ military footprint. He writes:

“Taken as a whole, I’d like to think this collection can begin to approximate the archipelago of militarized space often understood as empire. But I’m hesitant to say that. It seems to me that empire involves more than pushpins on a map. It is made up of human activity — a network of situated practices that preclude constellational thinking and sculpt geographies in their own image.

I’m not sure aerial photography can get at that complexity. But perhaps an outline of this footprint– of runways and bases and banal-looking buildings — might begin to chip away at the bumper-sticker simplicity much political discourse about the military-industrial complex gets reduced to.”sa_bing616

He also runs Dronestre.am, which gives real time and historical data about every reported United States drone strike. There is even an iPhone app. Check out his work at JoshBegley.com.

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War is Over

If you want it.

“Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” was a song written by John Lennon and Yoko Ono to protest the Vietnam War. It was released in 1971 and sung with the Harlem Community Choir.

 

Hark!

Song of Angels

Song of Angels

“The first Christmas hymn in history, which established for all time the inner melody of Christmas, was not composed by men. Saint Luke transmits it to us as the song of the angels who were the ‘evangelists”’ of Christmas night: ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among men’—the men who enjoy his favor, the men of good will. This hymn lays down a criterion. It helps us to understand what Christmas is really about. It contains a word that moves people today more than any other single word: peace. The biblical word shalom, which we translate in this way, means much more than the mere absence of war: it tells us that human affairs are as they should be, it denotes well-being, a world in which trust and brotherhood rule, a world without fear or deprivation or cunning or falsehood. Peace on earth—that is the goal of Christmas. But the angels’ song speaks first of a principle without which there cannot be any lasting peace: the glory of God.

If we are concerned about men and their well-being, we must first of all be concerned about the glory of God. The glory of God is not a private matter left to the arbitrary whim of the individual; it is a matter of public concern. It is a common good, and where God is not honored among men, man too cannot be honored. This is why Christmas is about peace among men: thanks to Christmas, the glory of God has been reestablished in a new way among men.”

~   Joseph Ratzinger (Pope Benedict XVI)