Thursday, November 27, 2008

Peace On Earth, Good Will to Men

Over 400 years ago, Shakespeare (through Shylock) asked these immortal questions:

"Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions; fed with the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases, heal'd by the same means, warm'd and cool'd by the same winter and summer, as a Christian is? If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, do we not revenge? If we are like you in the rest, we will resemble you in that.”

Now, replace “Jew” with “man” and “Christian” with whatever ethnicity, race, culture, religion, etc., that you like and Shakespeare is presenting a pretty valid and convincing argument for today. If everyone walked around without skin on, could you tell whom to hate? If they wore no signs of religion or culture, could you still single the supposedly “wrong” ones out? No, you couldn’t. And that is the point. Everyone, every sex, every race, every religion, is made equal because we are all human. There is no separation; we are all of the human race.  What we look like, what we believe, how we behave socially, may make us distinctive but it does not take away from our equality.

The only time one man is unequal to another is when that man commits a crime against humanity, when he degrades and destroys the very thing he is a part of. Violence towards another being is never justified, no matter what cause you fight for or which flag you fly. You cannot hide behind religion; all the major religions teach peace. You cannot hide behind your country; your servitude to their ignoble cause is even more degrading then the cause itself. Violence breeds more violence. It is one thing to take down one vicious man, a man like, say, Hitler, a man so evil that his very existence makes peace an impossibility. It is quite another to kill with out distinction for a vague cause championed by men who lie for their own gain, on grounds material rather than moral. No cause, no matter how convincingly justified by propaganda and fabrication, is worth killing innocent humans for. Violence will never prove a point. It will only succeed in making others fear you and create a stronger violence among them that will destroy you. The only way to truly convince others of the strength and righteousness of your beliefs is by peaceful use of reason and logic, and to show them the passion you feel for your cause harnessed by respect for your fellow man.  Then, and only then, will you truly be heard. A respect earned by fear is not respect at all. 

The world will never be at peace until all of these things are truly understood. By loving your fellow man you learn to love yourself, which in-turn begets more love. And is by loving that the world will know a tomorrow far better than its yesterdays. Borders cease to matter in love; differences will be embraced rather than feared. Nationalism will not disappear, but it will be of a different, better sort. A true love of one’s country, rather than a shared fear of its enemies. This may sound Utopic, but it is within reach. Once people stop giving in to fear and hatred, emotions so easily felt and inflamed, and start to feel the subtle glow of love and compassion, then the world will know peace. 

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Modern Day McCarthyism

       Another thought that has been rolling around my brain as of late is: what is with all the brandishing about of the word "patriotism"? I mean, patriotism tests? I guess it all started with 9/11 when extreme patriotism came into fashion. Please, please don't misunderstand me. 9/11 was terrible and horrible and it was reassuring to see the country band together. But, news flash, pasting the American flag on everything from car stickers, to T-shirts, to boxers is not patriotic. Having a flag on everything does not make you a better person or mean that you love your country more. Actually, I feel that having the flag on things like boxers is pretty disrespectful. The flag is supposed to be a symbol of our country, not a design to cover your derrière. Yet again, I digress. Back on topic:  Living in America these past eight years we have had the idea that criticizing your government or the choices it makes is “unpatriotic”.  Speaking out against your country’s actions is not, let me repeat this, NOT unpatriotic. In fact, that’s kind of like more patriotic. Our founding fathers’ envisioned a country where you could speak your mind, not one that condemns criticism and controls media coverage. That’s called fascism, folks. You cannot hide behind the flag. You have the choice, the right, to burn that flag if you so choose. I may not agree with what you do in reading or writing or demonstrations (& I defiantly do not agree with flag burning) but, to paraphrase Voltaire, I would defend to the death your right to do it. And that is what patriotism is all about. So next time you hear someone going on and on about how this candidate or the other is unpatriotic, ask yourself “would they defend my right to burn the flag, or write controversial material, or even speak up for myself?” and then you’ll have an idea of how patriotic they truly are.

 

Our purpose now is to reclaim democracy itself. We are here to affirm that when Americans stand up and speak their minds and say America can do better, that is not a challenge to patriotism; it is the heart and soul of patriotism.

--Sen. John Kerry