Sunday, September 26, 2010

If that is slavery then sign me up!!!

Okay I want a new law. That law is that if you make at least one million dollars a year then you can not state that you are a slave. Why would I want such a law? Becasue then I would not have to read stupid statements from someone like Haynesworth.
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Albert-Haynesworth-I-am-not-a-slave?urn=nfl-272374
I will go out and a limb and say that if I am paid 32 million dollar to play football for a few years then I am not a slave if they want me to come to practice. Even if 300 pound men are tossing my skinny butt around I will still not complain about being a slave. So I need to write my congressman to get that law in place.
On a more serious note, does not Haynesworth know how insulting his statement is for people who really are or were slaves? Has he read his own history to see how badly real black slaves were treated? Does he not understand that the horrors of slavery exists today? Yet he wants to claim that type of victimization to negotiate better working conditions. Hello. You make millions of dollars a year to play a game. I thought I had a dream job as a professor, but how can any job beat that working situation?
If it was just stupid athletes who use such exaggerations then it is easy to just laugh this off. But of course we see this all the time. I put Obama and Hitler into my Google search and come up with 6,180,000 hits. Nice. When I put Bush and Hitler in my Google search I came up with 5,96,000 hits. Stupidity knows no political boundaries. Do these people really know what Hitler did? Why are they not embarrassed by making such stupid comparisons? I am betting that most of them do not have the excuse of being a dumb athlete.
When we use such extreme language we cheapen the real horrors of slavery and Hitler. But that is alright since we get to demonize our opponent. After all pushing our cause is more important than an accurate assessment of reality. I have causes I believe in as well. I hope that truth and honestly will be more important to me than merely getting my way with manipulative accusations and exaggerations.

Sincerely,

Trouble-Maker

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Can we have it all?

How many of us have everything we want? Not many huh? Even those who are rich in income often find themselves poor in relationships or spiritual comfort or health. Troublemaker has tried to live a holistic life. He has worked on being healthy physically, intellectually, spiritually and socially. I must admit that I do not have always a great social life but am pretty satisfied in the other areas of life. But that forces me to think if I only had a better social life then everything would be great.
But would it? What if I had that great social life? Would I not then start wanting something else. Perhaps even more academic success or a better relationship with God or more knowledge. I think I will never be completely satisfied. I will always want something more than what I currently have.
But that is alright. I do not think that we are on this earth to feel fully satisfied. When we are fully satisfied then we stop struggling to make ourselves or others better. If Troublemaker hits the lottery tomorrow (highly unlikely since I do not play the lottery) and was set for life financially then hopefully other financial goals will develop. Finding ways to channel money to causes I care about or setting up foundations will become important. But then I will need more money than just enough to take care of myself. I will need money to take care of these causes. So ideally even hitting the lottery will not satisfy me financially.
Or what about our social relationship. Ideally a person in a good marriage will not be satisfied. He/She will constantly trying to make the marriage better. He/she will constantly attempt to make life better for any kids in the marriage. Just because something is good does not mean that we can be satisfied that we have arrived in life.
This brings me to an important but troubling point. We are not meant to be satisfied. We are meant to strive. This does not mean that we have to be unhappy in our striving. In fact not trying to better ourselves whether intellectually, spiritually, socially or physically may lead to a laziness that creates a loss of meaning in our lives. As a society we should attempt to make the lives of people better around us and to make our own lives better. But we should not expect to be able to "arrive" at a point where no further improvement is needed. Sometimes it seems that some people have such unrealistic expectations. But would they really be happier if they had all their desires met and no longer st rived to make their lives better?

Sincerely,

Trouble-Maker

Friday, September 10, 2010

Some Free Speech Please

This morning while I watch "Morning Joe" on MSNBC I saw a strange alliance take place. Donny Deutsch, a far-left commentator and Patrick Buchanan, a well-known conservative, both agreed on a solution for Terry Jones - the pastor who wants to burn the Koran. They believed that for the sake of national security that if the pastor insists on going through with the burning that President Obama should use Federal Marshals to arrest Pastor Jones for the sake of national security and the lives that may be saved if Muslim do not riot. President Obama can then use his justice department to create some charge to hold Jones on. To this solution Trouble-Maker has only one word.
Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
If anyone thinks that I am sympathetic to Pastor Jones then they should read my last post. But such an action would clearly strike at the heart of freedom of religion and free speech. Those are two cornerstones of American democracy. It is not hard to defend freedoms with those we agree with or disagree with but are still acceptable. But where the rubber meets the road is when we have to defend these rights for those who are offensive, such as Pastor Jones. His actions are clearly religious in nature and the expression of a given idea about Islam. We can speak out against his actions all we want. But his actions are covered by constitutional rights and if we do not defend them now we may not defend them in the future.
And what sort of a future may that be. Will we arrest a pastor who speaks out against homosexuality under the guise of ridding our society of "gay bashing"? Will we confine a supporter of Afrocentric theology so that the clergy person does not incite inner city riots? Should we round up religious critics of the Afghanistan war in the name of "protecting the troops"? The type of rash action proposed by Deutsch and Buchanan is a short cut that sets a precedent that can not be easily erased. Religious viewpoints seen as acceptable today may not be seen as acceptable tomorrow. And once those viewpoints are not seen as acceptable then all sorts of governmental abuses become possible.
Trouble-Maker stands squarely on the side of free speech and freedom of religion. If those rights mean anything then they mean that the government does not use its power to squash religious expression and speech it does not want to have. Those of us outside the government can call Pastor Jones whatever name we want or boycott organizations we disagree with. Private citizens can react in whatever way they want to offensive speakers. The government has to stay out. In doing so we do not only protect the rights of Pastor Jones. We also protect our own rights to ridicule and minimize his stupid ideas about burning the Koran. By protecting Pastor Jones I ultimately also protect myself.

Sincerely,

Trouble-Maker

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Short Term Thinking and Long Term Consequences

Okay. You never know where you are going to find new examples of stupidity. Take this for example.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100907/ap_on_re_as/as_afghanistan

I mean come on folks. What do these good "patriotic" Christians think is going to happen when they get their kicks burning up the Koran. I think that a lot of the claims that what we do fuels Muslim rage is overblown. But this time the General is right. Do they remember the number of deaths that occurred after the Muhammad cartoons. Yes it is their legal right to destroy the Koran but it is just wrong for them to do it (kind of like the 9/11 Mosque situation but I digress).

But when you think about it, this is a good move for this church. They are a church of fifty people. Joel Osteen the pastor is not. This stunt has given them all sorts of national and even international news. I would be surprised if they remain at fifty people. There are plenty of others who hate Muslims who will cheer them on and support them. Some of these people may even join the church. So what is bad for the troops and certain to lead to death is actually a good move if this church wants to gain notoriety. What is it they say. There is no such thing as bad publicity.

This brings out a larger societal issue. Often what aids us, or our group, in the short run hurt a lot more people in the long run. The welfare cheat benefits his/herself in the short run. But in doing so make it harder for us to get the aid people really need in the long run. The factory gains in the short run from exploiting labor. But in the long run this exploitation sets up unions and government regulation that stifles the economy and eventually cuts into the factory's bottom line. We do not always do well with long range thinking.

We have lost some of the will to overlook short-term gain for the higher good of serving our society. There are a lot of reasons for this. But our notion of individualism and entitlement can lead to some horrible consequences if we are not careful. I hope this church reconsiders and does something that expresses their opposition to Islam in a more responsible and less flamboyant way. I also hope that more of us consider the good for the community and society to be at least as important as the good for us and our particular group.

Sincerely,

Trouble-Maker