Just another Remembrance Day…

Remembrance Day seems to be sticking with me this year for some reason.  As a former peace activist, I’m one of those odd people who has always reflected on war and its causes and consequences*.  Currently, glory and  heroism are the dominant themes of the day.  While I feel a strong debt of gratitude and support for our military and veterans, in my mind focusing on their heroism defeats the deeper purpose of the day: prevention.

The Mennonite Central Committee in Canada came up with the concept “To Remember is to work for Peace”, a few decades ago.  “While Remembrance Day acknowledges the suffering that happens during war, it also affirms that wars are necessary,” says Esther Epp-Tiessen, MCC Canada’s peace program coordinator. “Our faith teaches us to love our enemies, to seek the well-being of our neighbours, and to do so through peaceful, non-violent means.”**

Over the decades, I’ve been impressed with these Mennonites the way they act on their beliefs in a big way – like forming volunteer brigades to build homes in developing countries.  So I was happy to learn of their take on war and peace.

What does it mean to “work for peace”?  Surely it has to begin with at least an understanding of the causes of war. These have been known and understood for a long time.  In fact, this understanding was a part of the creation of the United Nations (The League of Nations) after the first world war, and eventually, Peacekeeping.

In the sixties, the trajectory was increasingly towards developing steps to the  ‘permanent peace’ we used to dream of.  It included a large, mainly successful and respected role for the U.N.  We were still, underneath it all, afraid of nuclear war, so still motivated to prevent it.

In this new millennium, however, generations have grown up with a world full of nuclear weapons that have never been used.  It is now taken for granted by most that they never will be.

Meanwhile, people like myself, the harbingers of potential disaster, are tired of trying to find new ways to sound the alarm bells.  We too are moving increasingly toward escapist activities – Nero fiddling while Rome burns.  I often suspect we are entertaining ourselves to death.

Meanwhile, Israel and Gaza are at each other again, without much serious reaction from abroad.*   It doesn’t even show up on the Toronto Star’s website under “Hot Topics”.  So much for another Remembrance Day.

* http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1289703–gaza-civilian-toll-mounts-as-israel-targets-militants-in-residential-areas

** http://www.mcc.org/stories/news/after-two-decades-modest-message-peace-endures

Posted in causes, consciousness, nuclear, peace, reflections, Remembrance Day, social commentary, war, world peace | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

On “ending violence against women”

So you signed a petition to end violence against women?

Bravo.

Good start.

But How are you going to end it?

Really.

You are bigger, stronger animals compared to us.

Your  voices are, by default, louder and more intimidating.

By default, you are intimidating to smaller women, girls, little girls.

And that’s where it begins – this process of becoming intimidated and afraid of men,   of being unable to stand up to men as individuals, or in governance.

Our training starts early.

You just growl a little, and your little girl is intimidated.  You growl louder or shout, and she is afraid.

Will you learn to control your impatience?

Will you try to sound more gentle?

In the hope of assuring little girls and women that you come with good will?

That you come

Harmless?

Understand, that this too  is part of “ending violence against women.”

Posted in compassion, empathy, Power, reflections, violence | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

A few words for Skepticism

It seems to me that a few words about Skepticism* are in order.  I have talked about coming out as an atheist**; but I think it’s time to come out as a Skeptic too.

Skepticism seems a little harder for people to understand.  It’s more all-encompassing than atheism.  Deciding that you don’t believe in God is pretty straightforward in most peoples’ understanding.  While they may be shocked or disgusted, they at least get it.   It’s a simple rejection of something familiar – an every day sort of thing.  They understand it’s kind of adopting a ‘non-religious’ perspective.   While some people give up, say, Catholicism to become Protestant or Jewish, atheism rejects all theism.

But some atheists adopt an alternative set of beliefs that don’t include a god.  They might become Buddhists, Wiccans,  or (rarely) even believe in aliens.  And then there are a variety of belief systems which supposedly explain various aspects of living – ‘paradigms’ in a sense.  These would include beliefs like “quantum spirituality” and “New World Order”, etc.   None of these people would I call a ‘skeptic’.  Beliefs are beliefs, and by definition need no evidence or scientific proof.  Skeptics like myself, on the other hand, will often respond to an expressed theory, with anything from a mere ‘That’s interesting” to “Show me the science.”

I suspect I may represent the typical skeptic in the sense that I came to it relatively late in life, after temporarily adopting various ‘alternative’ theories or paradigms in different stages.  It was very gradual, and not a package of beliefs that I was sold on.   So what does skepticism mean to me in my everyday life?

It means tentativeness; keeping an open mind; accepting that we just don’t know everything, and that’s okay.  And it means change: adjusting my perspective as I learn and grow.

It means that when I hear a news announcement, for example, of  a scientific study that suggests we “may” have found “signs of life” on another planet, I don’t take it seriously.  In the context of science reporting, the word “may” is a very vague hypothesis, which only suggests a possibility for further future study.   Same with the word “signs” – and “life” – very open to interpretation.  I don’t get excited and I don’t join a movement or cult that believes this is proof of something.   The details of vocabulary are important and meaningful.

Some theories are quite complicated, and take a lot of patience, focus, time and thought, as well as trying to absorb equally complicated critiques.  Most people aren’t motivated to spend that kind of time or energy.  So many choose (not necessarily consciously) based on who’s doing the telling.  Or alternatively, it “feels right”.

Skepticism can be uncomfortable for people who need “answers” or certainty in their lives – or just plain old-fashioned “something to believe in”; it requires being able to live life without answers much of the time, yet hopefully not have to live with anxiety as a result.   Being comfortable with ‘not knowing’ helps.  It also helps to assume there’s no point in worrying as it has no benefit, and the corollary: taking  action can reduce anxiety.

My only remaining “belief” these days is more of an underlying assumption: that there is an interdependent web of all existence.  And this belief is tentative.

* http://www.skeptic.com/

** https://thinkinganddreaming.ca/2012/10/17/coming-out-as-an-atheist/

Posted in atheism, beliefs, evidence, personal growth, quantum consciousness, science, Skeptics, stages | Tagged , , , , | 11 Comments

Isabel, then and now…

At times it’s easier to reflect on the past more than  the present because the past contains more pleasure, less sadness (in some ways).

Recently I visited my 92-year-old aunt*, whose mental state  – which used to be  sharp for any age – has dramatically deteriorated.   During the two-and-a-half hour drive home, I reflected back on a lifetime of memories – times when our lives intertwined a lot, long gaps when they didn’t.

During my teens, she was the one who used to ask for my opinion.  Imagine that.  I suspect it was a strategy – you know, ‘engage the youth’.  But it sure ‘made a difference’ in my life.

She was the auntie who used to organize games when we got together.  Board games, blindfold roar-with-laughter games – part of what made it memorable when we celebrated at her house.

She was the auntie who wrote poetry; belonged to a writers’ group for twenty years and never mentioned it.  Just as she never mentioned her many talents and skills, like quilting or sketching.  Humility and Modesty were dominant values for her –  ‘biblical’ values, you might say.  She read the bible a lot, and would often quote from it – dire warnings (spoken quietly and politely but with a frown) about materialism (‘mammon’) or alcohol.  Just as I remember her mother – my grandmother – doing.

In recent years when I wanted to do video interviews of her, at first she protested -the immodesty of it all, then the embarrassment of looking old.   After reflection, she realized the value of it and relented, at first shyly, and then with enthusiasm.   Consequently there are hours of Isabel on video for posterity, including her reading from her own poetry, with her usual sparkle.

In an era when children – (especially female children) – were expected to be much less visible than in this new millenium, she made us feel special.  And to a misfit like me, it was sometimes even a bit of a thrill.

Isabel sparkled in any social situation.   On this last visit, she still sparkled.  Her personality – even her pretty smile – is still there.  But she seems to have suffered a stroke, perhaps – or was it the pile of pills she consumed with apparent abandon?  Or was it a lack of **B12?  And will we ever know?  For what kind of investigation will take place with a now “absent-minded” 92-year-old woman?

In her 80s, when she’d had five hip-replacements over the decades, a doctor decided against another one on the basis that she’d been “too many times to the trough”.  I was enraged when she told me that, for I knew it meant the end of life as she’d known it.  No more drives in the country, no more trips to art galleries or museums, and no more living by herself in an apartment, independently.  No, she would henceforth have to live in a “residence” use a wheelchair or a walker, and try to  enjoy a restricted, structured, unfamiliar community.   “Full care”.  Right.

She adjusted.   Some years later her last bionic hip became problematic, and it was medically necessary to give her a new one.  Ironic.  But too late of course.  Now, it was just a change of hardware, not a lifestyle enhancer.   To add insult to injury, not only was she stuck in that ‘home’, she also had to recover from major surgery.

When I walked into her room on that last visit,  something in her face told me instantly there had been a major change.   By the third time she asked about my extended family, it was obvious she had no short-term memory.  When I brought up a happy childhood memory, she recalled it immediately and talked about it, laughing – but moments later, she repeated the same details, unable to remember having already talked about it.

This was hard to see in my sweet little aunt, and it reminded me of the last time I had seen her mother decades earlier.  When I left, I had known I was saying good-by probably for the last time.  And I knew it this time.  As I left, I held the palm of my hand on her soft cheek, as if to imprint her permanently.   But I guess I didn’t really need to do that…

* https://thinkinganddreaming.ca/2012/10/17/coming-out-as-an-atheist/

** http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/29/health/vitamin-b12-deficiency-can-cause-symptoms-that-mimic-aging.html?_r=0

Posted in loss, Memories, old age, Reflection, reflections, relationships, senility, short-term memory, values | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Halloween – the ‘junk model’

The earliest Hallowe’en I remember I was about seven.  Mom had made crepe-paper costumes (made from a bought pattern) for my sister and me.  I was somehow not thrilled, partly because my sister got to be a rose (her name is Rose), but I was a pumpkin.  The indignity of it all!  Especially as the shapes were built around shaped wire, so I was a little round orange ball who couldn’t sit back on her seat, and Rose was the lovely little rosy-cheeked girl in pink.   Mom loved to sew, and I remember one year when she made my brother a cat costume that covered him entirely in dark grey fabric; we were all fascinated by his long tail.

And then there was suburbia – Pointe Claire, Quebec – where I learned about “Mat Night”, the night before Halloween.  This was a traditional night of pranks by adolescents – the harmless type when we’d put someone’s doormat on their roof, and the more irritating type when we wrote on someone’s window with soap.  During those years, for me, the only pleasure was pigging out on the resulting piles of candy Halloween night.  Costumes, for me in those days, were a competition in which I could only lose.

I was always in awe of people who could come up with a brilliant idea for a costume year after year – like my sister-in-law Jane, who not only had clever ideas, but could also sew anything – even better than Mom.   Again, throughout my life, costume parties have seemed intimidating to me, at best.  At worst, well last Saturday night I skipped a dance that required costumes, and instead went out to dinner and dancing in a place where not even a splash of orange appeared.

All of the above probably underlie my hiding in the dark, every Halloween night.  Lights off, invisible.  And this ‘custom’ of mine is strongly reinforced by my distaste for the increasingly commercial aspects of the event – peoples’ front yards full of plastic goo-gaws which really celebrates what has become a huge anti-creative industry.

I wonder if this trend indicates that my own intimidation by the ‘institution’ of Halloween is actually widespread.  Perhaps my neighbours buy the commercial package because they are more like me than I thought.  But when our children are small we do the Halloween thing at least in part because we don’t want our neuroses to reflect badly on our little loved ones.   If we refuse to participate, we risk traumatizing them.

For awhile there was a trend of organizing a neighbourhood party for the children, as an ‘alternative’, with games and loot.  But somehow it evolved into doing both ‘trick or treat’ and parties.  So there’s even more buying, more stuff.

And so, for event after event, celebration after celebration, Halloween, Easter, Christmas, we are buying into what I call the “junk model” of celebrating.  Supporting the petroleum industry, filling up the earth with crap.   Bummer.

Posted in awareness, commercial, competition, consciousness, Halloween, junk, materialism, modern life, pollution, reflections, social commentary | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

The People of the Kattawapiskak River

I sit here in my large, comfortable, well-heated home, almost trembling with reverberation from seeing Alanis Obomsawin’s film, “The People of the Kattawapiskak River” at the ImagineNative film festival in Toronto. Every Canadian needs to see it.

It’s late, and I’ll soon hit the sack, unworried about a fire starting in the night from improper wiring or an overheated makeshift stove.  I don’t have to worry about the approaching winter with 40 below zero cold but little insulation in my “temporary” ‘emergency’ trailer.   And I don’t have to worry about feeding or clothing my children, or whether they soon will lose our mother tongue – and our traditional survival skills, like snaring a rabbit.

I don’t have to worry that when I wake up tomorrow my neighbour’s adolescent boy may have died of alcohol poisoning or suicide.  Or in the final analysis, of boredom, and deep feelings of inadequacy, chronic depression, despair.

And to realize that most of this misery is the result of  cruel and ignorant exploitation by my ancestors’ governments and churches.  I feel shame, to the point of tears, whenever I am reminded of the residential school history.

You cannot, for example, take a young boy far away from his family and everything that is familiar and safe then, while he is already suffering from loneliness and homesickness, subject him to the additional cruelty of abuse, and expect him to become a strong, confident, emotionally healthy man who can lead his people to success and happiness.   You are more likely instead to drive him to drink, a life of nightmares and terrible memories, misery, and early death.

“The answer” is not self-flagellation.  We can’t undo the crimes that were done.  What we can do is everything in our power to make amends including all the help and support that will ever be needed.  There are many smart, impressive indigenous people trying to fix the wounds, in creative ways, but they need all the help they can get, because it was an emotional “bloodbath.”  We owe at least this.

And Restitution.  We should all be talking about this.

Posted in aboriginal, accountability, child abuse, consequences, exploitation, heritage, history, indigenous, loss, reflections, residential schools, Restitution, social justice, suffering, trauma, values | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Coming out as an atheist

When I was about 19, despite having taught Sunday school for three years, I delared myself an atheist.   Or perhaps it was because of Sunday school.  What had happened to the formerly ‘devout Christian’ me?

My aunt, who at 92 is as religious as ever and reads the bible a lot, accused me at the time of choosing “the easy way”.   For some reason that phrase still burns in my soul.  For all these decades, it has never been easy.  It is not easy going against the majority.  It’s not easy having no re-assuring beliefs to lean on as we go through life’s traumas and other learning experiences.  And it’s not easy having no simple explanations for the insanity of wars, climate change, and other scary things.  Easy?  More like chronic high anxiety with no relief.

When you don’t have a mysterious, powerful, invisible being – or ‘miracles’ – to believe in,  it’s up to you to search long and hard for answers, insights, and hopefully some wisdom.   It takes strength and determination to work our way through the mysteries and contradictions of life.

‘Coming out’ as an atheist in those days was somewhat comparable to coming out as a gay person today in some parts of the world.   In fact here in Toronto, I suspect today it has become easier to admit to being gay than to a lack of religious belief.  Atheism is the current pariah – one of the scapegoats for extremists to trot out as “the problem”.   There are many false beliefs about atheism of course, just as there are false beliefs about any category of humans.

Throughout my life, I’ve generally lived by the Christian values* I learned while growing up, through both family and church: compassion, honesty (with minor deviations!), and generosity.   But my drift away from churches began with my young, idealistic frustration at the hypocrisy of my fellow Christians.  I used to say bitterly, “they love the poor, but don’t want them to sit at the same table”.   The ‘properly dressed’ people I saw at church every Sunday, viewed the scruffier poor with disdain.  They seemed more interested in appearances than deeper issues.  Of course most “gave” when the collection plate was circulated each week.

For me, being a Christian meant being responsible for finding solutions to serious problems like poverty and war.  It meant acts like helping refugees, and accepting differences without judging.  It meant trying to understand difficult issues.  It meant living a ‘deep and meaningful’ life – acknowledging its complexity.

But to this day, I find “religious” people (of all religions) less likely than atheists to show compassion for homeless people, for example, and more inclined to believe that “they chose that life, why should I pay for it?”    Atheists I’ve known are more likely to search for actual cause-and-effect explanations, more likely for example, to see alcoholism as a disease, not a moral issue.

It’s hard to escape the fact that many right-wing Christians interpret the teachings of Jesus to mean it’s just fine to get rich.  Or that homeless alcoholics are just living the consequences of their choices.  Or that my willingness to ‘share the wealth’ or want higher taxes for the rich, can provoke accusations of “communist”.   It’s hard to escape the sad influence of religious extremists on scientific endeavours like stem-cell research, or the frequently anti-science perspective!  For me, these attitudes have always seemed an illogical “believer’s” orientation.  I remember an occasion when, as peace activists, a group of us were asked what we  might contribute to a certain event; one commented, “I will pray”.  At the time I felt a cynical disgust.  Now I hope I’d be more understanding and less judgmental.

For many decades, I felt so threatened by, and anxious around, Christians that I tended to avoid them.   But I no longer see people in such stark terms.  I’ve been relieved to discover there really are ‘thinking Christians’, who do act on their beliefs, who do actually try to make the world a better place in whatever way they can.   And of course it makes sense that many would be living out those same values I live by.

But for decades, I was truly afraid of ‘believers’.  In my mind, I had come to associate them with terrible things – quite apart from a general gullibility – like the horrible levels of racism before and during the civil rights movement; like the “Jonestown massacre”, survivalism, cults, etc.  For me they were anti-feminist, anti-choice, right-wing extremists, more likely to vote small-‘c’ conservative wherever they were. That in turn meant supporting the military-industrial complex, deficit economics, the death penalty, etc. and could conceivably ignite a global nuclear war based on belief in “The Rapture”.  With all this in my head, it’s easy to see why I had developed such fear.

With Christians – or Muslims, “schizophrenics”, golfers – any group of people with a label, if we don’t live among them or socialize with them, we tend to evolve our sense of what they’re like from the media – often sensational reports – or worse, hearsay.  As I tentatively include more believers in my life, my fear is diminishing, my respect increasing.  Who knows – perhaps someday I’ll even find a safe, soft spot in my heart for them.  Meanwhile, I’m trying hard to keep an open mind as we approach the U.S. presidential election in November.

* From what I have seen, the most important values are shared among all the major religions.

Posted in atheism, causes, compassion, fear, fundamentalist, gay, ignorance, Memories, peace, personal growth, poverty, reflections, religion, schizophrenia, social justice, values | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Occupy?

In the sixties, computers like we have now hadn’t been invented.  They were a ‘futuristic’ concept.  Some of us dreamed that eventually there would be a computer on every desk in schools.  We thought computers would be used to create shorter work weeks, more leisure time.   We were naïve.

That kind of thinking was part of a temporary  period of generous and creative social attitudes.  Wages were rising, unions were strong, benefits were increasing.  We in the western world were richer than  we had ever been and despite the cold war, there was a sense of optimism about the future.  A young ‘counter-culture revolution’ espoused love, sharing, equal rights, and a kinder, gentler future.

The space program was producing new and exciting byproducts.  New materials were changing the world – we could now throw sweaters in the washing machine – impossible with wool!  We dreamed robots would do everything for us someday.  Calculators would mean we’d no longer have to struggle with the ‘times-tables’.  Research would produce new solutions to problems, conquer diseases, create a whole new world in which people would live happily ever after.

But I guess we had forgotten how “the profit motive” works – and our own increasing materialism.    Reactionary conservatism came on strong.

Seems to me it was in the seventies that the right-wing reaction began in small ways, as movements do.   They gradually spread the message that taxpayers should get to keep more of their tax dollars – that their money was being ‘wasted’ by bureaucrats.  There was essentially a popular world-wide wave of “Hold on, enough of funding lazy louts and cheats and wacko research”.  One by one most of the ‘socialistic’ governments were defeated, we had Reaganomics, Thatcherism, and so on – all essentially ‘anti-government’.  Little by little social programs throughout the western world were cut back or thrown out; university research was increasingly funded by private enterprise instead of taxpayers; investments in the ‘military-industrial complex’ by governments were increased, CEO salaries inflated, shareholder rewards increased and the pressure continues to this day.

America – “leader of the free world” – went to the extreme of  ‘deregulation’ for banking and finance, and other fields – to ‘encourage investment’, a classic right-wing argument which we are hearing still in the current presidential election campaign.   It was easy to throw out the consumer protection of regulation, since most people don’t understand ‘money’ – or regulations, or consumer protection.   So while corporate executives became fabulously wealthy, it became easier to sell things people couldn’t afford – like homes – on borrowed money that they couldn’t afford to pay back.  Much of the west followed the U.S. example, not seeing that this was history repeating itself (The Great Depression).  This is of course an oversimplification of what led to the notorious meltdown of 2008.

Instead of shorter work weeks and more leisure time, corporations opted to use computers to accomplish the same work with fewer workers: more profit, lower costs.   Cutbacks of benefits became common,  ‘unions’ became evil; “Corporate Greed” has become a byword with good reason.

Reflecting on this abysmal history, I think what I ‘take away’ from it is the realization that while dreams of a better world are pleasant, they come true only with enough determined action by ordinary people.  For instance, perhaps the  “occupy” movement will develop a more focused attack on corporate greed.  I could easily imagine them becoming the “counter-culture revolution” of this new millennium.

Posted in capitalism, causes, computers, equality, exploitation, history, ignorance, Insight, love, materialism, Memories, personal power, politics, poverty, reflections, social change, social justice, values | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

Blogging consciousness…

Why do I blog?   Probably the majority of bloggers ask themselves, occasionally, why they do it, what they are after.    Am I posting too often, or too little?   And ultimately “What is my goal?” *

When I ask myself why, I realize that what I want really is to change people, to raise their consciousness in some way, to stimulate a little personal growth.  I am not here to entertain.  I am not here to teach cooking or decorating, or to share my art; someone else is taking care of that.  I ‘follow’ some of them.

As my fellow blogger, rap poet RDRevilo** says,

“How can we continue to witness what we see

How can we allow a voice to translate our lot, into acceptability

Which hypnotizes us into believing its inevitability

How can we not believe our eyes

Y can’t they see through a cosmetic camouflage of lies

And if we do

Y do we do what we do

Y in the midst of plenty

Most of us don’t have any

Y do we deceive ourselves with hope

Y has our humanity eloped

With cowardice instead of intrepid-ation

Why has firmness attracted hesitation

Y are we here

Right here, right now

Y”

He and I, among the more than 30 million bloggers on WordPress alone, express ourselves in two completely different ways, and the variety of self-expression is endless.  But we share our concerns with the state of humanity and the world, and in our own way, we are passionately working at changing it.

For me, part of trying to change the world, is to support and nourish others who are also struggling to roll that rock uphill, despite the difficulty, persevering because it is a real need.  It can be unbearably frustrating at times, and it’s encouraging to know there are others out there who identify with you in some way.

Einstein is supposed to have said, “The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.”  They would be the people who let others do the thinking and the ‘trying’, while they entertain themselves to death.

In this era of celebrity-obsession and mindless belief systems, I have more respect for those who “keep on trying”, than for just about anyone.

* http://bottledworder.wordpress.com/2012/09/25/blogging-quality-vs-quantity/#comments

** http://rdrevilo.wordpress.com/author/rdrevilo/

Posted in awareness, blogging, consciousness, Insight, personal growth, personal power, Poetry, Reflection, reflections, social change, values | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

Politicians accountable?

The other night I watched a movie called “Margaret’s Museum”.   It’s the first movie in a long time that made me ache.  Not cry – though almost.  Just ache, with a kind of profound sorrow.

There was the sorrow of recognizing a very real and ugly history exploited coal miners and the agony of the countless families who lived and died for coal.   There was the reminder of the many ways this kind of experience affects people emotionally, and in turn their children.   There was the reminder of the natural consequences of our blocking on exploitation that still goes on even today.

The movie was not just the story of an individual family, but also  a story of the deep sadness and behavior of people who are trying to live with loss, knowing it can happen again at any moment.   These long-standing situations in a sense produce almost dysfunctional communities, which in turn lack the ability to ‘save’ themselves.

There are people right now, for example, living and dying similarly for diamonds, minerals for our cell phones, or working with Canadian asbestos that we ourselves consider an unacceptable health risk.

Do we need a dramatic and memorable movie made of each and every situation of exploitation?  We change the channel so easily – literally and figuratively.   My complaint is with myself, as well as others.  What have I done lately to reduce the suffering of others?   There is so much of it, that we could be taking action many times every day of our lives.  And I think that’s part of the problem: it is overwhelming, and we don’t know where to start.   Perhaps that’s the action needed:

Could we require that everyone holding public office has a legal obligation to work at solving any problem he/she becomes aware of?   After all, many people believe they solve the problems of the world by voting.  And ideally, that ‘should’ be true.

Yes, I like that idea:  Accountability.  Gee, isn’t that almost like ‘responsibility’?   What a concept.

Posted in accountability, exploitation, politics, poverty, reflections, social justice, suffering, values | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment