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Marches Matter                                                                                    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1/20/2018

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By Bruce Thompson

Bruce Thompson is an adjunct instructor of philosophy at Palomar College. His Ph.D. is from the University of Colorado. His major emphasis in philosophy is critical thinking, formal logic, and American pragmatism. He is also a poet, violinist, and raiser of back yard chickens.
Marches Matter

​I
’d like to thank all the people who showed up for the 2018 Women’s March in San Marcos…but, it really isn’t my place to do so. I didn’t do anything more than show up myself. I didn’t help organize; I didn’t do any publicity; I didn’t even make a sign with a clever slogan on it. Like the man who marched next to me for a while—he was wearing a ridiculous pink backpack with floral patterns on it, which shouted “I’m here for my infant daughter!” (His daughter, a feminist of the future, was in a stroller a few feet ahead of us.)—all I did is show up. But, I think those of us who just showed up did something important. Marches are sometimes dismissed as useless show, a futile exercise that accomplishes little. I disagree. I think marches matter.

History certainly supports that opinion. Certain marches have proven to be turning-points, too many indeed to list here. The civil rights movement, the anti-war movement, the gay rights movement, etc. were all marked by memorable marches. The 2017 Women’s March will go down in history as well, and—who knows—maybe this year’s march will join it. Here are six reasons marches matter, listed in what I consider to be their reverse order of importance:

(6) Marches influence the public conversation. They attract news coverage; they publicize the important issues that motivate people to become active in politics. The more people who show up, the more publicity the march is likely to draw. Just showing up is important.

(5) Organizing marches is good practice. People who organize marches learn how to organize boycotts, campaigns, and voter drives—activities that can directly change our society and government.

(4) Marches energize people. A person who shows up for a march is almost certain to vote, even if the next election is months away. A person who shows up for a march is likely to do additional volunteer work—or even run for office.

(3) Marches are an opportunity to meet people who care about similar issues. Simply by showing up at the march I met people in my community who are active in the politics I care about. I got names, addresses, web-pages, etc., that connect me to further things I can do and other places where I can just show up.

(2) Marches are educational. By talking to people at the march I learned several things I didn’t know about the politics of my local community.

(1) Marches teach the value of political participation. People often show up to marches with their children. Those children catch the excitement of the event. They grow up caring about justice, and believing they can do something about it.

One of the great pleasures of participating in a march is seeing the signs that other people brought. My favorite from this march was: “We aren’t radicals. We are just informed citizens.”
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"I Have a Special Responsibility ... And So Do You"                                          ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1/16/2018

1 Comment

 
By Douglas Wood

Award-winning author, artist, musician, naturalist, wilderness guide: Douglas Wood, a Minnesotan, reflects in the essay below on his role during these chaotic times. Wood has written 35 books for children and adults. He has read his books, narrated, and performed at the White House, in New York's Lincoln Center and other venues around the country, and he leads far-flung wilderness expeditions. He lives with his family in a log cabin in the pines beside the Mississippi River. See more about this busy, creative man by clicking here. 

​"I Have a Special Responsibility--And So Do You"

I am just a private citizen who writes books for children. But because our president has uttered yet another foul, degrading, racist comment from the oval office, allowing that we don't want any dark-skinned people coming here from sh--hole countries, I have a special responsibility
. 
Because our president says there are many fine people in the white supremacist movement, I have a special responsibility.

Because he says we don't want people from Africa or Haitti, but instead more people from places like Norway, I have a special responsibility.
 
Because he has forgotten, never read, or never believed the words, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest tossed to me. I lift my lamp beside the golden door," then I have a responsibility.
 
Because he says a judge of Mexican heritage cannot do his job, that most Mexican immigrants are rapists and murderers; because he claimed for years that a black president could not possibly be legitimate, must not have been born here, or graduated from college; that the Central Park Five--found innocent--should still be executed; because he doesn't think Puerto Rico is part of the United States or deserves our help; because he cannot open his mouth or twiddle his thumbs without embarrassing and coarsening our country with profanity and stupidity; because he in no way sees the presidency of the United States as an office of moral leadership; because his entire existence is predicated on personal aggrandizement and enrichment; because he cares nothing for the effect his words and behavior have on impressionable children and the next generation; and because he so very clearly feels NO sense of responsibility to anyone or anything else--including the country he took a solemn oath to serve, I then have a special responsibility. 

And so do you. And so does every citizen of this nation. We have a responsibility to see clearly. Beyond party or personal enrichment. Beyond narrow advantage. We have a responsibility to think. To acknowledge reality. To stand for the decency and common humanity this man so clearly ignores or despises. And to speak out. Again and again, in whatever forum we can. Or else it stands. His words and actions stand. The debasement of our country stands.

I have lost and will lose friends, business, financial opportunities, the warmth of family, from speaking out; from words I decided to express publicly in this space. And elsewhere. But I do not regret one of them. Because I thought them through carefully and felt the need of them to express a truth that needed to be said. And because as an American, I have a responsibility.
​
And so do you. And so do we all share in the same responsibility. Because this is not OK. Not anywhere on Earth. And especially not in the United States of America.

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Breaking News                                                                                     -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1/11/2018

1 Comment

 
By Dick Eiden

Dick is a poet, attorney, and political activist living in Vista, California. The poem below is a pantoum, a poem with four-line stanzas in which the second and fourth lines in each stanza are repeated as the first and third lines in the next and the last line of the poem is the same as the first, rules Dick says he sometimes breaks. 
-------------------
Breaking News
Wolf Blitzer demands the Congressman do something 
about North Korea, names deadly threats to the region, says 
Nothing is working   Don’t you think we should do something?
We’ll go to our panel of experts after this break. 
 
They agree North Korea poses grave threats to the region but 
Oregon’s on fire, Texas and Florida drowned, millions without power
We’ll discuss this with a panel of experts after the break 
whether to bomb North Korea or fund the recovery - guns or butter.
 
Oregon’s on fire, Texas and Florida drowned, millions without power
and he made a deal to save the Dreamers, normalizing his deceit-
ful plans to bomb North Korea and fund the recover - guns AND butter
and the best health care in the history of the world, I can tell you that!
 
He made a deal to save the Dreamers and normalize deceit 
Pelosi and Schumer are on board, deliriously happy - “he likes us”
says he wants the best health care in the world. I can tell you 
international agreements are unraveling like cheap Korean suits.
 
Pelosi and Schumer are on board, delirious - he likes us 
to say bad things about the madman who thumbs his nose
at international agreements (unraveling like cheap Korean suits)
bullying and lying his way to a kingdom and a golden throne. 
 
Say bad things about the madman who thumbs his nose at civility.
Speak the only bloody language he understands, nothing else works
to stop the lying and bullying, his kingdom, his golden throne.
Running out of patience now, we must redouble our efforts.
 
Speak the only bloody language he understands, nothing else works.
He must stop behaving like this, we need him to do what we want.
Running out of patience now, we aim for a peaceful resolution but 
failing that we’ll be forced to take him out. All options are on the table.
September 2017
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2017: A Year of Loss                                                                            -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1/5/2018

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By Monica Hutchens

A resident of Vallejo, California, Monica is a behavioral analyst at the Spectrum Center Schools and Programs and Positive Behavior Supports Corporation in San Francisco.


​2017: A Year of Loss

The year 2017 will be remembered as a year of loss. These losses have been personal as well as universal, intrinsic as well as extrinsic, significant as well as minor. I won't list mine as that always smacks of mining for attention, but I will state those that have had a powerful impact on the way I perceive the world and live my daily life.
​
There has been a loss of kindness. People are quick to judge, quick to anger, quick to dismiss others as being "them." Finding kindness and empathy has become more and more difficult, and those who possess those qualities find them increasingly difficult to maintain.

There has been a loss of joy. A new life is now accompanied with a desperate fear for the quality of that life in 10 years, 5 years, next year.

Our country has suffered a loss of its core values. Those who interpret our Constitution in such a way as to justify the exclusion of other opinions, races, ethnicities, religions, gender, and sexuality now have a sense of righteousness and scream those justifications from the rooftops. All the while, they stridently declare that they are protecting our values.

There has been an ironic loss of security that has multiplied since a president promised to make the citizens safer. Guns now outnumber people in the USA, and those guns are used by both "bad guys" and "good guys," who are now more difficult to tell apart. The US is now just beginning to understand how millions of other people in the Middle East, South America, and Africa have been living for decades. Shame on us for not paying more attention to their security and consequently jeopardizing our own.

Our nation no longer has a sense of responsibility. It is unconscionable that Puerto Rico is still reeling from Hurricane Maria. It is unbelievable that our leadership has taken pride in breaking promises and promoting lawlessness. It boggles the mind that elimination of social service programs that literally save people's lives are about to disappear. If we have lost a sense of responsibility for our own, who are we?

Goodbye, 2017. Your passage inspires no remorse.
​ 
Hello, 2018. Let's try to get it right this time.


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