November 14, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Politics, Robert C. Koehler
Repairing Justice and Rebuilding Community
by Robert C. Koehler
I felt the music and the fire as the civil rights movement rose from its slumber.
“Repair . . . justice!†went the call and response last week, in the basement of an old Chicago church at the corner of Ashland and Washington. “Restore . . . life! Rebuild . . . community!â€
There was Gospel music and hand-clapping, passion and politics. The Reclaim Campaign launched and the Rev. Alvin Love said, “This is just the beginning. It’s going to take all of us. We’re going to leave this place mobilized, energized and activated. The work begins NOW.â€
Reclaim “Chiraq.â€Â The kids are dying. That’s what they call Chicago: “Chiraq.†The situation has to change; the community has to rebuild.
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November 13, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Missy Beattie, Politics
The Only Thing We Have to Fear…
by Missy Beattie
The stage was almost dark, quiet, but we could see 36 (Erma counted) tiered boxes with red curtains. Each was bordered with globes that were illuminated softly. Suddenly, a stringed instrument broke the silence as the lights brightened and the curtains of one of the
boxes opened to reveal a cross-legged, turban-wearing musician playing the kamancheh. Then another curtain opened. Another musician behind that curtain. And another. And another.
The Sisterhood sat in a North Carolina concert hall Monday night, transported to an exotic world. Our jaws dropped. The Manganiyars, a 43-member troupe spanning three generations, are from Rajasthan, a desert region in India. Their performance suitably is called The Manganiyar Seduction. Seduction, yes — the visuals and music are alluring. During the extravaganza, a dancing conductor lead the musicians. He’d face the performers, then turn to the audience, back to the musicians, to the audience, clicking castanets and encouraging the audience to clap hands, mimicking the castanet-ing. Gracefully twirling, leaping, landing, this artist was an 80-minute, cardio-vascular demonstration interrupted only once when director Roysten Abel took the stage near the show’s end. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 12, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Ecology, Evaggelos Vallianatos, Politics
Fukushima: Danger, Deception, and Betrayal
by Evaggelos Vallianatos
Last month I watched a documentary on the March 11, 2011 nuclear disaster in Fukushima prefecture, Japan. The showing of the 2013 documentary, A2-B-C, took place in a cafeteria of Pomona College where students gather at tables and speak foreign languages. I am a
guest at the Greek table.
The American producer, Ian Thomas Ash, introduced his film and answered questions. He is young and unusually virtuous and talented. He sees himself as a witness of a tragedy he has to report to the world.
He said he felt morally obliged to document the effects of the horrific nuclear accident. That is the reason he is not married and without children. For the duration of filming he lived in the contaminated Fukushima prefecture with the affected local people. He ate the food they ate and drank the same water. In addition, he speaks Japanese and has lived in Japan for several years. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 11, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Guest Author, Politics
Reflections on the Day from a Veteran
by Andrew Larkin
I am a veteran — of the Vietnam era, as are my friends and my brothers.  My father, uncles, and an aunt were veterans of World War II.  A great uncle was stationed on a battleship during World War I.  A great-grandfather fought in the Civil War, an immigrant in an
Illinois regiment who suffered the rest of his life from his bullet wound.
Veterans Day on November 11 was formerly Armistice Day, celebrating the end of the Great War.  But it has turned from a celebration of peace to a celebration of the false glory of war.
War damages everything associated with it, not only the sailors and soldiers but the civilians including the children, not only the body but the mind and the spirit.  Glorification of war becomes support for more war, for accepting the easy violence of war instead of the difficult peaceful resolution of human problems. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 08, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Politics, Robert C. Koehler
Corralling the Loners and Stemming the Violence
by Robert C. Koehler
Another crazed, furious loner shocks the world. This time I’m a little too close to the edge of the chaos.
I gape at the TV in disbelief: I’m supposed to fly out of Los Angeles Airport — Terminal 3, no less — that afternoon, but all I see is footage of scrambling police and snarled traffic. If I’d booked an earlier flight, I could have been sitting there when the 23-year-old gunman shot the TSA agent at the foot of the escalator, then wandered through the gate area with his rifle and his grievances.
There are worse things in life than having to reschedule a flight. I postponed my return to Chicago for two days. Now that I’m back, I’m still thinking about last week’s killer-rampage spectacle, which culminated in the wounding and arrest of the suspect, Paul Ciancia. Afterward came the media’s smattering of sound-bite psychology. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 07, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Current Events, Peter G. Cohen, Politics
Congress Is Making a Critical Decision
by Peter G. Cohen
The Pentagon is lobbying the Congress to provide funds for the “Modernization†of the B-61 gravity bombs now stored in Europe. Making this bomb more accurate and more “useable†will cost an estimated $8.1 billion through 2024. At the same time, many experts
and some European nations would like to see the bombs withdrawn from Europe.
“I would never have thought those silly things would still be there in 2013. I think they are an absolutely pointless part of a tradition in military thinking.†said former Dutch Prime Minister, Ruud Lubbers, to Time Flies, a National Geographic Television documentary. In 2010 a parliamentary resolution called on the Dutch governments to inform the United States that its nuclear weapons were no longer required for Dutch security. Read the rest of this entry →
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November 06, 2013
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, David Swanson
‘God Made Me an Atheist…’
by David Swanson
Peter Boghossian’s A Manual for Creating Atheists is a curious and ultimately very valuable book.
It’s curious because it doesn’t make much of a case — or at least not the sort of case I would have liked — for why we should create atheists.
It’s valuable because, if you believe we’d be better off with more atheists, this is a remarkable tool for accomplishing that goal.
I don’t view sloppy thinking as a great evil in itself. It doesn’t offend me the way hunger and lack of medicine and Hellfire missiles offend me. So, I look for the argument — which I think can be made — that sloppy thinking has serious results, or that belief in a god leads to a lack of responsibility, or that belief in eternal life diminishes efforts to improve real lives. This book does not focus on those arguments.
Boghossian points to abstinence-only sex-ed, bans on same-sex marriage, teaching Creationism, corporal punishment in schools, and other offenses in the United States, as well as pointing to various more-severe abuses by the Taliban, as the undesirable results of theism. But, with the possible exception of Creationism, these things could continue without theism or be ended while maintaining theism. Read the rest of this entry →
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