December 23, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Family, Rob Okun
Moving Beyond Men’s Killing Fields
by Rob Okun
In the wake of Adam Lanza’s murderous rampage, men in particular, must not stay silent. There’s an epidemic in our “man culture†we can ill afford to locate on the periphery, ceding center stage to the narrow gun control debate.
It’s encouraging that there’s momentum in Congress to reinstate the ban on assault weapons that expired in 2004. Let’s not miss the opportunity, though, to enlarge the national conversation about guns to centrally include how we raise boys and how we address the mental health crisis among many men. We must, in order to pull back the curtain of denial about mainstream culture’s “patriarchal masculine obsession with control,â€Â as sociologist Allan Johnson puts it, control “that defines ‘real’ manhood in this culture, with violence being merely its most extreme instrument. It is that control that links all men with the violence that only some men do.†Read the rest of this entry →
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December 22, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Current Events, Politics, Winslow Myers
“O that there were some virtue in my tears . . .†– Shakespeare
by Winslow MyersÂ
One of the Dalai Lama’s first principles is something he calls “universal responsibility.†However quick we are to place His Holiness on a saintly pedestal, it is only because the threshold of our own responsibility sometimes seems so very low — especially at this
moment of reflection upon the massacre of the innocents in Newtown.
From a tearful President on down through the powerful talk radio demagogues to ordinary citizens, we all bear a share of responsibility for the climate of violence that is the context for the tragedy in Newton. I’m as responsible as anyone because I haven’t yet written my representative concerning my strong feelings about gun control. Great Britain endured 58 firearm murders in 2011, while America had 8,775. Great Britain banned modern handguns altogether in 1997 and studies show a slow but steady decrease in crimes involving handguns in the UK ever since. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 21, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Ecology, Economy, Guest Author
On the Importance of Integrating Social and Ecological Perspectives
by the ISEP Class Working Group
{Editor’s Note: This collaborative statement was produced in the context of a college class focusing on the integration of social and ecological perspectives. The depth of critical engagement with the intersecting crises in our midst, coupled with insightful visions for action and change, provide a source of hopefulness in a time of profound challenges.}

I. Why We’re Concerned
Our world’s current dysfunction is a multifaceted crisis, exemplified by a host of social and ecological problems, including racism, violence, water shortages, drought, species extinction, pollution, and many others. Upon closer examination, the roots and solutions of each of these problems have both social and ecological components, which are dependent upon and directly influence each other. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 20, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Current Events, Robert C. Koehler
Something’s Wrong with the World — Can We Set It Right?
by Robert C. Koehler
“Evil visited this community today,†the governor of Connecticut said, though he might have been more accurate if he had quoted Pogo: “We have met the enemy and he is us.â€
This may be the hardest truth of all to swallow. But the point-blank murders of 27 people, including 20 small children as they sat in their classroom at Sandy Hook Elementary School — in Newtown, Conn., as safe and secure as any community in the country — shattered, at least for some people, the illusion that all our troubles are out there, beyond our borders and our exceptionalism, and that safety requires heavily armed protection from an incomprehensible “other.â€
In one of the safest communities in America, we couldn’t protect our 6-year-olds and our 7-year-olds, despite the fact that we have been waging a “war on evil†for the past decade-plus. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 19, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Family, Randall Amster
An Open Letter to the Children
by Randall Amster
Dear Children,
I know that this world must often seem confusing to you. It’s noisy, dirty, and filled with adults scurrying about their busy lives without noticing you all that much sometimes. It’s filled with rules
and people telling you what to do, mostly without asking what you want to do. It’s also a world where adults teach you about all of the dangers around you, but not as much about the wonderful, beautiful things.
You see, things weren’t quite like this when we were kids. We had our rules and dangers, to be sure, but nothing like the ones you face today. Back then (which is not really that long ago) people talked to each other more, neighbors knew one another, and schools were less like factories and more like playgrounds. There were less televisions, computers, and phones calling for our attention, and there were more open spaces to play like kids are supposed to do. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 18, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Jerry Elmer, Politics
After Sorrow Comes Happiness…
by Jerry ElmerÂ
Today, December 18, 2012, is the fortieth anniversary of the notorious “Christmas bombing†of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV), pejoratively (and inaccurately) referred to at the time by U.S. leaders (and the U.S. media) as “North Vietnam.†This coming
January 27, 2013, will be the fortieth anniversary of the signing of the Paris Agreement that ended direct U.S. involvement in the war; I will be in Vietnam observing and participating in the commemoration of that anniversary. But today it is time to remember the Christmas bombing that started on this date in 1972.
First, a word about the context. The 1972 presidential election was a race between peace candidate Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) and the incumbent President, Richard Nixon, who had continued and escalated the Vietnam War throughout his first four years in office. Read the rest of this entry →
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December 17, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Current Events, Jennifer Browdy
Uniting Around the Finest Values of Human Life
by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
Just as people in places like the Maldives, Bangladesh and Pakistan may have shook their heads at the cluelessness of Americans who suddenly woke up to
climate change when Sandy came to town, people living in hot spots of violence around the world now have every right to be shaking their heads at the collective American refusal to see and understand how, in the wake of the Newtown massacre, we are much to blame for our own misery.
The U.S. is the largest arms manufacturer and exporter in the world. We have by far the largest military. We are also by far the most heavily armed civilian population in the world, with some 300 million guns circulating among our population of about 300 million people. Americans, we need to acknowledge that collectively, as a nation, we have been responsible for hundreds, and probably thousands of deaths of children worldwide through the weapons we sell abroad.
There is not a conflict in the world today that has not been fueled by American weaponry. Read the rest of this entry →
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