September 11, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Guest Author, Kathy Kelly, Politics
‘Two Million Friends’ and a Ceasefire in Afghanistan
by Kathy Kelly and Hakim
“Stop fighting,†suggests Farzana, a brave 22 year old Afghan stage actress.
Significantly, her statement is in sharp contrast to what seems to be the democratic world’s unquestioned modus operandi of today, exemplified by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s pet-phrase for Afghanistan, ‘Fight, talk and build.’
What Farzana and the Afghan Peace Volunteers are sensibly suggesting is a ceasefire.
A ceasefire, like the ceasefire called for in Kofi Annan’s Six Point Peace Plan for Syria which Farzana and the Afghan Peace Volunteers also supported, is a first step towards ending the equally sectarian war and incendiary global politicking in Afghanistan. Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (2)
September 10, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Community, Ecology, Jennifer Browdy
We Eat By the Grace of Nature, Not By the Grace of Monsanto
by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
“Organic, schmorganic,†fumes New York Times columnist Roger Cohen sarcastically in an article entitled “The Organic Fable.â€
He bases his sweeping dismissal of the organic foods movement on a new Stanford University study claiming that “fruits and vegetables labeled organic are, on average, no more nutritious than their cheaper conventional counterparts.â€
Cohen does grant that “organic farming is probably better for the environment because less soil, flora and fauna are contaminated by chemicals…. So this is food that is better ecologically even if it is not better nutritionally.â€
But he goes on to smear the organic movement as an elitist, pseudoscientific indulgence shot through with hype. Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (6)
September 07, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Family, Victoria Law
Can There Be Justice When Women Fight Back?
by Victoria Law
What do a nineteen-year-old lesbian from New Jersey, a 23-year-old trans woman in Minneapolis and a 31-year-old mother in Florida have in common? All three were attacked, all three fought back and all three were arrested. All three are currently in prison while
their attackers remain free. Oh, yes, and all three are black women.
Marissa Alexander is a 31-year-old mother of three. She is also a survivor of violence at the hands of her ex, Rico Gray. In 2009, Alexander obtained a restraining order against Gray. Learning that she was pregnant, she amended it to remove the ban on contact between her and Gray while maintaining the rest of the restraining order. Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (2)
September 06, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Matt Meyer, Politics
Dealing with Errors and Breaking with Empires
by Matt Meyer
In my recent piece Building Bridges between Principles and Practice, I noted that there were “concrete, historical incidents in which principled pacifists stuck to their ideals about not engaging in individual acts of violence, but were blinded to the larger issues of
institutional violence being perpetrated against those socially considered ‘others.’†These incidents, I wrote, are seemingly more than simple coincidences:
“They suggest fault lines, especially along race and class, where one set of principles contradicted or trumped another. Sometimes without self-awareness, time and again, pacifist attempts to create a nonviolent culture (especially a single, white-washed or homogenized culture) led to acts which served to solidify institutional violence. Similarly, through ignorance or distance from those oppressed peoples struggling for justice ‘by any means necessary,’ even when they were often predominantly using nonviolent tactics, ‘First World’ pacifists missed — and still miss — the vital lessons offered by people who could easily be our closest colleagues.†Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (7)
September 05, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Ecology, Economy, Politics, Robert C. Koehler
Can We Reclaim Our Reverence for the Planet that Sustains Us?Â
by Robert C. KoehlerÂ
“Oh God, thy sea is so great and my boat is so small.â€
The Arctic ice is melting at a record pace this summer — just one more measurable phenomenon indicating that extraordinary change in the global ecosystem is in progress. As the ice melts, and the vast polar reflecting surface diminishes, the planet absorbs more and more of the sun’s energy and . . . grows warmer. More ice melts.
So what? Sitting at my desk in Chicago, I was tempted to opt out of caring about this — trend Republican, you might say. Put it on the back, ahem, burner. It takes a leap of consciousness to align my own well-being with the fate of the Arctic ice, the ocean, the Inuits, the polar bears. Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (5)
September 04, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Culture, Devon G. Pena, Economy, Uncategorized
Designer Babies, the Panopticon, and a World Without EthicsÂ
by Devon G. Peña
“You got to be greedy when others are fearful and you got to be fearful when others are greedy.” –Â Warren Buffett
Wired is often lauded as a rebellious poke-you-in-the-eye futurist magazine that brings leading-edge, outside-the-box thinkers to the reading public. However, I wonder how many people actually read the entire rag from cover to cover other than die-hard futurists, some research scholars, and men who forgot their Smartphones and are bored while sitting in the waiting rooms of the auto repair shop or a dentist’s office?
While Wired presents glimpses of technology at the edge, it is usually done without depth or analytical prowess. It is more like a snippet or PowerPoint version of Technology Review with a lot of colorful graphics and a semiotic code that could only appeal to Generation X and so-called Millennials. The magazine is therefore neither cutting-edge nor critical, at least not in the sense of any radical expository or analytical discourse; it is actually a rather staidly conservative magazine in the sense of kowtowing to established and worn out libertarian ideologies and a belief that ever smarter and better technology will save us and the world in some soon to arrive future populated by perfectly hard ageless bodies filled with square-jawed genetically engineered intellects. Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (2)
September 03, 2012
By: NCVeditor
Category: Ecology, Peter Bergel, Politics
Working Together to Address Threats Ignored by Dysfunctional Government
by Peter Bergel
In my email recently was a message from one of my favorite organizations, the League of Conservation Voters, that began: “We just won a major victory: The Obama administration has finalized new fuel efficiency and global warming pollution standards that will
raise the average gas mileage on cars to 54.5 mpg by 2025. Simply put, this is the single biggest thing the United States government has ever done to reduce global warming pollution.†The League urged me to thank President Obama “for protecting our planet.â€
I know I should not look a gift horse in the mouth, but I have to admit that my reaction was “really?â€
Modest Achievement
This “biggest thing,†raises average mileage on cars by 2025 — 13 years from now. Obama will be long out of office by then and the auto industry will have plenty of time to work on chiseling that mileage figure down. Besides, why did it take Obama nearly 4 years to get around to this? And why is the mileage figure so low? Read the rest of this entry →
Comments (4)