Archive for the 'Incarceration Nation' Category

Against The Grain

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

I recently watched a fascinating documentary jointly broadcast on the Sundance Channel and Court TV. The Human Behavior Experiments was directed by Alex Gibney (who also made the excellent Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room). Now I can’t stop thinking about it.
In the compass of an hour, Gibney and his collaborators touched down [...]

Hatching an Egg

Sunday, April 16th, 2006

Dear readers, perhaps you’ve noticed that I’ve been quiet for awhile. With springtime’s emphasis on rebirth, I like to think I’ve been hatching an egg, conceptually speaking. A new thought (new to me, I mean) has been taking possession of my mind and I’ve been readying myself to express it.
I am beginning to think [...]

Citizenship Reality Check

Tuesday, January 24th, 2006

Yesterday’s New York Times carried an interesting column about citizenship tests. The most anxious nations—Britain, Germany, Canada and of course, the USA—have been revising their tests to raise the threshold for citizenship, making sure that prospective citizens get with the program before they are admitted to the club.
The new tests are a fascinating Rorschach [...]

Banging on A Teakettle

Sunday, January 15th, 2006

Monday is my birthday. (And I’m honored to share it this year with Dr. Martin Luther King, may he rest in peace and may we live to see his dreams come true.)
For me, a birthday is an occasion for relentless self-examination, which is how I seem to mark all milestones. I must be making [...]

Against Torture

Saturday, November 26th, 2005

Very often these days, I am struck by the absurdity of our political situation: people of goodwill find themselves debating questions that in a less anxious and more humane moment would be no-brainers. Take Senator John McCain’s Anti-Torture Amendment to the defense appropriations bill. It would outlaw torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of [...]

The Good Bad Old Days

Monday, October 24th, 2005

Call me perverse (and you’re probably right), but I’m sitting here feeling nostalgic for the fifties, thanks to George Clooney’s new film about pioneering TV reporter Edward R. Murrow, Good Night, and Good Luck. If you haven’t already seen it, I urge you to see it now.
Here are some of the things that [...]

Finding Our Balance

Friday, June 17th, 2005

Some of us have it in our nature to sound the alarm, and some to say that this, too, shall pass.
Both are right, of course. Panic generates fight or flight, and we’ve seen the limitations of those tools for problem-solving. (Have we ever!) But an impenetrable conviction that all will be well without our [...]

Suddenly June

Sunday, June 5th, 2005

We who attended school in the U.S. have a little chip in our collective unconscious that gets activated this time of year. It happened to me as I walked by the water yesterday afternoon. Even though I’m not planning a vacation and don’t have kids in school, something about the angle of the sun and [...]

Culture Wars, Round Two

Friday, May 20th, 2005

This just in: it really ticks people off when you mess with whatever they perceive as holy.
I’ve been reading about the demonstrations around the world against U.S. use of the Koran as an interrogation prop at Guantanamo. Newsweek published an article on May 9 charging that interrogators tried to psych out Muslim prisoners by [...]

Evil Ways

Friday, February 11th, 2005

One of the strongest obstacles to positive change is narcissism: our proclivity to give ourselves the benefit of the doubt, based on the feeling that nice people like ourselves couldn’t possibly be doing bad things.
In the public arena, this is especially easy to see if you follow the way our leaders use the [...]