Archive for the 'Reading, listening & viewing' Category
Sunday, June 8th, 2008
I’ve been going through a whole houseful of possessions, clearing out the past to make way for the future. Last week I recycled three decades of journals without reading a single page. A couple of friends helped me do the same with Day-timers: we ripped the wire spines out of 700-plus month-by-month calendars going back [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Electoral politics, Reading, listening & viewing, Soul-searching | No Comments »
Friday, May 23rd, 2008
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on December 10, 1948. To me, it is a sacred text. Article 1 is as beautiful, as affecting, as inspiring as anything in the deepest spiritual teachings of this world:
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. [...]
Posted in Cultural issues, International issues, Reading, listening & viewing | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, May 20th, 2008
A reader send me this great blog featuring lyrics and videos of songs about Barack Obama created by musicians with roots around the world—Africa, Mexico, the Caribbean and beyond.
Some of these artists vote in the U.S., some cannot. Why do musicians beyond our own borders care so much about one of the candidates in [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Electoral politics, International issues, Reading, listening & viewing | No Comments »
Friday, May 9th, 2008
The same qualities Hillary Clinton is displaying now—commitment, tenacity, fortitude in the face of opposition and ridicule—need to be cultivated by anyone willing to stand up for an unpopular position. The thing is, it matters greatly whether that position derives from a wounded certainty of one’s own merit and therefore entitlement, as I’m afraid is [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Electoral politics, Reading, listening & viewing, Soul-searching | No Comments »
Monday, May 5th, 2008
A couple of weeks ago, Adam Liptak of the New York Times reported from the front lines of the U.S. prison-industrial complex:
The United States has less than 5 percent of the world’s population. But it has almost a quarter of the world’s prisoners.
Indeed, the United States leads the world in producing prisoners, a reflection of [...]
Posted in Activism, Cultural issues, Incarceration Nation, Jewish, Reading, listening & viewing | No Comments »
Thursday, May 1st, 2008
Never in my lifelong observation of politics have I seen an election to match this one for extravagant theatricality: Laughter! Tears! Elation! Nausea! This campaign is like a periodic table of human capability, from venal self-interest to hermetic self-delusion, from moral blindness to moral grandeur. To find another story that encompasses as much of the [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Cultural issues, Electoral politics, Reading, listening & viewing | No Comments »
Sunday, April 27th, 2008
I have been trying to clear my mind of obstacles so I can think without the impediments created by attachment to things as they appear to be. If that sounds a little abstract, imagine a farmer prying stumps or boulders out of a field before plowing and sowing; or a painter smoothing and priming a [...]
Posted in Activism, Cultural issues, Environment, International issues, Reading, listening & viewing | No Comments »
Thursday, April 24th, 2008
Want to watch a movie? How about watching with friends in Cairo, Kigali, London, Los Angeles, Mumbai, and Rio de Janeiro at the same time? Starting at 11 a.m. Pacific Time on Saturday, 10 May, 2008, Pangea Day will be celebrated with a four-hour program of short films and music. It will be screened in [...]
Posted in Community, Cultural issues, International issues, Reading, listening & viewing | 1 Comment »
Friday, April 18th, 2008
Passover—Pesach—starts Saturday night. This holiday, halfway into the Hebrew calendar year, invites us to consider the story of the exodus from slavery—from Mitzrayim (which means Egypt and also straits or narrow, constricting places)—as if it had happened to us, as if it were happening right now.
Every year, holiday preparations ask us to seek out [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Cultural issues, Electoral politics, Jewish, Reading, listening & viewing | 2 Comments »
Sunday, March 30th, 2008
I have a dear friend who understands the world of finance as well as I know my way around my own kitchen. For a long time, she’s been sending me alarming bulletins from people who keep a close eye on banks, Wall Street and federal financial regulators.
The economy has developed such an elaborate and [...]
Posted in Barack Obama, Electoral politics, Money & Class, Reading, listening & viewing | 1 Comment »