Category Archives: Social Commentary

Steve McSwain: 10 Mantras for a More Meaningful New Year

This is an interesting article, from Steve McSwain,for people who don’t do resolutions, but still look to the New Year as an opportunity for self improvement and awareness…

A mantra is a sound, syllable or group of words which, when recited, are regarded as capable of producing spiritual transformation (or so says Wiki). Actually, mantra is a word common in the eastern world and is itself made up of two words: man meaning “mind,” and tra meaning “instrument.” So, a mantra is “an instrument of the mind.”

In eastern religions, and to a lesser degree in the mystical traditions of Christianity, meditators use mantras to center themselves and so bring health and wholeness to the inner self (or, greater unity between the mind, body and spirit). Benedictine monks regularly use scripture in this fashion. For example, they might recite in meditation over and over again the words, “The Lord is my shepherd” (from the 23rd Psalm).

In my own experience, I have made it an every-morning practice to meditate and recite the following mantras. This is the first time, however, I’ve actually written them down. This was itself a wonderful discipline.

In many respects, a New Year’s Resolution is a kind of mantra. But, like mantras, resolutions must be practiced daily if you’re serious about them becoming your way of living. Which is why, my first mantra is…

More, including the actual Mantras:   Steve McSwain: 10 Mantras for a More Meaningful New Year.

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Filed under Holidays, My Journey, Religion, Social Commentary, Yoga

Louise Penny’s Town Captures World’s Notice

Great article about one of my favorite writers, Louise Penny.  It was originally posted on Facebook by another writer, Anthony Bidulka, who writes mysteries I also greatly enjoy reading.

I’m increasingly impressed by the Canadian writers I’m reading…

In Penny’s books, that setting is usually the fictional village of Three Pines, a hamlet in Quebec’s Eastern Townships first settled by fleeing United Empire Loyalists and today peopled by charming eccentrics looking for kindness and croissants in an often cruel world.

It is also, like Agatha Christie’s bucolic St. Mary Mead, home to a surprising number of murders.

Just as surprising is how well Three Pines and Penny’s detective, Chief Inspector Armand Gamache, have captured the imagination of readers around the world. Suddenly Penny, who believes readers are literary tourists and that, as the poet Emily Dickinson wrote, “There is no frigate like a book to take us lands away,” is making Canada the deadly destination to which they want to be transported

In the last few months, her 2009 book about the destructive power of greed, The Brutal Telling, won both the Anthony and Agatha awards for best crime novel; in fact, Penny is the first writer in history to win the Agatha three years running.

At the same time, the latest book in her series, Bury Your Dead, which is set mainly in Quebec City and digs up the long-unsolved mystery of Samuel de Champlain’s death, was named to several Best of 2010 lists, including those published by Amazon.com, Kirkus Review, Publisher’s Weekly, The Globe and Mail and The Chicago Tribune.

via Louise Penny’s town captures world’s notice.

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Filed under Books, Entertainment, Social Commentary

Large majority of Americans see religious influence in decline, poll finds | Raw Story

This is good news for those of us who believe in the separation of Church and State…

Most Americans feel that the influence of religion is waning in the US, according to a recent poll.

The Gallup organization found that seven in ten Americans think religion is losing influence, one of the highest responses in the 53-year history of the poll.

The survey found that only 25 percent of Americans believe that religion is gaining influence, while an additional two percent see it as unchanged.

The findings represent a major swing from the first part of the decade. Following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, only four in ten found religion was losing influence and 55 percent said it was gaining influence.

 

The new results are on par with last year’s poll. The only time a Gallup survey has found higher numbers was in 1970, when 75 percent of Americans reported that religion was losing influence.

Over the past sixty years, Gallup has found a slow decline in reported membership to churches and synagogues. The number peaked at 76 percent in 1946 and tied an all-time low of 61 percent this year.

via Large majority of Americans see religious influence in decline, poll finds | Raw Story.

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Filed under Politics, Religion, Social Commentary

Italy Bans Plastic Bags in 2011

This is a great move from both an environmental and oil dependency standpoint….

As usual, that means the U.S. will be one of the last countries to follow suit…

Supporters of the law say plastic bags use too much oil to manufacture and take decades to break down in landfills. The Italian environmental group Legambiente estimates that the plastic bag ban will save Italy 180,000 tons of CO2 emissions, according to The Daily Telegraph.

“This marks a key step forward in the fight against pollution, and it makes us all more responsible in terms of recycling,” Italy’s environment minister, Stefania Prestigiacomo, told Agence France-Presse.

Other European cities have implemented similar measures, but Italy’s is believed to be the first nationwide ban on plastic bags on the continent. Many countries charge customers for plastic bags.

via Italy Bans Plastic Bags in 2011.

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Filed under Food, Oil Dependency, Politics, Social Commentary, The Environment

Tucker Carlson on Michael Vick’s Animal Cruelty

It’s not often I agree with Tucker  Carson, or any conservative commentator, but I think he has a point here…

Even a stopped clock is right twice a day…

And I feel pretty strongly about animal cruelty…

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Filed under Pets, Politics, Social Commentary

Christmas Video of the Day: From Paris Holiday Kiss-In Against Homophobia

I ran this last year and liked it so much I wanted to run it again….

It’s a Christmas Video from the Kiss In Against Homophobia shot in Paris last December…

They seem to do these Kiss-Ins about every six months in Paris, but this is the best video.

They also seem to do these Kiss-Ins in various other cities and countries.  But the Paris one has the prettiest people…

Not that I’m shallow or anything….

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Filed under Entertainment, Gay, Holidays, Media, Politics, Social Commentary

Twenty-Something Turmoil: A Tale of Unemployment From a Would-be Young Professional

Great blog post from a Millennial.  Hat tip to Dailykos …

I encourage you to click-through on the link to read the entire post….

Twenty-somethings with a sense of entitlement, high expectations, and a stalled economy have to learn to become entrepreneurial. But how?

Being jobless in the Great Recession is about much more than making ends meet. While we struggle to pay every bill, we — the freshly minted unemployed — carry around psyches that have come undone in ways that we never expected. I should know. I am in my twenties. Educated. Hard-working. Intellectually proactive. And unable to find a job.

I often find solace playing the blame game: If it weren’t for those baby boomers and their Great Society, I never would have been convinced that if I did everything I was supposed to do in life and played by (most of) the rules, one day I would be successful — or at least employed. In high school, I woke up early, did my homework, studied for exams and participated in extracurriculars I wasn’t always very good at, following a grueling schedule that was exhausting and not always rewarding. I remember justifying my heavy schedule because I wanted to get into a good college. I enjoyed college, but I still worked hard and did plenty of things I didn’t want to because in the back of my mind lingered the self-righteous idea that someone like me would naturally be rewarded with a good job.

But here I am, three years after graduation, and it seems that I was wrong.

MORE:   Twenty-Something Turmoil: A Tale of Unemployment From a Would-be Young Professional » New Deal 2.0.

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Filed under Education, History, Politics, Social Commentary, The Economy

Wine at Walmart

This is bouncing around the web in various forms….

And, yes, it is a hoax….

Since I haven’t been in a Wal-Mart in at least 10 years, I wouldn’t know what they carry.  It could have fooled me.

Still, I liked it….

BENTONVILLE, ARKANSAS:

Wal-Mart announced that they will soon be offering customers a new discount item: Wal-Mart’s own brand of wine. The world’s largest retail chain is teaming up with E&J Gallo Winery of California to produce the spirits at an affordable price, in the $2-$5 range.

Wine connoisseurs may not be inclined to throw a bottle of Wal-Mart brand into their shopping carts, but “there is a market for cheap wine”, said Kathy Micken, VP of Marketing. She said, “But the right name is important.”

Customer surveys were conducted to determine the most attractive name for the Wal-Mart brand. The top surveyed names in order of popularity are:

10. Chateau Traileur Parc

9. White Trashfindel

8. Big Red Gulp

7. World Championship Riesling

6. NASCARbernet

5. Chef Boyardeaux

4. Peanut Noir

3. I Can’t Believe It’s Not Vinegar!

2. Grape Expectations

And the Number One name for Wal-Mart wine:

1. Nasti Spumante

via Wine at Walmart – Wine Forum – GardenWeb.

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Filed under Entertainment, Food, Social Commentary, Style, The South

You’re Out: 20 Things That Became Obsolete This Decade

From the Huffington Post:

The last ten years have brought us a windfall of new gadgets and gizmos, and with them, a new way of life.

Since 2000, we’ve gained iPods and iPads, Travelocity and Twitter, Facebook and Foursquare, BlackBerry smartphones and Android devices, Xboxes and Wiis, among many other new services, sites, and electronics. We’re now poking, tweeting, Googling, and Skyping.

But in that time we’ve also changed our habits and lost a few things, too. As we look forward to 2011, HuffPostTech has taken a look back at the things that have become obsolete (some of the these items were originally featured on an earlier list here) .

What other items or practices would you add to the list? Submit your own ideas by clicking “Add a Slide” below.

via You’re Out: 20 Things That Became Obsolete This Decade (PHOTOS).

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The American Civil War Still Being Fought

The secession of South Carolina on December 20, 1860 began the path to the Civil War.  We are approaching an important anniversary here in the US and people need to be prepared to talk about it.

It seems this was covered much more in the British Press than in the American Press.  That, alone, says something.

It just blows my mind that some white people in the South still insist Slavery was not the cause of the Civil War.  Admittedly, this is a complex, layered issue which is why so many people want to avoid talking about it or thinking about it too deeply…It makes them uncomfortable.

But white people in the South need to finally, once and for all, 150 years after the start of the Civil War, accept the fact that Slavery was the primary cause of the War and not “States Rights”.

We can’t begin to have an honest dialogue about Race in the South until this fundamental fact is accepted by all people.

The first step is to stop all the “Moonlight and Magnolias” foolishness, like the Secession Ball in Charleston and the Confederate History Month glorification in Virginia.

Even Scarlett O’Hara finally put all that stuff  behind her and moved on….

It’s time we did, too.

Good points from Eric Foner in The Guardian (UK).

 

What does it mean to say that slavery caused secession and the war? Not that the South was evil and the North moral. In his second inaugural, Lincoln spoke of “American”, not southern, slavery – his point being the complicity of the entire nation in the sin of slavery. Few northerners demanded immediate abolition. Abolitionists were a small and beleaguered minority. Sectional differences certainly existed over economic policy, political power and other matters. But in the absence of slavery, it is inconceivable that these differences would have led to war.

Rather, it means that by 1860, two distinct societies had emerged within the United States, one resting on slave labour, the other on free. This development led inexorably to divergent conceptions of the role of slavery in the nation’s future. Northern Republicans did not call for direct action against slavery where it already existed – the constitution, in any event, made such action impossible. But Lincoln spoke of putting slavery on the road to “ultimate extinction”, and he and other Republicans saw his election and a halt to the institution’s expansion as a first step in this direction. Secessionists saw it this way as well.

A century and a half after the civil war, many white Americans, especially in the South, seem to take the idea that slavery caused the war as a personal accusation. The point, however, is not to condemn individuals or an entire region of the country, but to face candidly the central role of slavery in our national history. Only in this way can Americans arrive at a deeper, more nuanced understanding of our past.

via The American civil war still being fought | Eric Foner | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk.

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Filed under History, Politics, Race, Social Commentary, The South