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May 21, 2008

Unread Books Meme

What we have below is a list of the top 106 books most often marked as "unread" by LibraryThing users. Bold the ones you've read, underline the ones you read for school, italicize the ones you started but didn't finish.

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Anna Karenina
The Brothers Karamazov
Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies
War and Peace
Vanity Fair
The Time Traveler’s Wife
The Iliad
Emma
The Blind Assassin
The Kite Runner
Mrs. Dalloway
Great Expectations
American Gods
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Atlas Shrugged
Reading Lolita in Tehran : a memoir in books
Memoirs of a Geisha
Middlesex
Quicksilver
Wicked : the life and times of the wicked witch of the West
The Canterbury Tales
The Historian : a novel
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Love in the Time of Cholera
Brave New World
The Fountainhead
Foucault’s Pendulum
Middlemarch
Frankenstein
The Count of Monte Cristo
Dracula
A Clockwork Orange
Anansi Boys
The Once and Future King
The Grapes of Wrath
The Poisonwood Bible : a novel
1984
Angels & Demons
The Inferno (and Purgatory and Paradise)
The Satanic Verses
Sense and Sensibility
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Mansfield Park
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
To the Lighthouse
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Oliver Twist
Gulliver’s Travels
Les Misérables
The Corrections
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Dune
The Prince
The Sound and the Fury
Angela’s Ashes : a memoir
The God of Small Things
A People’s History of the United States : 1492-present
Cryptonomicon
Neverwhere
A Confederacy of Dunces
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Dubliners
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Beloved
Slaughterhouse-five
The Scarlet Letter
Eats, Shoots & Leaves
The Mists of Avalon
Oryx and Crake : a novel
Collapse : how societies choose to fail or succeed
Cloud Atlas
The Confusion
Lolita
Persuasion
Northanger Abbey
The Catcher in the Rye
On the Road
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Freakonomics : a rogue economist explores the hidden side of everything
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : an inquiry into values
The Aeneid
Watership Down
Gravity’s Rainbow
The Hobbit
In Cold Blood
White Teeth
Treasure Island
David Copperfield
The Three Musketeers

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April 27, 2008

A San Francisco Moment

So... walking back from the garden store this afternoon, Anthony and I come across 8 men in plushy, pink bunny suits on the corner of Castro and 18th Streets. They are all holding beautiful red roses and waving at cars and people as they walk or drive by, smiling and hopping up and down. I overhear a gentleman asking, since apparently he expects them to hand him an advertisement or be plugging for something. "What are you guys out here offering," he asks. "Love" one says and then turns to wave his roses at another car pulling through the intersection. Seems like quite the way to celebrate orthodox Easter, I imagine.

God I love this town!

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December 4, 2007

Where Morality Lies, Part III

Fourteen billion years ago, more or less, the Universe came into being in a tremendous explosion of creative force. Into nothingness, that may have been very large or very small... since there was as yet no such thing as time or space... a great explosion of cosmic force accelerated outward, expanding into reality in the blink of an eye or less into the massive thing we call the Universe.

Out of this roiling and churning, forces beyond our understanding coalesced into vast systems that created galaxies made up of gasses. Chaos settled into order and the complex forces of gravity and entropy began to work to create matter. Stars were born and died in great bursts called super novas that tossed vast quantities of carbon matter into space that settled into planets.

Again... the system began to create order out of chaos, always moving and shifting until these forces shaped into patterns. On our planet, at least, and probably many others, these chaotic forces led to the emergence of atmospheres, and water, and ultimately life. Simple life to be sure, which over time grew increasingly complex until multi-celled creature emerged, and a complex biosphere emerged, and intelligence emerged, and human societies emerged, and culture, and stories, and the search for meaning.

If one takes a moment to stand back and look objectively at the emergence of this vast reality called the Universe and Everything, the ultimate Reality, one can see an incomprehensible process of creative emergence leading to increasing complexity which has so far culminated in intelligent life capable of self-reflection and awareness.

We are not separate from the Universe... we have emerged from it. We are a part of it, utterly and completely, and we are a manifestation of its process of creating complexity and order out of chaos.

From the sub-atomic level to the vast reaches of space, we have become aware of the grouping of things into order producing clusters that are self-perpetuating. Galaxies do it... and so do cells. Protons and electrons do it, quarks do it, and so do solar systems. And so do people, and our ideas from musical systems to social systems to moral systems.

And eventually, everything ungroups... from stars that go supernova destroying the gravity center that holds a solar system together, to plants and animals and people that die and decay into dust and are then recycled back into the biosphere, to ideas and social systems and moral systems that fall apart when new ideas come along that challenge old assumptions and accepted knowledge.

In this third part of this article, I will explore the implied ethics that arise from an understanding of the great cosmic reality of the Universe as an ever evolving process of creative emergence. I suggest that an awareness and appreciation of the Reality of this process is imperative as a starting point for a moral system capable of addressing the great crisis of morality that has beset us in our current time.

Starting Points for Evolutionary Ethics

There are, as in any moral system, a set of underlying statements upon which such a system is built. The problem with current moral systems is that not all of those underlying statements are accepted by all people as factual. In fact, they cannot be considered as such. Religious tenets are things which by their very nature can never be proven or dis-proven. They are not facts. This does not mean that they are not true or that they cannot be believed. It simply means that the specifics of the private revelation of religious truths cannot be objectively known.

The specific tenets of proven scientific fact, however, can be neither believed nor disbelieved. Contrary to scientific theory... which we are not addressing here... scientific facts simply are. We know that DNA exists, we have seen it... and we know increasingly more about how it determines biology. We know that dinosaurs lived and approximately when, and we know that species on this planet evolved from other species on this planet. And we know that ideas have evolved in human culture and society, effectively supplanting former ideas and that this process will never stop. As in the time of Galileo, there may have been those who simply refused to accept that the earth moved around the Sun, but the force of supporting evidence over time has prevailed.

So what can we discern from the facts of evolution that can act as starting points for a discussion of a new moral vision?

1 - There is nothing in the Universe... in all of Reality... that did not originate in the first moment of that cosmic explosion of emergent creativity. Every atom, every subatomic particle, every element, every cell in every thing - living or not, animate or inanimate - comes from the same originating source.

2 - Everything groups. Every instance of the creative process evolves into a self-sustaining, interdependent part of the whole Reality, grouping with other instances of creative emergence to form systems.

3 - Everything ungroups. Eventually, these systems either destroy themselves or are destroyed making space for other creative emergences. This is equally true for galaxies as it is for human societies.

4 - The entire process of creative emergence moves toward increasing complexity.

5 - Diversity emerges as an expression of creative Reality. So does intelligence. In fact, it is appropriate to say that the whole process accelerates toward them. They are the natural culmination of emergent complexity.

6 - Intelligence, as a part of emergent creativity, has culminated on this planet in a species capable of making meaning of itself and of the Reality within which it has evolved. The human species is, in short, the Universe's acquired ability to be self-reflective and meaning making.
 
7 - The emergence of creative Reality is not finished.

So what do we do once we have set out the fundamentals of an evolutionary moral vision? Necessarily, we need to begin to determine what the implications of such a cosmic process are for our species in particular. We need to humanize the ethical vision and see what the imperatives are. We need to make meaning... something that we are uniquely capable of and qualified to do.

Making Meaning of Things

Making meaning requires interpretation. And it requires language. The complexity of human language as significant of meaning cannot be underestimated. We human beings speak about the factual using one kind of language because the conveyance of information is different from the conveyance of meaning. When it comes to meaning making, we use a different kind of language altogether. We use something called metaphor. The language of religious vision relies a great deal on metaphor, because religion... after all... is a meaning making endeavor.

When it comes, however, to articulating a moral vision based on fact-based science, we for the time being will attempt to minimize the use of metaphor as much as possible. I will save the real use of metaphor for the final part of this paper which will deal with the integration of science and my particular religious tradition. 

So what can we extrapolate as a moral vision based on the starting points listed above? Where do the facts of evolution as an emergent creative process lead us?

The first is the interrelation of all things - and not merely the fact that all human beings are interrelated - but that we and the very planet we inhabit are one and the same on a fundamental subatomic level. We are all made from the same stuff, emerged from the same process, and utterly and completely interdependent. We have the same story in deep time in spite of the divergence of cultures and societies during our evolutionary processes. And we share this with absolutely everything that is, everything known and unknown in the Universe. This is not mythology, this is Reality. To harm one thing is to harm everything. To help one thing is to help everything.

We have the good fortune of being a part of a vastly complex system that has grouped for the purpose of creative emergence. As a species, we have plugged right in. We have created language, music, art, philosophy and meaning and we have created technologies capable of radically shaping and altering not only the future of this planetary system, but the shape and future of our own evolution into new species capable of marvels as yet unknown. And while most things in this ultimate Reality group without the benefit of sentience, we are capable of choosing where and how to group in order to advance the emergent creative process. Consciousness now allows the Universe, in its self-reflexive incarnation as the human species, to CHOOSE how to adapt in order to advance the emergent complexity of the evolutionary process. Some evolutionary psychologists refer to this as "conscious evolution."

While we can choose to group, we can also choose to ungroup, consciously aware that we are not beyond complete destruction in order to make space for a new creative emergence. This destruction is a necessary component of the evolutionary process and we are not divorced from it or independent of it. We are equally capable of destroying ourselves or being destroyed as any star system. Yet, while we have no control over whether we are destroyed by an outside force such as a comet crashing into the planet and demolishing everything... there are choices within our purview. From the disappearance of the Maya to the collapse of the Holy Roman Empire... we know that even human societies that ungroup will either disappear entirely or fold back into the evolutionary process to emerge with greater depth and complexity elsewhere. We can choose not to ungroup, knowing that entropy leads to the collapse of systems and their death.

Complexity will naturally arise from the system. Fighting against it, ignoring it, fostering hostility towards it will not prevent complexity from arising. It is what the entirety of Reality does. Emergent complexity is the very reason we are here in the first place. Therefore, should we not understand and embrace that change is expected and normal and, hence, be willing to do what components of other systems do in nature... adapt? Without emergent complexity we would still be banging sticks on rocks to make music rather than enjoying the benefits of Mozart. Without emergent complexity we would still be communicating in grunts rather than the hundreds of existing languages.. .spoken and unspoken... that make up the human vocabulary.

Diversity is a tremendous boon to complex systems. Without it, systems would die entirely for having no adaptive components that could survive a single threat to that system's existence. Without diversity, systems would stagnate. Is it any wonder that the Universe strives for it in order to advance the creative emergence of the new? Therefore, diversity must be celebrated and enjoyed as a life-giving, necessary, and saving part of the whole of Reality... without which we would surely perish.

The term "intelligent design" is one that wildly misses the mark, for it assumes that there is some agent outside of the generative and creative process of Reality that not only brought it into being but, like a maestro, conducts the orchestra of the Universe on a cosmic scale. Instead, evolution shows us that intelligence is WITHIN and emergent from the process. The creativity of cosmic evolution HAS intelligence because we (and other intelligent life arisen in other places of the Universe) are a part of the process of emergent creativity. And, if that intelligence is in us, then it is within the entirety of creative Reality because the human species cannot be seen as separate from the rest. Intelligence is our greatest asset in that it can be applied to the complexity of the system from which we have emerged and can be used to guide the choices we make. The solution to our pressing problems is, in fact, the deep application of our intellect.. rather than the exaltation of stupidity disguised as simplicity that our current American culture tends to promote. Human intellect can be leveraged to solve our most pressing social and environment issues rather than being used to demonize scientific discoveries that interfere with religious convictions no matter how deeply held. And while human intelligence is not the only characteristic trait that we can use - for example our meaning making, our faith, hope, and trust, our creativity and ingenuity - without our intelligence we are surely doomed.

Finally, the story is not over. Once human beings arrived on the scene in this particular location of the whole of Reality, the movement of evolutionary creative emergence did not stop. It continues elsewhere and it continues here. We are not finished yet and neither is this planet, among many, finished with the possibilities of life seeking and finding ways to express itself. Why do we always seem surprised to find new species of plant or animal that we didn't know were there? And why do we continue to believe that we human beings are the last stop on the evolutionary journey towards complexity and intelligence? And why do we continue to treat the delicate environment of this particular biosphere as though it is not integrally related to our health and well-being?

In the fourth and final part of this essay, I will explore the ways in which the private revelation of my own religious tradition can find itself deeply and even more fully expressed when viewed through the lens of this evolutionary ethic. I will ultimately answer the question posed by so many... "how can you be a Christian and believe in evolution?" To that I answer... "IT IS EASY!" I will also answer the unexpected assumption of a close colleague who somehow got the impression that the view I have been discussing here was somehow different from his own requiring God to be at the heart of creation; or that somehow my view of the real world as discussed in these pages was divorced from the presence of God. And to him I say: "My brother... we are talking about exactly the same thing!"

I give this by way of warning that I am about to take a theological turn which for some of you might be entirely unnecessary to what I've discussed so far. For those of you for whom this is a stopping point, thanks for staying along for the ride. I hope that these initial steps toward an evolutionary moral story provide you with a framework to approach the world in a new and life-affirming way. For those of you who wish to come along for the last leg:

Stay tuned for Part IV.


Br. Karekin is a social critic and political activist located in San Francisco and is also the Minister Provincial for Province 8 of the brotherhood of saint gregory. He provides Spiritual Direction for members of the local community, working particularly with members of the transgendered community. He works as Parish Administrator at trinity episcopal church an historic parish in San Francisco. He is also actively involved in the progressive Christian movement aimed at social change.


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Where Morality Lies, Part II

Since the appearance of the first part of this article, I have had a great deal of interesting feedback from individuals eager to point out the most obvious concern... how can you claim to be a Christian person and still believe in evolution? It is one of my greater disappointments in the early 21st century that 1) so many self-identified Christians in the United States (over 50%) reject evolution or claim not to believe in it and 2) that so many non-religious people seem to believe that a pre-requisite for being a person of faith is that you must also reject evolution as false. Clearly, something is wrong when Christians and non-Christians alike seem to believe that these two world views are simply not compatible.

Let me state from the outset that, as a person of faith, my religious beliefs are completely and utterly unverifiable, they are uniquely mine in that, while they fall into a broader category of Christian belief, they are also informed by my individual experience, my history, my particulars of family, community, and personal intellectual engagement with the faith's fundamental tenets. They are a matter of my private revelation and they are the lens through which I experience and interpret much of what the world offers me. I believe in God, I believe in and embrace the teachings of the Man of Nazareth, and the implications of his birth, life, and death. I believe that the Holy Scriptures of my Judeo-Christian tradition offer a guide to life and that they contain deep and valuable insights into the human condition that are still being unpacked and interpreted in every generation.

And evolution is true.

Evolution is absolutely, completely, and scientifically verifiable. It is not based on private revelation, it is based on empirical, observable fact. And, in fact, evolution IS... whether or not I believe it... just as the sun IS whether or not I believe it. Evolution does not require my assent, my belief, or my acceptance. It simply is. There are those who try to deny it, there are individuals and religious movements that try to say it just ain't so. However, these people need to utterly disconnect from nearly everything known by science today and uphold a worldview equivalent to a flat earth in order to do so... and they are very selective in their application of this world view. Such an untenable position might be en vogue these days, but it will surely collapse under it's own weight after it's public and very political moment has passed and the continued revelation of the truth of evolution unfolds in our scientifically verifiable endeavors.

Let me reiterate... evolution is fact. The evolution of the cosmos, of this planet, of its species, and of human beings is a fact. It is not a theory. In the theory department, we may have a ways to go before we understand completely whether the mechanisms of natural and sexual selection do indeed work the way that Darwin supposed, or whether there are deeper mechanisms at work... but advances in genetics, biology, geology, archaeology, behavioral science, and quantum physics all make abundantly clear that we as a species descended from ancestral primates, who descended from ancestral mammals, who descended from ancestral reptiles, who descended from ancestral eukaryotes, who descended from ancestral amino acid compounds forged in the fires of an infant planet, in an infant solar system in a nearly 14 billion year old universe (and now maybe even the multiverse!) that evolved from a single point of exploding energy of as yet unknown origin at the dawn of space and time in the event we call the "Big Bang." Evolution is undeniable.

And I suggest... that for individuals, communities, and the planet this is very good news indeed.

One of the real problems we have with evolution in the public sphere is the tendency of those who embrace it to suggest or even promote evolution as something at best morally neutral and at worst amoral. This is one fundamental reason that some religionists reject it... it is seen as a competing moral vision to the one offered by their religious traditions.

In this second part of this article, I will explore these supposedly competing visions of religious tradition and evolution and show that they are only NOT incompatible, but mutually complementary - differentiated only by the fact that one is a private, faith-based revelation and one is a public, science-based revelation and that both are subject to interpretation and re-interpretation in light of the other. And while one need not necessarily embrace a religious vision to have a vibrant moral understanding of the way things are, a basic understanding of evolution is no longer optional for us as a species, but imperative. I will attempt to show that evolution as a public, scientifically verifiable revelation offers the best hope for a unified moral vision capable of transforming society and saving us from the brink of the utter moral bankruptcy and collapse that now besets us in our own society and, increasingly, in the larger global community. Atheists, agnostics, and religionists of varied traditions can find common ground in the vision offered by a deeper understanding and application of evolution to our deepening moral crisis.

The Functions of a Moral System

We'll begin with some fundamentals that identify what is meant by morality and how it functions in a society and in the individual. General morality, as synonymous with ethics, is a system of fundamental assumptions that allow us to determine right behavior from wrong. Morality in this sense is about order - order in a society and in the passions of the individual. Moral attitudes function to allow us to:

1 - Locate individuals within groups by means of personal identity;
2 - Regulate the animal instincts that trigger rampant competitive desires inherent in groups and which threaten individual and collective well-being;
3 - Foster cooperation which allows a greater number of groups or individuals access to the resources necessary for life and health; and
4 - Create order and identify the relative value of the component parts of increasingly complex systems.

The issues evident in the breakdown of our current moral systems can be traced to how well they continue to function in the four areas noted above. The moral systems of religious traditions based on private revelation do indeed locate individuals within their group and give them personal identity. However, they do so by creating boundaries between those who belong and those who do not... and increasing sectarianism and modern tribalism locate more individuals outside than inside of the group. These boundaries, as they become increasingly rigid and conditional based on acceptance of dogmatic propositions, fail to include larger and larger portions of society.

Regulation of our competitive desires is symbolized by taboos. Each religious tradition from our earliest animistic revelations to our more current (historically speaking) religious revelations have these taboos in evidence. They are, however, not only culture bound but are also bound by the pre-scientific world views of their originators. In large measure, these taboos were also about establishing individual and group identities over and against the other. Taboos were often about eliminating competitions for resources including food, land, and even sexual partners. While scientific understanding of biology, genetics, and behavioral science have advanced, these lists of taboos have not only not been revised, some religionists have seen fit to proclaim their continued relevance. Thus, even the religious traditions still evidenced in human society today continue to be bound to assumptions about the origin of our behaviors and what is necessary to temper the instincts to competition in a globalized environment. Our traditions have failed to adapt to new understandings of human behavior, genetically programmed instincts, and deeply rooted psychological responses to increasing complexity. Thus, in the realm of private revelation, our current interpretations of religious tradition are no longer functioning to temper our competitive desires.

Cooperation, as deeply programmed in our biology as competition, is symbolized in our religious traditions as rules of behavior toward the stranger, the orphan and widow, the hungry and the poor. Proper behavior in these moral systems is enumerated by the call to feed and clothe others who do without, visit the sick and the lonely, and in acts of forgiveness toward the transgressor in order to welcome them back into the realm of access to entitlements such as food, shelter, and community. However, traditions that have fossilized and failed to adapt to the increasingly complex social and cultural systems of today are left struggling to apply these simple, pre-scientific mandates to social issues that have largely outgrown the capacity of individual acts of compassion or localized tribal cooperation.

Moral systems as determinants of order, or as systems for assigning relative value, are likewise trapped in pre-scientific world views. Information technologies have given us, as individuals and communities, increasing access to facts, ideas, alternatives, and information systems; and advances in science promise to increase exponentially the number of component pieces of information necessary to account for in our ordering and attribution of relative value to them in our society. In basic terms, it is easier to attribute order and relative value in simple systems than in complex ones. And there is often a competition between the orders assigned by individuals in their own lives over and against that as determined by the local community, or the nation, or a globalized society such as we now inhabit. Our sacred scriptures, written when and where they were, do not speak directly to the kinds of complexity we now face. It is not, however, that they cannot be re-interpreted to do so in new a creative ways, but as yet our institutions have failed to attempt this kind of re-interpretation. Instead, we try to force the new information into the old world views, discarding what doesn't fit, or applying pre-scientific understandings to things which science has proven either more complex or utterly different than could have been known by the originators of our religious stories.

A system of moral value must be able to accomplish all of these functions in a way that honors an evolutionary understanding of the world as moving toward ever more complex systems. It must succeed in giving all people a life-affirming identity and place within the whole global society. It must succeed in bringing more individuals into the realm of cooperation and sustainability. It must be compelling enough to temper our competitive desires by providing us with a clear understanding of where those desires originate. And finally, it must be able to accommodate not only our current understanding of the complexity of life as revealed by the sciences, but must also be capable of adapting to new information as it arises and place it all within a framework of relative value that is scalable and life-giving.

Most importantly, it must be a moral system capable of making room for individual private revelation of religious faith. Evolution as a scientifically verifiable reality can provide this framework and the extrapolation of an evolutionary environmental ethics can provide not only the fundamentals of a new moral vision, but can allow those of us from a religious perspective to re-interpret our old stories in ways that are make them relevant, affirming, and sustainable for the future.

Evolution as a Moral Story

The story of Evolution as a meta-narrative for human kind can surely provide every individual and group of individuals a sense of location and identity in the whole of reality. The fact of evolution allows us to reclaim that we are as a species, in fact, not separated from the rest of the globe... it's structure, processes, and abundant life. Every living creature of this planet is a part of the process that has developed long enough over time to give rise to the human species. We are evolved from the most simple of living organisms to a level of complexity that is now capable of being self-reflective. Human beings are the species uniquely capable of producing stories about where we have come from and hence where we are going. We are the universe itself which has finally evolved to the point of being able to look at itself in awe and discover our origins.

We have evolved as a species, and as cultural and social communities within that species in an ever increasing spiral of creative emergence. And we are not independent from the whole of nature and the order it has found... we have arisen out of it... from it... to a unique place in cosmic evolutionary history. Therefore... we can no longer continue to force the natural order into our program... but we must incorporate the human project into the rest of the natural order.

And... no matter how human communities have adapted, changed, and independently of the cultural and social orders that have arisen in varied times and places... we are all fundamentally of the same origins. All of life is... sharing no less than 50% of our overall genetic code with the lowliest of species and as much as 99% with our nearest primate relatives. We are all connected!

An appreciation of evolution and of the cosmic time scale that has guided it can also help us understand the animal instincts that continue to plague us by creating competing desires and engendering conflicts in human society. Genetically programmed into our DNA are behaviors that hail from the times that we were still a primitive species not yet human... and which ensured our survival and our ability to propagate our genetic code for survival. These behaviors, however, which may have served us while we were swinging in trees or slopping around in the muck of the swamp may now compete with behaviors necessary the for socially organized creatures we have become.

The pre-frontal lobes of our species which regulate our abilities to reason, create story and meaning, delineate right from wrong by creating moral systems.. these are a relatively new addition to our species. Our reptilian brain, that part which regulates body function, hunger, sex drive, is a remnant of our previous incarnation as an earlier species. Likewise, our proto-mammalian ancestors left a part of their brain still embedded in ours that create instinctual reactions. Evolutionary science is capable of providing us with a deeper understanding of the human brain and its function so that we can recognize and tame behaviors which emanate from our genetic ancestors.

Evolution shows us that it is not quite the amoral mechanism that some would suppose, but a continually emerging creative phenomenon that has been as equally responsible for fostering cooperation in and among species as much as competition. And often as not, that cooperation does not have selfish or genetically self-serving motives. It simply happens. Yet, even if those motives were completely self-serving, an understanding of them makes one conscious that evolution as a process is not finished yet... and we as a species are still playing a part. To care for the environment becomes a mandate since our survival depends upon the whole. To care for those members of our species who are hungry, poor, disenfranchised... to make sure that diversity in our gene pool has ample opportunity to propagate, is to make a decision to consciously guide the ongoing evolutionary processes that ensure our species survival into the future and our further evolution into whatever the universe in process would create.

Finally, evolution gives us a picture of a system evolving into increasing complexity. The natural processes of gravity and entropy, the grouping and ungrouping of things on the micro and the macro levels, the necessary death of some systems in order to give emergence to newer ones, is an affirming and awe inspiring thing. Applying these evolutionary dynamics to the vast accumulation of information and ideas allows us the necessary perspective to see when it is time for old things to pass away in order to make room for the new. It allows us to be adaptable in new periods of creative emergence and adapt our stories and our self-understanding when new information arises. Applying an understanding of these dynamics to the systems we create gives permission for these systems to be adaptable.

In the next part of this paper, I will discuss an implied evolutionary environmental ethics, and finally in the fourth section for those who are interested, show how this understanding of the forces at work in evolution can breathe new life into old interpretations of religious moral story.

Stay tuned for Part III...

Br. Karekin is a social critic and political activist located in San Francisco and is also the Minister Provincial for Province 8 of the brotherhood of saint gregory. He provides Spiritual Direction for members of the local community, working particularly with members of the transgendered community. He works as Parish Administrator at trinity episcopal church an historic parish in San Francisco. He is also actively involved in the progressive Christian movement aimed at social change.

November 20, 2007

Submitted to the Rupublican CNN YouTube Debate...

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October 9, 2007

RIP: Damian Curtis, BSG


Please, pray for the repose of the soul of our beloved Brother who passed away this morning after a long illness. Damian served as Court Appointed Special Advocate for abused and neglected children (CASA) for the 20th Judicial Circuit in Arkansas, and was on the board of directors of Dove House, a woman's shelter.

He will be most remembered for his lovely sense of humor, his dedicated service as a religious, and his wonderful southern manner that was always hospitable and warm.

Rest in peace, dear brother. God welcome you to your eternal reward.

September 3, 2007

PunkMonk Returns from the Burn...

And I found myself there! <grin>

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August 18, 2007

Wikiklesia Authors List

Please check out the h omepages and blogs of the authors of the new wikiklesia book project "Voices of the Virtual World: Participative Technology and the Ecclesial Revolution."

Also, Paul Walker, an Anglican blogger, is blogging one chapter a day of the new book over at Out of the Cocoon. Check itout!


Andrew Jones
Andrew Perriman
Bill Kinnon
Bob Hyatt
Brad Sargent
Brother Maynard
Calvin Park
Cynthia La Grou
Cynthia Ware
David Hayward
Derek Flood
Drew Goodmanson
Ed Brenegar
Heidi Campbell
Jo Guldi
Joe Suh
John La Grou
John Sexton
Br. Karekin Yarian, BSG
Katharine Moody
Kester Brewin
Len Hjalmarson
Matt Reece
Michael Lissack
Mike Morrell
Mike Riddell
Peggy Brown
Rex Miller
Rick Meigs
Scot McKnight
Scott Andreas
Scott McClellan
Scott Ragan
Stephen Garner
Stephen Shields
Steve Scott
Steve Knight
Stuart Murray Williams
Thomas Hohstadt
Wild Grace

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August 2, 2007

Voices of the Virtual World: Participative Technology and the Ecclesial Revolution by Len Hjalmarson, John La Grou (Book) in Religion & Spirituality

Well... the book has arrived on the scene to great reviews. Kevin Kelly, co-founder of Wired Magazine writes:

"The hive-mind of Christianity speaks! It brings news of the future. Uttered like a prayer retrieved from the year 2030, spoken in a new tongue, a new form. Listen!"
And also:
“The Wikiklesia Project has garnered some of the savviest writers and bloggers around in a daring attempt to radically democratize knowledge—and in the process unleash theological reflection where it matters most: in the public sphere. This is not just some new way to self publish; it is a new and exciting form of collaborative theologizing on critical topics that concern us all. Welcome to your future.”

- Alan Hirsch, author of The Forgotten Ways as well as The Shaping of Things To Come (with Mike Frost) and Founding Director of Forge Mission Training Network


Check it out at the link below. It has been a thrill to be a part of it!
Karekin

Voices of the Virtual World: Participative Technology and the Ecclesial Revolution by Len Hjalmarson, John La Grou (Book) in Religion & Spirituality

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July 11, 2007

Wikiklesia Project - Almost Here

PRESS RELEASE

Publication Date: 23 July 2007

Distributed by: Lulu.com

Wikiklesia Press, 2007

ISBN: 978-0-9796856-0-6


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 9 July 2007


Voices of the Virtual World explores the growing
influence of technology on the global Christian church. In this premier
volume, we hear from more than forty voices, including technologists
and theologians, entrepreneurs and pastors… from a progressive
Episcopalian techno-monk to a leading Mennonite professor… from a
tech-savvy mobile missionary to a corporate anthropologist whom Worth
Magazine calls "one of Wall Street's 25 Smartest Players." Voices is a
far reaching exploration of spiritual journey contextualized within a
culture of increasingly immersive technology.



Coversm ABOUT WIKIKLESIA: Conceived and established in May 2007, the Wikiklesia Project is
an experiment in on-line collaborative publishing. The format is
virtual, self-organizing, participatory - from purpose to publication
in just a few weeks. All proceeds from the Wikiklesia Project will be contributed to the Not For Sale campaign.

Wikiklesia values sustainability with minimal structure. We long to
see a church saturated with decentralized cooperation. The improbable
notion of books that effectively publish themselves is one of many ways
that can help move us closer to this global-ecclesial connectedness.
Can a publishing organization thrive without centralized leadership? Is
perpetual, self-organizing book publishing possible? Can literary
quality be maintained in a distributed publishing paradigm? Wikiklesia
was created to answer these kinds of questions.


Wikiklesia may be the world’s first self-perpetuating nomadic business model
- raising money for charities - giving voice to emerging writers and
artists - generating a continuous stream of new books covering all
manner of relevant topics. Nobody remains in control. There is no board
of directors. The franchise changes hands as quickly as new projects
are created.


I'm one of the voices along with friends Brother Maynard, Ed
Brenegar, Andrew Jones, John La Grou, Len Hjalmarson, Rick Meigs, Br. Karekin and a
host of other great writers that includes Scot McKnight, Bob Hyatt,
Drew Goodmanson, Kester Brewin and Heidi Campbell. Check out the full
list here
.

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June 21, 2007

Karl Marx & Heaven

So Karl Marx dies and shows up at the gates of heaven to be met by
Saint Peter.

"Name?" asks Peter.
"Marx, Karl Marx." replies the famous author.
"Hmm," says Peter to himself, "why do I know that name?"
"I am Marx," Marx said, beaming with pride, "founder of socialism
and the driving force behind the communist ideal called Marxism."
"I see," Peter said. "I'll have to check with God."

So Peter rushes off to confer with God. God hears the name Marx
and immediately a look of disgust infects His face. "Marx?" God
says, "He's nothing but a trouble maker. Send him down to hell."

So Peter happily signs the appropriate forms and deports Karl Marx
to Satan's firy hell.

Some time later, a free trade agreement is forged between Heaven and Hell.
The deal is hailed by all to be a great economic leap forward that would
revitalize both struggling economies. But soon after the treaty,
God realizes that Heaven is no longer receiving any products
from Hell. So he sends Saint Peter down to investigate.

"Well?" asks Peter of Satan, "What's the hold up? We have an agreement!"

Satan shrugs his shoulders, exasperated. "It's that Marx fellow," Satan
replied. "Ever since he got down here, all we've had are strikes and
labour demands. Productivity has dropped to zero!"

"So?" Peter asks, "What would you have us do?"

"Take him back. Take Marx back to Heaven, and I guarantee productivity
will sky rocket!"

So Peter agreed, on God's behalf, to accept Karl Marx back to Heaven.

Some time later Satan realizes that Hell has not received any orders
for product from Heaven. In fact, very little communication at all
has leaked from Up Above. So, concerned for the economic welfare
of Hell, he makes a trip to Heaven.

"Peter! Peter, are you there?" Satan demands.

"Yes, what is it?" Peter answers.

"What's the hold up? What about the flow of trade?"

"Oh I'm sorry," Peter said, "We have decided to adopt a Marxist
isolationist stance. We are an intrinsic self-governed body that is
now based on the needs of the prolitariate. It is our opinion that
this free trade agreement only benefits the bourgeois."

"What?!" Satan was furious. "I demand to speak to God!"

Peter's eyebrow is raised in confusion. "Who?"

Vice President Exempts His Office from the Requirements for Protecting Classified Information

The Oversight Committee has learned that over the objections of the National Archives, Vice President Cheney exempted his office from the presidential order that establishes government-wide procedures for safeguarding classified national security information. The Vice President asserts that his office is not an "entity within the executive branch." As described in a letter from Chairman Waxman to the Vice President, the National Archives protested the Vice President's position in letters written in June 2006 and August 2006. When these letters were ignored, the National Archives wrote to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in January 2007 to seek a resolution of the impasse. The Vice President's staff responded by seeking to abolish the agency within the Archives that is responsible for implementing the President's executive order.In his letter to the Vice President, Chairman Waxman writes: "I question both the legality and wisdom of your actions. ... [I]t would appear particularly irresponsible to give an office with your history of security breaches an exemption from the safeguards that apply to all other executive branch officials."A fact sheet prepared by Chairman Waxman describes other instances in which the Vice President's office has sought to avoid oversight and accountability.

Vice President Exempts His Office from the Requirements for Protecting Classified Information :: Committee on Oversight and Government Reform :: United States House of Representatives

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May 31, 2007

Second Annual RAMP Silent Art Auction

The Recycled AIDS Medicine Program Board of Directors cordially invites you to the event!

Date Saturday, June 30th, 2007
Place 3666 16th Street, San Francisco CA 94114
Time Doors open at 6pm (Silent Auction begins promptly at 7pm & ends promptly at 8:30pm). $10 entrance fee at the door to register for the auction.

Featuring the works of
Anthony Anchundo
Max Byrd
Nicolaus Chaffin
Richard Freeman
Ganyan
Patrick Gleason
Steve Guy
Alan Hall
Suzanne Husky
Marie Lawallen
Archie McKay
Kottie Paloma
Ghee Phua
Stephen Rivers
Jack D. Russell
Lance Smith
Scott Smitherman
Patrick Urquhart
Angela Villegas
& many more...


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May 29, 2007

Wiki and the rise of gift economies

Ward Cunningham - Wiki and the rise of gift economies

Creator of wiki software, Ward Cunningham, argues that the proliferation of wikis has proved that the for-pay economy is not the only way to create value and celebrates the fact that we have now more choices. 

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April 21, 2007

A Bitter Irony...

I came across this text from a speech today... and then... of course... was oddly moved and surprised when I discovered who had spoken these words:


We have ended America's longest war. But in the work of securing a lasting peace in the world, the goals ahead are even more far-reaching and more difficult. We must complete a structure of peace, so that it will be said of this generation -- our generation of Americans -- by the people of all nations, not only that we ended one war but that we prevented future wars.

We have unlocked the doors that for a quarter of a century stood between the United States and the People's Republic of China. We must now insure that the one-quarter of the world's people who live in the People's Republic of China will be and remain, not our enemies, but our friends.

In the Middle East, 100 million people in the Arab countries, many of whom have considered us their enemy for nearly 20 years, now look on us as their friends. We must continue to build on that friendship so that peace can settle at last over the Middle East and so that the cradle of civilization will not become its grave. Together with the Soviet Union we have made the crucial breakthroughs that have begun the process of limiting nuclear arms. But, we must set as our goal, not just limiting, but reducing and finally destroying these terrible weapons, so that they cannot destroy civilization. And so that the threat of nuclear war will no longer hangover the world and the people. We have opened a new relation with the Soviet Union. We must continue to develop and expand that new relationship, so that the two strongest nations of the world will live together in cooperation rather than confrontation.

Around the world -- in Asia, in Africa, in Latin America, in the Middle East -- there are millions of people who live in terrible poverty, even starvation. We must keep as our goal turning away from production for war and expanding production for peace so that people everywhere on this earth can at last look forward, in their children's time, if not in our own time, to having the necessities for a decent life. Here, in America, we are fortunate that most of our people have not only the blessings of liberty but also the means to live full and good, and by the world's standards even abundant lives.

--From Richard M. Nixon's Resignation Speech

So sad and ironic that such a legacy should have been articulated by this man of all people, while our new imperial President, inheritor of the Nixon legacy, cannot even articulate what even this villanous man knew of world affairs. How much has been destroyed in so little time.

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April 18, 2007

Why does the Bush administration have a list of everyone who has ever used anti-depressants?

by John Aravosis (DC) · 4/18/2007 02:39:00 PM ET


Guess what? They do.
From ABC News, regarding the VA Tech shooter:
Some news accounts have suggested that Cho had a history of antidepressant use, but senior federal officials tell ABC News that they can find no record of such medication in the government's files. This does not completely rule out prescription drug use, including samples from a physician, drugs obtained through illegal Internet sources, or a gap in the federal database, but the sources say theirs is a reasonably complete search.
We don't even have a list of gun owners, and we have a list of everyone who has been prescribed anti-depressants? And in fact, the article suggests that this isn't just a database of patients who use anti-depressants, it's a federal database of every prescription drug you've ever bought.

What exactly do the Bushies do with that list? And what other lists do they have of which medications you've ever taken?

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March 21, 2007

The full text of the American Bishop's response to the Dar es Salaam Communique

A Statement from the House of Bishops - March 20, 2007

We, the Bishops of The Episcopal Church, meeting at Camp Allen, Navasota, Texas, for our regular Spring Meeting, March 16-21, 2007, have received the Communique of February 19, 2007 from the Primates of the Anglican Communion meeting at Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. We have met together for prayer, reflection, conversation, and listening during these days and have had the Communique much on our minds and hearts, just as we know many in our Church and in other parts of the world have had us on their minds and hearts as we have taken counsel together. We are grateful for the prayers that have surrounded us.

We affirm once again the deep longing of our hearts for The Episcopal Church to continue as a part of the Anglican Communion. We have gone so far as to articulate our self-understanding and unceasing desire for relationships with other Anglicans by memorializing the principle in the Preamble of our Constitution. What is important to us is that The Episcopal Church is a constituent member of a family of Churches, all of whom share a common mother in the Church of England. That membership gives us the great privilege and unique opportunity of sharing in the family's work of alleviating human suffering in all parts of the world. For those of us who are members of The Episcopal Church, we are aware as never before that our Anglican Communion partners are vital to our very integrity as Christians and our wholeness. The witness of their faith, their generosity, their bravery, and their devotion teach us essential elements of gospel-based living that contribute to our conversion.

We would therefore meet any decision to exclude us from gatherings of all Anglican Churches with great sorrow, but our commitment to our membership in the Anglican Communion as a way to participate in the alleviation of suffering and restoration of God's creation would remain constant. We have no intention of choosing to withdraw from our commitments, our relationships, or our own recognition of our full communion with the See of Canterbury or any of the other constituent members of the Anglican Communion. Indeed, we will seek to live fully into, and deepen, our relationships with our brothers and sisters in the Communion through companion relationships, the networks of Anglican women, the Anglican Indigenous Network, the Francophone Network, our support for the Anglican Diocese of Cuba, our existing covenant commitments with other provinces and dioceses, including Liberia, Mexico, Central America, Brazil, and the Philippines, our work as The Episcopal Church in many countries around the world, especially in the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, and Taiwan, and countless informal relationships for mission around the world.

Since our General Convention of 2003, we have responded in good faith to the requests we have received from our Anglican partners. We accepted the invitation of the Lambeth Commission to send individuals characteristic of the theological breadth of our Church to meet with it. We happily did so. Our Executive Council voluntarily acceded to the request of the Primates for our delegates not to attend the 2005 meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council in Nottingham. We took our place as listeners rather than participants as an expression of our love and respect for the sensibilities of our brothers and sisters in the Communion even when we believed we had been misunderstood. We accepted the invitation of the Primates to explain ourselves in a presentation to the same meeting of the Anglican Consultative Council. We did so with joy.

At the meeting of our House of Bishops at Camp Allen, Texas in March, 2004 we adopted a proposal called Delegated Episcopal Pastoral Oversight as a means for meeting the pastoral needs of those within our Church who disagreed with actions of the General Convention. Our plan received a favorable response in the Windsor Report. It was not accepted by the Primates. At our meeting in March 2005, we adopted a Covenant Statement as an interim response to the Windsor Report in an attempt to assure the rest of the Communion that we were taking them seriously and, at some significant cost, refused to consecrate any additional bishops whatsoever as a way that we could be true to our own convictions without running the risk of consecrating some that would offend our brothers and sisters. Our response was not accepted by the Primates. Our General Convention in 2006 struggled mightily and at great cost to many, not the least of whom are our gay and lesbian members, to respond favorably to the requests made of us in the Windsor Report and the Primates' Dromantine Communiqué of 2005. We received a favorable response from the Joint Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative Council and the Primates, which found that our effort had substantially met the concerns of the Windsor Report with the need to clarify our position on the blessing of same sex relationships. Still, our efforts were not accepted by the Primates in the Dar es Salaam Communique.

Other Anglican bishops, indeed including some Primates, have violated our provincial boundaries and caused great suffering and contributed immeasurably to our difficulties in solving our problems and in attempting to communicate for ourselves with our Anglican brothers and sisters. We have been repeatedly assured that boundary violations are inappropriate under the most ancient authorities and should cease. The Lambeth Conferences of 1988 and 1998 did so. The Windsor Report did so. The Dromantine Communique did so. None of these assurances has been heeded. The Dar es Salaam Communique affirms the principle that boundary violations are impermissible, but then sets conditions for ending those violations, conditions that are simply impossible for us to meet without calling a special meeting of our General Convention.

It is incumbent upon us as disciples to do our best to follow Jesus in the increasing experience of the leading of the Holy Spirit. We fully understand that others in the Communion believe the same, but we do not believe that Jesus leads us to break our relationships. We proclaim the Gospel of what God has done and is doing in Christ, of the dignity of every human being, and of justice, compassion, and peace. We proclaim the Gospel that in Christ there is no Jew or Greek, no male or female, no slave or free. We proclaim the Gospel that in Christ all God's children, including women, are full and equal participants in the life of Christ's Church. We proclaim the Gospel that in Christ all God's children, including gay and lesbian persons, are full and equal participants in the life of Christ's Church. We proclaim the Gospel that stands against any violence, including violence done to women and children as well as those who are persecuted because of their differences, often in the name of God. The Dar es Salaam Communique is distressingly silent on this subject. And, contrary to the way the Anglican Communion Network and the American Anglican Council have represented us, we proclaim a Gospel that welcomes diversity of thought and encourages free and open theological debate as a way of seeking God's truth. If that means that others reject us and communion with us, as some have already done, we must with great regret and sorrow accept their decision.

With great hope that we will continue to be welcome in the councils of the family of Churches we know as the Anglican Communion, we believe that to participate in the Primates' Pastoral scheme would be injurious to The Episcopal Church for many reasons.

First, it violates our church law in that it would call for a delegation of primatial authority not permissible under our Canons and a compromise of our autonomy as a Church not permissible under our Constitution.

Second, it fundamentally changes the character of the Windsor process and the covenant design process in which we thought all the Anglican Churches were participating together.

Third, it violates our founding principles as The Episcopal Church following our own liberation from colonialism and the beginning of a life independent of the Church of England.

Fourth, it is a very serious departure from our English Reformation heritage. It abandons the generous orthodoxy of our Prayer Book tradition. It sacrifices the emancipation of the laity for the exclusive leadership of high-ranking Bishops. And, for the first time since our separation from the papacy in the 16th century, it replaces the local governance of the Church by its own people with the decisions of a distant and unaccountable group of prelates.

Most important of all it is spiritually unsound. The pastoral scheme encourages one of the worst tendencies of our Western culture, which is to break relationships when we find them difficult instead of doing the hard work necessary to repair them and be instruments of reconciliation. The real cultural phenomenon that threatens the spiritual life of our people, including marriage and family life, is the ease with which we choose to break our relationships and the vows that established them rather than seek the transformative power of the Gospel in them. We cannot accept what would be injurious to this Church and could well lead to its permanent division.

At the same time, we understand that the present situation requires intentional care for those within our Church who find themselves in conscientious disagreement with the actions of our General Convention. We pledge ourselves to continue to work with them toward a workable arrangement. In truth, the number of those who seek to divide our Church is small, and our Church is marked by encouraging signs of life and hope. The fact that we have among ourselves, and indeed encourage, a diversity of opinion on issues of sexuality should in no way be misunderstood to mean that we are divided, except among a very few, in our love for The Episcopal Church, the integrity of its identity, and the continuance of its life and ministry.

In anticipation of the traditional renewal of ordination vows in Holy Week we solemnly declare that "we do believe the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of God, and to contain all things necessary to salvation; and we do solemnly engage to conform to the doctrine, discipline, and worship of The Episcopal Church." (Book of Common Prayer, page 513)

With this affirmation both of our identity as a Church and our affection and commitment to the Anglican Communion, we find new hope that we can turn our attention to the essence of Christ's own mission in the world, to bring good news to the poor, to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to liberate the oppressed, and to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor (Luke 4:18-19). It is to that mission that we now determinedly turn.

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March 18, 2007

Hillary 1984

I am LOVING this!!!

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February 28, 2007

A Proper Beginning to Lent

While posting my most recent blog entry in anticipation of our Africa trip, I was stricken with the inadvertent Lenten discipline I'll be taking for the next two weeks. It has me justifiably nervous!

Being a proper child of the digital age, my daily routine is spent juggling my laptop, a cell phone, a PDA, an iPod and various and sundry electronic gadgets. I am connected to my peers and my friends and my family for 24 hours a day. Texting, video messaging, email, blogs, newsfeeds all combine to keep me informed and to make my own life available to those I love.

While in Africa, I will have none of these things. I will be utterly disconnected from my daily reality and the quick easy fix of calling on friends or family at any time the mood strikes. I will be absent the daily, hourly, almost down to the minute flow of information that I have become accustomed to.

No news; no gossip or scandal; no quick and easy way to look up a fact I do not know; or answer a question with the immediacy of the digital age. No way to write a quick article or reflection or hammer out a new poem on the keyboard. Heavens... I may have to actually use pen and paper!

This is a prospect that I find terrifying and exhilarating at once. And it will certainly require of me more patience and deliberation than I have had need of in a very long time.

I am an information junkie. And that quest for constant connection, the exploration of ideas and the constant question and answer dialectic informs so much of my life and even my search for an understanding of God and God's history with us, that to be without my digital fix for the next two weeks begs a very serious question:

Is this something God has placed in my path for Lent to make me find new ways to express my longing?

And secondly, have the use of these means of communication in my life usurped the role of waiting in my life as a reminder that I cannot always have what I want when I want it?

As I embark on the journey today, I will miss my family and friends and all of those with whom I have daily interaction through the wonders of electronic information sharing. I will be absent my digital community that gives me so much nourishment.

You will all be in my prayers and thoughts and I will try to record as much as I can using my good old fashioned memory cells... rusty as they are... so that I can share with you all when I return.

I ask for your prayers as we travel, so that we might not only find safety on our journey, but that I might also enter in to the Lenten journey so surprisingly sprung upon me. I trust that God will reveal something mighty and marvelous if I enter fully into the desert of "digital aloneness" that has been prepared for me.

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February 27, 2007

A trip to Africa

Tomorrow, we leave for an extended trip to Africa with the Recycled AIDS MEdicine Program. While I will keep a journal, blogging will be virtually impossible while I am away. I will post my journal here upon my return. But, in the meanwhile, I request your prayers as we travel with over six suitcases full of medications, and I offer this little blog post so you can know more about our trip.


*****************

Anthony and I are on the Board of Directors of this agency in San Francisco composed of 5 volunteers who collect unused HIV medications and redistribute them to clinics in the developing world. Many people with HIV end of with large quantities of medications that go unused, mainly due to the medications not working in their particular case, or a change in regimen. Some medications are from folks who have died and the families donate them to us. Some medications are perfectly fine, but because of expiration dates can no longer be sold or used in the US in spite of the fact that they are still quite usable, in some cases for up to two years after they expire.

Anthony and I will visit two agencies in Zimbabwe to meet the people that our work directly benefits. We will help several doctors in our party at an open clinic in Harare for two days distributing medication and offering counseling to those we can. Many hundreds of people will show up and wait from the night before to be seen by a doctor. Many will have to be turned away because we cannot see everyone given the limited staff. For four days afterwards, we will stay at the Mother of Peace orphanage with the children whose parents have died as a result of HIV infection. Many of them are HIV positive.

The pharmaceutical industry in the US is maximized NOT for the health of the individual, but for the profit of the pharmaceutical companies. Unfortunately, there is an abundance of medication available in the US but at tremendously inflate prices. Because of this, and due to the high number of HIV cases in the developing world, medications are difficult to come by in places like Africa and South America because to offer them at cheaper prices does not benefit the pharmaceutical industry.

There is tremendous social stigma attached to HIV infection, particularly in the developing world. Many people risk losing their jobs, housing, and health care if it is discovered they have HIV. The clinics we supply, under the supervision of a medical staff, make sure that these medications are distributed in an equitable fashion.

RAMP has criteria for how the medications we donate are distributed:

1 - the agencies many not charge for the medication
2 - Social and economic status may not be used to determine who has access to the medications.

The medications we receive are donated anonymously in drop off boxes across the Bay Area. We then collect them and rigorously sort them into drugs which we may permissibly distribute and those we may not. Unusable drugs are incinerated and the others are sorted according to which clients need which medications. We currently supply a clinic and an orphanage in Zimbabwe, a clinic in Mexico City and another in Santiago, Chile. In addition, we supply medications to a women's health program in Uganda.

With an annual budget of $5000, we distribute as much medication as comparable agencies in the US with annual budgets in excess of  $150,000. Last year, we gave away nearly $2 million in medications that would otherwise have been thrown away. We are an all volunteer agency and rely on couriers to get medications to our clients. We will be hand delivering several suitcases full of medications on our trip.

Brother Karekin

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December 30, 2006

Saddam is Dead

Today we executed a near 70 year old man.

A man, once of great power, whom we captured cowering in his underwear in a hole in the ground.

A man who, without a doubt, was committed to evil and performed great sins against humankind...

And yet a man who had been neutralized.

A man who could have spent his life imprisoned for his crimes.

Today, we executed a near 70 year old man...

For crimes committed by countless others whom we continue to support and keep in power

Because it is expedient to our wishes.

We executed him, like we execute so many others in our own country

Because we do not believe in God, despite our protestations to the contrary.

No... we do not believe in God.

We believe in vengeance and retaliation.

We believe in political expediency.

We believe in photo opportunities.

We believe in our own righteousness.

We believe in the gallows because we do not believe in grace.

We believe that death solves the problem because we do not believe that Christ overcame death...

Or that, if he did, he did so only for a privileged few that doesn't include Muslims.

Especially near 70 year old Muslims caught cowering in their underwear in a hole in the ground because he realized that the gig was up and vengeance was at hand.

Saddam went to the gallows with a copy of the Quran in his hands.

I wonder if the executioner did the same... carried to the gallows whatever holy book gives him comfort and strength.

I wonder if our Christian president bothered to take up his Bible and pray at all yesterday while awaiting news of the death his machinations had wrought against a near 70 year old man.

Today I got a note from a friend wondering if we ought to pray for Saddam in church this weekend.

Pray for your enemies and those who persecute you.

Those who live by the sword shall perish by it.

Vengeance is mine, says the Lord.

But what do we care. The biggest fear we have when it comes to executing a near 70 year old man is whether his death will lead to more violence against us.

Or whether, in an age of lies and deceit, we dare show a video of the execution to the world for fear people won't believe he's really dead. How graphic should the news dare to be?

It really is, after all, just a question of taste.

An evil man has died on the gallows, but a man nonetheless.

At our Christian hands.

And in the scheme of things, the cycle of violence continues with no end in sight...

Because we do not trust God nor God's justice.

Our own petty tyrant is more convincing than the petty tyrant just dispatched.

We will hear about our savage victim over the next several days:

How afraid he was.

How resigned he was.

How pathetic he was.

"I saw fear... he was afraid." "It was strange... he just gave up."

He was near 70 years old.

And his death will not quench our leader's thirst.

Nor ours.

Just another dead Muslim.

Caught in a hole in the ground in his underwear.

And I swear...

I just heard someone laugh.


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