Sunday, May 29, 2011

A Most Unexpected Road Trip

So yesterday Cara posted on her Facebook page about her intention to attend the Heartland Peace Rally in Joplin as a counter-protest to the Westboro Baptist Church's plans to demonstrate at the Memorial Service for the Joplin Tornado victims.

She asked if anyone else was going and indicated that her car had room for 3 more people.

In an uncharacteristic display of complete spontaneity, I decided to ride along. So a young, female, Jewish, conservative and an old, atheist, socialist curmudgeon set out on a road trip!

We got there early and had time to view some of the devastation left by the tornado. It was staggering. I've lived in the midwest all my life and I've never seen anything like this.





You here people compare the destruction to a war zone. I've never been in a war but I'm fairly certain that nothing short of a nuclear weapon could cause this amount of damage.




The turn out in support of the folks in Joplin was quite large, loud and enthusiastic.














We got to see President O'Bama arrive on Air Force One.



It wasn't the usual 747, but a lesser Air Force One that landed in Joplin.




We never did see any members of the Westboro Baptist Church, although various rumors had them blocked in at the Flying J truck stop by truckers, getting beat up by some truckers, getting tear gassed by the police and being hauled off to jail. None of which were true. But having never encountered them we can't claim to have been much of a counter-protest.

We didn't help any residents clean up or rebuild. We didn't actually accomplish anything.

But sometimes you just have to see a thing for yourself and lend your support in whatever way you can.

Monday, May 23, 2011

A Brief History of Israel


The Biblical state of Israel only existed for about 300 years.

In around 1000 BC, King David conquered Jerusalem and carved the state of Israel out of a chunk of what had been, for the previous 1000 years or so, the land of Canaan.

The Israelites felt compelled to conquer Canaan because their God told them they could have Canaan. That and the force of arms was their only claim to the land.

Israel thrived, more or less, until about 722 BC when it was conquered by the Assyrians.

Then conquered again by the Babylonians in 586 BC.

Then conquered again by the Persians about 50 years later. The Persian remained in control of the area until Alexander the Great conquered it around 331 BC.

After the death of Alexander, the area bounced around in limbo until it came under Roman rule in about 164 BC. This is when the area became known as Palestine.

At no time during the previous 2000 years was the area populated by a Jewish majority. It was populated by a mix of indigenous people who had been inhabiting the area continuously for 10,000 years. The Jewish people were just part of the mix.

The Roman Empire ruled Palestine until about 300 AD. The Byzantine Empire ruled Palestine from about 300 AD until 638 AD when the Muslims took control and held it until it became part of the Ottoman Empire in 1517.

The Ottoman Empire remained in control of Palestine until the end of WWI when it was divided between the British and the French.

Although there was talk of establishing a Jewish homeland in the area, it wasn't until after WWII that the British finally punted, turned the issue over to the newly formed United Nations and let them decide what to do with Palestine.

The U.N. basically split Palestine into an Arab Palestine and a Jewish Israel in 1947. That was just 64 years ago. It was not a popular decision then and it has not aged well.

Imagine if the United Nations decided to split Texas in half and give half of it to the Mexicans. The displaced Texans and the neighbors in the surrounding states might take issue with the decision.

Imagine further that the Mexicans decided that half of Texas wasn't enough and went to war with Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana to annex even more territory. Ya know, for "security".

So, let's just take a step back here.

Over the course of the last 10,000 years, Israel existed for 300 years because their God said so and again for the last 64 years because the United Nations said so.

When you look at the big picture, telling Israel that they can't keep the land they took by force in 1967 and need to pull back to the land that was taken from the Palestinians and given to them in 1947 doesn't seem to be all that egregious.

The bottom line here is that the only reason the state of Israel exists again after
3000 years is because the United Nations took a chunk of land away from one group of people and gave it to another group of people. It's not as though it was brought into existence by God Himself and has remained inviolate for all of human history.

Israel is a consensual construct of modern international law. It's borders were negotiated into existence against the will of it's neighbors and they can only be maintained through continuing negotiations with those same, hostile neighbors.

If world history teaches us anything, it's that nothing lasts forever.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Vintage Warbirds

A little background on this first picture might be in order.


The warbird featured on this veteran's jacket is a B-25. After Pearl Harbor, Jimmy Doolittle led an incredibly daring bombing raid on Tokyo. The B-25s were launched from the deck of an aircraft carrier with just enough fuel to drop their bombs on Tokyo and then bail out and ditch their planes over China. It was basically a big feel-good raid for Americans and it was designed to send the message to Japan that if you can hit us, we can hit you. In today's parlance, it would have been called a "Fuck You Too!" mission.

In case you can't make it out, the banner on his jacket says "Partial Payment".
















Friday, May 13, 2011

Is Religious Belief Integral To Being Human?

You may have seen this story on CNN yesterday:

Religious belief is human nature, huge new study claims

By Richard Allen Greene, CNN

London (CNN) – Religion comes naturally, even instinctively, to human beings, a massive new study of cultures all around the world suggests.

"We tend to see purpose in the world," Oxford University professor Roger Trigg said Thursday. "We see agency. We think that something is there even if you can't see it. ... All this tends to build up to a religious way of thinking."

Trigg is co-director of the three-year Oxford-based project, which incorporated more than 40 different studies by dozens of researchers looking at countries from China to Poland and the United States to Micronesia.

Studies around the world came up with similar findings, including widespread belief in some kind of afterlife and an instinctive tendency to suggest that natural phenomena happen for a purpose.

"Children in particular found it very easy to think in religious ways," such as believing in God's omniscience, said Trigg. But adults also jumped first for explanations that implied an unseen agent at work in the world, the study found.”

"Religious people would say, 'If there is a God, then ... he would have given us inclinations to look for him,'" Trigg said.

"If you've got something so deep-rooted in human nature, thwarting it is in some sense not enabling humans to fulfill their basic interests," Trigg said.

"There is quite a drive to think that religion is private," he said, arguing that such a belief is wrong. "It isn't just a quirky interest of a few, it's basic human nature."

"This shows that it's much more universal, prevalent, and deep-rooted. It's got to be reckoned with. You can't just pretend it isn't there," he said.

And the Oxford study, known as the Cognition, Religion and Theology Project, strongly implies that religion will not wither away, he said.


Sounds pretty compelling, doesn't it? Oxford University. “...40 different studies by dozens of researchers looking at countries from China to Poland and the United States to Micronesia.” That has to be pretty scholarly and objective, right?

Well, first of all, Dr. Roger Trigg is on the Theology Faculty at Oxford so I think we can presume a certain lack of objectivity to his study right off the bat.

But the thing is, I don't really disagree with his findings, just his subjective interpretation. In particular, look at the portions I bolded and italicized. Both of these statements are absolutely true.

Jean Piaget first discovered this in his studies of Genetic Epistomolgy.

The specific area of that discipline that we are dealing with here is the sensorimotor stage of an infant's cognitive development which occurs between birth and about age 2.

The key development comes at around 8 months old when the infant begins to develop a sense of “object permanence”. This is the understanding that objects that exist in the environment, such as a bottle, blocks, a blanket or a binky and even a parent, continue to exist even if they are out of sight or changed in some way.

This is when the world starts to make sense to an infant and they begin to develop a sense of trust.

Even when they can't see their parents, the infant knows that it's parents still exist and will return to them.

“We think that something is there even if you can't see it. ... All this tends to build up to a religious way of thinking.”

"Children in particular found it very easy to think in religious ways,"

Once that sense of Object Permanence becomes such a basic part of the young human's world view, it becomes very, very difficult to let go of it. The very thought of letting go of it can induce confusion and panic as it shakes the very foundation of everything they believe to be true.

It's so obvious. The basis for all of the world's religions and the almost universal belief in an afterlife is nothing more than the result of the natural cognitive development of all human infants.

This is why parents have such a hard time explaining death to a child. A child's entire world view is built upon object permanence. Once they are introduced to the concept of death, that object permanence starts to crumble.

It starts when the family dog dies. “Well Tommy, you know dogs like to run and jump and our yard is so small. So we took Lassie to a Big Farm in the country where there are lots of other dogs she can run and play with all day! I know you miss Lassie and she misses you. But this really is better for her. She's happy now.”

Then it continues later when Aunt Martha dies. “Aunt Martha died, but her faith in Jesus was strong so she is up in Heaven now, watching over us and waiting to be reunited with us when our time comes. So it's important that you read your Bible, love God, and do what Jesus says so you can go to Heaven and see Lassie, er, um, I mean Aunt Martha again!”

A certain percentage of the human population never learns to let go of the fallacy of object permanence. They are incapable of living without it. They have to have something in their lives that is absolutely rock solid, unchanging, unwavering and always there.

That's what faith and religion is to those people. When they feel like they are being tossed about by the random, meaningless, chaotic currents of life, they need to touch the rock. They need to know it's still there and hasn't changed. That comforts them and gives them strength.

I'm not saying that there's anything wrong with that, but let's recognize it for what it is. A basic feature of human infantile cognitive development that does not require any supernatural beings or eternal, mystical realms.

It's all neurons, synapses and chemicals. Nothing more.

Sunday, May 8, 2011