Peace and Justice

Our friend, Molly, likes to send around some favorite poems at seasons of the year.  Autumn began on September 22.  Here are her Fall selections – three pages: 2021 Fall poems.  Thank you, Molly.

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A week ago I was interviewed via Zoom as one of many participants in an international DNA project.  The interview was brief and in my recollection there were five questions.  One of them was “What’s identity for you?”  I asked for time to think about this one, and overnight came up with a pretty long list.  But the meat of my response to the question was also brief: “At 81 years, I think I can honesty say my preferred identity is to be part of the human race, which to me is all-inclusive.

Anyone who walks the same planet as I do knows that we live in tribes now.  My ideal is probably seen as naive.  But I’ll stand my ground.  We’re in this walk to the future together, whoever we are, wherever we live.

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This post is the last for September, and like the previous five (see the archive), this relates to the post 9-11-01 world in which we live.

I title this post, simply, Peace and Justice.  If you have an interest in peace and justice for all, I want to strongly recommend the two initiatives which follow.  I know both persons over a lot of years; they have good ideas, they work hard and they deserve support.  I especially encourage your sharing this post and information with others.

The U.S. Peace Memorial Foundation:

I met Dr. Michael Knox in 2006 and have promoted his initiative since the beginning.  I’d encourage your purchase of the book, and becoming a founding member of the organization yourself.  This is a long term project.

The Peace Memorial Foundation website is here.  On July 17, 2021, the Tampa Bay Times published a column about the proposed US Peace Memorial. I joined the US Peace Memorial Foundation as a Founding Member in 2006 and served as Coordinator for MN for many years. The Foundation now has 427 Founding Members. They come from forty-five states (plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands). I’m proud to say that 10 percent (43) of these supporters live in Minnesota. All information about the initiative, how to donate, etc., are easily available at the website.  I’m proud to say that I was the 27th founding member of this Foundation, and the first from Minnesota.  

The 309 page book, which I purchased through Barnes and Noble is filled with useful information.  

Portraits of Peace by John Noltner.

I met John Noltner at a meeting of the Minnesota Alliance of Peacemakers about ten years ago.  He was in the process of reinventing himself – the near meltdown of the U.S. economy in 2008 forced a change in focus from previous work with major magazines and in the corporate world.  He has done amazing work – Portraits of Peace is his third book, just released.  Until it was interrupted by the pandemic, his series called “A Peace of My Mind” was in four exhibits traveling nationwide.  His website is well worth a visit.  The first panel gives information about the book.

I’ve had Portraits of Peace for only a few days, and chose to read a random selection of three chapters from the 31 chapters in the 201 page book.  Each chapter tells a story, many, perhaps most, with a single photograph, and in my opinion, each chapter would be worthy of a book club discussion group – one chapter at a time.  Each are gentle calls to action.  This is not a book for speed reading.  The selections are usually 5-10 pages, brimming with food for thought and personal reflection.  The subjects are ordinary people from all over the country, all representing the diversity that is America.     This book is readily available anywhere you like to buy books.

Check back for more topics on current issues beginning in early October.

Forward

Today is [Last Sunday was] the World Day of Migrants and Refugees, observed by the Catholic Church since 1914; I learned about this in an excellent column by Janice Andersen in our church newsletter, which can be read here:  Janice Andersen: An ever wider “we“.  A separate, younger observance is the United Nations World Refugee Day.  We are a nation of immigrants; one need not look further than the daily news to see that this is a critical and current issue.

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“Back in the day”, well, actually two weeks ago, I had planned a post looking forward after the 20 year anniversary of 9-11-01.  As it happens, several days previous to 9-11-21 this site was hacked by someone, somewhere, who didn’t interfere with my site; rather rendered my own site inaccessible to me.  This has happened once before, about two years ago.  In this business, even small fry like me don’t escape the marauders.

September 8 I did my own retrospective on the last 20 years.  It’s “Snake bit“, if you wish.

There’s been a lot under the bridge in even the few days since 9-11-2021.  Just a few comments on this, the first day of the rest of our lives.

It does not seem a good strategy to try to go forward by becoming immobilized by what happened in the past.

A twin occurrence seems particularly instructive to me as I write.

For many years I’ve been a subscriber to our magnificent Minnesota Orchestra.

Our opening Minnesota Orchestra concert in 2001 happened to be September 21.  This was 10 days after 9-11-01.   Maestro Eije Oue (Japanese) raised his baton, leading the Orchestra in a rousing rendition of the Star Spangled Banner.  It was magnificent, and it was moving.  Unforgettable.  (I looked to see if this was on YouTube.  No luck.  My recollection was it was not on the printed program.)

About the same exact time, 9-20-2001, maestro Kurt Masur (German) led the New York Philharmonic similarly.  You can watch it here.  It seems much more subdued than the Minneapolis version I remember on near the same day.  The same notes; different tone.)

Twenty years later, we were in the same Minneapolis hall as in 2001, and Maestro Osmo Vanska (native of Finland), in his final year of a long tenure with the Minnesota Orchestra, also raised his baton, once again a rousing rendition of our national anthem.  This was in the printed program “John Stafford Smith/arr. Stanislaw Skrowacewski.  The Star-Spangled Banner“.  2021 matched the 2001 memory for me.

Skrowacewski was the revered long-time, 1960-79, music director of the Minnesota orchestra.  (Here’s a version from You Tube featuring the Coast Guard Band.)  September 23, 2021, was the first full concert of the full Minnesota Orchestra since the Pandemic brought our lives to a halt in March of 2020.  It was an evening to celebrate a return.

In my opinion:

In 2001, 9-11 was a huge shock to the national psyche.  In my opinion, we lost an opportunity in how we responded to 9-11 and this has been a huge millstone around our collective necks ever since.  Masur’s Star Spangled banner came across as solemn and depressed compared to the Oue’s rendition I heard almost the same night in 2001.  The NY Phil reading of our national anthem seemed to accurately reflect our national attitude going forward.

In 2021, sitting near where I sat in 2001, I was hearing a determined and hopeful national anthem from an Orchestra which had recovered from a near two year lockout in mid-decade.  It felt good to be listening.  I remembered the 2001 anthem in Mpls similarly.

Last Thursday the Orchestra was also aware of and pointing out other issues we need to confront.  To get in the hall, we needed to provide proof of being vaccinated, and masks were mandatory.  There were no protests.  The hall was filled to capacity.

But there was more: in the program itself, which included Max Bruch’s Scottish Fantasy and Beethoven’s 5th, was an 8 minute piece by composer Jessie Montgomery, simply entitled “Banner”.   Here is how the program booklet described the piece Minnesota Orchestra Sep 23 2021.  Take the time to read the few paragraphs.

Forward?

I wish everyone could hear the Minnesota Orchestra Star Spangled Banner, both the 2001 and 2021 versions.

I think 9-11-2001 found the U.S. in a “hole” – perceived loss of power and control.  Rather than working towards a rational solution then, our society proceeded to dig the hole deeper as the generation went on, as witnessed by endless and fruitless war.

Twenty years after “9-11”, our new 9-11 day will forever be January 6, 2021.  This was the day our own chickens came home to roost.  Our ‘terrorists’ now are home grown.  As we have come to learn, simply by living our lives, we have been driven apart into warring tribes, even within our own families and associates.

If there is to be hope forthcoming, and I believe there is reason for hope, it has to come from each and every individual citizen doing his or her part to carry us forward.

If our function is to be casual spectators, only expected to be critics, we will get the inevitable unpleasant results.  To win takes all of us.

I hope you agree.

POSTNOTE: Early in September an intriguing Opinion Quiz came via the New York Times: “If America had six Parties, Which would you belong to?”  It’s an easy opinion quiz – 20 questions, maybe 5 minutes, instant and personal assessment.  If you can access the quiz, I highly recommend it.

We are a nation of 330,000,000 people, and too often it seems we seem to have the idea that the only opinion that matters is our own personal opinion…and a society cannot function, much less an entire nation or even a family, where “my way or the highway” seems a prevalent ideology.  Even worse is the forced choice between two extreme options: us or them.  We are at that point in this divided society.  Our all too obvious flirtation with the fantasy of an authoritarian dictatorship is an ill wind, blowing.

Snake bit

Today I was driving in a nearby quiet neighborhood.  I was meeting another car in a street narrowed to one lane by two vehicles parked on opposite sides.  The occupant of one, a young man, was sort of a traffic cop, though that wasn’t necessary.  But it was a nice touch.  But mostly I noticed the young mans pick-up which had a very large Gadsden flag mounted at the edge of the truck bed.  These days that coiled snake yellow flag seems favored by people who fancy themselves rebels (my opinion).

For those who like to think that we’re back on the right track in this country, I beg to differ.  The Gadsden Guy was only the most recent piece of evidence that trouble is not that far beneath the surface, and the trouble will likely come from within our own citizens including friends, neighbors and relatives.

Much of the inciting we see every day in the American commons of internet or television especially.  Role models are governors and state legislators saying “go to hell” on things like masking, etc.  Or people who disrupt school board meetings, on and on.  Why used to be rare has become common.

We’re a big country with lots of people, and there are brilliant and diabolical organizers out there who are willing and able to make trouble, and who have plenty of money to work with, and willing minions at the local level.  And of course there’s the tribal leader who’s modus operandi is to get revenge and enlists angry people in assorted ways most of us probably don’t see.

Many of us have friends and relatives who are police and military, former and present, some who were or still are open and even outspoken support of anti-government, though they are part of this same government.  We tend to close our eyes to this: this a free country, after all.

But the rubber has hit the road.  Selective enforcement of the law: in the case of January 6, a slow response to a crisis because the people in the chain of command who had to authorize action, delayed response.  We were accustomed to a usual and customary role of our law keepers, and their chain of command.  And we still are.  But the deviations from normal in the recent – and not so recent – past have been significant.

Timothy McVeigh, who murdered hundreds in Oklahoma City in 1995,  was a Boy Scout and from the military, we must remember.  Today’s militia groups include in their membership people with lots of military experience, with nothing good on their minds.  Perhaps we are fortunate to have witnessed the graphic demonstration of this on Jan. 6, first hand; and witnessing ever since the efforts made by some to disrupt and upset any investigation or punishment of those involved.  I wonder what the guy with the Gadsden Flag was saying?

This has been evolving for years.

Just this week I was going through a box of papers, and came across something I knew I had, somewhere, but couldn’t find.  There it was, something I wrote back in the fall of 2001, including three pages from a U.S. News and World Report from September, 2000.  Here it is: 9 11 2001 Three vignettes.  Look especially at pages 3 and 4, keeping in mind that this is from 20 years ago.  It is worth a look as the 20th anniversary of September 11, 2001, approaches.

I have no idea what if anything will happen from this point on.  Nobody does.  But you can bet that preparations are being made, just in case.  We can no longer be naive.  There is doubtless planning taking place.

Each of us is either part of the solution, or of the problem.  Where do you stand?

POSTNOTE: My reflections 20 years after 9-11-2001 on the anniversary day, Saturday 9-11-2021.  (9-11 was a Tuesday in 2000.)

9-11-01

My first post about the 20th anniversary of 9-11-01 is here.

My personal quest is to learn from our nations experience in the last twenty years, and help make a contribution to a better world in what time I have left.  Another, possibly final, post on the topic will be published on 9-11-2021.

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September 11, 2001, I was part of a crew of volunteers from Basilica of St. Mary working on a new Habitat for Humanity home which had been under construction for some time.

Our crew began its work on September 10, and was on scene for two weeks.  I recall there was a great outpouring of volunteers in the days following 9-11-01, so many that there was not enough work to be done.  People would drive up and ask if they could help.  I suspect others have similar stories at that time of national stress.  I was there probably for 7 of the 10 days.

I remember this porch (below) especially since my son-in-law John was helping when this porch was being constructed 9-11.  When I took the below photo, in the late Fall of 2001, the house was essentially complete, and the dedication and presentation to the family was in January of 2002.  The family still lives in the home. (A photo of the porch and crew on 9-11-01 can be seen here.)

I’ve watched several retrospectives on 9-11-01 in the past week, most recently last night on the NY Firemen first on the scene after the first plane hit the first tower.

I have been to New York City only once in my life, and that was in late June of 1972 for a few hours when I took the snapshots at the end of this post.  At the time, one of the towers had been completed and was occupied; the second was nearing completion.  We did not go into the building; we just wanted to see it.

At the end of October, 2001, we went on a vacation trip to London, which had been scheduled long before 9-11.  I remember the kindness and welcoming of the English on that trip.

Back home, unfortunately, the mood of our nation was war, and that has been our last 20 years, largely.  I think the danger of the Kabul suicide bomber at the end of August, could be – I certainly hope it isn’t – our new 9-11-01.  Wars have started on actions by a single person or a small group.  We didn’t, and we don’t, need war to get to peace.  War is a fork in the road best not taken.  Too much can go too wrong.

Sadly and ironically, the day the World Trade Centers were destroyed was days after the United Nations General Assembly meeting at the UN in Manhattan had approved a resolution setting September 21 of each year as the International Day of Peace.  A celebration was taking place at the UN Plaza when the first plane hit the tower not that far away.  I still have the video produced by the English group Peace One Day (scroll to the end and read the review written by someone.  The film is worth watching, if you have any interest in peace.)

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Here is some information about the losses on 9-11-01 and in the subsequent years of war.  I think these numbers are reasonably accurate, though I know there are certainly other pieces of data that are similar, but not identical.

Data about the deaths at the time of 9-11-01 at the three sites.

Afghanistan cost of war between 2001 and 2021, data from Associated Press.

We always seem to amplify our own losses, and minimize those suffered by others in our wars.

World Trade Center New York City, end of June, 1972, by Dick Bernard

World Trade Center New York City June, 1971 photo by Dick Bernard

Snapshot of United Nations, New York City, Dick Bernard , Late June, 1972

POSTNOTE of concern: I have rarely written about 9-11-01 at this space.  One time vividly comes to mind, and that was the day I visited the International Peace Garden shared by North Dakota and Manitoba.  You can read it here.   I published it July 23 2009.  Succinctly, the tragedy we are re-viewing now, became a pretext to going to endless war, which hopefully ended on August 30, 2021.  Have we learned anything?  It remains to be seen.  Other posts about 9-11 can be accessed in the archive section at right, for Sep 2 2011, Sep 9, 2011,  Sep 11 2017, Sep 10, 2019.  Simply call up the month and year, then click on the specific calendar date.

Decay within.

Individual citizens, like myself, and you, will decide whether this experiment called the United States of America will succeed or fail.  January 6 was the first and very major wakeup call about a genuine crisis attacking our democracy.  The assault continues.  We sit idly by, and we invite disaster.

Related posts: August 30 and September 6.

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This morning, as every morning, I delivered the Sports section of our paper across the driveway to our neighbor, then off for coffee.

We live in a town home, and share a driveway with three other families.  Rick, whose home adjoins ours, was in the doorway of his garage.  He’s often out early, the same time as I, and we’re casual friends.  Good folks, good neighbors, both ways.  This day Rick wanted to talk, and said he was reading a book about how America is destroying itself from within by Mark Levin.  It puzzled me.  First time in all the years I’ve known him that a political topic has ever come up.  I know the family politics – polar opposite of ours – and I said I didn’t know of the book, nor Mark Levin;  that what he posed would probably take a very long conversation.  We went on with our respective day.

Back home some time later I google’d “Mark Levin destroying itself from within”.  Levin’s a long-time conservative commentator, and there was a book with a similar thrust that he authored in 2005.  That book is my best guess what Rick was talking about.  (2005 was 16 years ago, the first year of George Bush’s second term, and we were full tilt into the Iraq War at the time.)  If you’re curious, google it.

The previous evening had come an e-mail from a relative, a retired PhD in political science in Montreal.  At the end of his e-mail he said “I’m reading a lot about the state of democracy in the States.  Fascinating but scary.”  The e-mail came at 8:29 p.m.

At 7:36 had come another e-mail from a good friend about the Supreme Court non-decision on the new Texas abortion law:  “How did only 80,000 Nazi officers control Germany, a country of 60 million? By identifying “the enemies” and asking citizens to report their fellows to the Gestapo or other Nazi group for persecution and/or death. Turn citizen against citizen. Divide and conquer.

If you follow the news at all, you can probably gather the drift.  Vigilantes are being empowered.  To those who say “good”, be very careful what you pray for.

The non-decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in the Texas case on Wednesday is the immediate most recent cause, but the rainstorm has become a flood of epic proportions particularly since a certain person lost the 2020 election by over 7 million votes.  But the raining on democracy itself began long before, consciously and deliberately, by operatives wishing to take permanent control of this government, supposedly “of the people, by the people and for the people“.

Heather Cox Richardson catches the essence of some of the critical political history here.  It’s not a long read, but a good one.  She’s not the first I’ve heard, recently, talk about “dog catches car” – it’s more fun to chase the car, than to catch it.  What do you do when you win?  I would suspect the Taliban has that quandary in Afghanistan ‘as we speak’.  So did the Nazis, when their “1,000 year Reich” began to unravel only 10 years into their regime.  Be careful what you pray for.  Yes the victims can also be the perpetrators.

But this is a deadly serious matter and we are well advised to take our heads out of the sand.  If we give a damn, we get to work.  It’s our gig, not someone else’s.  One person, one action at a time.

Personally, I’m struggling with how best to address another e-mail I got from a relative last Sunday.  This one was one of those insane “forwards” which ends “Author unknown”.  It is the laundry list of the radical right fears and hates.  Here is the forward in its entirety: Ken anon letter Aug 28 2021.    The handwritten comments are mine.  I apologize for the brevity.  It would take many pages to do justice in a response.  I expect to add somewhat more detail to my response to this, perhaps this weekend.  Check back.  [Sep 5.  See postnote.]

As for the “author unknown”, I’ve watched this evolve over the years in the misinformation industry.  In the naive old days, which are really fairly recent, they would attach a real name to a quotation even if the person named was not responsible for the quote, which may or may not have been true.  The most recent example that comes to mind was a quote by Abraham Lincoln I saw in a North Dakota church bulletin a couple of years ago.  Unfortunately, there are people keep close tabs on Lincoln’s quotations, and it was an easy search to find out that Lincoln never said what was attributed to him in the bulletin.

The Priest apologized to me, and said he got a sheet including such quotes from parishioners he trusted…just how this works.  He was conned by his own flock.  Did he learn his lesson?  He’s in another state.  I don’t know.

If you look at the Ken letter, and I recommend that you do, what you have by this prolific and infamous author, “anon”, is a listing of things that a certain group of people fear or hate.

Caveat emptor.

Some ideas for a long weekend:

  1. Last Monday I had the opportunity to watch, for the first time, the film Hunger Games (2012).  It is worth your time.  It is fiction, but it is thought provoking.  It was a very successful series of books and movie.
  2. You probably know the name “Julian Assange“.  Whatever your personal feelings about him, an organization in which I’m active is offering a particular opportunity between now and September 16.  All details are here.  Scroll down.  Preregistration is required if you wish to join the program; the films are available on line and on your own.  Watch before the conversation.

COMMENTS:

from Jane:    Every woman has a right to choose whether or not to give birth.  And every woman also has a right to choose whether or not to get an experimental injection that is proving to be more dangerous in many instances than COV$D itself.

response from Dick: I decided to ask Center for Disease Control (CDC) about this first.  Here.  Then I went to the link provided by Jane, which is here.

from Marion: Thanks, Dick. I read the link. Most of it either new to me or lost to my 94-year-old memory.

POSTNOTE Sep. 5, from Dick: I don’t see any reasonable way to confront “Ken anon” (above).  It would be evidence against feelings, and if feelings dominate, evidence will make no difference whatsoever to either the author (who will always be unknown) and the person who sent it to me in the first place.   So, I’ll just let it be.  I did rescan the pdf, in particular high-lighting words and phrases which seem most relevant to the sender.

 

Hunger Games

A few years ago I heard about a book then a film called “The Hunger Games”.  It didn’t much interest me.  I neither read the books, nor saw the movie.

That changed Monday night: I was invited to a showing of the movie and I went.

It is described as a “dystopian” novel and thus film.

Nonetheless, at the end of the film I would highly recommend it as good food for adult discussion about contemporary America.

Here’s the wiki article about Hunger Games.

I’ll say no more about it, than to say I watched the entire film with a few teenagers.  And I recommend it as food for both thought and discussion, but as a possibility for action.