Archive for the ‘Polytheological ~ Philosophical’ Category

Some thoughts on same-sex marriage

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

I’ve been thinking about same-sex marriage recently (no, I haven’t got a boyfriend!), but in terms different from what the public is currently debating. In light of the recent California Supreme Court decision mandating equal marriage rights (and rites?) for same-sex couples, I thought I’d share them.

The Religious Reich’s war against same-sex marriage is only part of a larger picture. Perhaps if it is framed in the context of creedism, rather than just that of homophobia or heterosexism, we can create more effective strategies to stop it.

At the rock bottom of the RR’s theocratic agenda is an appeal to creedism. They believe that they have a “right” to shove their particular (and often peculiar) doctrines down the throats of every man, woman, and child on the planet. This is true whether you are discussing Christian or Islamic Fundamentalists (Jewish Fundamentalists only want to force their doctrines upon people living in Israel or in Hassidic communities elsewhere).

There are plenty of new and old religions in the world, with millions of their members in the USA, who do not agree with the sexual, reproductive, or marital doctrines of conservative monotheism. Why should one group of religions be able to use the power of civil law to enforce their doctrines and deny others’ doctrines?

The fact that Judeo-Christian-Islamic creedists are a voting majority in America is no more relevant to our civil rights than the fact that racists and sexists were once (and in some places still are) the majority of US citizens. The tyranny of the majority is specifically restrained by the constitution.

I advocate fighting this battle over marriage rights, reproductive rights, sex education rights, and all related issues in terms of resistance to creedism. The old protest phrase, “Keep your rosaries off my ovaries,” cuts to the heart of RR bigotry. Their views are rooted in the Torah, Bible, and Koran, so monotheistic creedists are “obligated” to be homophobic and opposed to all sexual freedom issues, just as they were once “obligated” to be racist or sexist.

People are entitled to have any sort of religious beliefs or non-beliefs they like. They are not entitled, under the US constitution, to force all other citizens to live under those same opinions, whether they call them “God’s Law” or anything else.

It may be easier for those of us who are (more or less) “straight” to use the “Homophobia is creedist” frame, but we might all consider using it in appropriate circumstances. Let’s make creedism as socially unacceptable as racism and sexism, and perhaps heterosexism will become equally unacceptable.

Go to www.beyondmarriage.org for some additional interesting thoughts on this issue. I think Robert Heinlein would be pleased at their goals.

As a Neopagan Druid, I’ll be happy to perform same-sex or multiple marriage ceremonies for anyone who asks me to do so. I consider it an obligation of my priesthood. Of course, I would hope that the couple/triad/quad/etc. would help out with any subsequent legal costs!

Blog Against Theocracy

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Blog Against Theocracy is a link archive of those blogs participating in the Blog Against Theocracy blogswarm April 6-8, 2007. For (Western) Easter Weekend, bloggers around the world are posting blogs about the dangers of theocracies, a topic dear to my heart.

Breaking (if silly) News: Librarians are hiding something!™

Monday, March 26th, 2007

During an interview with a gentleman from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, about EFF’s lawsuit against Viacom (the owner of the Comedy Central network) over internet copyright issues involving Viacom’s lawsuit against YouTube for posting clips from the Colbert Report, Stephen “the Eagle” Colbert tonight declared: “Librarians are hiding something!™” as an example of a phrase he was trademarking as his own creation and insisting that no one should repeat on the Net. (That’s the longest sentence I’ve written in months.)

We Have Been Warned. All of us who are concerned about issues of intellectual property rights and freedom of the Nets should be sure not to repeat the phrase, “Librarians are hiding something!™” online, for fear that Stephen (and Viacom) will lose the fortune this phrase would otherwise earn them. I certainly will be careful not to repeat the phrase, “Librarians are hiding something!™” as I’m sure Stephen wishes all his fans would be.

Yes, serious. In his own special way, Colbert is simultaneously making fun of and spotlighting a serious issue: how do we define intellectual property rights in the 21st century and should corporations, as distinct from the actual minds that create new ideas, be allowed to own ideas?

I’m a professional writer. While I’m pleased that many other authors use ideas from my books, I usually don’t get even a footnote, let alone a cut of royalties, from those who do. Yet, if you are trying to change the world through what you write, paint, sing, or otherwise create, at what point is it appropriate to let your creations dive into the global memepool to mutate and reproduce freely? Often those other authors have no idea that they are repeating words I coined or principles I was the first to explicate–can I blame them for having picked up concepts third or fourth hand?

Yes, I know there’s an entire subspecies of legal shark searching for exactly such multiply-descended usages of once original materials (at least ones that made money somewhere along the line), yet somehow I’ve never felt the need to hire such predators to defend my rights. (I was really miffed about the pirated editions of Real Magic in Russia and China, but that’s another, if related, story.)

As a political note, this is related to the fears that professional political consultants and the MSM have about losing control of the universe of political discourse to the unwashed masses and their anarchic video editing and posting skills.

Is copyright obsolete? Or is it merely subordinate to more important principles such as freedom of speech and the (electronic) press? There’s an old saying to the effect that freedom of the press belongs to the person who owns one—is it time to expand that right to all of us on the Net? Furthermore, since corporations are not people (no matter what SCOTUS says) and do not have ideas, should they be allowed to own ideas that were created by real people?

Tell me what you think, but remember not to repeat: “Librarians are hiding something™”

[Cross posted at The Daily Kos]]

Clinton Challenges Rampant Use of False Dilemma

Thursday, October 19th, 2006

Here.

Yes!

The Druid cried “Peace!”

Friday, August 11th, 2006

And there was no peace. No, I’m not talking about a lack of war, though that is certainly something I have shouted about before, but rather the sort that happens in the phrase that ends, “and quiet.”

Today has been a lovely day here in the northern suburbs of New York. I found myself thinking of how many summers have gone by where I was indoors (or incars) 24/7 only to realize in the Fall that I had missed the whole season. So I decided to go out to our landlords’ rather large backyard and just spend some time listening to the sounds of summer.

Cars and trucks driving by, planes droning overhead, hammers and powertools around the corner where yet another house is being built on land that had been nothing but trees a few weeks ago. Off in the distance, a train’s whistle and a freeway’s roar. From the landlords’ house, a television chattering and an air conditioner whirring. Every now and then, in between the raucous sounds of human technology, I could hear a bird calling or some crickets chirping. In occasional moments of relative silence, I could hear the wind rustling through the trees. That was it.

I found myself wondering just exactly where one can go to completely escape this other kind of air pollution. The middle of the farming country? Nope, too many tractors and pickups roaring. The middle of the Rocky Mountains? Nope. Have you ever seen the map that CNN shows when talking about airplane traffic patterns? During the daylight hours at least, every square mile of the USA seems to have one of thousands of planes flying noisily overhead. The South Pole? Maybe. For now. But it’s hard to get to and from, especially for brief trips.

Perhaps I can find an island somewhere…

(Phae has just reminded me that I can always use the “Summer Night” circuit on our white noise generator!)

Some musings on fear and the religious left

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

I was reading a Daily Kos entry by a liberal Protestant (I assume) minister (RevRandy) about a “liberal religious revolution” today, in which he was attempting to rouse liberal members of all religions to take action of some sort. As I told him, I wish him well, but I have my doubts about how much success he and others will have without some major changes on the religious left.

As a Neopagan activist I have watched over four decades of liberal mainstream religionists speaking noble words and expressing (four or more) noble truths, but still not having one-tenth the cultural, political, or economic impact their fundamentalist brethren have.

As I look at the eternal stewpot of hate that is the Middle East, or even just at domestic American events, I find myself wondering where the liberal Jews, Christians, and Muslims are. I know they exist, but their voices all seem terribly muffled (with the major exception of the civil rights movement of the 60s).

Where are the liberal religious PACs and get-out-the-vote efforts electing candidates to federal office, loudly denouncing fundamentalist lies, refusing to allow the Talibaptists and their ilk to represent the only voice of religious or spiritual concern in our nation?

I read about some such folks every now and then, but they are so few, so terribly few.

The only explanation that has come to me over all the years is fear — sensible fear, but fear nonetheless. It’s the fundamentalists and their cohorts, the people with absolute truth claims who live in a black and white world, who have all the guns. Their monopoly on weaponry and other implements of violence, combined with their willingness to use them against those who oppose their theocratic agendas (they shoot doctors, remember, and university professors), is enough to silence loud and persistent opposition from their liberal coreligionists, whether here in the USA or overseas in the Muslim world.

Martin Luthor King and Malcom X knew they were risking their lives to stand up for their religious beliefs, and they paid the price. How many Martins and Malcoms are there now on the religious left to stand up to the snipers, the firebombers, the character assassins (and the literal ones), and the militias on the religious right?

When will the liberal monotheists have the courage to loudly, publically, and repeatedly state that people who believe their scriptures literally, and who believe those scriptures give them the right to kill other people, are insane rather than “misguided”? Because that seems to me to be the meme they should be spreading. When will they (liberal religionists) understand that tolerating bigots is not only intellectually and spiritually bankrupt, but also suicidal?

Their religious opposition consists of people who are crazy, intolerent, and violent. Mere rationality, toleration, and peacefulness won’t stop them. They want an eventual worldwide theocracy, with themselves in charge, starting with the USA and the Middle East, leading to a “glorious” battle of Armageddon in which the “winning” Crusaders or Jihadists will rule over the radioactive ruins. Being sweetly reasonable and talking just to ourselves won’t stop them.

I don’t really know what will. I deeply suspect that monotheism, with the almost inevitible dualism that usually accompanies it, is part of the problem, not part of a solution. The culture wars are between dualists and pluralists, with liberal monotheists stuck uncomfortably in the fuzzy area between.

This may be an an area where liberal Neopagans, Hindus, Voodooists, and Native religionists of many lands may have a role to play in the coming years. We know that the universe can count higher than two, so we’re not necessarily stuck in the mainstream Western culture’s dualist worldview.

Ironically, many leftists who might stumble over this post will probably think that I’m as crazy as the fundamentalists of the religious right, because they’ve decided by their own religious dualism that all religions are insane. That is correct Marxist dogma, but the only variety of Marxist-Lennonism I’m interested in involves Groucho and John.

(This post also posted on my Daily Kos page.)

This entry was originally posted on Sunday, July 30th, 2006 at 12:44 am. The following are the comments originally made:

1. niamh Says:

Perhaps a great deal of the problem lies within the very spirit of liberalism, in most cases. My fellow Liberals have always seemed to me to be less concerned with convincing people that their way is the Correct and Proper Way. I know for myself, that the appealing thing about Liberalism *in general* is the willingness to accord others the right to think for themselves, that there is more than one “right” way, that reason and empathy are valid tools for resolving many issues. The fundamentalist view is concerned, above all things, with converting others to their way of thinking/feeling/acting. If they cannot convince them reasonably to do so, they are perfectly willing to do whatever they must to ensure *cooperation*, even if it means violence. To be frank, I think that frothing at the mouth is far more impressive and convincing to most folks than tolerance. A little fire in the eyes would, I think, do wonders for the leftist argument, but I think that it is a quality lacking in most of the breed. Vicious onemindedness appeals to the lowest common denominator. Reason and emapthy demand restraint and I think that most folks are so comfortable in their own apathy to even bother. Reason and emapthy are the more difficult path. It is oversimplifying, I know, but to me, this is one of the roothairs of the liberal-charisma problem.

Oh my gods, my husband is right. I *am* an elitist!

2. ibonewits Says:

Welcome to the club!

3. sari0009 Says:

Like domestic abuse victims that so many are quick to look down on, populations know fundamentalists/abusers are nuts, often armed, and dangerous but are afraid (and often in denial regarding “flare ups,” and so take a ride on the cycles of violence.

I got out of an abusive marriage when I reached out and many responded with a “we can do this” attitude — and so we developed a plan of escape, complete with contingencies.

Like careful gardeners, legacies of activism may have to be passed down through at least several generations of mentors and their students/children — good results may require a combination of a Johnny Appleseed approach and interfaith mentorship programs. Clearly, we need more than one wave of civil rights and other types of activism.

I like Ralph Nader’s Appleseed Foundation but while we need the best minds, we also need to involve and further develop the average person. We have to rethink the nature of common ground. We need a convergence of genius/persistence that’s accessible and put to use. Americans are not getting a sound education in logic and social intelligence in public schools. We’re going to have to supplement school/adult education.

Fundamentalists or other overly religious people engage their kids with books, tapes, games, videos or camp experiences that indoctrinate their children. What are the masses doing to develop socially and intellectually on more of a “platform independent” common ground?

4. sari0009 Says:

I don’t know if reason and empathy need restraint as much as they need direction. With direction, one can be on fire and still have reason and empathy.

This entry was reposted on August 4, 2006 at 1:30pm EDT. My special thanks to Sari for making this possible.

Logic

Thursday, July 20th, 2006

Well … today I was mulling over why on Earth people tend to see logic as cold or unemotional/impersonal. How completely odd, when you really start thinking about it and recall an array of debates you’ve witnessed or participated in, personal or public.