Saturday, December 31, 2011

Feast of the Theotokos

We start the year at midnight tonight honoring Our Blessed Mother - Mary the Theotokos.  In the Latin rite of the Catholic Church there has been an  overemphasis on the humanity of Christ ever since Vatican II with movements such as liberation theology and feminism seeking to diminish  the divine mysteries of the our religion and relegating the miracles and significance of Christ and His mother as folktales.  

One of these mysteries is the role of a very special human being who played a key role in the divine plan of salvation.  Some Protestants and secular humanists assert that we Catholics and Orthodox worship the Blessed Virgin Mary.  Of course anyone who would take 10 minutes out of their day to study this claim would discover that is is completely false.  We honor, venerate and pray to her but don't worship her..... we only worship God.  We believe in her intercessory powers with her Son. As a matter of fact these same dismissive people dishonor her...and her Son....by trying the best they can to push her presence from the Christian message entirely.

Mary, the Theotokos (God bearer) was a central figure in every event of Christ's earthly life from the Incarnation to the Crucifixion.  The woman who bore the Savior, who pondered wondrous things in her heart and was present at Pentecost was the indispensable  human being who played the key role in the salvation history by saying, "Behold, I am the Handmaid of the Lord;  be it done according to your word" (Luke1:38)..

We recently celebrated Christmas in all its beauty and mystery.  The Nativity is narrated in the Gospels from a first hand source.  Who?  Mary of course.  If you think of the events of Christ's early life, the flight to Egypt, Simeon's prayer (Nunc Dimitis), visit to Elizabeth, etc......these were all conveyed by Mary to those writing the Sacred Scriptures.   The gospel authors (Matthew and Luke)  only wrote down the events told to them by the Blessed Mother with regard to events in which she was the only surviving witness.  When  a newspaper reporter is writing a story and is quoting the original source, should we not recognize that the real source is the person being quoted.  The same is true for the gospel of Mark which is regarded by most scholars as being the words of St. Peter transcribed by his companion and disciple Mark.

To dishonor the Blessed Mother is to dishonor Our Lord her Son.  She was the perfect disciple, no matter the belittling over the centuries of her significance by Christians with figurative and literal iconoclastic intentions.  During the horrendous 24 hours between the Agony in the Garden to her Son's death on the cross, she never wavered and stood beneath the cross and while dying, Our Lord gave her to us....."Son, behold your mother."

Even the prophet Mohammed, certainly not a friend of Christianity, when naming the best woman who ever lived named Mary (Maryam in Arabic), the mother of Jesus, as the best woman to ever live.  Shame on those pastors of any Christian denomination who do not hold the Theotokos as a subject of many sermons as the perfect disciple.  Christianity, without the central figure of Mary as a focus of human interaction with the divine, is a mere shadow of its potential.

Mary is also known as the Sorrowful Mother.  Her life was filled with heartbreak and for that reason many mothers throughout the ages believe that they have a person in heaven who is closer to Our Lord Jesus than any other human being and to whom they can confide and trust their own sorrows and pain.  Her power is evident in the story of the Wedding Feast at Cana.  Even though it was not time for His public ministry to begin, he acted upon her request and turned water into wine..

The following ancient hymn is one of my favorite and you can find my excellent recordings on YouTube with orchestra.  It is also very beautiful when sung in Latin chant which I did several times in my youth in choirs.

Holy Theotokos, pray for us.

Stabat Mater Dolorosa (Sorrowful Mother)

Stabat mater dolorosa
juxta Crucem lacrimosa,
dum pendebat Filius.
Cuius animam gementem,
contristatam et dolentem
pertransivit gladius.
O quam tristis et afflicta
fuit illa benedicta,
mater Unigeniti!
Quae moerebat et dolebat,
pia Mater, dum videbat
nati poenas inclyti.
Quis est homo qui non fleret,
matrem Christi si videret
in tanto supplicio?
Quis non posset contristari
Christi Matrem contemplari
dolentem cum Filio?
Pro peccatis suae gentis
vidit Iesum in tormentis,
et flagellis subditum.
Vidit suum dulcem Natum
moriendo desolatum,
dum emisit spiritum.
Eia, Mater, fons amoris
me sentire vim doloris
fac, ut tecum lugeam.
Fac, ut ardeat cor meum
in amando Christum Deum
ut sibi complaceam.
Sancta Mater, istud agas,
crucifixi fige plagas
cordi meo valide.
Tui Nati vulnerati,
tam dignati pro me pati,
poenas mecum divide.
Fac me tecum pie flere,
crucifixo condolere,
donec ego vixero.
Juxta Crucem tecum stare,
et me tibi sociare
in planctu desidero.
Virgo virginum praeclara,
mihi iam non sis amara,
fac me tecum plangere.
Fac, ut portem Christi mortem,
passionis fac consortem,
et plagas recolere.
Fac me plagis vulnerari,
fac me Cruce inebriari,
et cruore Filii.
Flammis ne urar succensus,
per te, Virgo, sim defensus
in die iudicii.
Christe, cum sit hinc exire,
da per Matrem me venire
ad palmam victoriae.
Quando corpus morietur,
fac, ut animae donetur
paradisi gloria. Amen.
At the Cross her station keeping,
stood the mournful Mother weeping,
close to her Son to the last.
Through her heart, His sorrow sharing,
all His bitter anguish bearing,
now at length the sword has passed.
O how sad and sore distressed
was that Mother, highly blest,
of the sole-begotten One.
Christ above in torment hangs,
she beneath beholds the pangs
of her dying glorious Son.
Is there one who would not weep,
whelmed in miseries so deep,
Christ's dear Mother to behold?
Can the human heart refrain
from partaking in her pain,
in that Mother's pain untold?
For the sins of His own nation,
She saw Jesus wracked with torment,
All with scourges rent:
She beheld her tender Child,
Saw Him hang in desolation,
Till His spirit forth He sent.
O thou Mother! fount of love!
Touch my spirit from above,
make my heart with thine accord:
Make me feel as thou hast felt;
make my soul to glow and melt
with the love of Christ my Lord.
Holy Mother! pierce me through,
in my heart each wound renew
of my Savior crucified:
Let me share with thee His pain,
who for all my sins was slain,
who for me in torments died.
Let me mingle tears with thee,
mourning Him who mourned for me,
all the days that I may live:
By the Cross with thee to stay,
there with thee to weep and pray,
is all I ask of thee to give.
Virgin of all virgins blest!,
Listen to my fond request:
let me share thy grief divine;
Let me, to my latest breath,
in my body bear the death
of that dying Son of thine.
Wounded with His every wound,
steep my soul till it hath swooned,
in His very Blood away;
Be to me, O Virgin, nigh,
lest in flames I burn and die,
in His awful Judgment Day.
Christ, when Thou shalt call me hence,
by Thy Mother my defense,
by Thy Cross my victory;
While my body here decays,
may my soul Thy goodness praise,
Safe in Paradise with Thee.
Translation by Edward Caswall
Lyra Catholica (1849)

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

2012 Predictions

Once again I am willing to stick my neck out and make predictions for the coming year - 2012.  Looking back at some of my previous forecasts I would give myself a grade of B.  Basically, more right than wrong but that is not saying much but let's give it a try.

1.  It will be Obama/Clinton vs, Romney/Perry.  Romney and Obama need to keep their respective parties core constituencies in line.  Hilary makes sense from several perspectives and gives her a running start for the nomination in 2016.  Perry encourages the anti-Mormon evangelical base in the South to stay with the GOP.  Another choice for VP could be Backmann or Santorum.  I'll stay with Perry.  Either way you have two national security state candidate pairs to maintain the war first, peace second strategy being practiced in Washington.  This could be an extremely close election and I give the edge and prediction to Obama/Clinton.

2.  The economy will stay in a slight decline with many corporate managers waiting to see if there will be any change in Washington.

3.  War with Iran appears to be inevitable for logical reasons that escape me.  There is no demonstrable threat to the United States.  However, Iran is a threat to Israel and has a tremendous amount of oil reserves.  Invading Iraq did not make sense either and they (national security establishment) got away with it.  Why not Iran....especially when an election is at stake?  We should expect an October surprise from Obama to get the election support of the flag wavers and Jewish vote and then some sort of amnesty plan for the Hispanic vote.  The key to Obama reelection is to make everyone forget about the economic issue.

4.  Europe will sink into deeper crisis as the forces of centralization (unification) clash with the decentralization ones.  There will be a EU backlash against to UK for leading the decentralization forces and will find itself isolated with a 'non-aligned' Obama administration.  This could lead to a financial crisis in the UK as its banking industry is threatened. This is probably the last year for the Euro as the rest of the weaker members get flattened by the recession.

5.  There will be increased domestic unrest in China as the effects of the global slowdown hit a highly leveraged economy.  China will propose large scale infrastructure projects in order to keep people working and give the facade of a healthy economy and society. However, this will only be a band aid on a hemorrhage.  China's middle and working classes are well aware of what is going on around the world and there will be more pressure for more openness.  I predict increased violence and crackdown by a desperate regime only too mindful of the results of the Arab Spring.

6.  No secret that Wall Street will be the main issue of the 2012 election.  Obama will make it the centerpiece of his campaign and will paint Romney and the GOP as representing Wall Street, greed and corporate corruption.  We can expect every deal done by Bain Capital to be highlighted as a symbol of offshoring jobs and layoffs.  This will help Obama is the industrial rust belt.

7.  Wall Street will be in decline all year as the economy stagnates and foreign growth slows.

8.  In religion, the Anglican communion will suffer significant defections to make its continued existence appear be in doubt even in the UK. A religious body whose main principle is doctrinal contradiction cannot continue much longer before economic and spiritual collapse are inevitable.

9.  Sarkozy will be defeated in France despite his desperate efforts to keep France as a European and global player.  He will not enjoy Obama's luck this time around and anyone in his position would find it hard to be re-elected.

10.  Celebrity culture will continue unabated and I can guarantee that the Kardashians's and the rest of the Hollywood trash will dominate not only the media but also the fashion industry.

Let's hope I am wrong on most of these predictions.......I would be most happy.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Trends Going into 2012

Despite the blessings of the Christmas season, we also have to deal with the rampant materialism that this season of the year.  The basic message is........buy this product and you or your loved one will be happy, fulfilled, completed, loved.......and on and on.......all one big lie delivered daily with sexy and attractive people subliminally telling you that you can be them....although they are actors or models and not real at all.  A gigantic mirage concocted by marketers but millions around the world fall for its message every day even though deep in their hearts they know the lesson is false.

Things do not bring happiness.  If you don't believe me I can tell you that some of the richest people I know are the most miserable and unhappy of my friends and acquaintances.  I also have friends who are poor, also fellow parishioners and for the most part they are happy people with loving families and faith.  I also know many people without religion in their lives and many appear to be content (what exactly is happy all the time anyway)?

Now that the Holiday weekend is over........people have to deal with reality - borrowed money to pay for gifts that they really couldn't afford but felt pressured by society to buy anyway.  It is a vicious cycle that replays itself every year for millions of people.  However, this year it probably is causing much more anxiety given the economic climate which unfortunately is in serious decline.

Here are some bad statistics that surely don't bode well as we enter the new year:


50 Economic Numbers From 2011 That Are Almost Too Crazy To Believe


From the Economic Collapse Blog
Even though most Americans have become very frustrated with this economy, the reality is that the vast majority of them still have no idea just how bad our economic decline has been or how much trouble we are going to be in if we don't make dramatic changes immediately.  If we do not educate the American people about how deathly ill the U.S. economy has become, then they will just keep falling for the same old lies that our politicians keep telling them.  Just "tweaking" things here and there is not going to fix this economy.  We truly do need a fundamental change in direction.  America is consuming far more wealth than it is producing and our debt is absolutely exploding.  If we stay on this current path, an economic collapse is inevitable.  Hopefully the crazy economic numbers from 2011 that I have included in this article will be shocking enough to wake some people up.
At this time of the year, a lot of families get together, and in most homes the conversation usually gets around to politics at some point.  Hopefully many of you will use the list below as a tool to help you share the reality of the U.S. economic crisis with your family and friends.  If we all work together, hopefully we can get millions of people to wake up and realize that "business as usual" will result in a national economic apocalypse.
The following are 50 economic numbers from 2011 that are almost too crazy to believe....
#1 A staggering 48 percent of all Americans are either considered to be "low income" or are living in poverty.
#2 Approximately 57 percent of all children in the United States are living in homes that are either considered to be "low income" or impoverished.
#3 If the number of Americans that "wanted jobs" was the same today as it was back in 2007, the "official" unemployment rate put out by the U.S. government would be up to 11 percent.
#4 The average amount of time that a worker stays unemployed in the United States is now over 40 weeks.
#5 One recent survey found that 77 percent of all U.S. small businesses do not plan to hire any more workers.
#6 There are fewer payroll jobs in the United States today than there were back in 2000 even though we have added 30 million extra people to the population since then.
#7 Since December 2007, median household income in the United States has declined by a total of 6.8% once you account for inflation.
#8 According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 16.6 million Americans were self-employed back in December 2006.  Today, that number has shrunk to 14.5 million.
#9 A Gallup poll from earlier this year found that approximately one out of every five Americans that do have a job consider themselves to be underemployed.
#10 According to author Paul Osterman, about 20 percent of all U.S. adults are currently working jobs that pay poverty-level wages.
#11 Back in 1980, less than 30% of all jobs in the United States were low income jobs.  Today, more than 40% of all jobs in the United States are low income jobs.
#12 Back in 1969, 95 percent of all men between the ages of 25 and 54 had a job.  In July, only 81.2 percent of men in that age group had a job.
#13 One recent survey found that one out of every three Americans would not be able to make a mortgage or rent payment next month if they suddenly lost their current job.
#14 The Federal Reserve recently announced that the total net worth of U.S. households declined by 4.1 percent in the 3rd quarter of 2011 alone.
#15 According to a recent study conducted by the BlackRock Investment Institute, the ratio of household debt to personal income in the United States is now 154 percent.
#16 As the economy has slowed down, so has the number of marriages.  According to a Pew Research Center analysis, only 51 percent of all Americans that are at least 18 years old are currently married.  Back in 1960, 72 percentof all U.S. adults were married.
#17 The U.S. Postal Service has lost more than 5 billion dollars over the past year.
#18 In Stockton, California home prices have declined 64 percent from where they were at when the housing market peaked.
#19 Nevada has had the highest foreclosure rate in the nation for 59 monthsin a row.
#20 If you can believe it, the median price of a home in Detroit is now just $6000.
#21 According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 18 percent of all homes in the state of Florida are sitting vacant.  That figure is 63 percent larger than it was just ten years ago.
#22 New home construction in the United States is on pace to set a brand new all-time record low in 2011.
#23 As I have written about previously, 19 percent of all American men between the ages of 25 and 34 are now living with their parents.
#24 Electricity bills in the United States have risen faster than the overall rate of inflation for five years in a row.
#25 According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, health care costs accounted for just 9.5% of all personal consumption back in 1980.  Today they account for approximately 16.3%.
#26 One study found that approximately 41 percent of all working age Americans either have medical bill problems or are currently paying off medical debt.
#27 If you can believe it, one out of every seven Americans has at least 10 credit cards.
#28 The United States spends about 4 dollars on goods and services from China for every one dollar that China spends on goods and services from the United States.
#29 It is being projected that the U.S. trade deficit for 2011 will be 558.2 billion dollars.
#30 The retirement crisis in the United States just continues to get worse.  According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, 46 percent of all American workers have less than $10,000 saved for retirement, and 29 percent of all American workers have less than $1,000 saved for retirement.
#31 Today, one out of every six elderly Americans lives below the federal poverty line.
#32 According to a study that was just released, CEO pay at America's biggest companies rose by 36.5% in just one recent 12 month period.
#33 Today, the "too big to fail" banks are larger than ever.  The total assets of the six largest U.S. banks increased by 39 percent between September 30, 2006 and September 30, 2011.
#34 The six heirs of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton have a net worth that is roughly equal to the bottom 30 percent of all Americans combined.
#35 According to an analysis of Census Bureau data done by the Pew Research Center, the median net worth for households led by someone 65 years of age or older is 47 times greater than the median net worth for households led by someone under the age of 35.
#36 If you can believe it, 37 percent of all U.S. households that are led by someone under the age of 35 have a net worth of zero or less than zero.
#37 A higher percentage of Americans is living in extreme poverty (6.7%) than has ever been measured before.
#38 Child homelessness in the United States is now 33 percent higher than it was back in 2007.
#39 Since 2007, the number of children living in poverty in the state of California has increased by 30 percent.
#40 Sadly, child poverty is absolutely exploding all over America.  According to the National Center for Children in Poverty, 36.4% of all children that live in Philadelphia are living in poverty, 40.1% of all children that live in Atlanta are living in poverty, 52.6% of all children that live in Cleveland are living in poverty and 53.6% of all children that live in Detroit are living in poverty.
#41 Today, one out of every seven Americans is on food stamps and one out of every four American children is on food stamps.
#42 In 1980, government transfer payments accounted for just 11.7% of all income.  Today, government transfer payments account for more than 18 percent of all income.
#43 A staggering 48.5% of all Americans live in a household that receives some form of government benefits.  Back in 1983, that number was below 30 percent.
#44 Right now, spending by the federal government accounts for about 24 percent of GDP.  Back in 2001, it accounted for just 18 percent.
#45 For fiscal year 2011, the U.S. federal government had a budget deficit ofnearly 1.3 trillion dollars.  That was the third year in a row that our budget deficit has topped one trillion dollars.
#46 If Bill Gates gave every single penny of his fortune to the U.S. government, it would only cover the U.S. budget deficit for about 15 days.
#47 Amazingly, the U.S. government has now accumulated a total debt of 15 trillion dollars.  When Barack Obama first took office the national debt was just 10.6 trillion dollars.
#48 If the federal government began right at this moment to repay the U.S. national debt at a rate of one dollar per second, it would take over 440,000 years to pay off the national debt.
#49 The U.S. national debt has been increasing by an average of more than 4 billion dollars per day since the beginning of the Obama administration.
#50 During the Obama administration, the U.S. government has accumulated more debt than it did from the time that George Washington took office to the time that Bill Clinton took office.
Of course the heart of our economic problems is the Federal Reserve.  The Federal Reserve is a perpetual debt machine, it has almost completely destroyed the value of the U.S. dollar and it has an absolutely nightmarish track record of incompetence.  If the Federal Reserve system had never been created, the U.S. economy would be in far better shape.  The federal government needs to shut down the Federal Reserve and start issuing currency that is not debt-based.  That would be a very significant step toward restoring prosperity to America.
During 2011 we made a lot of progress in educating the American people about our economic problems, but we still have a long way to go.
Hopefully next year more Americans than ever will wake up, because 2012 is going to represent a huge turning point for this country.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Mount Athos

I am not a fan of the politics at times of 60 Minutes on Sunday evenings but I have been watching it on and off for my entire life.  It is usually always interesting except when they do fawning interviews of their favorite politicians such as Presidents Clinton or Obama.

Last night they hit a 'home run' on Christmas night.  It was a profile of the Eastern Orthodox monks on Mount Athos in Greece.  I highly recommend watching this video to get a glimpse of holiness and the other-worldliness of these men with one foot on earth and the other in the heavenly spheres.


   

Saturday, December 24, 2011

There were giants and heroes in those days............

There were giants and heroes in those days............

 No, I am not talking about ancient history.  The great men Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,  Karol Josef WojtyĹ‚a, Lech Walesa and last but not least Václav Havel emerged from eastern Europe and changed the world from one that was on the brink of nuclear annihilation to the ‘new world order’ and  the liberation of millions of people behind the Iron Curtain.  These men will be remembered in history as having the courage and faith to stand up to an atheistic and corrupt system without guns, bombs or terrorist tactics but by speaking Truth to the Lie.  They literally cahnged the world...for the better..... and they warn us of the evilness of all human systems including the secular new world order.

It is unfortunate that the younger generations, even in their own eastern European countries, are unaware of the long odds that were against their success…..or survival.  They were threatened, imprisoned and almost assassinated in their quest for freedom and truth.  As great as Reagan and Thatcher were during this period – and the former did much to aid the success of the dissident movement – they did not take the risks of the consequences of failure as did the men working within the evil system.

I believe that these men were able to accomplish so much was due to their belief in God and that He works in history.  We must never forget that none of these men came from aristocracy or the elites.  Like Our Lord’s apostles they came from humble and common stock.  The media may be full of ‘heroes’ and ‘superstars’ who pass from the scene such Steve Jobs – who will not be remembered much in twenty years  - but these men from Eastern Europe will be remembered centuries from now as heroes of human freedom.

Sic Transit Gloria!

The following essay from the Acton Institute does a great job of summarizing of the achievements and Václav Havel’s place in history.     

Requiescat in Pace.


Acton Institute

Living Responsibly: Vaclav Havel’s View

If you could have one chance to speak to the world’s most powerful political body, what would you say? When Václav Havel’s invitation came, he told the United States Congress that “the salvation of this human world lies nowhere else than in the human heart.” He told people preoccupied with getting reelected that they should “put morality ahead of politics, science, and economics” and that “the only genuine core of all our actions–if they are to be moral–is responsibility.” Then, as a capper, he explained that our supreme responsibility is “to something higher than my family, my country, my firm, my success”; it is to the transcendent realm above us.

Havel had indubitably earned his right to be heard by the high and mighty. He had put his successful career as a playwright on hold to lead the dissenters against communist totalitarianism in his native Czechoslovakia, had therefore been repeatedly imprisoned, and then–during our turbulent century’s most sensational year, 1989–moved within months from prisoner to president of his country. This was enough for America’s Most Beautiful People to invite him to a gala reception in New York, where they could have their pictures taken with him, and Barbra Streisand allowed that he could smoke in her presence. The New York Review of Books, that bellwether journal of America’s elite opinion, regularly publishes his essays. Havel has become as much of an icon as our secular establishment can accommodate.

This appropriation is incongruous. Havel’s ideas do not comport well at all with those of our cultural pacesetters in Manhattan or inside the Beltway or in the Big Academy. They do comport well, by contrast, with those of the many ordinary American citizens who also think against the grain of today’s fashions. Havel believes in the old-fashioned concepts of good and evil. He speaks of truth, without quotation marks. He sees individuals as the chief engines of history. Championing human liberty, he warns against the centralization of power, and his plays describe the dehumanizing effects of bureaucracy. Challenging the doctrine of progress, he looks to the past for wisdom. He speaks freely about God and religion. He conjoins these themes in a call for each of us to live responsibly. Personal responsibility is his central theme.

Our Century’s Unprecedented Flight from God.

As Havel presses this theme, he offers a particularly penetrating analysis of our times. What, would you say, is the distinctive character of the twentieth century? Many, perhaps most, would point out its amazing technological advances. Others call it the American century. Havel says that our century’s distinguishing mark is that “we are going through a great departure from God which has no parallel in history.” It is no coincidence that “the first atheistic civilization” has produced the bloodiest century in history.
The civic face of atheism is ideology. Havel considers ideology “almost a secularized religion.” His exact synonym for “ideology” is “the lie.” An ideological regime “must falsify everything”–the past, the present, the future, statistics, everything. Citizens under such a regime “need not believe all these mystifications, but they must behave as though they did.” Havel depicts a greengrocer who puts in his window the slogan “Workers of the world, unite!” He thereby embodies the moral illness of “saying one thing and thinking another.”

Were the greengrocer not to put up the sign, he would wordlessly announce that “the emperor is naked” and would show that “it is possible to live within the truth. Living within the lie can constitute the system only if it is universal.” This, Havel explains, is exactly what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn did. And so did other dissenters, whom he calls “ordinary people with ordinary cares, differing from the rest only in that they say aloud what the rest cannot say or are afraid to say.”

According to Havel, ordinary people everywhere can live in the truth only by embracing the “notion of human responsibility.” Responsibility is “that fundamental point from which all identity grows and by which it stands or falls; it is the foundation, the root, the center of gravity, the constructional principle or axis of identity.” Thus, Havel declares, “I am responsible for the state of the world,” and he means a “responsibility not only to the world but also ‘for the world,’ as though I myself were to be judged for how the world turns out.” Citing Dostoevsky’s spiritual dictum that all are responsible for all, he points to that “‘higher’ responsibility, which grows out of a conscious or subconscious certainty that our death ends nothing, because everything is forever being recorded and evaluated somewhere else, somewhere ‘above us,’ in … an integral aspect of the secret order of the cosmos, of nature, and of life, which believers call God and to whose judgment everything is liable.”

The Transcendent Reality from Which All Life Draws Its Meaning

Despite his Roman Catholic rearing, Havel does not number himself among the believers. He admits to “an affinity for Christian sentiment,” and he tries “to live in the spirit of Christian morality.” Yet, when queried about a rumor that he had become a Christian, he began ambivalently–“It depends on how we understand conversion”–then said no. No, because “genuine conversion, as I understand it, would mean replacing an uncertain ‘something’ with a completely unambiguous personal God, and fully, inwardly, to accept Christ as the Son of God.… And I have not taken that step.”

Yet the rearing shows. Havel does insist–and this is what matters most for Havel as cultural critic–that there is a transcendent reality from which all of human life draws its meaning. And, despite the impersonal ring of his God-substitutes, such as “the mystery of Being” and “the absolute horizon of Being,” he routinely makes personal references to them, as when he converses with “someone” who “addresses me directly and personally.” He is always approving toward believers and disapproving toward atheists. In his cultural criticism (as distinct from his private life), Havel might as well be a Christian.

This is certainly true in his analysis of the West. Havel and his fellow dissenters took “the traditional values of Western civilization” as their guiding light. He remains wholeheartedly committed to “the ideals of democracy, human rights, the civil society, and the free market”–the values America espouses. As a lay historian of ideas, he particularly praises the “blending of classical, Christian, and Jewish elements” that has created “the most dynamic civilization of the last millennium.”

With the Cold War over, we can now look beneath its surface split in the world and recognize that “the West and the East, though different in so many ways, are going through a single, common crisis,” for both are heirs of the Enlightenment’s legacy of atheism. In both precincts we observe the “arrogant anthropocentrism of modern man, who is convinced he can know everything and bring everything under his control.” This worldview “kills God, and takes his place on the vacant throne,” viewing the world as “nothing but a crossword puzzle to be solved.”

Because “communism was the perverse extreme” of this modern world-view, Havel sees life under communism as “a kind of warning to the West, revealing to it its own latent tendencies.” He once admitted being particularly “taken aback by the extent to which so many Westerners are addicted to ideology, much more than we who live in a system which is ideological through and through.” But the West shows “unwillingness to hear the warning voices coming from our part of the world.” So, it misses the real significance of “the end of communism,” which is “a signal that the era of arrogant, absolutist reason is drawing to a close.”

Havel’s Warning to the West

Thus, Havel laments that “the Western way of affirming Western values … seems to me to have seriously cooled off.” The West has “lost its ability to sacrifice,” he asserts, because its “economic advances,… based as they are on advances in scientific and technical knowledge, have gradually altered man’s very value systems.” We now worship “a new deity: the ideal of perpetual growth of production and consumption.” The American-led West offers the world an “essentially atheistic technological civilization.” It mainly exports not its traditional high ideals but its unsavory “by-products,” such as “moral relativism, materialism, the denial of any kind of spirituality, a proud disdain for everything suprapersonal, a profound crisis of authority and the resulting general decay of order, a frenzied consumerism, a lack of solidarity, a selfish cult of material success, the absence of faith in a higher order of things or simply in eternity.”
Such an indictment could easily turn Westerners defensive. What about democracy? we might ask. Is not that a high ideal? Havel the democrat considers that we promulgate a cut-flower variety of it. He considers the right to vote, freedom of expression, and private ownership of property to be, by themselves, “merely technical instruments,” which can “enable” but “cannot guarantee [human] dignity, freedom, and responsibility.” Electoral procedures are the husk, not the kernel, of a free society. And do we not ourselves sometimes fear that “the democratic West [has] lost its ability realistically to foster and cultivate the values it has always proclaimed and undertaken to safeguard”?

We might also ask, What about our free-enterprise system, now widely imitated? Havel values its wealth-making ways, as his own policies in the Czech Republic show. However, he also espies “the general unwillingness of consumption-oriented people to sacrifice some material certainties for the sake of their own spiritual and moral integrity.” So, he resists a marketplace without morality. “If [the West’s] own consumer affluence remains more important to it than the laudable foundations of the affluence, it will soon forfeit that affluence.” As we might have learned from another source, we could gain the whole world and lose our own soul.

Our moment in history is, according to Havel, a “watershed” moment “in the history of the entire human race.” Can we come out from under the rubble of our century’s atheism? Michael Novak thinks we can and will. He predicts that “the twenty-first century will be the most religious in five hundred years.” And he cites Havel as one of “the leading spirits of our age [who] have begun to sense that humans are naturally religious.”

Havel’s advice for the future, whether to America or to the world as a whole, is governed by his view that “our very planetary civilization is endangered by human irresponsibility.” In a nutshell, he counsels us to reinvigorate the wisdom of the past. To America, he declares that “the fathers of American democracy knew” what “modern man has lost: his transcendent anchor.” Ironically, it is a foreigner who reminds an audience in Philadelphia that “the Declaration of Independence, adopted 218 years ago in this building, states that the Creator gave man the right to liberty. It seems that man can realize that liberty only if he does not forget the One who endowed him with it.” Is this what American schoolchildren hear?

The Way Forward Is First the Way Back

To the world as a whole, he also suggests that the way forward is first the way back. As Western technology imposes “the veneer of world civilization” through “informational and economic globalization,” we need to locate “sources of a shared minimum that could serve as a framework for the tolerant coexistence of different cultures within a single civilization.” Although Havel asserts that “no unbiased person will have any trouble knowing where to look,” his answer is surprising. He looks to ancient religions. He emphatically rejects the familiar modern move to make the Creator “disappear from the world” and “into a sphere of privacy of sorts, if not directly into a sphere of private fancy–that is, into a place where public obligations no longer apply.”

The religions of antiquity proclaim in common what modern humanity has lost: “The certainty that the Universe, nature, existence, and our lives are the work of creation guided by a definite intention, that it has a definite meaning and follows a definite purpose.” Despite our superior information about the universe, our ancestors “knew something more essential about it than we do, something that escapes us.” They knew that “people should revere God as a phenomenon that transcends them.” They knew that “true goodness, true responsibility, true justice, a true sense of things–all these grow from roots that go much deeper than the world of our transitory earthly schemes. This is a message that speaks to us from the very heart of human religiosity.”

In short, Havel commends, as Christians such as C. S. Lewis before him have commended, the concept we sometimes call natural law. This may not be the whole counsel of the God of the Bible, but what a sharp contrast it provides to the blandishments of our secular elites.

Think of how our public discourse would change if we drank deeply from Havel’s well. We would talk less about such secondary aspects of our being as race, class, and gender and more about our souls. We would couch our conversations about politics and economics in a moral vocabulary. For every mention of rights, we would mention responsibility. We would stop ignoring God. One need not know Havel to live responsibly, but knowing him can only help.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Tyranny of the Elites

The EU decision to tax airlines for carbon emissions is one of the more ridiculous decisions of the year.  Instead of taxing investment banks, hedge funds and private equity - if for no reason other than the tremendous harm they have caused to the global economy - the cowards and corrupt bureaucrats go after one of the industries most hard hit by the recession and also higher energy prices.  Of course, these taxes will be passed on to the consumer in the form of higher fares.  However, this will have a damper effect upon demand since the hard pressed consumer can ill afford higher air prices when alternative choices are available.  Here is the NY Times article

I find this whole global warming scam to be galling example of corruption with the financial banksters and politicians teamed together once again to create a false potential catastrophe and then profit from it in the form of taxes to the government and trading income to the banksters.  These same corrupt individuals in the United States as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are winding down are beefing up the internal security within the country to counter potential terrorism.  

Just who is the damn enemy that we are afraid of?

Iran - I haven't heard of any terrorist plots lately aimed at the USA

Iraq - They will be busy killing themselves for the next couple of decades to bother with us

Syria - I think Assad has his own problems

Russia - They are too busy socking the money away in Swiss bank accounts

China - They are more worried about the economies of the West and their own corrupt system

Afghanistan - What?  the Taliban?

North Korea - They will be in mourning for years........more a South Korea and Japan issue anyway.

Mexico - There narco war is caused by our War on Drugs.  They have their own problems.

The internal security threat is a power grab by a centralizing federal government and a threat to the civil liberties of the citizenry.

Listen to General Robert E. Lee's reply to a letter to Lord Acton a year after the War between the States ended in 1866.


"I can only say that while I have considered the preservation of the constitutional power of the General Government to be the foundation of our peace and safety at home and abroad, I yet believe that the maintenance of the rights and authority reserved to the states and to the people, not only essential to the adjustment and balance of the general system, but the safeguard to the continuance of a free government. I consider it as the chief source of stability to our political system, whereas the consolidation of the states into one vast republic, sure to be aggressive abroad and despotic at home, will be the certain precursor of that ruin which has overwhelmed all those that have preceded it. I need not refer one so well acquainted as you are with American history, to the State papers of Washington and Jefferson, the representatives of the federal and democratic parties, denouncing consolidation and centralization of power, as tending to the subversion of State Governments, and to despotism."



We have met the enemy and it is us..............Charlie Brown

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Who is the Hypocrite?

Maureen Dowd's recent piece on Newt Gingrich was also a subtle dig at Catholicism.  It surely incited many anti-Catholic comments in her on-line page similar to those comments that I referred to my own post I did a few days ago about the comments about Shroud of Turin column in the UK telegraph.  I don't share Mr. Gingrich's views in Neo-conservative foreign views but the icy and malicious ad hominem hatchet job by Ms. Dowd focused on his religious conversion to Catholicism.  I know Ms. Dowd was raised as a Catholic but if she has faith or any doctrinal tenets I believe she would subscribe to the far left of the Episcopal Church. She is of an age of those converted to the lie of radical feminism in the 1970's who believed that all that gibberish about the overall superiority of women, children as a burden, etc.

I do not think Newt's conversion was a politically inspired act......who in their right mind can judge the intentions of another person especially in matters of the soul.  Also, conversion is a continuous process and Mr. Gingrich has only begun the journey.  He is an admitted sinner.......who is not a sinner?  I am sure that the unmarried Maureen has more than a few things that she has done over the decades that she would rather forget.....or remain unmentioned.  Unfortunately, Newt has been in the political limelight for over thirty years.......has he lied, has he had extra-marital affairs, etc.?  Yes, but so has Alexander Hamilton, Warren Harding, FDR, JFK and most famously of all, Bill Clinton.  At least he admits his sin openly unlike Clinton who continues his priapic adventures to the present day if the tabloids are to be believed.

The underlying theme to her column was personal disdain of Mr. Gingrich and Catholicism in general.  Conversion to Catholicism compounds his negativeness to the liberal and progressive crowd of the New York Times.  How could a rational person who wants to be President of the USA subscribe to a religion that opposes: homosexual and lesbian marriage; a woman's right to choose (to kill her offspring); women in the priesthood, etc.?  The NYT smiles at those Catholics such as Nancy Pelosi and Gov. Cuomo who live political lives divorced from the teachings of the Catholic faith but declare in public that their faith has no bearing on their political decisions.   Christ had one word for people like this....Hypocrites.

The liberal and progressive dogma has transformed into a form of neo-paganism.  Therefore, the Ten Commandments are not celebrated as the supreme wisdom but rather are openly mocked and denigrated by the agnostic neo-pagans in the USA and Europe.  Keep holy the Sabbath, take the Lord's name in vain, do not kill, covet your neighbor's wife and goods.......we are a society that celebrates the violation of the Ten Commandments.  Our celebrity culture is based upon this disavowal of God's laws.

I don't plan on voting for Newt Gingrich unless he is the GOP nominee versus Barack Obama.  I admit I would have to hold my nose but at the end of the day I would rather choose a repentant sinner rather than the current President who shares the values and disdain for Christian civilization as does the self hating Catholic raised Ms. Dowd.

BTW, the downward spiral of the New York Times continues............it does not help to mock God.  

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Dance of the Buffoons

It has been 30 years since Americans were offered a real choice in a presidential election. The monopolistic two party system has corrupted the intent of the Founders and we are offered establishment candidates every four years, promising 'change' but delivering at best the status quo and at worst schemes like No Child Left Behind, Obamacare and foreign wars. The two parties have managed to campaign on issues such as abortion on the right and (yes!) abortion on the left to galvanize sectors of the electorate at the extremes and then whomever gets elected always governs against the interests of the citizenry. Both parties are but two sides of a centrally planned military-industrial complex that is impregnable to the opinions, desires and interests of the People.  It owns the mainstream media and increasingly the major web sites.   But many are not fooled by the charade that has more to do with a television soap opera than a real debate of statesmen.


Unfortunately, with buffoons like the two retreads Gingrich and Romney or the imbecilic Palin or Bachmann for the GOP; and the weak, controlled,socialist and anti-Christian Obama being offered as candidates, albeit both parties governing mandate will be exactly the same, more and more thinking Americans are not wasting their time voting. Thomas Jefferson once wrote to James Madison, “I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and is as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.” The status quo should not always be considered unchangeable and we should heed the great man's advice, of course in a non-violent manner. Unfortunately, most Americans identify Jefferson with a sport star or Archie Bunker's neighbor.


A good article on the leading GOP buffoon, Newt Gingrich, from Tom Fleming in the UK Daily Mail. 


Newt's Last Hurrah



Newt Gingrich's campaign has been a roller coaster ride.  Newt started out at a low level in the polls, he sank even lower as his personal irresponsibility--spending his ill-gotten gains at Tiffany's, going on vacation as the campaign began--alienated even his staff.  Nonetheless, as dissatisfaction with Mitt Romney, the once-and-future frontrunner, failed to dissipate and as, one by one Romney's challengers--Bachmann, Perry, Cain--inevitably faded, Republicans switched from saying, "Why in the world would I vote for this has-been" to a rueful, "why not?"
Answers to that question came quickly.  As Republican speechwriter and strategist Peggy Noonan wrote in the Wall Street Journal, few of Newt's supporters actually know him personally.  By contrast, former staffers, congressional colleagues, and Republican collaborators were adamant in saying "anyone but Newt."
Admirers and critics alike agree that Newt is "brilliant."  This is very nice of course but means nothing.  In politics brilliant seems to mean the ability to steal sound bytes from the few books you have read.  Gingrich's intellectual credentials are a PhD in history from a Tulane with a dissertation on education policy in the Belgian Congo.  He also spent some years teaching history, geography, and environmentalism at an Georgia college that did not grant him tenure.  
As an historian, he made absolutely no contribution to his academic field or to the popular writing on history.  He must have been a popular teacher--undergraduates always fall for the classroom drama queen with simplistic theories and potted ideas--but he is neither a scholar nor a thinker.  Aristophanes had a word (Greek) for people like this: alazon,  imposter.
In watching Newt, mostly from afar, I have never heard him make one original intelligent observation.  When  he was borrowing from the Tofflers, he was filled with their Future Shock and Third Wave inanities.  Newt and the Tofflers always reminded me of the Mighty Criswell, the nightclub prophet who always began his routine by assuring the audience, "We are all interested in the future, for that is where you and I are going to spend the rest of our lives," before going on to predict a comical series of absurdities.  That, in essence, is Newt Gingrich, though Criswell, at least, got laughs.
Well, a lot has come out:  Newt's unofficial lobbying activities for the corrupt and crumbling loan giants, Fannie and Freddie, and for the healthcare industry.  His agreement with Nancy Pelosi to campaign for the fraud of the century, Global Warming.  His ultra-Zionist pronouncements against the Palestinians, who are a made-up people because they were part of the Ottoman Empire.  What about Iraq, Turkey, and Syria or, for that matter, Serbia, Bulgaria, Albania, Bosnia, and Greece?  Does Newt actually know any history or, if he does, does he really care even remotely about truth?  It is better not to ask.
Finally, Gingrich's rivials have pointed to his frequent and repeated tergiversations and flip-flops that should remind some voters, at least, that a newt is an amphibian that can live on land or water.  Newt's response has been to declare that he will not engage in the negative campaigning his rivals are using against him.  It's a wise move, rather as if Qadaffi had rejected the use of nuclear weapons, stealth jet fighters, avant-garde artillery, and tanks in his battle with NATO forces.
The sooner Newt's expiring carcass can be dragged off the battle field, the better for the campaign, the Republican Party, and for the United States.  Unfortunately, the Democratic Party and its media organs--The New York Times in particular--know they have a gold mine in Gingrich. By comparison, Obama seems sane, patriotic, and honest.  The Democratic media have done and will continue to do their best to keep this corpse alive.
If Gingrich should by some miracle should get the nomination, he will have the Democratic media to thank, the same media that went all-out for the Republicn loser of all losers, John McCain.  But even though the Grand Old Party has legitimately borrowed the mantel of "the stupid party" from the Tories, I find it hard to believe that large numbers will ever vote for Gingrich.  
But then, what do I know?  I watched in slow-motion horror as the two parties settled on Obama and McCain, just as they had previously settled on Bush and Kerry, Bush and Gore, Clinton and Dole.  If Americans ever needed a clear refutation of Churchill's fatuous aphorism on democracy--an institution he, more than any man of his time, knew how to manipulate to his own benefit--they have it now.  If modern democracy cannot do better than the presidential candidates of the two parties, we need to adopt the model of the ancient Athenian democracy, which selected political leaders by lot.   
Even a national presidential lottery would not save us.  We have the leaders we deserve, leaders who reflect the American character.  American voters like to complain that they are dissatisfied with the politicians they elect, but Bush, Obama, McCain, and Gingrich are the political face Americans see when they look in their mirrors.