Paul's Perambulations a personal blog

April 7, 2007

Peace and Photography

Filed under: Peace — admin @ 5:38 pm

Here’s part of an email that I sent Fran regarding this year’s Good Friday demonstration at Lockheed Martin, followed by her reply. In reading this, we should remember that there are many ways that we can contribute to peace.  Each person has their own gifts, which should be used as best they can.  I am grateful that Judith has chosen to use her gift to work for peace in this manner:

Hi Fran,

An interesting thing happened at the demonstration. A lady approached me and gave me her card, Judith Joy Ross. She is some sort of artist and photographer,with a gallery in Bethlehem, PA.  Her plan is to create a photography book of peace activists. She was carrying a huge wood camera that looks like my antique one, except bigger and heavier. There was a suitcase for the film – it takes flat 8×10 separately-cased wood sleeves of b&w film. I signed a release, and then she took much of her film case on me. I was holding a large gong, which I rang at the reading of each name of a Pennsylvanian solder killed in Iraq. Have I acquired the look that I feel? You can google her at “Judith Joy Ross” and see what you get. 

. . . . . . Fran’s Response . . . . .

Oh, Sweetie, she does amazing work. Had a write up in The New York Times just last year; exhibitions and permanent displays at major museums. Wow!

April 5, 2007

NPR interview on not paying taxes for war

Filed under: Peace — admin @ 10:31 pm

I was recently interviewed about my war tax resistance for a JusticeTalking episode on NPR. I had initially questioned my role in doing this interview, because I  felt that the heroic actions of some of my friends represented a more powerful message than my own civil disobedience with the IRS via war tax resistance.  I came to the conclusion that this was an opportunity for me to (more…)

March 20, 2007

National Service — It’s still a draft

Filed under: Peace,Politics — admin @ 12:13 am

Politicians promise “No draft.”  At the same time politicians speak of the value of “National Service” by our youth.  They say it can be an opportunity to serve the needs of the inner city, to improve the environment, and, oh yes, to serve your country in the military.  There are real needs in the inner city and for the environment.  So let’s put some significant money into those areas now. Strange, it’s not happening now. But we will get national service when the politicians think a draft is needed and socially aceptable (oh, I forgot, this is not a draft, it is “National Service.”)  But come another 9/11 (which our actions around the world are making increasingly likely), when all “true patriots” are clamoring for revenge, we will hear “National Service” for real. Make no mistake, it is a draft in sheep’s clothing, with useful options to shunt aside those who might otherwise object to military service. With universal service for both men and women, there will be plenty of wo/man power. But the true purpose is to fight a world war. Those who oppose it will be crucified.  I will oppose it with all my strength, knowing what it really is and how it came about. I hope others can hold to that same faith — it will not be easy.

March 5, 2007

Unconditional Love

Filed under: Love,Peace,Religion — admin @ 10:47 pm

There are two things of which I am certain. That I love my wife Fran. That I cannot particpate in war. I experience them as complementary.  The tangible love that I feel for my wife enhances the more conceptual abhorrence of war.  Love for my wife helps me directly comprehend that war, in destroying such life and love, is totally unjust. I describe my love as unconditional love. I find this to be an amazing and life-changing conviction. It does not mean that I never get angry.  Fran and I are blessed to be amazingly well matched, but we are not perfect.  But in this instance I believe that perfect love, in the sense of being forgiving, understanding, and having total confidence in one’s love, is achievable. Such love blesses both the giver and the receiver. It is a feeling that is so rare and special, that for me it is experienced as a gift from God. This experience becomes part of the tangible evidence for the love that God has for all human kind, and has the effect that I become a channel for expressing this love to the world through my resistance to war.  War destroys love; war is a denial of God.

February 9, 2007

Something to ponder

Filed under: Peace,Politics — admin @ 8:55 pm

Perhaps the worst thing to happen to Christianity was Constantine and his conversion to Christianity.  Perhaps the worst thing to happen to Socialism was Lenin and his Russian Revolution.  In each case, an ideal of peace and mutuality was usurped by a culture of force and authority.

December 21, 2006

Pacifism and Socialism

Filed under: Peace,Politics — admin @ 3:50 pm

The following was published in The People, the oldest socialist paper in the world and the official publication of the Socialist Labor Party.  The Socialist Labor Party is the third oldest extant political party in the United States.  It is an Americanized and modernized form of Marxism, working to change the government of the United States through education and the ballot box.  The Socialist Labor Party never recognized the legitimacy of the Soviet Union, which falsely used the name of socialism in an attempt to disguise its authoritarian nature.  They are an interesting and idealistic group of people, offering much that is relevant to today’s world.  Unfortunately, the world does not seem to be listening at the moment, and in some ways the group is a living historical relic.  At Villanova some years ago I met their candidate for Vice-President of the United States, George Taylor.  You can check their website if you’re interested.  They are not antithetical to religion.

p.s.  I am also a subscriber to the group/journal Religious Socialism.  The book Christian Socialism (by John Cort…I treasure my inscribed copy) is relevant.  Particularly interesting is the material on the early Christian church.

To the Editor of The People:

As a long-time reader of The People, I must take exception to an item in your July-August 2006 issue in which you equate pacifists with capitalists (“pacifists…pretend that capitalism can one day provide peace, justice, or equality”).  In fact, pacifism refers to an attitude about war, and says nothing about one’s particular political sentiment.   I feel certain that you would find a much higher percentage of people sympathetic to your cause among pacifists, than you would find among the general public.  Personally, I identify myself as a Quaker pacifist revolutionary socialist.

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