Cheaters Prosper And Africa Gets F***ed Again: Soccer Hurts Bad Sometimes

Part IV in a series by Andrew Jenner about the South Africa 2010 World Cup and the meaning of life in Harrisonburg, Virginia (Part I, Part II, Part III).

The hands of Uruguay's Luis Suarez rise out of a crowd to stop a ball headed for the net and give away a penalty kick at the end of extra time with Ghana on Friday. (Fernando Vergara/Associated Press)

There are things in life and soccer that are unfair, and then there are things that are so stunningly unjust that they beggar belief, blur your vision, boil your blood and confront you squarely with the problematic existence of evil in our world.

Have you heard about the way Ghana lost to Uruguay yet? The way the Uruguayan player deliberately used his hand to prevent a last second goal that would have made Ghana the first African team ever to reach the semi-finals of the World Cup? And the way the referee followed the letter of the law by red-carding the Uruguayan goon and awarding Ghana a penalty kick? And how Ghana missed that penalty kick as the last second of extra time expired? Meaning the game came down to a penalty shootout, which, of course, Ghana lost? Continue reading “Cheaters Prosper And Africa Gets F***ed Again: Soccer Hurts Bad Sometimes” »

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This post was submitted by Andrew Jenner.

Give Me “Liberty” or Give Me…?

Since our arrival on these shores, we Americans have been obsessed with the idea of “liberty.” Some of the earliest European settlers came here to enjoy their newly found freedom from the 17th Century pluralistic society that was evolving in their mother country. They came to practice a more disciplined brand of religion, a legalistic brand that did not place a high priority on individual liberty.

But as the colonies evolved and the Age of Enlightenment swept the soon-to-be nation, the concept of liberty was re-examined in the context of political and economic matters. Liberty became a more inclusive term that extended to so-called Continue reading “Give Me “Liberty” or Give Me…?” »

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Give Me a Little K.I.S.S. Will Ya, Huh?

Keep It Simple, Stupid! (KISS)

I cannot recount the number of times I have been subjected to the over-used acronym-adage – K.I.S.S. (Keep It Simple Stupid). I first heard it in the military, then college lectures and most recently, while attending professional seminars and workshops. The more I am exposed to this morsel of unsolicited advice, the more I realize that it does not, at least not in any practical way, pertain to the human race.

First, human beings are complex organisms driven by complicated mental and Continue reading “Give Me a Little K.I.S.S. Will Ya, Huh?” »

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Then and Now: Coming of Age in the Best of Times

I turned 13 in 1943, a year of world chaos and personal up-heaval. The world was at war, my family on the move. My dad had joined the navy and after he returned from battles in the Pacific, new orders shifted him about stateside. I attended three junior high and three high schools. Yet it was a wonderful time to enter my teens. And even today I’m still grateful for the innocence and idealism that marked my generation. They forged me—and many others—a confidence to face any future and to look forward to it.

Today, however, I sense an opposite outlook on life—too many youthful cynics, too many who don’t dare to dream. And so too many won’t risk Continue reading “Then and Now: Coming of Age in the Best of Times” »

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This post was submitted by Nancy Bondurant Jones.

The Hydrofracking Challenge

The good news is that there is valuable, comparatively clean natural gas in the eastern U.S. The bad news is that the process for getting it is so new, so complex and so dangerous that states which have drilled first and then scrambled to regulate later have found themselves overmatched by a highly industrialized process which turns out to be highly hazardous.

Field and Stream magazine says drilling has exploded so suddenly Continue reading “The Hydrofracking Challenge” »

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This post was submitted by Ruth Stoltzfus Jost.

Interfaith Dialogue

With all the diversity for a city the size of Harrisonburg have there been attempts at interreligious dialogue? Even interfaith devotions? I would think that topics such as Spring Fest and the economic crisis could be well be addressed in interfaith forums, Continue reading “Interfaith Dialogue” »

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BP or DC?

BP—before disaster– had been trying to position itself as a progressive company with such ad slogans as “Beyond Petroleum.” And indeed, some stations currently offer biodiesel., for example in Strasburg. BP as a company was NOT pouring money into climate-change denying campaigns as was Exxon. It was a “greener” oil company. . .or so it seemed.

But we now know that BP does not stand for “Be Prepared.” From what we have seen this past month, as the oil spill in the Gulf continues, BP may need to change its name to DC for Damage Control, or Don’t Count the gallons of oil pouring into the Gulf.
Does this latest environmental disaster point to our addiction to petroleum? That’s too much of a conceptual leap. We need to start first with our addiction to inventions, chemicals, and technology without any accompanying wisdom as to how they should be used. For example, BP’s early application of chemical agents to disperse the oil may actually cause more environmental damage than the oil itself. Clearly, BP was not thinking in terms of the Big Picture.

There’s a saying in some circles that the mindset that created the problem cannot solve the problem. We cannot keep inventing things and using technology to fix the problems caused by malfunctions and misuse of other inventions, without a radical examination of, and shift in, our values.

A few weeks ago, the invention of a concrete cap to place over the well to stop the oil failed. It had not been tested, and if it had, it might have worked. Why not? My guess is that BP was in Damage Control mode. I sincerely hope the current “top kill” strategy of pouring mud into the well is successful, but this sounds like something a 7-year-old could have thought of. Why has it taken over a month to implement?
If, 100 years from now there is an ocean, and a planet that can support human life, I envision a company that puts people and the environment Before Profits

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This post was submitted by Diana Woodall.

Daily News Record

I subscribe to the Daily News Record and I find that I am learning about Harrisonburg as I plan to move there this year from Roanoke to be closer to family. However, I am finding the editorials there to be bigoted and racist and I cannot understand how there are journalistic ethics to be followed. I hope that I am not to understand that there is a dominating culture in Harrisonburg that is composed of angry white Christian men who are hostile to all others outside of their nationality, race, religion and gender?

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This post was submitted by Jay Bender.

The Price of Politics

When a friend of mine informed me that he would no longer shop at Wal-Mart because he believed the store was guilty of stocking books with only one political point of view, my immediate reaction was to support his decision. But after a few hours of mulling over his position and trying to confirm the allegation, I realized that this is not such a simple black and white issue.

My search came up with only a few instances of Wal-Mart banning anything. One was a book by Jon Stewart, but only because of what they deemed to be an offensive picture on its cover. Another was an accusation that Wal-Mart had banned Christmas.

“A Catholic advocacy group has launched a national boycott against Wal-Mart, claiming the world’s number one retailer has in effect ‘banned’ Christmas, while promoting other seasonal holidays such as Hanukkah and Kwanzaa. But Wal-Mart tells WorldNetDaily it has ‘absolutely not’ banned Christmas, but is just trying to serve all our customers for the holiday season.’”  (source: WorldNetDaily.com)

There was also an article about how Wal-Mart stopped carrying magazines such as Hustler and others due to customer complaints but I could not find anything about limiting its stock of books based on politics.

So, I went to the Wal-Mart website. I was surprised to find many titles from both the Right and the Left, including Nancy Pelosi’s, Know Your Power, and Barack Obama’s, A Change We Can Believe In. This is not to imply that store managers who may choose not to stock a narrower selection of books based on their geographical demographics and local market do not exist. The corollary question is: how do we react to retailers who limit our choice of reading materials?

In a free and open market, retailers are the sole arbiters of what is placed on the shelves of their stores. Customers are the sole arbiters of what and where they choose to buy. For instance, a few years ago, I chose to cancel my subscription to a particular local newspaper because I objected to their mindless editorials and lack of journalistic integrity. At that time, there was not much in the way of competition for the newspaper but I felt that TV news and rumors were about as satisfying and valid as what I had been reading. The commercial book market is quite different. There are so many outlets for books, both in stores and online, that I do not feel deprived of options by one or even several retailer’s stock choices.

I am well aware that the Wal-Mart business model is considered by many to be destructive to Main Street, USA. Because they deal in enormous volume, they can cut prices far below those of traditional mom and pop retail stores. The trend for the past few decades has been moving toward big box stores for low-end customers and boutique shops that cater to the more affluent. We can nostalgically pine for the old days of butcher shops and haberdashers but the hard reality is that blue-collar working folks are going to spend their limited funds where they can get the best value. I should at this point acknowledge that my wife and I shop regularly at Wal-Mart, primarily because we live on my retirement and her teacher’s salary. We would very much prefer to patronize local vendors but the money we save shopping cheap allows us to donate to our favorite charities. Such is the dilemma many folks like us face.

There is one more consideration that I thought was worth mentioning. For the sake of argument, let’s assume Wal-Mart is guilty of selling only books that adhere to their owner’s political views. Would or should we consider a retailer who values profit over their political convictions to be a better citizen? Can we disagree with an individual’s point of view and still give him our business? If you still shop at a local boutique shop, do you know the proprietor’s politics? Should that matter?

David Rood

I never thought I would ever be in a position to defend Wal-Mart and I hope this does not come off as an apology for the corporation. However, they are part of the mix of our modern system of commerce. Though we may not like them very much, they do fit the model of American Capitalism, which is to win customers through competition in an open market. I would not fault anyone who, after considering all of the above, chooses to boycott Wal-Mart. Neither would I fault anyone who continues to shop there. How we allow our political views to affect our buying behavior is a decision each of us needs to make without recrimination or condescension from others.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

New Law In Arizona

I recently saw a newsclip that featured a few words by Mexian-American Linda Ronstadt and she mentioned how the new law would not effect her because she was light-skinned. I really that the new law is racist. Immigration is indeed a problem and new policies are needed but scapegoating Hispanics is simply not just.

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This post was submitted by Jay Bender.

Capitalism: Two Scenarios

David Rood

Like many others, whose views do not fit neatly into a well-defined category, I am frequently mischaracterized as a “liberal” or a “socialist,” and even “anti-Capitalism.” I suppose some of my positions might be considered liberal but I am hardly a socialist and certainly not anti-Capitalism. Perhaps the best way to state how I feel about our American form of economic structure is to paint two extremes of what our nation’s experience with Capitalism has been and to indicate the end of the spectrum I prefer.

Capitalism – Scenario A

An enterprising individual uses his savings or a loan from a bank or investors to create a company that provides a product or service to benefit his community, his country or the world.

He hires workers and managers to help him and forms a cooperative bond, wherein he agrees to provide employment and a safe workplace in exchange for the worker’s dedication and service to the company.

In times when market forces compel him to cut back, he attempts to fairly distribute the hardship throughout the company and its investors.
He resists the pecuniary urge to overpower the market for his product/service through unfair practices such as “dumping” and acquiring his competitors to create a monopoly.

He does not knowingly hire illegal aliens, under-age children or only those who promise not to complain about work conditions.
He does not discriminate in hiring based on race, religion, gender or political views.

He permits workers to organize and respects their decision, if they choose to do so. He bargains in good faith with their elected union.
He abides with all laws and codes of ethics, and does not attempt to sell products that he knows will very likely cause death or injury to his customers. When knowledge that one of his products is found to be unsafe, he publicly discloses that information and makes a good faith attempt to rectify the problem.

Capitalism – Scenario B

A clever individual with resources provided by a major multi-national corporation or syndicate acquires a small family-owned company, sells off its assets and fires all of the workers.

The acquired company’s product market share is transferred to the parent corporation and production is moved to a plant in a developing nation.
Criteria for management positions are carefully crafted to exclude women, people of color or anyone who might question the corporation’s practices.
To maximize profits, the corporation encourages the plant manager to employ children eleven and younger.

Any attempt of its workers to organize for better conditions is met with immediate termination and beatings administered by hired goons.
The corporation’s management circumvents US laws and taxes by moving all subsidiaries and financial operations off-shore.

When one of its products is found to be dangerous, it hires lobbyists to deny it, while it continues to manufacture and sell the product, having calculated that the law suits will not cost the corporation as much as recalling the product or fixing the problem.

The board of directors and senior executives vote to give themselves generous bonuses, despite the corporation’s failing performance and widespread firing of any remaining US workers and mid-level managers.

Both of these scenarios represent American Capitalism. I am very much in favor of A, and very much opposed to B. I also believe that the federal government has a role to encourage A and discourage B. That does not make me a “socialist” or a “Marxist.” It is merely an indication that I want Capitalism to represent the best of America, and not the worst. It also does not indicate that I want the expansion of government or the dissolution of our individual rights. It does mean that I want the federal government to represent me and all of my fellow citizens who are the consumers of products from both company A and corporation B.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

The Preacher’s Paradox

The Rev. Franklin Graham recently reaffirmed his 2001 comment that Islam “is a very evil and wicked religion.” For this, he was excluded from the Pentagon’s National Day of Prayer. Many fundamentalist Christians believe his being banned is unfair. Most others do not.

Graham was expressing a deeply held belief, similar to the belief that some hold about the superiority of their own race. The notion that we are God’s chosen and everyone else is living in sin and ignorance creates a serious paradox in a society that prides itself on freedoms of speech, assembly and religion. How do we accommodate different belief systems when those systems tend to be non-accommodating and antithetical to freedom and tolerance?

Religion in America is probably unlike any other. Because we are composed of peoples from every part of the globe, and because our Founding Fathers were well aware of the blood shed over conflicting religious doctrines in the 16th Century, we have decided to be a nation that tolerates and accommodates. Still, there are those among us who only begrudgingly tolerate other religions because the one they practice teaches that theirs and theirs alone is the true faith. To say that the core belief of their religion is wrong denies the reality that there is no possible way to prove the truth or falsity of any religion. Therein lies the dilemma.

We want to be open and accommodating but we also want to be true to our faith. For some of us, that is a conundrum not easily solved. At what point do we exclude those who exclude us? What would have been the reaction of the Christian community if an Islamic cleric had stood up and called Christianity “wicked and sinful”? We all remember the Iranian slurs against Judaism a few years back, that it was a “gutter religion.” That set back progress for peace in the Middle East decades. Those of us who are passionate about our own brand of faith sometimes forget how easy passion can sometimes step over the line to zealotry. Passionate people can still talk to each other, zealots rarely negotiate with anyone, even divisions among their own.

I do not share Rev. Graham’s religious views. Whether or not his passion has crossed the line of zealotry is a close call.  However, just as our parents taught us, “if you can’t say something nice about someone, it’s better to say nothing at all,” perhaps Graham would have been better off to practice Christian charity and kept his mouth shut.  Another old saw teaches us, “the less we say, the more we listen, and the more we listen, the more we learn.”  To all who are absolutely convinced they alone know the “truth,” this is very good advice.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Springfest vs. Volunteerism

Aired May 7, 2010
“CIVIC SOAPBOX” (WMRA-FM): Springfest vs. Volunteerism
By Mike Grundmann

When the Springfest riot broke out in Harrisonburg on April 10, the opposite was going on across town, and JMU students were at the center of both. Dozens of students were helping with the annual Blacks Run cleanup, where almost 3 tons of trash were collected.

Not only that, 35 members of the JMU swim club anticipated the Springfest garbage mess and helped the city do its cleanup the next day.

There’s been plenty of shame-on-you within the campus confines after Springfest: not just from the president but a professor who wrote a scalding letter to the student newspaper, The Breeze, and at least two students who wrote confessional pieces. Dozens of readers added their comments. The Breeze also probed for causes in a piece on mob psychology.

The following week, a group of students spontaneously formed and started planning how it can help patch relations with the city and volunteer where needed. It’s talking with city leaders so its efforts can be meaningful.

I’m the Breeze faculty adviser, so pardon me if I cite a few stories just from this semester, which prove the altruism permeating the student body. After the Haitian earthquake, a group struggled desperately to reach its $30,000 fundraising goal. A 25-hour basketball game raised money for orphans in Mozambique as well as the local Boys and Girls Clubs (one organizer played for 18 hours). An airplane-pulling contest raised money for a city mediation center. The women’s lacrosse team served a Sunday meal at the Salvation Army. The annual Relay for Life, a cancer-benefit walk that’s an overnighter, drew about 2,000 people and raised more than $150,000. One student in 2008 invented a new type of concrete mixer that will raise the standard of living in a Ugandan village.

Using examples from my own journalism classes this semester, one student spent spring break helping the homeless in Nashville, and another helped build a shelter for homeless teen girls in Belize.

It’s not just volunteerism that JMU students contribute. The university is also a lab for the kinds of technology that will save the world. An electric motorcycle that students built has set a speed record. Students are also designing bicycles that disabled people can ride. Others are experimenting with nanotechnology, which will produce eventual wonders in medicine, manufacturing and space travel. There’s a lab with printers, quote-unquote, that make 3-D objects; the prediction is that we’ll all have such printers at home in 10 years. And, from the president on down, there’s a major push to minimize waste in energy and materials. JMU just won a governor’s award for that.

I’m continually impressed by how many of my students list activity or office-holding positions on campus, the vast majority of them service-oriented.

Did some of these same students also attend Springfest? Yes. Did they throw bottles? I don’t know, but I doubt it.

I’m not saying all this because I’m the booster type. I’m a journalist by training, and you know how skeptical we can be. I’m doing this because the Springfest riot really surprised me, and I wanted you to know why I was surprised.

Mike Grundmann is a journalism professor at JMU and advisor to the student newspaper, The Breeze.

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This post was submitted by Mike Grundmann.

Help Support Local Student in Design Competition!

Have a passion for color or home design? Third year Virginia Tech interior design student and Harrisonburg native, Jessie Oliver, does! Jessie has recently entered a home office design into the 2010 Benjamin Moore Envision Color Contest, and needs the community’s help to become one of the top ten finalists!
From the top ten, 3 entries will be selected to win the following awards: 1st Place-$10,000, 2nd Place-$5,000, and 3rd Place-$2,500! Jessie is competing against 134 other interior design students from all over the nation and Canada. Voting is quick, easy, and will be open until 11:59 PM on May 30, 2010. All you need to do to vote is follow these few steps:

  1. Follow this link to Jessie’s entry
  2. Click the purple “Like it?” paint swatch in the upper right hand corner of the entry.
  3. Register to vote and click “submit and start voting.” (They ask for a minimal amount of information in order to keep track of the voting).
  4. It will bring you back to Jessie’s entry. Now click the same “Like it?” purple paint swatch until it changes to a pink “I like it!” paint swatch.

Thank you so much for helping support a local student!

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This post was submitted by Jessie Oliver.

US Healthcare: A little gratefulness would be nice.

Visit any US hospital doctor’s or surgeon’s lounge and you’ll hear the low, continuous rumble of complaints. Reimbursements are down, Medicare is cutting back, Obamacare is going to be the end of us, patients are waiting longer, Malpractice costs are skyrocketing. As a surgeon who has divided his time between Africa and America, I’ll be honest with you: it’s easy to lose patience with all the complaints.

We’ve forgotten how good we have it. Yes there are problems. Yes, some reform is needed (why don’t we start with tort reform..but don’t get me started, as I’ll soon sound like the ones I’m trying to encourage here). But we have the best system in the world. I’ve been in so many hospitals in East Africa and I can tell you: your worst nightmare would be waking up to find out you are in a Kenyan District hospital.
In the US, I use a “disposable” clip applier during laparoscopic surgery. It likely cost the patient one hundred and fifty dollars. In Kenya, I’d use the same “disposable” instrument a dozen times. (And guess what, it worked!). Overall, because there is no money, we were forced to make do. Patients endure “wards” with dozens of cots lining the walls. There is one sink at the end of the room, a pharmacy with the basics, and a housekeeping service that can’t seem to keep up….so I just learned to overlook the trash.

In Kenya, we didn’t have a CT scanner or MRI scanner at my hospital. We had an ultrasound, but no radiologist. We didn’t have many subspecialists. The medicine was provided by a generalist and if you come in with a head injury, you’ll get me (a general surgeon) instead of a neurosurgeon to drain the blood pressing on your brain.

But in Kenya, if you listen to the buzz around the doctors, there is a funny absence: no complaints. They’ve never known anything better and they’ve learned to make do.
I’m not saying there aren’t room for improvements. I’m just saying that mixed in with all of our negative comments, we should whisper a “thank you,” for the best health system in the world.

Harry Kraus, MD, FACS
Best-selling author of “The Six-Liter Club”

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This post was submitted by Harry Kraus, MD.

Policy and Pragmatism

I am opposed to capital punishment, abortion and torture. Those are my policies. However, I have learned that policy is not immutable doctrine. It’s more like a map that helps us find our way. A locomotive engineer does not need a map. His steel wheels are going to follow where the rails lead and his options are limited to the few track switches on his route. Some who adhere to policy are like railroad engineers and others are more like motorists. I think I tend to be like the latter.

There are several reasons I believe capital punishment should be abolished, first and foremost is that innocent individuals will inevitably be wrongfully convicted and executed in our imperfect legal system. Folks found to be innocent after years of incarceration can be released and compensated but there is no remedy for a corpse who is vindicated after the fact.

Then there is the argument that Clarence Darrow used in defending those young privileged sociopaths, Leopold and Loeb. He argued that state-sponsored homicide appeals to our worst nature and thereby diminishes our humanity. The United States is one of the few industrialized nations that continue to sanction executing felons. I agree, capital punishment is an archaic holdover from the Dark Ages and should be abolished.

Then I am confronted by the case of a serial pedophile, who after being judged guilty in an extensive trial, admits to having tortured and murdered small children, and I find it very hard to support my own stated policy. I want absolute assurance that man will never harm another child, even if that means execution.

Abortion is a tragedy for all involved. I believe as a matter of policy, we should do all we can to prevent and avoid the aborting of fetuses. I do not believe aborting a fetus of several days is morally equivalent to abortion at six months but any termination of life is, as far as I am concerned, a sad thing.

Then, I am confronted by the case of a fourteen-year-old who is pregnant through rape by her drug-addicted, psychotic father, or the case of a young mother of two who was assaulted and gang-raped. Now, I am forced to concede that abortion is the lesser of two evils. I cannot justify my policy to force a teenager or young mother to bear a child that will be a reminder of her horrible experience for the rest of her life.

I find it hard to impose my morality on those who, after much soul-searching, arrive at a different policy regarding abortion because I understand there are no clear or simple choices, even though some may feel otherwise. So, I tend to emphasize prevention of unwanted pregnancies through education and contraception rather than prohibition of a woman’s right to choose to abort.

Finally, the euphemism, “extraordinary interrogation techniques” is one I find to be especially revolting. We all understand the term refers to torture, and calling it something else does not mitigate its obnoxious nature. State-sanctioned torture should be abolished, period. There is no rational justification for using these dehumanizing tactics to gain information. Aside from the demonstrated fact that information obtained through torture is completely unreliable and often leads to poor decision-making, it is just wrong.

However, ask me to serve on a jury and vote to convict an intelligence officer who uses force on a known terrorist to attempt to get information to save his wife and child from an imminent impending attack, and my policy may just have to bend a little. That defendant is probably going to walk out of the courtroom a free man. However, my policy remains intact, state-sanctioned torture is wrong and should not be the policy of the United States of America, even though I may have a personal reservation based on specific facts at hand.

To some, my equivocation on stated positions may seem hypocritical. The point I am attempting to illustrate is that it is easy for us to construct our ideologies as long as we are not confronted with the nuances of real life situations. An individual’s policies, as well as those of a company, a church or an elected government, all have one thing in common – they are all maps, not railroad tracks.

The reason we give judges discretion in sentencing convicted criminals is that no law can be written in such a way as to anticipate the mitigating factors of each and every situation that may arise. Larceny is a crime but most agree that stealing a loaf of bread to keep a family from starving is not morally equivalent to stealing the life savings of a retiree who is barely meeting expenses.

If we are to plan for the future (which I believe we must), we need to understand that we cannot contemplate every contingency, which means we must craft our policies to guide us through and not restrain us from dealing with the many obstacles that lie ahead, just out of view. That, too, is my policy.

This content was submitted by the author, and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Harrisonburg Times.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Power to The People?

Those of us with a preponderance of gray (or in my case, sparse) hair will vividly recall the angry chant of “POWER TO THE PEOPLE” from Yippies and other radicals on the Left. The phrase was even memorialized in a song by John Lennon, and came to symbolize the vehemence felt by liberals and pseudo-liberals about the Vietnam War, a war prolonged and expanded by the Nixon Administration in the late Sixties and early Seventies.

But the anger did not begin with Nixon. Though Lyndon Johnson was considered to be every bit a liberal as John Kennedy, his decision to allow the military to pursue an unpopular war, which it knew it could not win turned the Left against him. LBJ wisely chose not to run for re-election in 1968 but that did not stop the raucous ugly protests and rage by the anti-war crowd. Vice President Hubert Humphrey, a decent man with impeccable liberal credentials, inherited that anger and distrust from his own base. The Democrat landslide of 1964 would not be repeated and the resulting Republican victory spawned an even angrier and demoralized Left. In retrospect, the shift of power was inevitable but in the heat of the times, few liberals could see it coming.

It is my contention that angry people never see clearly and seldom act responsibly. I state this now, having participated in the outrageous protests of the Sixties and Seventies, and having since devoted the intervening years to studying history and gaining some perspective on the political tactics in the context of traditional American values. When I hear Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh venting against their political adversaries, I relive the hate I felt for LBJ and Nixon. I understand why they are so upset with people who are in power, people who do not share their political, economic or religious views. I understand the anger and I also understand how that anger is self-defeating. It is apparent that, because they are so angry, they cannot see clearly and will not act responsibly. Eventually, their influence will wane.

Fringe groups like to say, “most Americans want…” but to anyone outside that fringe, it is clear that they have no idea what “most Americans” want. They extrapolate what THEY want to a fictitious majority to try to make a case for their ideology and policies. Anyone who has ever participated in formal debate knows that the Achilles’ heel to any argument is overstating one’s case. The fringe’s hyperbolic assertions may get the attention of the masses but when the facts are examined more carefully, reason will usually prevail over emotion. We have seen this with the Far Right’s alarmist terms such as “Death Panels.” What they contrived to be a cogent argument backfired to be an embarrassing joke. The same can be said of the term, “Socialist.” I have found that most people on the Right who invoke that hot-button term have no understanding of its definition.

The petulance shown by Republican leaders and the fringe Right at the passage of health care reform is a sad commentary on how we have abandoned our most sacred of American values. It reminds me of professional wrestling, where the match isn’t over until someone is knocked unconscious with a metal folding chair. Contrast that with boxing, where the losing prizefighter congratulates the winner with a handshake or embrace. Our political leaders on both sides of the aisle need to become more like Joe Louis and Rocky Marciano and less like The Undertaker. After all these years, I still support “Power to The People” as long as “the people” believe in democracy, civility and human decency.

This content was submitted by the author, and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Harrisonburg Times.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

Ethnically Diverse Harrisonburg

Kurdish Community at the Harrisonburg International Festival

I hope and pray that the Harrisonburg Times can be a medium for the cultural richness of the city. There are so many immigrants and refugees in the city that I believe that Harrisonburg is blessed. I would like that those immigrants and refugees have a voice here.

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This post was submitted by Jay Bender.

JMU Riot: Blame Game is Not Constructive

This riot blame game needs to stop. Harrisonburg and JMU are inextricably linked. Both are equal partners in this community and mutually benefit each other. Splitting our community along these lines merely adds to the shame and embarrassment. Instead of creating this dichotomous rift as a means of shifting blame, we should be engaging in constructive dialog as partners in this community to figure out how to prevent such regrettable situations and sustain this mutually beneficial relationship.

In situations of this magnitude there is rarely a clear cut right or wrong. This case is no exception. Clearly a number of students did not act in accordance with the values espoused by the university and this city and should take personal responsibility for their actions. However, there was a serious lack of foresight by the city and the university that allowed the situation to reach the critical mass necessary for this level of civil disturbance. Each should take responsibility for their portion and move on to a more constructive debate.

I would encourage members of the groups who are committed to working together to attend future city council meetings and any other community dialog.

This content was submitted by the author, and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Harrisonburg Times.

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This post was submitted by William Koons.

Fair and Balanced

Dave Rood is a contributor to the HarrisonburgTimes.com

Much has been made of the so-called “Liberal Mainstream Media.” Allegations of bias come from both sides of the political spectrum but mostly we hear the Right crying foul for what they perceive to be news and entertainment media dominated by the Left. There is little doubt that the politics of many in the national media tend to be slightly left of center but the notion that the Right has been drowned out is patently absurd. The Right uses this myth of a Liberal-dominated national news media to justify the plethora of extreme Right-wing talk and public affairs shows on radio and now Fox television.

Fox News uses the tagline, “Fair and Balanced,” which has come to be one of the greatest ironies of all times. The network, owned by Australian-American mogul, Rupert Murdoch, manages operations much like George Steinbrenner runs the New York Yankees. Both understand the power of large sums of money and each imposes his will through spending whatever it takes to get what they want. It is sort of like the American Dream turned on its head. Instead of ordinary guys taking risks to develop their innovative ideas and make their fortunes, entrenched billionaires Murdoch and Steinbrenner use their money to sell their ideas, and overwhelm their competition.

The argument from the Right is that Fox News, as well as the thousands of local ultra-conservative radio and print franchises, are merely a counter-balance to the Left’s influence on the national media. It just does not work that way.

For the sake of argument, let us assume the national media is indeed the tool of the Left. The antidote is not more propaganda from the Right but truthful (as in the whole truth) and objective reporting. Any first-year journalism student knows the difference between “the press” and “yellow press.” When a reporter searches for facts to affirm what he has already concluded to be true, he is not reporting. He is selling. When a news anchor adds colorful condescending commentary to stories for the purpose of discounting or ridiculing the stated facts, she is not reporting. When the line between entertainment (e.g. Glenn Beck, Bill O’Reilly, et al) and news is deliberately blurred, the news is devalued and naturally becomes highly suspect.

There are such things as professional standards of journalistic ethics and practices. A reporter does not have to disavow his political ideology to do his job but, like any doctor, teacher, scientist or other professional, he must suppress his bias to accurately investigate a story. This is why Creationism cannot stand the test as a science. Creationism begins with a conclusion and includes only those data that support the conclusion. Science begins with a hypothesis and confirms, disproves or modifies it as data are collected. Fox News reporters may not technically be propagandists but anyone who views the network for more than a day or two will see that the Murdoch fortune is working behind the scene to shape the news to fit his ultra-Right-wing taste.

One would think that all of the lampooning and mocking Fox has received would lead them to straighten up and fly right (poor metaphor) but it has not. Just as Steinbrenner will not stop stealing talent from other teams in the American League East, Murdoch is not likely to seek to become a noble individual who actually cares about the plight of average folks more than indulging his perverted sense of American values or shoring up his vast pile of cash.

The Harrisonburg Times is taking the mound against some heavy hitters. Obviously, it does not have the financial resources possessed by other news media in this market. If this fledgling e-paper is able to fly, it will be due to the support of local citizens who care about the information they consume, as well as the information they are fed. It is a noble attempt to both educate and enlighten our community. The Harrisonburg Times will eventually be known as either a revolutionary hero like George Washington or a romantic idealist like Don Quixote. I am rooting for it to be more like George… Washington, not Steinbrenner.

David Rood
daverood [at] comcast.net

This content was submitted by the author, and does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Harrisonburg Times.

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This post was submitted by David Rood.

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