Circuit Writer

Musings on the intersections of life, faith and other things…

Browsing Posts published on 15 June 2009

Chris Hedges, longtime journalist and writer of War is a Force that Gives Us Meaning, a National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction finalist, presents a critical look at the United States under the Obama administration.  His harsh and uncompromising commentary may be difficult to read, but it is certainly worth considering in light of the ongoing U.S. military actions abroad.

Did they play  Barack Obama’s speech to the Muslim world in the prison corridors of Abu Ghraib, Bagram air base, Guantanamo or the dozens of secret sites where we hold thousands of Muslims around the world? Did it echo off the walls of the crowded morgues filled with the mutilated bodies of the Muslim dead in Baghdad or Kabul? Was it broadcast from the tops of minarets in the villages and towns decimated by U.S. iron fragmentation bombs? Was it heard in the squalid refugee camps of Gaza, where 1.5 million Palestinians live in the world’s largest ghetto?

What do words of peace and cooperation mean from us when we torture—yes, we still torture—only Muslims? What do these words mean when we sanction Israel’s brutal air assaults on Lebanon and Gaza, assaults that demolished thousands of homes and left hundreds dead and injured? How does it look for Obama to call for democracy and human rights from Egypt, where we lavishly fund and support the despotic regime of Hosni Mubarak, one of the longest-reigning dictators in the Middle East?

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Catching my personal site up with my work at the Xenia Institute, this is my most recent post at xeniainstitute.org.  Here I take a tangent from the debate on closing Guantánamo Bay to raise questions about our national priorities and ethical choices.

News that the first Guantánamo detainee has arrived in the U.S. will undoubtedly restart a debate that has been simmering on the back burner for a few weeks now.  The arrival of Ahmed Ghailani to stand trial in Manhattan for the 1998 bombings of the U.S. Embassies in Tanzania and Kenya marks the first test of public resolve to keep terror suspects out of the United States.  That resolve is apparent in polling data concerning national opinions on the proposal to close the detention facility at Guantánamo Bay.

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While flipping through some news updates I came across this interesting little tidbit related to evangelical author Warren Cole Smith and his latest book A Lover’s Quarrel with the Evangelical Church.  Here’s an excerpt from this post:

“For the sake of money and power and status and celebrity … we’ve made ‘church’ easy,” complains Smith, editor of The Charlotte World and the Evangelical Press News Service. “We’ve made being a card-carrying member of the evangelical movement easy. But being a disciple of Jesus in the early 21st century is hard and, for the most part, the evangelical church doesn’t teach us how to do that.”

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