On the Florida school shooting and “arming” teachers… I just read a post from a teacher who wrote that if we want to “arm” her: arm her with more teacher’s aids so she can give more individual attention to her students; arm her with more school counselors; arm her with less standardized test criteria so she can focus on more creative, and individualized, teaching; arm her with smaller classroom numbers, so, again, she can have more time for individual students… It was as if she’d read our position paper on education. Note: I talked with an educator from the Bath, Ohio school system today. He said a proportionally large number of students at his school come from poor (“…like trailer park”) backgrounds. Because of the poverty, he said, there is sometimes trouble at home. This is compounded by some of these kids being made fun of by the more popular, more well off, students at school. This, he said, can sometimes become a perfect recipe for a kid psychologically exploding. In our cross country research, we learned at Wilmington College’s Peace Center in Ohio that they have weekend Conflict Resolution events, bringing together key kids from different school peer groups to get to know each other, to see each other behind the masks, so to speak. I’m told this is effective.
fiscal irresponsibility; on the national debt: “tighten our belts”
A recent NY Times article noted that Republicans promised to end “fiscal recklessness,” yet they have been tremendously free-wheeling in creating yet more debt with, say, a new spending deal “…that would blow through the caps imposed by the 2011 Budget Control Act.” The article goes on to note that “…the long-term implications of all this borrowing put the United states on track to ultimately owe more to its creditors than the economy produces over the course of a year.” And, the nation’s debt tops $20 trillion now… First off, we need to tighten our belts and pay this off so our kids don’t inherit it. Secondly I told the Delphos Herald newspaper in Ohio: WE NEED SOMEONE IN DC WITH A CALCULATOR THAT WORKS! Then they would use that calculator to total all the revenue that came in in a given year. And then here’s the game plan: The federal government wouldn’t spend any more than it had. Common (fiscal) sense. Note: While campaigning in Wyoming, I saw a front yard campaign sign of a woman running for state auditor. It had her name at the top, then read: “Tightening Wyoming’s Belt.” She won… In our travels, I talked to a small town CPA at one point who said his business didn’t do so well last year — so his family had to “ratchet down expenses.” Why wouldn’t that be any different for the Federal Government, he wondered.
Florida shooting, “culture of death,” apathy…
CNN News report lead in: “A gunman unleashed horror at his former high school in South Florida on Wednesday (yesterday), authorities said, slaughtering at least 17 unsuspecting students and adults and leaving the country asking why another school massacre has happened yet again.” Why? Because America has evolved into what the late St. Pope John Paul II labeled a: “Culture of Death.” Yesterday, also, 4,000 babies were dismembered and killed in their mothers’ wombs. And that didn’t even make the news. Yesterday millions of kids and adults sat in front of screens watching movie, TV show, video game… extreme violence — helping keep the Culture of Death around all this going. “Sanctity of Life” is also disregarded on other fronts as we move closer and closer to euthanasia and assisted suicide being the law of the land in all 50 states. The opiod crisis claims 150 lives a day now, while 22 veterans commit suicide every day now. Then there’s the streets of Chicago… We’re awash in death. Yet most of us are just as awash in apathy — especially if it doesn’t affect us directly. Sad spiritual thing here, though, is that apathy will spell the (eternal) death for countless others. I recently gave a 10-minute talk addressing all this, and more. The talk is titled: WAKE UP AMERICA!
Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh
I was just reading a Wall Street Journal article today about Myanmar’s Rohingya fleeing violent persecution into Bangladesh. More than 700,000 people have packed into camps there in the last year, according to the report. Bangladesh, which is poor country itself, is struggling to help all these people. Meanwhile in the First World, majority are living in big homes (especially in comparison to Third World homes/shacks). And we binge on food and endless entertainment… while our countries keep their immigration quotas low. Not exactly sound spiritual principle. For more on our administration’s answer to a good deal of this, see our position paper on poverty. Note: Trump seems to be not very concerned (and that’s an understatement) on the plight of these people in these poorer countries. We would be.
Industrial Revolution
In the book A Farewell to Alms (A Brief Economic History of the World), author Gregory Clark writes of the Industrial Revolution: “The classic description has also suggested that significant technological advances across disparate sectors of the economy contributed to growth during the Industrial Revolution, again pointing toward some economy-wide institutional change or equilibrium shift.” And it would ‘shift,’ dramatically. While there was economic benefit to many across a spectrum now with the Industrial Revolution, other things came with it as well. With mass production came a “throw-away” society orientation. With heavy industry came more and more pollution. What’s more, assembly line workers putting, say, one part in a car eight hours a day often undercut the essence of ‘work and human dignity.’ On balance, `the Industrial Revolution might not have been such a good thing, huh. But nobody (but the Old Order Amish, etc.) stopped to question it. Most just got swept up in it. Our administration would push for a return to an agrarian-based society that revolved around Decentralism. See…
Califronia Dreamin’… for a new day
Just read a NY Times piece on outgoing California Governor Jerry Brown. As a slate of new candidates line up out there, one particularly stands out to me: Desmond Silveira. Like Brown, he would lean toward social justice, toward good environmental stewardship, toward fiscal responsibility… But unlike Brown (and most Democrats) on some social issues, Silveira also stands against abortion, he stands for traditional marriage, he stands, in fact, for the gospel message (and Catholic Church teaching) across the board. In fact, his platform very much matches up with ours.
American Dream?
At our Wednesday night Spiritual Book Study, we’re currently discussing the book Uncomfortable by Brett McCracken. McCracken, a Christian, notes Jesus said: “Whoever loves his life, loses it. And whoever hates his life in the world, will keep it for eternal life.” So… The operative question the first night was: “How do we feel about our lives?” Most people in the group acknowledged that their lives in small town Bluffton, Ohio, were, well, pretty “comfortable.” Three square meals and snacks; relatively nice homes (as compared, say, to most people in the inner cities and Third World); no shortage of entertainment with TVs, internet, etc.; more than adequate vehicles; friendly safe village atmosphere… Why, most were living the “American Dream.” So, what does that say about the “American Dream,” spiritually? Does it say that perhaps, oh, we’ve got it spiritually backwards in this country when it comes to aspiring to this iconic “American Dream” that was sold to us? Note: To put “flesh” on all this, see my Dec. 25, 2010 blog entry.
Martin Luther King Jr. Service Day
I was reading that presidents Obama and Bush both designated Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a “service day,” and each volunteered at various outreaches on that day during their presidencies. (Trump played golf at Mar-a-Lago that day.) So in that tradition (no, not golfing), I spent time today doing the preliminary leg work for a Bluffton St. Mary’s Youth Group volunteer outing at the City Mission in nearby Findlay, Ohio. I had previously written a newspaper article about the Mission. (second story down the page). Phenomenal place. It has a highly creative mix of tiered programs to help the homeless get on their feet and stay on their feet. There are 21 people on staff and 200 active volunteers. They provide life skill training, job training, tutors, art therapy… They also liaison with such groups as Bridges Out of Poverty; Century Health (mental health service); Drug Court… What’s more, the Mission takes no government money. Most everything is subsidized by private and church donations. I started the article by writing that the homeless figure in America would decline by two-thirds if every significant sized town had a City Mission.
Social Work Part II; Martin Luther King Jr. Day
As a follow up to my last entry on the social work field, I picked up the book: Social Work with Groups (Social Justice Through Personal, Community and Social Change). In a section about lab group work through activity-centered therapy, it talked about “socio-recreation activities.” The book used the example of a group of youth using hip-hop music as the center piece for such group activities as discussing song lyrics and how they relate, say, to someone’s struggles. The youth might also write their own hip-hop music; listen together to the music; decorate the therapy room with posters of hip-hop artists… Our kids in this country are in trouble. Many seem ostracized. Many others feel not understood. And yet others simply feel lost in a fast paced, distracted world swirling all around them. The social work field has a lot of extremely creative, extremely effective, models to help these marginalized youth. As the “…adults in the room,” its our responsibility to mobilize as many of these strategies as possible to help these kids not fall through the emotional cracks, so to speak. Note: This is Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Our administration would mobilize a comprehensive, tangible amends program for African Americans to, finally, make right what we should have been making right in this country for quite some time now. For more on this, see
More social workers…
In a book titled: The Ohio Reader, I was reading a section today that noted the lack of social workers is contributing to over-crowding in the psychiatric units throughout the state. With less social workers in the field, to help people with life skills, to help people work through emotional issues, to help people manage taking, say, their medications, and so on, some of these people, inevitably, will devolve to the point that they need extended psychiatric stays. (I am a former social worker, did some liaison work at the Cleveland Psychiatric Hospital, and know this to, indeed, be true.) So, picking up the ball where Rosalyn Carter left off, our administration would push for more funding for the Mental Health field to put it on a par with the Physical Health field, so to speak. Our society, at present, is replete with people with mental disorders, addictions, etc. And common sense says we need to devote more time and resources toward this if we want a more (for lack of a better word) sane, balanced society.
