We’re in motion on yet another series of tours for Campaign 2012… Heading south on I-75 through Tennessee, we saw a billboard that simply read: Less Speed. Less Pollution… We make it a point of driving no faster than 55 mph on the highway, no matter what the speed limit is. Because of the pollution, and safety… In Canton, Georgia, there’s a sign in the YMCA locker room asking members to keep their showers to five minutes, to save water. To saver water, and energy, it’s my belief all Americans should be taking, like, three minute GI showers. “Tough talk for tough times,” our new campaign motto goes… In La Grange, Georgia, I talked with Dustin and Jamie White, who are in the area from Ohio on a Christian mission. The Whites periodically take homeless people into their place. Dustin talked of one man they’d helped who had been on the streets, then got into recovery for cocaine addiction, reunited with his family and has a solid job now. And it was this young couples’ willingness to risk that helped get the ball rolling. Tough people for tough times. How do we end homelessness in America? Well for one, more people like the Whites.
our ‘state of the union’ video from Notre Dame
I recently gave a ‘State of the Union’ address at the University of Notre Dame. It was given the same night as President Obama’s State of the Union address, and it is my contention the talk I gave was a much more candid look at the real ‘state of our union.’ To view video…
feeling ‘vague compassion’?
I recently gave a talk at the University of Notre Dame. It was sponsored, in part, by ND’s Center for Social Concerns. The Center is recognized nationally for it’s community-based learning courses. What’s more, students do “immersion experiences” in gang war zones in Chicago, migrant farm labor camps in Florida, in the back woods of Appalachia… Students also go throughout the Third World to help with providing food, health care, adequate housing, education… for those in dire need of all of these. In addition, the Center sponsors seminars on such subjects as: human trafficking, authentic human development, poverty… Executive Director Rev. William Lies, points to Catholic Church teaching that explains: “Solidarity is not a feeling of vague compassion or shallow distress at the misfortunes of so many people, both near and far. On the contrary, it is a firm and persevering determination to commit oneself to the common good…” Average Joe translation: If we know 24,000 people are starving to death every day in the world, we in America need to be sacrificing our butts off (way less food, way less energy use, way less entertainment…), so people in the Third World can have at least the basics in adequate food, medicine, shelter… That is, if we’re taking the Gospel message seriously.
standing up to China
The New York Times reported yesterday that Gao Zhishenq, one of China’s most high profile human rights lawyers is “missing” after being taken into custody by the Chinese Communist government. Previously, he was taken into custody for 54 days and administered constant beatings and electro-shock. Mr. Zhishenq’s crime? He advocates for members of the “unofficial Christian Church” in China. (Members who are regularly oppressed for their faith.) The crux of the article is that China is less and less concerned with how other countries view their human rights violations because “of their new found economic prowess.” The article went on to say that America’s leverage on human rights began dissipating in 2001 after China was admitted to the world Trade Organization and Congress surrendered the right to review China’s human rights record before granting it favorable trade status… It was reported today that Barack Obama is committed to continuing trade with China. “Our future is going to be tied up with our ability to sell products all around the world, and China’s going to be one of our biggest markets,” Obama said. “For us to close ourselves off from that market would be a mistake.” …If I were president, because of the consistent human rights violations in China (forced abortions, Christians being tortured and killed…), I would push for an immediate moratorium on importing products from China across the board — until the human rights abuses ended. How we can let economics trump human rights is so antithetical to the Gospel message? I mean, c’mmon!
…what will change the world
I talked to Professor Mike Hebbeler’s senior-level course on discernment and vocation Friday at the University of Notre Dame. I said that we, so often, have a neat, rational set of plans for our future based, well, on our own will. When, it’s my belief, we should be praying in earnest for what God’s will is for our life. Now while that’s a lot riskier, I told the students it is the essence of what will change our world. One of the students, who was on a fast track to become a doctor, said he’s discerned he should take a couple years off to do volunteer work in Latin America. And that’s what he’s going to do. We need a whole lot more of that.
State of the Union Address
The night President Obama gave his State of the Union address, I gave my own ‘State of the Union Address’ at Andrews Auditorium at the University of Notre Dame. I said, political correctness aside, that this was the real ‘State of the Union.’ Global warming looms over us like a scary doomsday scenario. More and more children are growing up in American urban gang war zones. There is now a 60% divorce rate in America, broken families everywhere. There’s astronomical national debt, terrorism and war. We’ve reached the 50 million abortion mark in America… I showed a picture of a baby in it’s mother’s womb. I then said during an abortion procedure, a surgical instrument is inserted and the baby’s limbs are excrutiatingly dismembered. He or she is then suctioned out of the womb. I followed this by saying that our global society has become so crazy that… Barack Obama, who is a major player in this ongoing genocide of babies, was recently given the: Nobel Peace Prize. HELLO!
Haiti
Haiti… Before the earthquake, Haiti was the second poorest country in the world. To quell persistent, acute hunger pains, a significant number of people there were eating patties made of mud, oil and flour. While this was slowly killing these people, apparently it was better than immediately dying of starvation. Meanwhile in America, significant numbers of people think nothing of spending all kinds of money on non-nutritional junk food and beverage (as opposed to taking the savings to send to Haiti, Uganda, Somalia…). We had the chance to help Haiti before. We have the chance to help Haiti now. It’s important we do that. Not only for them… but for our souls. Note: While in Virginia on a campaign tour several years ago, a woman told me she’d just returned from a missions trip to Haiti. And what had particularly struck her was “…how stick thin almost everyone seemed to be there.”
Over populated?
I just read that if every person on earth was positioned side-by-side, they could all fit: on the island of Jamaica. Over populated? We have traveled the “back roads of America” for many years now looking for common sense takes on all the major issues of the day. In Keene, New Hampshire, Ray Rivest posed this question to me: “Do you think God would allow more people on the planet than it could sustain?” Good question. Perhaps a more salient question then is: “Are many of us overusing the resources God has given us to live here?”
hallmarks of a human being…
I’m just in the process of preparing a talk I’ll be giving at Notre Dame University toward the end of the month. I hold to a Consistent Life Ethic that sets me against poverty, pollution, abortion, euthanasia… and anything else that can end life prematurely. Today I was writing a segment about abortion. I noted that in the womb there are 10 fingers, 10 toes and a heartbeat. Now it wouldn’t take, say, a top-flight physician at the Mayo Clinic to figure out that these are: THE HALLMARKS OF A HUMAN BEING! Yet while the fact seems so basic, so simple, many in society have come up with a tremendously complex set of rationalizations (read: rational lies) to justify killing these little babies. Note: While in Mansfield, Ohio, to give a Pro-life talk, I noticed the following bumper sticker: “Call me extreme, but I think dismembering babies in their mothers’ wombs is wrong.”
‘Fly me to the moon?’
Under the Obama administration, NASA continues on. The latest is an Aires I series of spacecraft to take man back to the moon. All the brightest and creative engineering minds out of Harvard, Yale, MIT, have combined on these tremendously expensive, ultra-sophisticated spacecraft to take us to places like the moon… where we can’t breathe the air, there’s no food, and there’s no gravity! I mean, common sense… Note: The other day at the YMCA here, someone had a t-shirt on that read: “Stupidity is not a crime. You’re free to leave.”