Thursday, December 24, 2009

"Closet Christian" article on Salon

Someday, Salon will take this declaration of faith and philosophy offline. I'll never forgive myself if I don't save it and so here it is:


I am a closet Christian

At least, I was until now. Because in my circle, nothing is more embarrassing than being religious

It was Sunday morning in my scruffy Brooklyn, N.Y., neighborhood, and I was wearing a dress. Walking to the subway, I ran into a friend heading home from yoga class. She wore sweats and carried her mat over her shoulder. "Where are you going so early all dressed up?" she asked, chuckling. "To church?" We shared a laugh at the absurdity of a liberal New Yorker heading off to worship.

The real joke? I totally was.

Inside the church, it's cool and quiet. I read the Collect of the day in the Book of Common Prayer, which urges us: "While we are placed among 
things that are passing away, to hold fast to those that shall
 endure." My recent layoff no longer seems like the end of the world. I take Communion and exchange the peace and listen to the sermon. As I'm walking back up the aisle, I feel reoriented and calmer, the indignities of the week shift into perspective.

These moments are not only sacred; they are secret. Outside, on the steps of the downtown Manhattan church, I think I see someone familiar coming down the sidewalk, and I bolt in the other direction.

Why am I so paranoid? I'm not cheating on my husband, committing crimes or doing drugs. But those are battles my cosmopolitan, progressive friends would understand. Many of them had to come out -- as gay, as alcoholics, as artists in places where art was not valued. To them, my situation is far more sinister: I am the bane of their youth, the boogeyman of their politics, the very thing they left their small towns to escape. I am a Christian.

I certainly wasn't born one. I was raised bohemian in New York's East Village in the '80s. I was fascinated by religions but also baffled by them. (If anything, I assumed I was Jewish.) When I began traveling around the world alone at 18, I longed for a religious experience, something that would inspire me to cast my lot with a denomination the way you choose a political party. But nothing really clicked.

I got a taste of the divine at Hindu shrines in south India, and when Mother Teresa grabbed my head and blessed me while I was working for her ministry in Calcutta I felt a kind of electricity rush through my body. Later, when I almost died from amoebic dysentery in New Delhi, I did hallucinate that the Jesus poster on the wall of the clinic moved. But these experiences were no more formative than the Tolstoy books I read on those 24-hour train trips across India.

In college, I majored in Sanskrit and translated part of the Atharvaveda for my senior thesis. I studied Jewish history, Zen and Hinduism with equal interest. The closest thing to my religious sensibility back then was either Pure Land Buddhism ("the world is emptiness ... and yet") or Gnosticism (though my penchant for makeouts kept me from achieving their level of physical self-denial).

When I hit my early 20s I found existential gratification in that feeling at the end of the night, drunk and awake and looking out into the rain while the bar closed and not knowing what was going to happen next. I worshiped at the altar of the Replacements and had romances that only made sense in the context of a Paul Westerberg song. I felt closest to figuring things out when I drank too much coffee and smoked too many cigarettes and stayed up too late.

Sometime later I got married, and the priest with whom my husband and I did premarital counseling had firsthand experience of closing bars, but he also was smart and eloquent and fulfilled. He showed me the best side of Christianity. Not how it's right or just, but how -- and this may sound stupid, but it's what I think about religion in general -- it works.

All of us need help with birth and death and good and evil, and religion can give us that. It doesn't solve problems. It reminds you that, yes, those challenges are real and important and folks throughout history have struggled and thought about them too, and by the way, here is some profound writing on the subject from people whose whole job is to think about this stuff.

The idea of an eternal community brings me comfort: I like the image of a long table extending backward and forward in time, and everyone who's ever taken Communion is sitting at it. The Bible at the 1920s stone church where my husband and I were married was filled with the names of people in the community who'd married, been born and died. When my son was baptized in our church in a traditional Easter eve service, the light spreading from candle to candle through the pews of the dark church made me feel, at least for one moment, we were united in a sense of gratitude for new life and awe in the face of the numinous.

Oh, I don't know. Unless you're William James or Saint Catherine of Siena it's hard to talk about any of this without sounding dumb, or like a zealot, or ridiculous. And who wants to be lumped in with all the other Christians, especially the ones you see on TV protesting gay marriage, giving money to charlatans, and letting priests molest children? Andy Warhol went to mass every Sunday, but not even his closest friends knew he was a devout Catholic until his death. I get that.

"[Closeted Christianity] definitely exists in Manhattan, some Democratic corners in Washington, and I'd bet parts of Northern California," says Amy Sullivan, author of "The Party Faithful: How and Why Democrats Are Closing the God Gap." Sullivan says after her book about the Christian left came out, "colleagues in New York were taking me out for these clandestine lunches and leaning across the table and whispering excitedly, 'Pssst! I'm one of them!'"

The Panel Study of American Religion and Ethnicity asked people how they felt about those outside their close friends and family knowing they were religious. About 2 percent said they didn't want people to know, and that percentage is higher among people with liberal politics and people, like me, who are part of Generation X.

Barry Kosmin at the Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture at Trinity College says it's ridiculous that, in a city like New York, where there is a church on every corner, anyone would hide their religion. He says he was at a conference in Seattle recently where atheists complained about having to hide their lack of beliefs. "Everyone's paranoid!" he says.

But if you're in a place like New York City -- or Austin, Texas, or Portland, Ore., or Los Angeles -- the "new atheists" surround you. In October 2009, the atheist organization Big Apple Coalition of Reason (COR) started a poster campaign to celebrate non-belief. "A million New Yorkers are good without God. Are you?" reads one such poster. A similar campaign in London led by the bestselling author Richard Dawkins reads, "There's probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life."

Writers like Dawkins, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens and Victor J. Stenger -- and, of course, performers like Bill Maher -- get loads of press mocking the dummies gullible enough to believe some guy a couple thousand years ago was God's son. But come on. It's like shooting Christian fish car magnets in a barrel.

I'll give the atheists a lot: The Creation Museum is a riot. The psychos shooting up abortion clinics and telling gay couples they're going to hell are evil, and anyone of faith has an obligation to condemn them. Abominable stuff has been done in God's name for centuries. The Bible has a lot of crazy shit in it about stoning people for using the wrong salad fork. Up with science and reason!

And yet, atheists are at least as fundamentalist and zealous as any religious people I know, and they have nothing good to show for it: no stained glass, no great literature, no great art, no comfort in the face of death. Just dissipated Christopher Hitchens sounding off on "Larry King Live" and a stack of smug books with childishly provocative titles.

A lot of my best friends are atheists, and there's no reason they wouldn't be. They find what I get from religion elsewhere, like from music and art. Not long ago, I told a priest at my church that my friends equated religion with horrible things. I expected her to tell me I had some obligation to stop hiding my faith, but she said, pulling a scarf around her neck to hide her priest's collar, "Those preachers on the subways make me cringe." She said she prefers Saint Francis: "Preach the gospel at all times. If necessary, use words."

I could reassure my atheist friends that the Episcopal Church is a force for equality and social justice. It ordained its first gay bishop, Gene Robinson, in 2003. It takes the Bible as a mandate to fight hunger and disease and to rebuild after disasters. I believe that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and other politically involved religious groups who take the gospel as an excuse to spread hate and support specific candidates and propositions should have their tax-free status taken away.

Maybe, though, apolitical Christianity is on the rise. The Obamas are now in office -- a good Christian family in the truest sense of the term -- and the right wing is more marginalized than it was a year ago. My friend, the young (and kind of ridiculously hot) priest the Rev. Astrid Storm, whom I used to edit at Nerve.com, says she's sensing more acceptance:

"When I said I was a priest, it was always a conversation stopper," she says. "Recently someone asked what I did, and when I told him he said, 'How interesting. There are a lot of exciting things happening right now in the Episcopal Church, aren't there?' The diversity of opinion people are reading about in the news -- about gay marriage, female priests, poverty issues -- are showing how Christianity isn't monolithic."

Christianity in the popular imagination is decreasingly linked with evangelicals, agrees John Spalding, founder of the SoMa Review, so it's freed up people who were once embarrassed to self-identify as Christians. "It's no longer like, 'You're just like Pat Robertson. Leave this dinner party,'" Spalding says.

But faith and religion are hard to talk about; maybe they're not necessary to talk about. Even though I am a feminist, I've always had a problem with the personal being political. It gave me a lot of anxiety back in the '90s. If I enjoyed a book with a titillating rape scene in it, did that mean I should be stripped of my membership in the Women's Action Coalition? If I liked wearing Blackberry Revlon lipstick and an off-the-shoulder shirt, was I a tool of the patriarchy?

And now, too, I wonder: When I go to church, am I liable for every monstrous thing every denomination has ever done in the name of Jesus? Am I allowed to get spiritual fulfillment from something that has been, and continues to be, so disastrously invoked by other people? Am I allowed to just go to church sometimes and read the Bible sometimes without wearing a huge cross necklace and checking an official box on forms?

But also, increasingly, I wonder: When I'm getting a ride from some friends and they start talking about how stupid religious people are and quoting lines from "Religulous," do I have an obligation to point out how reductive and bigoted they're being, the way I would if they were talking about a particular race? Increasingly I wonder if I should pipe up from the back seat and say, "Excuse me, but these fools you're talking about? I'm one of them."

Praying

Praying to God doesn't mean you'll win the lottery. It means you'll stop wishing you'll win the lottery.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Obama finding improper spending and cracking down

More than $98 billion in improper gov't payments

More than $98 billion in taxpayer dollars spent bygovernment agencies was wasted, much of it on questionable claims for tax credits and Medicare benefits, representing an increase of $26 billion from the previous year.

In all, about 5 percent of spending in federal programs in fiscal year 2009 was improper, according to new details of a government financial report that were released Tuesday. Saying the overall error rate was similar in 2008, officials attributed the $26 billion jump to some changes in how to define improper spending as well as an increase in overall spending due to the recession.

President Barack Obama is expected to sign an executive order within the next week aimed at cracking down on government waste and fraud, particularly in Medicare and other benefit programs. In the 2009 report, the government officially reported questionable Medicare payments of roughly $36 billion, but that amount will be revised upward to about $48 billion next year as the Health and Human Services Department fully converts to a new methodology that imposes stricter documentation requirements.

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Obama campaigned that he could fund new programs without raising taxes by cracking down. He's said that they can medicare's budget without cutting its benefits by cracking down. His new, stricter documentation requirements and his executive orders will fulfill his promises.

Faux News Caught Twice in Same Week

Fox News rolls wrong video of Palin 'crowds.' Will heads roll too?


Again? Last week, Jon Stewart's Daily Show caught Hannity's show showing old footage to exaggerate the size of a health care rally.

There's a difference between seeing something different and deceiving. There's a difference between a news organization w/ a bias and a news organization that plans controversial rallies. There's a difference between a news organization that takes a side, and one that does it and then says it's "fair and balanced".

Sunday, October 11, 2009

there has a to be Republican somewhere in America willing to congratulate our president on winning the freakin Nobel Peace Prize

My Facebook comments regarding Obama's Nobel Peace Prize:

What did Obama do to deserve the award?
(Obama won the election) on his platform of shifting America from a cowboy to a responsible. People get caught up in the fact that he's black. Let's forget about that. He stands for much, much more.

By talking about peace and hope, and not winning an election by bringing fear with fake terrorism alerts. His election stood for much more than America coming over it's history of racism. To me, it showed that America is tired of being afraid and ready to see what we can build instead of hide from or attack. He, like Nelson Mandela, is about a message. Just because he'll deserve more later doesn't mean he doesn't deserve it now.

When you realize what a horrible person and president W was, you'll realize what a great man Obama is and what a great president he'll be considered. The Nobel Peace Prize isn't a joke, Republican hate is. Show your president some respect.

Saying that Nobel Peace Prize is a now a joke because Obama was nominated is disrespectful. You may disagree with Obama's policies, but everything he does is what he (and many others) believes is right and good for America. I can't say the same about Bush.

Dislike and argue all you want. But Republicans need to quit rooting against America. And Luke, there's no free health care on the table. The public option would give an affordable option to the working poor. If you like in AZ, there's already AHCCCS giving away free healthcare to the poor. I'm fully aware that my tax dollars would go to assisting the working poor. I'm all for that.

Please don't tell me you're putting Obama in any connection with Nelson Mandela?
Yes I regard Obama that highly. 80% of Americans were all for a bullshit Iraqi War, and he convinced over half of us to take a new direction.

None of my comments match Nate's though:
Personally, I enjoy hearing from all of these impotent Obama haters. I hope he raises your taxes, takes away your guns, and your daughters sleep with black guys. FU, we won. As Rep. Grayson so eloquently spoke on the house floor the other day,"...get out of the way."-Nate Tolle

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Ever notice that healthcare sucks?

Have you seen the latest survey of American health care? In the last ten years, job-based family health insurance has gone up 138% , wages have gone up 38%, and inflation went up 28%.

Someone should really do something about these rising healthcare costs! Maybe we capitalists should add some competition to the market. I dunno.

Glenn Beck's a Liar (Part 1)

If you only watched FOX News, you'd be under the impression that one of the largest demonstrations in US history occurred over the weekend. You'd also think that Obama is an illegal alien, and that Palin has credentials.

Just so the facts are straight: The number in attendance was closer to 75,ooo (or the same amount that attend Kansas City Chiefs home games).

I'm happy that I get to ignore the present 6 hours a day and focus on our future. If I worked for Obermann's show, I'd hate life...

We Will Not Forget

8 years and 4 days ago, our country was attacked by those it had not provoked. 2,952 Americans were murdered that day without reason or purpose.

Since that time, 4,259 US soldiers were killed in an entirely unrelated war. Entirely unrelated, yet Bush mentioned Iraq and 9/11 at least 22 times (according to Keith Obermann who quoted a study that I escapes me).

There was no Sept. 11th / Iraq connection, no WMDs, and no impending threat. There was no reason to invade, murder, and destroy. No self-defense justification. The Iraqi people were attacked by those it had not provoked.

The souls of those 2,952 were invoked to convince the American public and congress to support a horrible crime against humanity. We could have had no greater disgrace to those who were lost than to create an even more grotesque devastation of human life in their name.

This grotesque devastation of human life has killed between 93,096 -101,596 Iraqi civilians. Civilians. Not soldiers or political leaders. And certainly not anyone connected with those terrible attacks. They are civilians. Innocents.

Saddam Hussein was executed for his horrible crimes against humanity. He was tried and found guilty of being responsible for several hundreds of deaths, but not for the deaths of 400,000 people whose bodies were allegedly found in mass graves after the American invasion of Iraq. Later reports claimed the mass graves were around 5,000.

But in the end, does it matter if one is responsible for 5,000 or 400,000 deaths?or 2,952 deaths? or 100,000 deaths? None had a reason a sane man could follow. Not one for a greater good.

All senseless.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Joe WIlson, go to the principal's office


How embarrassing for Joe Wilson!? Not only was behavior legendarily uncouth, but he was wrong. He must've skipped that section of the proposal labeled, "No coverage for illegal aliens" where it says, "Nothing in this subtitle shall allow federal payments for affordability credits on behalf of individuals who are not lawfully in the United States."

So he's a jerk and a moron? That sucks.

Reminds me of Sarah Palin. We figured out that she was moron when she claimed to have experience with foreign affairs and was then clueless when Katie Couric questioned her about "Bush Doctrine." (Wish I was clueless about it.) Then we found out she was a jerk when McCain's aides called intolerable and a prima donna. Oh, she billed clothing and family travel to Alaska citizens too.

I was very happy to see many Republicans come down on Wilson. McCain was even harsh. I wish he and Obama would start calling out people on their own side more often. Shut the whackos up on both sides of the aisle.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Excerpts from Obama's speech to students

The White House released tomorrow's script for President Barack Obama's address to our nation's school children. Below is a list of excerpts from that speech:

... I understand that you may not be excited for the end of summer. When I was a young boy growing up in Kenya, I didn't enjoy school either...

...and yes, safe sex is preferable, but sometimes protection ruins the mood and that's why we have abortion...

... Students (and Comrades), I urge you to study the history of our world (especially Karl Marx) so that you can help us build a better (communist) nation...

.... Those Republican bastards are also the reason why the school cafeteria sometimes runs out of chocolate milk.

...I propose a new tradition in American schools. Let's all start reciting the pledge of allegiance facing the east. On our hands and knees. Five times a day...

...So I expect you to be serious this year. Serious about convincing your parents that socialism is actually pretty awesome...

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Pastor refuses to refute; Jesus weeps


"One member, who wore a black polo shirt with a message emblazoned in red, "Hating is not a Crime," strutted in the parking lot. "

How many things are wrong with that statement?
1. No one said it was a crime
2. Hating is wrong regardless of faith or lack of faith. And defending it ranks with defending racism and sexism.
3. A church's purpose is to spread the good news and works of Christ. Christ has nothing to do with hate, or with this pastor.


"Anderson, who briefly emerged from the church door, said "absolutely" to a media question about whether he still believes Obama should die."

When I read this, I saw Samuel L Jackson in my head from Room 1408..."He's an evil f*cking man."

Thursday, September 3, 2009

No one should die

just because they cannot afford health care, and no one should go broke just because they get sick. If you agree, consider posting this as your status for the rest of the day.

Tom Horne's on drugs? an illiterate? a racist? or just a jerk?


How goddamn terrible is this? How goddamn terrible is this? The president can't wish our children a great school year and challenge them to take personal responsibility for their education and future? Tom Horne is an asshole. "Too worshipful toward Obama"? Where? Effing where?!?
http://www.whitehouse.gov/mediaresources/

Few hated Obama's predecessor more than I, but Bush would've won me over if he had done the same thing...


Update:
This isn't a liberal/conservative, dem/reb, Obama/McCain, or pro/con health care reform issue. This is about slapping our president, our Commandeer-in-Chief, in the face as he extends a hand to our students who, as a whole, so desperately need to be pushed by someone other than their teachers.

Jonathon Swift would be proud

Obama urges everyone to frequently wash hands to minimize impact of H1N1. Conservatives lambast president for pushing socialist hygienic values. Glenn Beck reveals in a special two hour investigative report that Hitler also washed his hands, using soap made from dead Jews. While urging everyone to interrupt town hall meetings to protest soap, Beck also reveals that the administration's appointed Swine Flu "czar", Dr. Richard Besser, has a pet cat named Snowball, drawing reference to one of the pig characters in Animal Farm, the satirical novel about communism. Coincidence? He reports, you decide.

(thanks, Jed)

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

A serious concern

Uh, everyone knows that Iraq had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks right? Everyone knows that in 2009, right?

Friday, August 21, 2009

Stewart and McCaughey discuss healthcare

I found an actual discussion of healthcare reform! Jon Stewart and Betsy McCaughey, who worries about the funding and the wording of the public-option, have an actual exchange of facts and ideas. How American.


The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Exclusive - Betsy McCaughey Extended Interview Pt. 1
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political HumorHealthcare Protests

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

AP fact checks healthcare reform myths

WASHINGTON – The judgment is harsh in a new poll that finds Americans worried about the government taking over health insurance, cutting off treatment to the elderly and giving coverage to illegal immigrants. Harsh, but not based on facts...(more!)

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The "Birther" movement is dying out

http://www.newser.com/story/66159/how-to-refute-birther-myths.html


Let's talk about health care reform, the two wars, the economy, and why Obama prefers Bud Light over Coors (jk!).



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'Kenyan' Obama Birth Certificate Is Mine: Aussie

Forgery by birthers 'so laughable it’s ridiculous'


(Newser Summary) – President Obama’s “Kenyan” birth certificate, posted online by lawyer Orly Taitz, has been debunked as a forgery, and the original document—an old Australian certificate—it was based on has even been discovered. The Australian Broadcast Channel tracked down David Bomford, the man whose genuine birth certificate was used for the forgery. Bomford was quite shocked to have been an unwitting pawn for the US birther movement:

“That is ridiculous,” Bomford said. “Little old person in Adelaide, the president of the United States. I don’t know whether to laugh about it or not, be worried about it. Oh I definitely confirm that the birth certificate was mine. That was quite easy to see—my address, even the style of the birth certificate was an old South Australian one.” Click the Salon link below to see both documents.

Nick McMaste