Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Court Reinstates Clean Air Rule During EPA Fix

This is from truthout.com by Jesse J. Holland, The Associated Press, "Court Reinstates Clean Air Rule During EPA Fix":

In a ruling hailed by environmentalists, a federal appeals court on Tuesday reinstated one of President George W. Bush's clean air regulations while the
Environmental Protection Agency makes court-mandated changes. In July, the US Appeals Court for the District of Columbia Circuit threw out the Clean Air Interstate Rule, which required 28 mostly Eastern states to reduce smog-forming and soot-producing emissions that can travel long distances in the wind.

Kids against Hunger

Watching Lehrer's Newshour on Georgia Public Broadcasting last evening, I saw Kids against Hunger; the work featured is exceptionally provocative and proactive; take a look and see what you and I can do to join the kids.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

WASHINGTON - The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday approved a last-minute rule change by the Bush administration that will allow coal companies to bury streams under the rocks leftover from mining.

Mountaintop coal mines, such as this one near Mud River, W.Va., generate large amounts of waste. "With less than two months left in power, the Bush administration is determined to cement its legacy as having the worst environmental record in history," Earthjustice said in a statement. "This is a sad day for all people who are thankful for the clear mountain streams and stately summits of the Appalachians."(By Michael Williamson -- Post). The 1983 rule prohibited dumping the fill from mountaintop removal mining within 100 feet of streams. In practice, the government hadn't been enforcing the rule. Government figures show that . . . read more


Published on Wednesday, December 3, 2008 by McClatchy Newspapers; article by Renee Schoof and Bill Estep.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Following up a newspaper announcement, I've found out that the movie Shane Claiborne and others have been working hard on called The Ordinary Radicals ill be playing at the Kentucky Theatre at 7 pm on October 16th, Thursday.

The Ordinary Radicals is set against thie modern American political and social backdrop of the next Great Awakening. Traveling across the United States on a tour to promote the book “Jesus for President”, Shane Claiborne and a rag-tag group of “ordinary radicals” interpret Biblical history and its correlation with the current state of American politics. Sharing a relevant outlook for people with all faith perspectives, director Jamie Moffett examines this growing movement.

Admission for the private showing is $7.50. I have purchased the DVD and will be sharing it with anyone who wishes to see and discuss it. More than likely I'll share with our prayer group at www.prayingdaily.blogspot.com and with my Sunday School class at First United Methodist Church and elsewhere.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Andrew J. Bacevich, The Limits of Power

Having listened to Bill Moyer's recent interview of Andrew J. Bacevich and immediately purchasing Bacevich's The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism (it came today), I want to share with you what I consider to be a profoundly sound analysis of what's going on in the United States today. I urge you either to watch the video of the interview, listen to the podcast, or read the transcript, and then perhaps getting a copy of the book, read it and pass the word around: Becevich is someone both the right and the left, both conservative and liberals, Libertarians and Greens, both supporters and "againsters" of Washington policy can agree upon; Bacevich is right in his analysis of the American soul, the body politic. As I slowly read The Limits of Power, I may well want to share with you of Bacevich's insights and convictions. If you've gotten or will get a copy, please post your comments!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Important KFTC Announcements

Just received the following from Kentuckians for the Commonwealth and am passing it on.

Dear Madison County KFTC Member,

Below are Madison County KFTC updates and upcoming events. We hope to see you there!

1.) FINAL WEEK BEFORE VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE: HELP REGISTER AND EDUCATE VOTERS -- The chapter will be door-knocking and tabling in Berea and Richmond this final week before the closely approaching voter registration deadline (October 6th). Last Saturday KFTC members registered 33 folks at the Berea Walmart and had great conversations with many more folks about the importance of voting and KFTC's issues. There is still time to help out and get more folks registered before the October 6th deadline:*

Tabling: This Friday evening (October 3rd) from 4 to 8 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m. we will be tabling all day (most likely at the Berea Walmart , Berea Sav a Lot, and possibly Richmond Kroger - but stay tuned for specific location). If you can volunteer for a two-hour shift of time, please let us know (and when you are available).*

Door-Knocking: On Saturday, October 4th we will be door-knocking in Berea - We will meet at 10 a.m. at the KFTC office (green house behind the MACED building on Chestnut St. in Berea) for a short training and determine our walking paths. Door-knocking is an important way to engage with folks who we might not otherwise be able to reach through other methods. Many KFTC volunteers have said that the best conversations about the importance of voting happen on someone's front door step.

If you can volunteer to take a shift registering voters or help cover a street in a neighborhood, please RSVP to Carissa at Carissa@kftc.org or 986-1277 Ext. 224. The more volunteers, the more ground we can cover - which means more registered voters!

2.) BEREA SOLAR TOUR THIS SATURDAY: The Berea Solar Tour is this Saturday, October 4 from 10am-2pm. 10 solar homes and buildings will be open for viewing. This is your opportunity to view and ask questions about solar hot water and solar electric systems; net metering; passive solar design; and home energy conservation.

Also, there will be two solar workshops: "Logistics of Home Solar Installation." 9am-10am in the Second floor classroom, Child Development Laboratory, 125 Jefferson Street and "Ask an Expert: Questions and answers on home solar energy." 2pm-3pm at 302 Center Street.

In addition, there will be a van to outlying solar homes. It departs Memorial Park parking lot (125 Jefferson St.) at 10:15 am and returns by 12:30. Limited to 10 seats. To reserve a seat, call 985-1689 or info@sustainableberea.org

.3.) LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS HOLDS BEREA CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATE FORUM: Tuesday, October 14th from 7 to 9:15 p.m. at the Berea City Hall Chambers on Chestnut St. Stay tuned for more information.

4.) LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS/ENERGY AND EMPOWERMENT EVENT: The League of Women Voters/Energy and Empowerment gathering, featuring Amy Malick from International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI) will be on October 15th at the Berea public library from 6 - 8:30. Amy will speak on what local governments can do to address climate change. The event will also include tasty food. Hope you can join us!

5.) MADISON COUNTY FRIENDRAISER: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24th - Mark your calendars now for the Madison County Fall Friend-raiser in Berea. The fun will kick-off with a tasty potluck at 6 p.m. followed by entertainment and a short program at Union Church. We hope you can join us for this fun event - and bring a few friends with you! It should be a lot of fun!

6.) KFTC STATEWIDE ANNUAL MEETING - Register online today for KFTC's statewide annual meeting October 10th - 12th at the Kentucky Leadership Center in Faubush. There will be great workshops, thoughtful discussion, and lots of wonderful fellowship.

You also won't want to miss the keynote speaker, Dr. Phil Thompson, a nationally recognized urban planner and political scientist. Phil is a professor in the Urban Planning Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Phil will discuss ideas about how community organizations can develop locally-owned renewable energy systems that create jobs and potentially generate resources for low-income and people of color communities.

Phil worked as Deputy General Manager of the New York Housing Authority, and as Director of the Mayor's Office of Housing Coordination. Phil is a frequent advisor to trade unions in their efforts to work with immigrant and community groups across the United States. Phil's most recent academic work includes a 2004 review of public health interventions in poor black communities and a recent book called Double Trouble: Black Mayors, Black Communities and the Struggle for Deep Democracy published by Oxford University Press.

For more information or any questions, please don't hesitate to contact me at 859-986-1277 Ext. 224 orCarissa@kftc.org.

Sincerely,Carissa Lenfert
Madison County Chapter Organizer
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth

Friday, September 19, 2008

Good News from Christian Flights International (CFI)

Late this afternoon Scott Mandl of CFI sent in the following:

First I wanted to let you know we have had a great response to our Hurricane Relief initiative. We have sent $4,000 for emergency food down this week and already have over $7,000 more pledged that will be sent down next week. The second amount also includes money for seeds to help families replenish their family gardens wiped out by the storms. As more comes in, we will continue to send it down to provide critically needed help. If you know of a church or individual that wants to help, let them know about us.

I should note that 100% of the Hurricane Relief donations will go just to that -- not to any other CFI programs.

Second, I would like to ask your help in an unusual way. Next week is our CFI Board meeting. During this time, our nine board members assemble for a couple of days to meet, pray, review and plan the ministry of CFI. We do this twice each year. These folks not only are regular donors, they give generously of their time and expertise to help this ministry in a vital way. To attend our meetings, they drive, at their own cost, from as far away as Florida and North Carolina. Most are Team Leaders who have taken numerous teams to Haiti, while paying their own way in the process, and accepting a lot of work and responsibility. They are leaders, and they are selfless servants.

CFI would like to show our appreciation to this group by taking them to the UK-WKU game Saturday, Sept. 27. We currently have 4 tickets but need 8 more for this game (or even entry into a box -- whatever works!). If you have tickets you aren't using or have connections to anyone who could help us get these folks in to the game, it would be much appreciated.

Just drop me an email and I'll get back to you as quickly as possible.

Thanks & God Bless,

Scott

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Help Provide Food for Haiti's Hungry

This just in from Scott Mandel at Christian Flights International:

Dear CFI Leaders,

We try to be careful in asking for finances as we know many of you are already giving what you can and as God leads. But the recent storms have provided a critical need and a special opportunity.

As such, we will be sending some special wires to Ranquitte to provide some critically-needed relief.

Below is a request written by CFI Team Leader and Buildings and Grounds Director Eddie Arnold. You can help with a check (address below) or by clicking on the donate link on our website and noting this is for Hurricane Relief.

We have provided some Hurricane Info on the home page link above, as well as a link to a video and news article.

Of course, we will continue to help with those long-term needs through our school, clinic, ag-reforestation, wells and homes projects, but wanted to give you a chance to help the immediate need.

Your prayers and response are much appreciated!


Dear CFI Board
Members and Friends,

I am writing you today to ask for your prayers and/or financial support for the village of Ranquitte, Haiti. The devastation caused by three hurricanes has left the village flooded, homes damaged or destroyed, and gardens washed away. As you know, these gardens supply the main source of food to these families.

Life is often hard in the mountain village of Ranquitte, but the toll that these repetitive storms have taken on the land and the people has caused damage that will not easily be repaired.

Ranquitte Mayor George Derval said that these “winter storms” have taken over the land and that his people are hungry. He would like to provide beans and rice to the people immediately.

The people of Ranquitte need our help. Susan and I approached our church and asked for help through prayers and funds. God provided. We ask that you do the same thing in your communities.

Time is of the essence. We plan to send an initial money wire the first of this week, and then a second wire when additional funds are provided. If you would like to help, please send checks made out to: Christian Flights International, and marked for “hurricane relief.” The full mailing address is below. If you have questions or would like additional information, you can reach me at https://owa.eku.edu/owa/redir.aspx?C=ab23078ca5e249d39a4755ed4361c0c6&URL=mailto%3aeddiearnold%40hotmail.com
or by calling (859) 936-9520.

Sincerely,

Eddie Arnold

Send checks to:

Christian Flights International
Susan Arnold, Treasurer
580 Roy Arnold Blvd.
Danville, KY 40422

From the Daily Grist: 16 September 2008

Pipeline to Nowhere?

Alaska natural-gas pipeline is far from a done deal
In her speech at the Republican National Convention, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin touted her role in moving forward a plan for a natural-gas pipeline from Alaska's North Slope to the Lower 48. The GOP veep candidate declared, "That pipeline, when the last section is laid and its valves are opened, will lead America one step farther away from dependence on dangerous foreign powers that do not have our interests at heart." She failed to mention, however, that the project is far from a done deal. It so far exists only on paper, and federal approvals are years out. In addition, Palin is in a bit of a catch-22: She gained a reputation for standing up to Big Oil when she stridently criticized the former governor's pipeline plan as a handout to ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips -- but she must gain the cooperation of those companies, which have development rights to much of the North Slope, in order to make the pipeline operational. Meanwhile, BP and Conoco have announced plans to move forward with their own separate pipeline. Realistically, only one pipeline will be built; whatever form that will take, there will assuredly be much political and regulatory wrangling to come.
See also, in Grist:

Monday, August 11, 2008

Viva la Causa! Sponsorship


Viva la Causa! Sponsorship

In Fall 2008, the Southern Poverty Law Center will release a new Teaching Tolerance documentary film, Viva la Causa! free to classrooms across the country. The film is about one of the seminal events in the march for human rights — the grape strike and boycott led by César Chávez and Dolores Huerta — and will highlight the parallels between the farmworkers' and civil rights movements.

This film could not be timelier. Racist rhetoric is polluting the immigration debate, immigrant workers are being abused in the fields, anti-Latino hate crimes are on the rise, and Latino children are being demonized in our schools.

This new Teaching Tolerance film kit will inspire children for years to come, and teach them that there are non-violent ways to make positive social change.

Sponsor our new documentary Viva la Causa and support our other work for justice and tolerance. Sponsors donating $100 or more will be listed in the credits of the classroom documentary and receive an advance copy of the DVD. Deadline for sponsors is Aug. 15, 2008.
For ways to donate, visit the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Image: Grape strike leader César Chávez talks to grape workers who were exploited for their cheap labor in the 1960s.

Give blood!

Just received this notice!

We need more donors or we will not have enough blood for Kentucky hospitals!

This is a particularly good time to be a blood donor. Everyone who donates will be eligible for the 2009 Toyota Camry LE that we are giving away to celebrate our 40th anniversary (everyone who donates between 7/21 and 9/21 who is at least 18-years-old will be eligible). The winner will be announced at the UK-Western football game at Commonwealth Stadium on Sept. 27. Details are on our website: www.kybloodcenter.org The first local drive is August 14 from Noon to 7:00pm at the Madison County Public Library at 507 W. Main in Richmond.


Visit https:/www.kybloodcenter.org for a full list of mobile drives in Madison County and to schedule a donation time at a drive. You could win a Camry. You will definitely save lives! Please share the gift of life!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Kentuckians for the Commonwealth: An August Update

It's been a month since my last posting, an interruption caused in part by the crash of my laptop and by a visit to Ranquitte, Haiti. Now that I'm back, I promise to be more faithful in posting news and comments.

Of real interest are the following announcements sent out from Kentuckians for the Commonwealth (KFTC) by Carissa Lenfert:


AUGUST 8 -- KFTC Chapter Voter Empowerment Workgroup Meeting on August 8 at 2 p.m. Folks interested in helping further plan and carryout this year's voter empowerment efforts are meeting again at the KFTC office in Berea (behind the MACED building on Chestnut). All are welcome to participate.


AUGUST 14 -- The Madison County KFTC chapter's energy workteam will meet next Thursday, August 14th, at 6:30 p.m. in the community meeting room of the new Madison County Library in Berea. Members will continue their discussion about how to work locally and beyond regarding energy related issues.


AUGUST 19 - The City Council will be holding a work session to discuss the proposed Berea utility rate increase. This important public discussion will be around 5 p.m. (stay tuned for a specific time) on the 19th in the Community Room of Berea City Hall. At 6:30 the City Council will hold their regular meeting where a vote on the utility issue is possible. Please plan to attend if possible to demonstrate the communities continued interest in energy and conservation.


AUGUST 25th -- The Madison County Chapter will hold its annual meeting on Monday, August 25th at the Child Development Lab on Jefferson St. in Berea. The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. (a half hour earlier than normal). At the annual meeting members have the opportunity to elect members to fill chapter leadership positions, make suggestions for KFTC's issue platform, nominate members to serve on KFTC's statewide committees, and decide whether or not to remain a KFTC Chapter. Documents to help guide these decisions can be found on on our website at http://www.kftc.org/our-work/chapters/annual-chapter-meeting-materials. Also, below are notes from the previous chapter meeting on July 28.

Please contact me with any questions or for additional information.

Carissa Lenfert
Madison County Chapter Organizer
Kentuckians for the Commonwealth
859-986-1277, Ext. 224
Carissa@kftc.org


Notes from Madison County KFTC Chapter MeetingMonday, July 28, 20081.


  • We discussed plans for Fall voter outreach activities in Madison County.

  • The voter workgroup laid out their proposal for the fall which included:

  • Tabling at Kroger/Big Lots in Richmond and Walmart/Sav a lot in Berea

  • Tabling at Spoonbread Festival and KY Artist Guild Fall Fair

  • Door-knock two days in the fall

  • A sign-up sheet was passed around for folks to volunteer for these activities

  • Folks were also interested in trying to register students at Berea College and EKU as well as reaching out to the Latino population.

  • Folks were encouraged to attend the voter empowerment training in Louisville August 1st and there was also interest in holding a similar training locally for folks who can not attend the Louisville training.

  • The voter workgroup will meet again on Friday, August 8th at 2 p.m. at the KFTC office in Berea - all are welcome to attend!2. We heard an update on the Berea Utility Proposed Rate Change

  • Steve Boyce and Bill Stolte provided an update about the Berea City Council's proposed utility rate change. The Berea city council is proposing to increase rates for city-owned electric, water and sewer. At issue is the extent to which the particular rate changes recommended by the Prime Group, a consulting firm hired by the city, reflect the values being singled out by KFTC and its allies: promoting and rewarding the conservation of water and electricity; encouraging the emergence of renewable energy; shielding all rate payers, especially low-income people, from unnecessarily high utility bills by promoting energy efficiency and addressing the root causes of waste.

  • The City Council has made modifications to the original proposal that KFTC member believe move it in the right direction. They are now proposing to only increase the "base" rate (flat fee that all customers pay regardless of use) to $9 (was originally proposed at $10). In addition, the city council is now proposing that all revenue adjustments in the future only address the usage rate and not the base rate - which could attempt to promote conservation in the future.

  • Folks agreed that these were all movements in the right direction and that they likely would not have been made without the efforts of KFTC members and other allies working on this issue!

  • Folks anticipated that the City Council members will discuss the utility rate change at an upcoming work session and possibly vote at their August 19th meeting. Folks liked the idea of attending those meetings to demonstrate their continued interest in this issue. Stay tuned for more information about those as the dates get closer.

  • It was also agreed that the energy work-team will meet again in August to continue developing plans for additional work around energy related issues. Stay tuned for a meeting date and time.3.

  • We discussed plans for fall fundraising and membership recruitment.

  • Folks discussed again the Each One Reach One campaign, which asks KFTC members to each recruit at least one new member. Almost everyone present signed up to participate in Each One Reach One.

  • We reviewed our commitment towards fundraising as a chapter and discussed ideas for fall chapter fundraising efforts.

  • People liked the idea of doing another fall friendraiser. Some also liked the idea of having an issue meeting that raises money.

  • It was announced that an anonymous donor has committed to donating $2,000 as a challenge grant if the chapter can set a fundraising goal and meet that goal. Folks discussed various ideas surrounding the challenge grant including setting a fundraising goal around the fall friendraiser.

  • We decided to convene a small workgroup to plan through the various ideas and activities. This group will meet at some point in August. Stay tuned for information about a date and time.

  • If you are interested in participating in this planning, please contact Carissa Lenfert at Carissa@kftc.org or 986-1277 Ext. 224.4.

  • We made plans for the August Chapter Annual Meeting.

  • Folks reviewed the agenda from last year's annual meeting. We agreed that the format of having a business meeting from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and then inviting a guest speaker from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. works well. People liked the idea of focusing on a local public official. Possible guest speakers for this year's annual meeting included: The Mayor of Berea, Mayor of Richmond, Berea City Manager, Berea City Council (chairman of the finance committee), and Madison County Fiscal Court Judge Executive.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

A rare-bird reality show

This morning's Lexington Herald-Leader featured "A rare-bird reality show" (D2), an article alerting readers to a "Web Cam Trained on Osprey Family." Several weeks ago I had an opportunity to watch an osprey swoop down on a lake at the Charlie Elliott Wildlife Center in Georgia and was momentarily stunned to see the catch. Now I know that perhaps I had seen an osprey hunting for food for his or her chicks. If you'd like to see the live web cam and a host of photos of such parenting by a mom and dad osprey, visit Kentucky Environmental Education Projects. It's well worth the visit!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Introducing Grist

This morning I'm adding Grist: Environmental News and Commentary to our list of online organizations worthy of seriouis reading and podcast listening. A wonderfully robust resource, Grist provides daily reports and analyses on hundred of environmental topics. Here, for example, I mention four in today's list:

Finding Grist's list of 15 Green Religious Leaders, I was delighted to see that Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the Rev. Sally Bingham, Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, Richard Cizik, Pope Benedict XVI, and Norman Habel (once my seminary professor!), among others were recognized as distinct and clear Christian voices. There are many more listed as "runners-up," including Allen Johnson, whose work is close to home:

As the head of Christians for the Mountains, Allen Johnson rallies Christians against mountaintop-removal mining in the Appalachian Mountains. Johnson says his
religious and environmental epiphany
occurred while volunteering in Haiti in the early 1990s, and led him to quit his job to attend seminary. "We believe that God made this planet, that God loves the earth, God loves creation, God loves humanity, and that even though God gives us freedom to spin our destiny, God doesn't want it to be trashed," says Johnson.

A daily dose of Grist is good for the soul, the body, and the earth; it goes a long way! Take a read or plug in your iPod bud and listen. You'll find it educational and activating!



Monday, June 9, 2008

Obtaining Information about the Efficiency and Pollution Rating of Vehicles

Now that the national average of gasoline per gallon is over $4.00, many are looking for accurate data as they think and pray through the selection of their next vehicle. If you would like information on the fuel economy and air pollution ratings of specific vehicles, go to http://www.fueleconomy.gov/.

Tuesday, June 10: Prevent War with Iran: National Call-in Day

The Fellowship of Reconcilliation (FOR) posts this announcement:

Prevent War with Iran: June 10 National Call In Day


Current U.S. policies regarding Iran are not working. Threats of military attacks and regime change, while refusing to talk with Iran until they stop enriching uranium, has only heightened tensions. Please join the Fellowship of Reconciliation this coming Tuesday by participating in the Campaign for a New American Policy on Iran. Call your Congressional Representatives on June 10th: 1-800-788-9372

  • Tell them to work for direct and comprehensive talks without preconditions between the U.S. and Iran.
  • The U.S. and Iran share common interests in a stable Iraq, Middle East and Afghanistan.
  • The U.S. pursued negotiations with North Korea and Libya - it's time to talk with Iran.

I will be making my call about 9:00 a.m. on Tuesday. Please join me by making your call on Tuesday, June 10th.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Friday, June 6, 2008

KFTC and Potluck on Friday, June 13

Jo Wernegreen announces the following:

Friday, June 13th at 6:30 p.m.:

Join us for a celebration and potluck dinner at the First United Methodist Church in Richmond. We’ll be honoring individuals who demonstrated leadership and courage in the 2008 General Assembly, including Kentuckians for the Commonwealth (KFTC) members and several local legislators. Everyone is welcome, including children. The event is free and open to all. Bring friends! Hope to see you on the 13th.

Under Local Efforts, I've added a link to KFTC; this organization is about people working together to correct things that are wrong, correct injustices and make a better world. It’s about people finding their own voice. One nice thing about KFTC is that it does have a broad platform. You get to exchange those ideas and those passions. When you get involved there’s such a diversity of issues and concerns- it changes people. (Holding her cup of coffee (or tea?) is Janet Tucker, Immediate Past Chair.)

Janet, Jo, and I urge you to come to the celebration and potluck dinner!

Monday, June 2, 2008

111 Nations, But Not US, Adopt Cluster Bomb Treaty

When over in Ireland two weeks ago, as we drove around Dublin and elsewhere I saw many posters and billboards pleading for passage of a treaty that would eliminate the manufacture and use of cluster bombs. This morning I read the AP announcement that 111 nations, but not the United States, have signed a treaty to "outlaw all current designs of cluster munitions and require destruction of stockpiles within eight years." The article points out that

The United States and other leading cluster bomb makers - Russia, China, Israel, India and Pakistan - boycotted the talks, emphasized they would not sign the treaty and publicly shrugged off its value. All defended the overriding military value of cluster bombs, which carpet a battlefield with dozens to hundreds of explosions.

But treaty backers - who long have sought a ban because cluster bombs leave behind "duds" that later maim or kill civilians - insisted they had made it too politically painful for any country to use the weapons again.


Let's hope so!


Last night on C-SPAN's Q & A, I listened to Brian Lamb interview Colman McCarthy, Founder & Director of the Center for Teaching Peace (4501 Vn Ness St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20016). Having read McCarthy's I’d Rather Teach Peace (2002) earlier this year, I found the interview stunningly provocative and wonderfully informative. If you wish to see, read, or listen to the interview, it's available in the these formats: online video, transcript, DVD, and soon by podcast.

Isamuch as several of us are interested in doing peace studies this fall and are looking for some kind of syllabus and/or foundational text, we should take a look at Solutions to Violence, an eight session class developed by Colman McCarthy. It uses classics in peace and justice literature to teach peacemaking. This course may well suit our needs.

Monday, May 26, 2008

This Week's Prayer

A Prayer for the Bombed Out, Burned Out, Driven Out:



Lord God, we pray for all the bombed out, burned out, driven out, relocated, wondering , wandering, unwilling pilgrims in this world. Forgive us for our part in uprooting them. Restore their lives, make us partners with in the rebuilding of their lives. We pray in the name of the Son of Man, who had no place to lay His head.

(Arnold Kenseth and Richard Unsworth in Prayers for Worship Leaders)

Back from Ireland and Scotland

As you can see from this morning's posting elsewhere, I'm back from our nearly two-week trip to Ireland and Scotland, a pilgrimage that ended up in Iona, one of the world's "thin places," especially notable for its dedication to peace, the extending of love to everyone. Later this week, I'll share with you much of what we experienced so that you too may come to know the witness of Celtic-minded Christians who commit their lives to reconcilliation, justice, environmental protection, and peace.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Away in Ireland and Scotland

It's time for my wife and I, along with two other couples, to visit one of God's "thin places"; this time I'm off to the Isle of Iona by way of Ireland. and the west coast of Scotland. We'' be gone for almost two weeks, returning around the 23rd of May. In the meantime, do your best to promote peaceful Christianity, share your food/money with the hungry, walk lightly upon God's earth, and do what you can to take the sting, bites, and wounds out of injustice. Prayer s often a good first (and second and third and fourth and so on) step. And, oh yes, I will able to read email while away; do write!

Shane Claiborne, Jesus for President

Yesterday the mail brought me Shane Claiborne's Jesus for President. I first heard of Claiborne while listening to a recent interview by Krista Tippett on Speaking of Faith. It was a passionate discussion about what's unfolding in public and in private conversations among Evangelical leaders and communities. Should Christians be involved in politics and if so, how? What has gone wrong, and what has been learned from the Moral Majority up until now. In this live public conversation, Krista probes these ideas with three formative Evangelicals: Chuck Colson (a hero in the faith for my father who was a prison chaplain), Greg Boyd, and Shane Claiborne.

Colson is the founder of Prison Fellowship and author of God & Government; Boyd is a former atheist who surrendered his life to Christ in 1974, a graduate of Yale Divinity School and Princeton Theological Seminary, Professor of Theology for 16 years at Bethel University. founder and senior pastor of Woodland Hills Church, an evangelical megachurch in St. Paul, MN, and author of The Myth of a Christian Nation.

After hearing the interview, I ordered Claiborne's Jesus for President.

Visit Claiborne's homepage to take note how a radical disciple of Christ is also an intelligent and articulate spokesman for non-violent Christianity. When I get back from Ireland, I'll be glad to loan Jesus for President to any of my central-Kentucky and Georgia friends. It's a great read!

By the way, in the decades ahead, God willing, you'll be hearing much more from and about Shane Claiborne.

The invisible wounds of war

A Benedictine friend sends this report by Greg Dobbs, published yesterday in the Rocky Mountain News:

It is a crude way to put it, but "they are dropping like flies." That's how one soldier I spoke with characterized the spike in suicides among servicemen coming home these days from war. With bodies intact, but minds wounded - sometimes mortally.

It's not a new phenomenon - mental trauma is a normal reaction to the abnormal horror of war. Back in the Civil War it was called "soldier's heart." In World War I, it was known as shell shock. In World War II, battle fatigue. After Vietnam, it was called Post Vietnam Syndrome. Nowadays it has a formal name: post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

But it is an invisible wound, and soldiers with injured minds often haven't gotten the treatment they needed. Some have been discouraged from even seeking treatment because of the ghost called "stigma." Some have only been told to "suck it up," get back out there and fight! Which has cost our armed forces dearly.

According to a RAND Corp. report last month, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have wounded the minds of 300,000 Americans. That's because trauma is cumulative: some servicemen have been back to the battlefield as many as four times, and particularly in Iraq, they live with fear 24 hours a day because, unlike most previous wars, there is no "rear" to the front line - they are always surrounded; there is no safe haven.

That is a recipe for wartime PTSD. And for some, a prescription for suicide.

According to the military's own numbers, suicides were up 20 percent last year over the year before, with six times as many suicide attempts as there were the year before the war began. In the Veterans Administration it's even worse. E-mails, recently exposed in a federal court case, showed an average of 18 suicides a day among vets, and twice as many attempts, about a thousand a month.

In our HDNet documentary we interviewed victims of PTSD. One young infantryman who went to Iraq from Fort Carson, having seen friends blown up and himself crushed by "survivor's guilt," came home diagnosed with PTSD. But when I asked him to describe his treatment, he laughed and said, "Didn't exist." Even when he got "mental health" appointments, his line commanders made him work so he'd miss them. Eventually, he took a kitchen knife and cut his wrists. He was saved, but six hours after being released from the psych ward, he was sent back to his unit to train for redeployment to Iraq.

A Marine out of Camp Pendleton told us he came back with PTSD and was put on overnight guard duty - armed. He called his mother one night with a gun in his mouth, telling her he had killed so many innocent Iraqis, he didn't deserve to live. She kept him on the phone, praying neither battery would die, as she drove six hours to save him.

Our third interview was with the Massachusetts parents of a Marine reservist. Their son had come home and started drinking heavily - a symptom of PTSD - so they committed him to a VA hospital. But the VA wouldn't treat his PTSD until he stayed sober - like a doctor refusing to treat your head cold until you stop sneezing. Three weeks after his release, he hanged himself with a garden hose slung over a beam in his parents' basement.

What these guys - and many others - had in common was, they got wounded in the line of duty, but didn't get the treatment they deserved. In the active military the barriers were bureaucracy, stigma and the culture of courage. In the VA it was just a systemic nightmare of red tape, short staffing, long forms and long waits - obstacles that are hard enough to navigate if you're not disturbed, virtually impossible if you are.

What's the impact of these avoidable inefficiencies? More trauma - which means more PTSD, and more suicide. The Army itself warned a couple of months ago that as the number of troops in Iraq was surging, the number of mental-health providers was declining. That does not bode well for the future.

Nor does the Pentagon's take on PTSD and suicide. The top Pentagon psychiatrist told me that, most of the time, the crisis that leads to suicides is the breakup of relationships. And when it's not about relationships, it's about legal or financial problems. When I told the Massachusetts Marine reservist's parents about this, they used a word I wasn't able to put to put on television.

It's fair to say that at least a few positive changes are taking root. The new commanding general at Fort Carson, who lost one of his own sons to suicide and another to combat, is teaching troops and commanders that asking for help is a sign of strength, not weakness. Several state National Guard units have pilot programs for "reintegration." They invite Guardsmen returned from war and their families to come for counseling and bonding 30, 60 and 90 days after returning home.

Some who come back from war have been driven over the edge not just by combat, but by their experiences when they got home. They are casualties just like casualties on the battlefield. The difference is, if we ever build a Vietnam-type wall to honor the victims of Iraq and Afghanistan, their names won't be on it.

Former Rocky Mountain News media critic Greg Dobbs reports for a documentary program World Report on HDNet Television.

© Rocky Mountain News

A Letter from Benjamin Kleppinger

Ben Kleppinger, editor of EKU's Eastern Progress and member of First United Methodist Church, Richmond, Kentucky, is being sponsored by Mission Discovery for intense summer work. Ben sends Peaceful Christians the following email. Do all you can to support him!

It’s about two and a half weeks until I leave, and I have a few updates for everyone.

I will be flying from Nashville, Tn., to McAllen, Tx., on May 27. I’ll be in the Rio Grande Valley, commuting each day into Mexico for my video work until June 11. On June 11 we will be flying to Denver and driving to South Dakota, where Michael Kneff and I will run the project there, which I’m told involves home repair and construction ona Native American reservation. On June 22 we will return to the Rio Grande Valley to do whatever we are needed for. We will be in the Rio Grande Valley until July 5, when I return to Nashville. I’m then homefor a short time, until I leave on July 16 for Guatemala. I’ll be in Guatemala working on that project until August
4.

Plane tickets are remarkably cheap right now, which is excellent news for me, because rather than needing well over $2,000 for plane tickets, it looks like I’ll only need about $1,100. As of right now you guys have supported me financially in the amount of $1,050, which is pretty amazing. This means my plane tickets are covered, which leaves only my traveling expenses (the last two summers I’ve made it by on $200ish) and my bills here at home while I’m gone (app. $900). As always, you guys are awesome at supporting me. Thanks to everyone!

I will be posting photo updates on my photo blog: benkleppinger.blogspot.com .
Whenever it’s possible. I’m thinking about creating a CD of the best photos I take at the end of the summer for anyone who wants one. Let me know if you’d be interested in this, and I can try to make it happen. Thanks for supporting me, and helping people all over the place feel the welcoming warmth of God’s unconditional love.

If you want to help me out, you can send whatever amount you would like to:


Ben Kleppinger
1042 Burnell Dr.
Berea, KY 40403

If you would like your donation to be tax-deductable, mark it "for Ben Kleppinger's Mission Trip" and send it to:

Richmond First United Methodist Church
P.O. Box 27
Richmond, KY 40476

Ben

Ben Kleppinger
Eastern Progress Editor (859) 200-7266
ben.kleppinger@gmail.com
benjamin_klepping@eku.edu

Thursday, May 8, 2008

One morning last month I went to the Charlie Elliott Wildlife Center in Georgia, about fifteen miles from our lakehouse, for a "Spring Migratory Birk Walk" with Tim Keyes (on the right) as our ornithologist. It was just great; we saw or heard sixty-six different kinds of birds, including a summer tanager, a kingfisher, and an osprey catching a braem on the wing. If that weren't enough, I got to meet Rusty Pritchard (on the left), the editor of Creation Care: A Christian Environmental Quartery, to which I have subscribed for several years. The two boy's are Rusty's kids: Angus and Euan. In the Spring 2006 issue, Tim has written "It's a Frog's Life: The songs of frogs are an early promise of spring." Couldn't have prayed for a nicer day! I've placed a link to Creation Care, along with its sponsoring organizaiton, the Evangelical Environmental Network.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Poverty in Haiti

As some of you may know, a group of us scheduled to go to Haiti last month had to cancel our trip because the civil unrest in Port au Prince and elsewhere made it too dangerous to travel. Even the pilots flying the single-engine planes for Missionary Air Flights were unable to take off and land for fear of being targeted by some desperate Haitians whose hunger had driven them to violent protests. This week we received news that the airflight restrictions are now being listed and a group of us, two pastors, two physicians, and I--under the planned supervision of Christian Flights International (CFI)--plan to spend a week in Haiti at the end of July. While in Ranquitte, Haiti, we'll be building the Haitian version of a Habitat Home. To give yourself some sense of the grinding poverty in Haiti, take a look at Poverty in Haiti, a slideshow published by The New York Times. The photograph above shows Pastor Ron Luckey and Claymon, a Haitian master-mason, mixing up "mud" (sand, concrete, and water) for the morter used to hold together the home-made concrete blocks for a small four-room home constructed for a grateful Haitian family who lived for decades in a 10' x 14' mud-wattle home with a dirt floor and no furniture.

Might you want to help build a home for "the poorest of the poor"? If so, contact Richmond's CFI supporter Harry Smiley; he'll tell you how you can help.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

What Happens When Christians Work Together for Justice

The following article by Jim Niemi was published in the Lexington Herald-Leader on April 8, 2008, the morning after an April 7 meeting of BUILD, associated with the Direct Action and Research Training Center. Several Christians from Richmond--Pastors Bob Jones and Robert Blythe among them--attended the meeting! Andy Harnack's pastor at Faith Lutheran Church is co-chair of the organization.

COALITION WORKS TO PROVIDE FOR NEEDY: HOUSING, HEALTH CARE ARE PRIORITIES

An overflow crowd of more than 1,000 left Consolidated Baptist Church with smiles on their faces Monday night after city officials and health care providers committed to helping thousands of low-income residents find affordable housing and medical services.

An initiative of churches from across Lexington called BUILD, or Building a United Interfaith Lexington through Direct Action, brought worshippers together to seek financial aid for people who can't find or afford a safe place to live or pay for health care.

Mayor Jim Newberry told the audience that his office would draft an ordinance to help low-income home owners and renters, including those in mobile home parks, with relocation assistance and submit it to the Urban County Council. Included as part of the city's effort will be an affordable-housing trust fund.

"The demand for affordable housing in Lexington is huge," said the Rev. Adam Jones, pastor of Open Door Church. According to a 2007 government study, at least 6,691 households pay more than 50 percent of their income for rent. In addition, 20,000 households pay more than 30 percent, and Jones noted that not all of the housing is up to standards.

Funding for the trust would be left to the city. Other cities have programs in place, Jones said. "Louisville just enacted one."

Council members Jim Gray and Linda Gorton were there to support the proposal. As Newberry said, "If it isn't for council involvement, it does not happen."

Later in the meeting, prominent health care providers including St. Joseph Hospital and Central Baptist Hospital agreed to form a plan to cover health care costs for 2,000 uninsured adults each year over a three-year period beginning in 2009. Others signing on to the plan included Bluegrass Community Health Clinic, Mission Lexington and the Fayette County Health Department.

The Rev. Ron Luckey of Faith Lutheran Church said, "People think everybody has health care, but there's no continuity of care. People (without insurance) go to emergency rooms or urgent care centers with a specific problem, like a broken arm. But they are not given physical exams (to diagnose) other problems."

Affordable housing and health care were also BUILD initiatives in 2007, and they produced results, especially in health care, Luckey said. The hiring of an additional doctor at the county health department allowed 700 more appointments to be scheduled each month.

Dr. Rice Leach of the county health department told the audience that the power generated by large numbers of energized, concerned people would propel this year's recommendation even though it had been tackled before.

He recalled that when he was providing health care to Native Americans early in his career, there was a saying: "Ain't no such thing as your side of the canoe leaking.

"This time, we're going to have a bigger canoe."