Saturday, July 11, 2009

Ethics Without Gods

by Frank R. Zindler The Probing Mind, February 1985

Whenever we transform the raw materials of existence in such a way that we leave them better than they were when we found them, we have been creative.

The task of moral education, then, is not to inculcate by rote great lists of do's and don'ts, but rather to help people to predict the consequences of actions being considered. What are the long-term as well as immediate rewards and draw-backs of the acts? Will an act increase or decrease one's chances of experiencing the hedonic triad of love, beauty, and creativity?

Thus it happens, when the Atheist approaches the problem of finding natural grounds for human morals and establishing a nonsuperstitious basis for behavior, that it appears as though nature has already solved the problem to a great extent. Indeed, it appears as though the problem of establishing a natural, humanistic basis for ethical behavior is not much of a problem at all. It is in our natures to desire love, to seek beauty, and to thrill at the act of creation. The labyrinthine complexity we see when we examine traditional moral codes does not arise of necessity: it is largely the result of vain attempts to accommodate human needs and nature to the whimsical totems and taboos of the demons and deities who emerged with us from our cave-dwellings at the end of the Paleolithic Era - and have haunted our houses ever since.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Keep It Simple





Cornel West argued that people’s commitment to their faith is best demonstrated in service to others:
“We don’t want to get too obscure in our discourse and not really just put on the table something that’s very simple: how deep is your love? What is the quality of your service to others? Are you concerned about those on the margins, or do we define a catastrophe only when it relates to investment bankers and Wall Street Bankers as opposed to the precious children in chocolate cities or white children in Appalachia or red children in Navajo reservations?... What costs are we willing to actually undergo? You can’t be a Christian if you’re not willing to pick up your cross and, in the end, be crucified on it. That’s the bottom line.”

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Gone

Men Prize Resource
Covet The Earth
Misguided Focus
What is One Man Worth
Control The Other
Darwin's Heel
Squander The Harvest
Your Children Will Feel
Illinois service agencies work to fight budget cuts

By Deanna Bellandi
Carmi Times
Wed Jun 24, 2009, 11:54 AM CDT

Unions and social service agencies worked behind the scenes Tuesday to try to save programs for needy Illinois residents as thousands of people flocked to the state Capitol to rally for a tax increase to avoid deep budget cuts.

The groups have been calling, faxing and meeting with lawmakers to persuade them to raise the state income tax instead of axing $9.2 billion in spending. Gov. Pat Quinn and others have warned the cuts will gut a host of social service programs for children, senior citizens, the poor and disabled.
''There's not a human service provider that has gone untouched in the state so to find a lawmaker who has not received a call from a human service provider from Cairo to Rockford would be unimaginable,'' said David Ormsby, the Illinois Alcoholism and Drug Dependence Association spokesman.
IADDA represents substance abuse and treatment providers who could see state funding cut by more than 70 percent unless more revenue is pumped into the state budget, Ormsby said.
Targeting rank-and-file lawmakers can help put pressure on legislative leaders who decide which measures come up for votes. Some lawmakers have complained they're being inundated and office staff can't get work done, said Anthony Cole, IADDA's board chairman.
Cole, who also is vice president of the Haymarket Center in Chicago, said he personally has met with more than a dozen lawmakers in Springfield to plead the case for more money in the budget.
''They're more than willing to meet. It's just a hard call for any politician to vote for a tax increase. But if not now, when?'' said Cole, whose substance abuse treatment center would have to turn away 5,000 people if its state funding is cut by $7 million.
Cole was back in the capital for Tuesday's rally and for lawmakers' first day of a special session to try to resolve the budget.
The rally drew more than 5,000 people, including Quinn, according to the Secretary of State's office. Police stopped letting people into the building at one point out of crowd safety concerns.
The state's largest employee union also is helping organize the fight against the threatened budget cuts.
The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees has put up a Web site, encouraged members to send e-mails to local lawmakers and helped organize rallies, said local union council spokesman Anders Lindall. Besides state employees, the union's members include 5,000 people who work for community nonprofit agencies that serve the developmentally disabled and have been notified about potentially drastic state funding cuts.
SEIU Healthcare Illinois also represents home care and child care workers who could be affected by cuts. The union is part of the Campaign for Illinois' Future that has demonstrated outside the offices of 25 state representatives who didn't support a tax increase.
At Tuesday's rally, Paula LeRoy of Paris, who works for Human Resources Center of Edgar and Clark Counties, said her organization gets multiple daily e-mails from state agencies warning of budget cuts and asking the organization to contact lawmakers. The Human Resources Center in turn tells clients to contact officials in Springfield.
''When is the fervor going to actually reach our elected officials and bring this to a close?'' asked LeRoy, sporting a ''Please Raise My Taxes'' button on her purse.
LeRoy said the people of Illinois ''aren't naive'' and understand something big must be done to deal with the state's historic deficit of at least $11.6 billion.
Quinn has said some budget cuts will be needed even with a tax increase. But lawmakers - both Republican and Democrat - have so far been uninterested in supporting one.
That's what Maria Pesqueira - president of Mujeres Latinas En Accion, an agency that offers domestic violence, sexual assault and other support programs - heard when she talked to state Rep. Michael J. Zalewski, a Democrat from Chicago's southwest side.
Zalewski told her taxpayers in his district didn't want to fork over more money in taxes. Pesqueira reminded him that some of those same taxpayers won't have services available if the state budget is whacked.
Pesqueira, who appeared earlier this week at a rally with Quinn to push for the tax increase, doesn't know if she persuaded Zalewski to change his mind.
''I got him to think about it,'' she said.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Thrive

Be Alive
Choose To Thrive / 2009

Escape


Great River Road