We here in America are lucky. But maybe not (in my opinion) for some of the reasons usually given.
From earliest times, America was to be a haven and refuge, a new and better society. One of the earliest colonies in what became the United States, that in Plymouth (Massachusetts), established in 1620, was founded by members of the Puritan sect who left England to escape persecution-- and, incidentally, once in the New World set up a theocracy which was anything but religiously tolerant. (Just as a couple of examples, Roger Williams was expelled from Plymouth for having and spreading ideas that the government did not like. Anne Hutchinson was expelled because she and her preaching were deemed unorthodox.)
For much of America's history, there was a sense--quite often expressed--that this new land was special. It was given to the newer arrivals to tame the wilderness, to civilize the "savages." America was seen as "the new Eden," a chance for mankind to make a new start with divine blessing, free of many of the Old World's problems such as religious intolerance, bad governance, and so forth. Many immigrants came to the United States also to make a fresh start in their personal lives, sometimes even to shed their identities and take on a new one. (A bit like Australia, some early arrivals on the shores of America were criminals who had been sentenced to "transportation" and who sometimes made a fresh start in America and even became materially very successful.) It was seen as a matter of divine dispensation: God was giving Mankind a second chance.
But this has to be viewed, today, as myth-making, so that's not what I meant in the opening sentence. I mean we have been spared much of the human misery like, for example, the starvation and homelessness that is going on in Somalia. We have had our Civil War and it cost a shocking number of lives, but many of the earth's peoples have endured decades of civil warfare that has created far more widespread suffering.
Look at the poor people of Vietnam, who not only suffered killing of their civilian population and destruction of their homes and crops and livestock during the Vietnam War; but are still suffering today in the form of birth defects as the result of the defoliant Agent Orange that was sprayed on their land during that war. Not to mention that American soldiers during Asian wars--in Vienam just as earlier in Korea--left behind "war babies" who do not find social acceptance in those countries because of their mixed race and have to live their lives with that stigma.
India, despite astonishing progress, still has shocking poverty among literally millions of its people. China, despite its economic miracle and the prosperity of its urban population, still has much true poverty among its rural population.
I don't wish to make our Civil War or the War of 1812 or the French and Indian War mere footnotes; but in more modern times America has not suffered any war on its own soil. We have poverty and we have problems, but a majority of Americans since the Depression generation have not suffered in the manner that enormous segments of humanity have.
I am not a flag-waver at all, and I am the last one to take an America-can-do-no-wrong attitude. I just want to point out that we, compared to great masses of humanity, have been comfortable and secure, and spared a great deal; and we just don't know what the sad lot is of so many humans.
Copyright (c) 2011 by Richard Stein
Showing posts with label Massachusetts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Massachusetts. Show all posts
Friday, August 12, 2011
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Rev. Donald Wildmon and Same-Sex Marriage
I recently saw Donald Wildmon, head of the anti-gay American Family Association, being interviewed in a film. The film was several years old and Wildmon was predicting that God would punish Massachusetts for legalizing (and legitimizing) same-sex marriage.
Well, it has not happened--not yet, anyway. The Netherlands was the first country to marry same-sex couples, in 2001. By now there have been six other countries and three U.S. states, with same-sex marriage set to start in three more states. I haven't noticed any divinely-ordained catastrophes striking any of these states or countries.
If God wanted to punish the Netherlands, it ought to be pretty easy for Him to cook up a big storm that would cause the sea to breach the Netherlands' extensive system of dikes that keep the water out of many hundreds of square miles of below-sea-level land. Doubtless, if pressed, Rev. Wildmon could explain What God Is Waiting For. Guess that when you become a rev., there's some piece of paper you get that certifies, "Knows What God Is Thinking."
If Wildmon, and people of his ilk, believe what they say, when they say things like that, then they are big fools. I am not sure, though, that they do believe what they are themselves saying. If that's the case, then they are mendacious liars and downright evil, trying to manipulate their followers for their own advancement. (And how many of these preachers have made themselves rich? How many anti-gay preachers and politicians have been arrested in public washroooms or in some other way been shown to be big hypocrites? If you follow the news, I don't need to start enumerating them.)
For more on Wildmon, see Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Wildmon
Copyright © 2009 by Richard Stein
Well, it has not happened--not yet, anyway. The Netherlands was the first country to marry same-sex couples, in 2001. By now there have been six other countries and three U.S. states, with same-sex marriage set to start in three more states. I haven't noticed any divinely-ordained catastrophes striking any of these states or countries.
If God wanted to punish the Netherlands, it ought to be pretty easy for Him to cook up a big storm that would cause the sea to breach the Netherlands' extensive system of dikes that keep the water out of many hundreds of square miles of below-sea-level land. Doubtless, if pressed, Rev. Wildmon could explain What God Is Waiting For. Guess that when you become a rev., there's some piece of paper you get that certifies, "Knows What God Is Thinking."
If Wildmon, and people of his ilk, believe what they say, when they say things like that, then they are big fools. I am not sure, though, that they do believe what they are themselves saying. If that's the case, then they are mendacious liars and downright evil, trying to manipulate their followers for their own advancement. (And how many of these preachers have made themselves rich? How many anti-gay preachers and politicians have been arrested in public washroooms or in some other way been shown to be big hypocrites? If you follow the news, I don't need to start enumerating them.)
For more on Wildmon, see Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Wildmon
Copyright © 2009 by Richard Stein
Labels:
Donald Wildmon,
Massachusetts,
Netherlands,
same-sex marriage
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)