I have strong feelings about the situation in Gaza, though I know friends on either side will disagree. The attack by Hamas was horrendous, and Israel had every right to strike back. I find myself thinking of the Biblical injunction of an eye for an eye. That was not meant to approve escalating retaliation, but rather to put limits on vengeance. You are to hurt the other no more than you were hurt. The attack by Hamas killed about 1,200 Israeli civilians, including women and children. Israel's response has killed 20,000 Palestinians including many civilians and women and children. Basically, they have killed 16 Palestinians for each Israeli killed. That is disproportionate, and it is time for the bloodshed to end. I've had friends who call Israel's attack genocide, which t is not. To kill less than 1/2 of 1% of all Palestinians is unnecessary killing but not genocide. Genocide is destroying a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. While this is an overreaction, it is not nearly to that level. We first need a ceasefire, then we need people on both sides of the conflict to work to create a free and independent Palestinian state. Sadly, the problems are not on one side only, but rather there are people on both sides who don't want that to happen.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Israel & Hamas
There has been too much bloodshed on both sides in Israel and Gaza. I roundly condemn the attacks by Hamas which killed some 1,200 people and took hundreds of hostages. I understand the anger in Israel, but their assault on Gaza has killed far too many innocent civilians, totaling some 12,000 including Hamas fighters and civilians.
I had a friend who called Israel's assault genocide. Genocide is defined as "the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group." Killing 12,000 out of over 2 million people in Gaza is not genocide, though it certainly is unnecessary bloodshed.
I feel that Netanyahu has not made any serious attempt to reach a two nation solution. The attack by Hamas makes it clear that they don't want one either. Sane people on both sides need to end terror attacks and the expansion of illegal settlements on the West Bank and work toward establishing a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza.
It will not be easy, since there are those on both sides who see advantage to continuing the existing system with the hopes of pushing out the other side. Both sides have rights and there needs to be something that recognizes the rights of both groups and gives them a chance to have their own independent nation.
Diehard partisans on both sides will hate this and try to put all the blame on the other side. Both sides have contributed to the existing deadlock, and nether side can have everything they want. Neither side is without blame, regardless of what some might say. Only when we can accept both the wrongs and rights of both can peace come.
Friday, September 29, 2023
Covid Vaccine Skeptics
I know a few people who are Covid vaccine skeptics, including at least one who is rabidly anti-vaccine.
Looking at the numbers, in the US there have been 1,144,000 Covid deaths. There were about 5,700 people who died after receiving Covid vaccinations, though the CDC says few if any of those deaths were attributable to the vaccine.
More than 330, 000,000 vaccine doses were administered. Even if all 5,700 actually were from the vaccine, that is just under 2/1000 of 1 percent, compared to a death rate from Covid of just under 2% so Covid is at least 1000 times more deadly than the vaccine, even taking the worst possible spin on it.
And in truth Covid is far more deadly, since most of those 5,700 were NOT due to the vaccine.
Wednesday, May 24, 2023
All religion is bad?
Occasionally, I see posts which ascribe the worst of some religion to all religion. If you are atheist, I have no issue and no intention of changing your beliefs. I come from a fairly liberal religious background and have become even more liberal as I've aged. I don't wish to impose my religious beliefs on any other person, and resent have others try to impose their beliefs on me.
At the same time, I resent having anti-theists condemn all religious belief. I am not of the ilk of the rigid fundamentalists, and I understand people have done and still do horrible things in the name of religion. I can condemn the ills of the over zealous without blaming all religion for that zealotry. Many believers are not intolerant, yet we face intolerance from both the anti-theists and the rigid fundamentalists.
Frankly I have unfollowed and unfriended people and groups who slam all religion and feel no hesitation about doing it again. It is one thing to have a civil discussion about the wrongs done by the uber-zealous, and it is something else to insult and denigrate what you disagree with.
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
The Challenge of Writing
It’s funny. I started by writing a short one-act play. I submitted it to a local one-act production at a community theatre, and it was accepted and performed. I wrote a second and it was also chosen and done. There were not thousands of entries, but at the least, mine were top 5% to 10% of the submissions. I wrote a third, which I submitted to a professional equity theatre company, which meant the competition was stiffer. It was also selected and performed.
All that gave me confidence in my work, so when I wrote my first screenplay, I felt sure it would do well. It was a wholly different level of competition, and my work didn’t place at all. I kept working and kept writing and revised my work to make it stronger. Then I saw a contest for either female writers or female protagonists. Since I had works with female protagonists, I submitted two pieces to it.
They had 25 ‘official selections’ which I take to be effectively finalists. Both of my pieces were among those 25 chosen. I got traction with some other competitions as well. At this point, I’ve had 19 contest placements with ten different works. I have failed to place in the Nicholl or Austin, which are the biggies, but have placed in some second tier, including some semifinals.
I’ve also written some short stories, which I posted to an unpaid site. The readers can rate the stories, and 80% of my stories rate 4.5 or better on a 5 point scale. Even there, I fall short of the top, since 4.81 is my highest rating and some place 4.9 or better. I can tell my work is decent, just nothing exceptional. It is all frustrating, even though I have some success at what I’ve done.
I write because I have stories to tell, but make no money at it. In one sense, money is a secondary consideration, but there is a satisfaction in feeling that my work is good enough for someone to pay for it. Beyond that, I would like to see something I wrote be made into a movie. I’m working and promoting, just without reaching that last step.
Wednesday, March 8, 2023
Takers
The common thread among right wing folks is that poor people are takers. These takers want others to give them things without them having to work for it. To be fair, there are some people like that. They will use others, taking as much as they can get from them. We have all met those people – hell, we may even be related to some of them.
The fact that we liberals want to help people in need, doesn’t mean that we don’t realize that fact. The difference is that we know that many poor people work their asses off, just trying to stay afloat. Most of them are happy to work, as long as their work is appreciated and as long as they can make enough to get by.
How do we help the deserving needy without being used by the true takers?
There are several things we can do. First, we need to make sure that anyone who is willing to work has access to a job. Second, we need to make sure that the job they get will pay their basic expenses – housing, food, utilities, clothing, transportation, and medical care. Third, we need to make sure that they have access to affordable medical care and medications. If people lack the skills necessary for available jobs, we need good job training. We need government programs to provide the above.
We also have to deal with those who cannot work, children, the disabled, and such. Welfare programs, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid can deal with those. For those who have been said to be at the dawn and dusk of life, we need to provide for them.
We need good affordable education for all. That includes normal public education, but should also include college education at community colleges and state universities, as well as tech training for other jobs. We should not have people undergoing a lifetime of debt for a college education. If someone wants to go to expensive private colleges, they can figure that out for themselves.
What about those who truly are takers, who only want a handout? Honestly, I’m not too concerned about them. There are homeless shelters and soup kitchens so they need not go completely without, but we need not provide much for those.
I’ve heard people ask why those who are working should have to pay for those who don’t. In a sense, they shouldn’t, but we have people who are extremely wealthy, who have more wealth than they truly earned by their labor. Those people should be taxed to pay for the kinds of programs I suggest. Instead, we have cut taxes on the very wealthy, then cut programs to help the needy. In my view, that is short sighted and bad for the country.
I can already hear people screaming about socialism, and frankly I refuse to be intimidated by that word. For the last hundred years or so, every program designed to help the less well off has been decried as socialism by some people. We are supposed to be one nation, and we need to make sure the whole nation is taken care of.
We should not have people dying of preventable diseases. We should not have people dying because they can’t afford their medications. We should not have people going without because either they can’t find work or because their job doesn’t pay enough to cover basic expenses.
I’ve heard the chorus of folks who say that if someone doesn’t have a job that pays enough, they should get another job. That’s easy to say when you have never gone without. When you struggle to get from paycheck to paycheck and don’t have the skills for a better paying job, then you’re in an impossible situation.
On the contrary, I would argue that if an employer can’t pay a living wage, they should not be in business. Instead we have top executives making millions a year in salary and benefits, while the bulk of their workforce barely scrapes by. That, to me is unacceptable, and as a society, we should not accept that.
In short, those who can work should be given a chance to work, and should make enough to get by when they work. Those unable to work should be taken care of. Those who are able but unwilling can get by on whatever someone is willing to give them. If they want more, let them work.