Tuesday, April 27, 2021

15 Most Personal Songs (a musical apologetic) -- #7 Lenny Kravitz, "What Did I Do With My Life:

 As a child of the 70s and 80s, I didn't have the luxury of computer games and social media to shape my thoughts. Instead, a lot of it came from the music I listened to. 

These are the top fifteen songs that helped to make me who I am and help keep me on track as a genuine person in this human experience. #STformativesongs

#7 - "What Did I Do With My Life" by Lenny Kravitz

I discovered this song shortly before my MeMe (grandmother) died. I had been listening to the album and really enjoying it's introspective, almost melancholy tone, and when I spoke at MeMe's funeral, this song was the one I quoted in its entirity. I don't know how she would have answered the question, but I know how I answered it having witnessed her life. A very solid and loud "YES!" I only hope to live my life in such a way that at my funeral (and every day) someone would feel compelled to answer the same on my behalf. 

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Did I work on the battlefield?

Did I do what I thought was right?

Did I do all that I could do?

Did I put up a good fight?


Did I love all that I should?

To everyone in my sight?

What did I do with my life?


Did I exercise giving & forgiveness with all my might?

Did I honor my freedom & did I live in the light?

Did I cherish my moments?

Did I take a good enough bite?

What did I do with my life?


You can live any way you wanna

All you have to do is dance

Achieve anything you thought of

You just have to take the chance

You can fall in love with your life

'Cause that truly is romance

What did I do with my life?


Did I learn what I came to learn?

Did I listen with my heart?

Did I do what I came to do?

And how did I play the part?

Did I see all the beauty?

Because living is an art

What did I do with my life?


You can live any way you wanna

All you have to do is dance

Achieve anything you thought of

You just have to take the chance


Learn to love your life

'Cause that truly is romance

Oh what did I do with my life?

What did I do?

Say it again

What did I do with my life?

Oh what did I do?

What did I do?

With my life

What did I do?

What did I do?



Friday, April 23, 2021

The Church of the Misfit Toys

People ask me about where I've been going to church during the pandemic. I'm always happy to tell them about The Catch. I've long been a reader of John Fischer and when he started the catch as a ministry to real people out in the real world, I wanted to give it a shot. 

It's no shock to anyone who knows me that I used to love my former physical church for it's "Church of the Misfit Toys" model of outreach. Then that changed and we became much more "modern contemporary" (in structure, not just overly repetitive music) and "first Baptist-ish" in terms of merely paying lip service to welcoming the least of these and reaching out to those who don't look and act like typical modern Christians. Then again, it's tough to make budget when the bulk of the church members aren't in positions of power or money in the community, so it's only normal that the most successful churches cater to the "norms and muggles" so to speak. 

When John and the ministry team at The Catch put together this statement, I resonated with it on pretty much all cylinders. At first I was taken back by the term "marketplace Christian" because so many treat the church like a marketplace nowadays, trying to find the best "services" and even "coffee house." But John and the team's approach is more the idea of Christians becoming part of the marketplace (real world, "in the world not of it") rather than standing outside it and yelling at it or making a list of everything that's wrong with it or trying to change all it's cool stuff into "safe" Christian versions (of the world not in it). 

I share it here with a link for those who has asked about it, and for those who wonder where an very non-traditional believer can find a church home that embraces my understanding of the life of faith. 

=============================

 
Declaration of a Marketplace Christian

Whereas:   We are followers of Christ who are wary about things that are given the cultural label “Christian”; and

Whereas:   “Christian” has become a term that has more to do with how one aligns oneself politically and socially, or how one behaves in relation to certain cultural mores, than it does with anything of the heart; and

Whereas:   We want to be Christians – but with a new definition;

We have come to the following conclusions:

We are not trying to create a place of safety in the world. Instead, we have found a place in our hearts where Christ dwells, and this gives us courage to face the world as it is.

We realize our overall purpose is not to change the world (that kind of thing is beyond our control), but it is to bring comfort, peace, warmth, love, and aid to people who are in the world, in the name of Jesus and His gospel.

Even if we were able to control the moral standards of society we understand that we would not necessarily be furthering the cause of Christ by making people better. In fact, we recognize a selfish motive in wanting a better world so we can have a safer environment in which to live and raise our own families. This gives no regard that to the fact that “better” people without Christ still perish in their sins. A more moral society means little or nothing if people do not come into relationship with Christ.

We may not look or talk like traditional Christians because we hang around non-Christians a lot and have learned to play down our differences rather than exploit them, as some Christians before us. We have discovered that by identifying with sinners we are in a better position to introduce them to Christ than when we remain separate and aloof because we think we are “different” (which usually translates to “better” in their minds). The only people who are looking for perfect Christians to model their lives after are other Christians who have bought the lie that perfection is attainable.

We will not be offended by the language and behavior of non-Christians. We realize, because we know ourselves, that sinners sin. There is no reason to be appalled at this. If we were perfect and had no sin of our own, we could be appalled, but we are not without sin. The only thing that should offend us is the same thing that offended Jesus: self-righteous hypocrisy. We realize that in choosing to be offended by the normal behavior of non-Christians, we are turning ourselves into the very thing Jesus hated. We, who are worried about being offended, make ourselves an offense to God.

We have decided not to put any real stock in having famous people endorse Jesus and have concluded we would be happier having Jesus endorse us. Character is superior to fame and glory.

We realize that we live in a world dominated by secular minds and philosophies. Because of our love for all people and our desire for them to know the love of Christ, we choose to learn about and interact with these philosophies rather than categorically reject them. When it becomes obvious that we have to part ways with the world to avoid compromise of our beliefs, we will do this in such a way as to not judge others who don’t feel as we do.

Though our hearts are connected to eternity, our feet are firmly planted on earth. For this reason we will strategize, barter, study and grow in two kingdoms. We have found that these two kingdoms need not always be warring against each other. We have found the things of God in the earthly world, and we have found evil in the kingdom of heaven, just as the parables of Jesus indicated we would.

We have learned to appreciate the artistic expressions of those who may not be following Christ. We will not begin with the assumption that they are wrong so that we can condemn them, but with the belief that they are right about something so that we can communicate with those who value their work.

We will not be threatened by “other paths to God” knowing that there is only one God and one way to reach Him, and if people are truly seeking Him, they will ultimately find their way to Christ even if they started out by way of another path.

We believe that wherever we go, God got there first. This means at least three things:

1) There is always something to find and embrace in the world, since God’s truth is everywhere.

2) We are never alone because there is nowhere we can go on earth or in heaven where God is not present.

3) There are many shoulders people are riding on other than our own. We do not have to finish everyone’s search; we are merely helping them along the way. If we happen to be there when someone comes to Christ, we will be overjoyed, but we will realize we are only part of a long line of witnesses who have prepared the way.

We do not have to determine whether a person is a Christian or a non-Christian before we know how to talk with him or her.  We speak to everyone in a universal language. Some may be drawn to us; others may be repelled. We do not know who is who – nor is it our responsibility to figure this out; we only point the way.

We can be fearless in the world because we know that Jesus is praying for our protection (John 17:15), and there is no power on earth or in heaven that can stand against Him.

Therefore, and for all these reasons, we do not have to hide in a subculture, nor do we have to spend all our efforts fighting society. We are not at war with the world. We love the world as God does because it is full of people for whom He gave His Son so that those who believe in Him might not perish but have everlasting life.

Since Jesus did not come into the world to condemn it, neither will we. And since, instead, Jesus came to save the world, we will put all our efforts to that end, knowing that He has already completed all the work necessary to save people. It remains only for us to let them know.

Originally posted at The Catch: Declaration of a Marketplace Christian

Tuesday, April 20, 2021

15 Most Personal Songs (a musical apologetic) -- #8 Daniel Amos, "Darn Floor, Big Bite"

 As a child of the 70s and 80s, I didn't have the luxury of computer games and social media to shape my thoughts. Instead, a lot of it came from the music I listened to. 

These are the top fifteen songs that helped to make me who I am and help keep me on track as a genuine person in this human experience. #STformativesongs

#8 - "Darn Floor, Big Bite" by Daniel Amos

Terry Scott Taylor and Daniel Amos' music has been a part of my life since I started making my own musical choices. From satire like "Bibleland" and "Mall All Over the World" and "(It's the Eighties Where's Our) Rocket Packs" to introspective songs like "A Sigh for You" and "William Blake," to more longing songs like "Soon," they were always a band with something to say about the human condition. 

"Darn Floor, Big Bite" reminds me of the axiom that pride comes before a fall, but in terms on my intellect and my understanding. No matter what I think I know, it's never the full story. No matter how much I want to put my understanding of reality in a box and say "this is it," it never is "it." The moment my pride decides to tell someone else, "no, this is how it is, and you're wrong," I remember that my understanding is just as incomplete, and that we're both on the same footing. This song leads me to empathy, not having to be right. It also reminds me of the line from the Carolyn Arends song from a few days ago, "Trying to touch the stars and the cookie jar, and both were out of reach."

==================

You touch my hair and cheek sometimes

Feel in yourself this flesh and blood

My poor flesh and blood, my poor flesh and blood


I think I met an angel once

But I cannot really know for sure

Do I know you now? Do I know you now?


Illuminate my muddled heart

Sweep the shadows from my mind

So I might imagine what you are like

And understand the great design


Darn floor - big bite

You are earth, water and light

Darn floor - big bite

Can I ever hope to get it right, can't get it right


I believe I've had a vision or two

Could have been a dream

I guess it could have been a dream

Could have been a dream

I saw the wide world crack where you touched down

And bodies wash up on a mythical shore

Will you save me now? Will you save me now?

In not-quite earth, in not-quite heaven

I'll imitate love like lovers do

In not-quite art, in not-quite living

I'll pray that writing it down is part of loving you


Darn floor - big bite

You are twilight, dark and bright

Darn floor - big bite

You are beautiful, terrible terrible sight!


Darn floor - big bite

You are love, fire and light


No I can't get it, no I can't get it right


Friday, April 16, 2021

When Indie Horror Directors Understand Faith Better Than Ordained Theologians

My buddy Daniel Emery Taylor is a man of deep faith and a director of indie horror films. And he totally gets both. I asked if he'd mind if I shared this tidbit he wrote about his Messianic understanding of faith. 

------------------

I am going to tell you what most people get wrong about Jesus.

Now, before I explain that purposely provocative statement, I want to give a little context.

Invariably, when I post about the holidays, someone will message me in confusion. 

“Wait, so ... Messianic Judaism? You believe in the Torah and the Jewish holidays and all of that?”

“Yes.”

“But I also see you post stuff about like Jesus or whatever.”

“Yes.”

“... Dafuq?”

So, then I try to explain that a Jew following the Jewish Messiah really shouldn’t be that confusing and that modern Christianity, for all its sincerity, often misinterprets Yeshua’s (Jesus’) teachings so that’s why I generally shy away from using the “Christian” label. It’s not a good representation of my faith in the modern era.

But, at its core, I really have few disagreements THEOLOGICALLY with evangelical Christianity (method and practice are different issues). Save for one. It may seem like semantics but I believe it fundamentally changes the way you view the Scriptures and the way you go about your day to day life.

Christians teach, by and large, that when Yeshua was crucified, He abolished the Torah. We are no longer under the law! It is finished! Done! Kaput! Live your conscience and then if you feel guilty (“convicted”) about something, pray for forgiveness.

I say they’re wrong. I say they’re worse than wrong - not only did Yeshua not abolish the Torah ... HE MADE IT HARDER. He amplified it. How?

There’s one specific teaching in the fifth chapter of Matthew’s account. Yeshua teaches (my paraphrase) “You’ve been told not to commit adultery - I tell you if you look at a woman to lust after her, you’ve already committed adultery in your heart. You’ve been told not to murder but if you harbor unjust anger you have already committed murder in your heart.”

There it is. The Torah is written on our hearts - it’s no longer just about what we DO. It’s about what we feel. It’s about what we THINK (Lord, forbid). See, it’s relatively easy to not cheat on your wife. It’s easy not to murder someone. As much as we may want to, most of us have that conscious stopgap that forbids us from following through.

But lust? Petty anger? Those are base human instincts. They’re hardwired into us. They’re the sins that we are ALL guilty of. And Yeshua equates them to adultery and murder. In His eyes, we’re all adulterers and murderers. So, what does that mean? Two things:

1.) We’re all in the same rotten boat together, so not one of us should assume they’re more pious or holy than the rest. How gracious and empathetic we should be to each other!

2.) These are both sins that were punishable by death. We’re condemned to death. We have racked up a debt we cannot pay and, left on our own, we’re destruction-bound.

Just as HaShem provided a way to our people during the exodus, smearing the blood of a lamb on your door posts so the Death Angel would pass over you, so did Yeshua provide a way to be similarly passed over in judgment. He would pay our debts for us. And He did - and if you accept it, absolution of cosmic debt is yours to have. The blood of one lamb sustained us for that season; the blood of the ultimate Lamb sustains us forever.

But it’s not all roses and Easter lilies. Because He amplified the Torah. He internalized it. He is judging our thoughts, our motives, and our hearts.

That is why Rav Sha’ul (the Apostle Paul) says that if you confess with your mouth “Yeshua is Lord” and believe IN YOUR HEART that God raised Him from the dead, you would be saved. It’s not doing good deeds. It’s not just SAYING the right thing. It’s not going to Church at the right times or getting down on your hands and knees and telling Him how great He is several times a day. It’s what you truly, sincerely believe in your heart. He sees your heart. And trust me, the world may be fooled by hucksters and liars (politicians and televangelists) but the Almighty sure ain’t. He knows. And He judges accordingly.

But when your faith is weak and needs a boost, He also knows. And when you’re hurt He knows. When you’re sad, He knows. And when you’re trying the best you can but keep failing anyway, He knows. A bruised reed He will not break. What a merciful and gracious God!

So, in conclusion, contrary to what you may have been told, Jesus did not complete, supersede, or abolish the Torah. He amplified it and made it, by our standards, impossibly more difficult. And that is why it is imperative that we trust Him even more. We can’t pass the test on our own - we have to believe Him when He says He passed it for us.

Have a blessed rest of your Passover week or Resurrection Sunday, whichever you celebrate. I love you guys.

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Yoke

(It is said that children who have been
abused have a greater likelihood of
becoming abusers themselves.)

She is a drooping rose
Weighted by the rain
Hunched,
Leaning above a younger bloom
Careful to pour out her burden
Beyond the newer pedals.

© 1994 Sean Taylor 

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

15 Most Personal Songs (a musical apologetic) -- #9 Bob Dylan, "What Good Am I"

As a child of the 70s and 80s, I didn't have the luxury of computer games and social media to shape my thoughts. Instead, a lot of it came from the music I listened to. 

These are the top fifteen songs that helped to make me who I am and help keep me on track as a genuine person in this human experience. #STformativesongs

#10 - "What Good Am I" by Bob Dylan

This is the first of two Dylan songs on this list. This one is the one that taught me to be sure that the ideals inside me match the actions on the outside. It's sort of like the idea of being a sounding gong and clanging cymbal if I'm empty of love. No matter what I say I am and believe, it doesn't mean squat until my outside actions reinforce it. 

==================

What good am I some like all the rest

If I just turn away when I see how you're dressed

If I shut myself off so I can't hear you cry

What good am I?


What good am I if I know and don't do

If I see and don't say if I look right through you

If I turn a deaf ear to the thunderin' sky

What good am I?


What good am I while you softly weep

And I hear in my head what you say in your sleep

And I freeze in the moment like the rest who don't try

What good am I?


What good am I then to others and me

If I had every chance and yet still fail to see

If my hands are tied must I not wonder within

Who tied them and why and where must I have been


What good am I if I say foolish things

And I laugh in the face of what sorrow brings

And I just turn my back while you silently die

What good am I? 



Friday, April 9, 2021

[Link] Why Do Our Children Leave Christianity?

by Sam Williamson

Why do so many people—with incredible conversions—parent children who leave Christianity? History overflows with great saints whose offspring lose faith:

Samuel was a mighty prophet of God. His sons were a mess.

David was a man after God’s own heart. His children were a disaster.

Harvard, Yale, and Princeton were founded on the gospel. Now they lead the opposition.

I’ve witnessed dozens of families, churches, and ministries, who began with a furious fire of love for God whose next generation couldn’t blow a smoke ring.

Our children lose fire because of our mother-of-all-assumptions; we assume the gospel. Mack Stiles, in Marks of the Messenger, explains how we believers lose the gospel:

The gospel is Accepted —->

The gospel is Assumed —->

The gospel is Confused —->

The gospel is Lost

Stiles concludes like this: “For any generation to lose the gospel is tragic. But the generation that assumes the gospel … is most responsible for the loss of the gospel.

We are that generation. We are most responsible. Who has bewitched us?

Forgetting Conversion

It’s virtually 100% predictable that we are converted by one message and then preach another. We are converted by the unbelievable hope of God’s love for those who don’t deserve it, but we lecture on behavior. Everyone I know does it, even when we don’t want to. Including me. And I bet including you.

A friend of mine lived wildly until the age of thirty. He slept with scores of women, drank an ocean of beer, and was a self-admitted, abusive jerk. In a desperate time of loneliness, he heard the hope of the gospel and talked with Jesus. He became a pastor.

He was converted by grace, yet his sermons nagged and scolded:

  • You should never tell coarse jokes or cuss.
  • You should be generous, and that includes making sure you tip 20%.
  • You should always bring your Bible to church.
  • You should watch Fox News and never CNN. (I’m serious.)

Day after day, week after week, he proclaimed the Nike gospel, “Just do it!”

The Presumption of Assumption

One day I asked him why his messages concentrated on behavior and not the gospel. He replied, “My congregation knows the gospel. Now they just have to know what to do.” He assumed the gospel but wondered why his shrinking congregation was so joyless.

His own moral life was empowered by a gospel-fueled heart, but he scolded, rebuked, and ragged on behavior. In his personal life, he remembered, “What DID Jesus do?” yet he publicly harangued and lectured WWJD, “What WOULD Jesus do?”

Martin Luther wrote in his Commentary on Galatians,

Continually listen to the gospel that teaches not what I ought to do (for that is the job of the law), but what Jesus Christ has done for me. For that is the gospel.

The gospel is the primary article of all Christian truth. It is most necessary that we should know this article well, teach it to others, and beat it into our heads continually” (slightly edited).

The gospel is God’s love first, behavior second. Moralism doesn’t reject the gospel, it just forgets the gospel and emphasizes behavior. The Gospel is God’s initiation first, then our response. The heresy of the Pharisee is our initiation first, then God’s response.

We need to beat the gospel into our own heads continually, because we constantly assume it, confuse it, and lose it. And if we do, so will our kids.

Read the full article: https://beliefsoftheheart.com/2021/03/24/why-do-our-children-leave-christianity/

Wednesday, April 7, 2021

The truth about Charlie ... er, Seanie ... er ...

Someone asked me on the phone the other night about how did I reconcile my faith and many of the topics and characters I choose to write about in my stories and comics, etc. Then he said that my "open mind" (his words) was one of the things he liked about me, particularly considering where I used to work.

All of which got me to thinking.

Am I really that open-minded? I don't think so.

I think I'm far more tolerant than I am open-minded.

I share many of the same beliefs as other conservative fundamentalists. Really I do. But I just don't think that having those beliefs has to hamper my ability to develop genuine relationships with people who might disagree rigidly with me and I with them when it comes to politics, social conventions, religion, and who knows what else.

So, before anyone goes and labels me as open-minded, let me set the record straight. I'm not. Not really. My tolerance just disguises it some times. And I don't tend to advertise the individual tenets of what I believe apart from what I consider the big things like grace, forgiveness, and faith. Because the smaller things are just that, the smaller things.

It's not that I dislike the idea of being open-minded, and I guess to a degree I am. Maybe. I am willing to give ideas a chance, an opportunity. I believe Truth rises to the top, and therefore, I'm willing to accept that Truth, if it (or He/She) exists as I believe, has a way of making it's presence known in its creation. And particularly via the branch of theological ponderings I've grown to embrace.

But what I ultimately deem as Truth will determine my views on everything else. Purpose. Politics. Life. Law. Sex. Sexuality. Society. Human dignity. Poverty. Hunger. Gender. War. Peace. Economics. The world. Everything. That's why what we believe is called a world view.

But it doesn't have to prevent me from enjoying the company of people. Any people. All people. After all, I've got a great role model right at the top spot on the pyramid of my belief system.

Were I to wear my beliefs on my sleeve and tout my how they affect my political views, I'd probably lose a few of the folks on my friends list. Maybe. Or maybe not. Maybe I just somehow am lucky to meet people of a like-minded tolerance. Even toward Southern Baptists who live in the "Bible Belt."

So, why mention any of this? Because one of the things I really want to do here on LJ and everywhere else is be authentic. Perhaps painfully so sometimes, and perhaps embarrassingly so at others. Of perhaps even against the wishes of that little voice inside that says, "Don't mention that, you freakin' moron. Nobody likes a fundie. So hide the fact that deep down, you really are one. C'mon, boy, get a clue."

Oh well, just feeling introspective. This too shall pass, I'm sure.

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

15 Most Personal Songs (a musical apologetic) -- #10 Steve Taylor, "The Finish Line"

As a child of the 70s and 80s, I didn't have the luxury of computer games and social media to shape my thoughts. Instead, a lot of it came from the music I listened to. 

These are the top fifteen songs that helped to make me who I am and help keep me on track as a genuine person in this human experience. #STformativesongs

#10 - The Finish Line by Steve Taylor

Yes, this is another from CCM, but the reason it's so important to me is that it feels a lot more Flannery O'Conner than Billy Graham. This song knocks all the prestige and pride out of being a person of faith and shows life as tough and hard and kicking you when you're down just like it is for everyone, person of faith or not. And it says that ultimately it's all worth it. (Religiously, not because of anything I did, but because of something and someone imputed.) 

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Once upon an average morn

An average boy was born for the second time

Prone upon the altar there

He whispered up the prayer he'd kept hid inside


The vision came

He saw the odds

A hundred little gods on a gilded wheel

"These will vie to take your place, but Father,

by your grace I wil never kneel"


And I saw you, upright and proud

And I saw you wave to the crowd

And I saw you laughing out loud at the Philistines

And I saw you brush away rocks

And I saw you pull up your socks

And I saw you out of the blocks

For the finish line


Darkness falls

The devil stirs

And as your vision blurs you start stumbling

The heart is weak

The will is gone

And every strong conviction comes tumbling down


Malice rains

The acid guile is sucking at your shoes while the mud is fresh

It floods the trail

It bleeds you dry

As every little god buys its pound of flesh


And I saw you licking your wounds

And I saw you weave your cocoons

And I saw you changing your tunes for the party line

And I saw you welsh on old debts

I saw you and your comrades bum cigarettes

And you hemmed and you hawed

And you hedged all your bets

Waiting for a sign


Let's wash our hands as we throw little fits

Let's all wash our hands as we curse hypocrites

We're locked in the washroom turning old tricks

Deaf

And joyless

And full of it


The vision came

He saw the odds

A hundred little gods on a gilded wheel

"These have tried to take your place, but Father,

by your grace I will never kneel

I will never kneel..."


Off in the distance

Bloodied but wise

As you squint with the light of the truth in your eyes

And I saw you

Both hands were raised

And I saw your lips move in praise

And I saw you steady your gaze

For the finish line


Every idol like dust

A word scattered them all

And I rose to my feet when you scaled the last wall

And I gasped

When I saw you fall

In his arms

At the finish line

Friday, April 2, 2021

[Link] The Origins of America’s Unique and Spectacular Cruelty

What Happens When Societies Don’t Invest in Civilizing Themselves?

By Umair Haque

A friend, recently, told me a very interesting and telling story. She’d recently been in the States, where she was taking the subway to work, and she fell down, injuring her wrist. Not a single person helped her up — they all stared at her angrily as if to say: “you are going to make us late for work!!”. (Ironically, the train was full of doctors, nurses, and healthcare workers).

She contrasted that with London — where, the last year, when she’d broken a limb, and had a cast on, people would regularly, and very courteously, give up their seats on the tube.

It’s a tiny example. And perhaps you will say it’s just a meaningless anecdote. But by now, American cruelty is both legendary — and one of the world’s great unsolved mysteries. Just why would people in a rich country leave their neighbours to die for a lack of basic medicine, their young without good jobs or retirements, make their elderly work until their dying day, cripple students with lifelong debt, charge new mothers half of average income just to have a baby — not to mention shrug when their kids begin massacring each other at school? What motivates the kind of spectacular, unique, unimiaginable, and gruesome cruelty that we see in America, which exists nowhere else in the world?

See that pic above? It’s kids huddling under bulletproof blankets, doing “active shooter drills”. That’s what I mean by “unique and spectacular cruelty”. No kid should — ever — have to be traumatized and victimized like that, and indeed, even kids in Pakistan and Iran aren’t.

(And no, I don’t mean “all Americans”. I just mean something like “more” or maybe “enough”, if you want to think statistically, that the distribution of cruelty has fatter tails and a higher peak.)

My answer goes something like this. Americans, you must remember, grew up in the shadow of endless war. With two “sides” who championed atomic individualism, lionized competition and brutality, and despised weakness and fragility. And thus, America forgot — or maybe never evolved — the notion of a public interest. Each man for himself, everyone against everyone himself. So all there is left in America is extreme capitalism now. Few championed a more balanced, saner, healthier way of life, about a common good, about virtue, about a higher purpose. And in that way, America has become something like, ironically enough, a mirror image of its great enemy, the Soviet Union. It is a totalist society, run by and for one end — only a slightly different one: money.

Read the full article: https://eand.co/the-origins-of-americas-unique-and-spectacular-cruelty-74a91f53ce29