Tuesday, June 30, 2009

I recently participated in that loathsome atrocity of the Internet that is known as a “meme”. Thank you for time-wasting activities Faith.

The meme in question asked people to list 30 books that come to mind that they consider impacting on their lives, books that we “carry” with us everywhere, you know, those books that we consider foundational to our personalities. At least those of us who consider ourselves avid readers, bibliophiles if you will.

A number of people cited the standard canonical English Lit. Canon, and there is much in that list that deserves mentioning and most of us have at least 1/3 of our list devoted to such titles.

One thing I saw absent from a number of people’s lists though were children’s books. Often times I think we forget how important those first few books, those first “giant” (or at least what we thought of as giant) reads were and how they subsequently shaped our entire reading future.

I thought I’d list off a few books from my childhood that I know helped shape who I am as a person and my passion for reading.

Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls

This book is cliche to the point of tackiness. As if someone jumped into Norman Rockwell’s mind and said to him: “I want an image of Americana set in the mountains about a young boy and his love of dogs and the outdoors.” Rockwell projected his image into Wilson Rawls and there we have it. [ Reading that back I realize how stupid that comparison sounds, but it works somehow. ]

I have a worn out copy of this somewhere in a box and I mean worn, the pages are starting to fall out from having been read so much. I think that all children go through that phase where they desperately want for a young puppy. This book captures that feeling admirably and if you’re looking for a very simple and clean story, this is worth picking up, and it is about a day’s worth of reading.

A young boy who comes from a poor family that cannot afford any puppies, so the young boy listens to some common advice: God helps those who help themselves. And this is exactly what he does, works hard at his chores and at odd jobs so that he can save up enough to purchase the dogs himself.  A simple enough story but it’s full of adventure, violence, love, death, so much more. Check it out. Cheers.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Book Review: Here's My Card

Pick a Card, Any Card 

Business cards are simple enough—wouldn’t you think? Print them up, hand them out—that’s all there is to using them, right? Actually there’s much more to utilizing your business cards so they can make money for you. So says Bob Popyk (www.bobpopyk.com), author of Here’s My Card; How to Network Using Your Business Card to Actually Create More Business, (ISBN 1-58063-113-4/www.Macmillan.com).

While the book isn’t a new release, (it was printed in 2000), it is a very helpful volume that anyone who owns a business or works in a one should read. Business cards are one of the first impressions made upon a new client, prospect, or business partner—especially when sent along with materials—not handed out in a face to face meeting.

In Here’s My Card, Popyk offers a multitude of suggestions on how you can network with your business cards. On certain occasions he even suggests not handing someone your card—or taking it back out of his/her hand. He also suggests easy systems that you can use, to get the most use out of the cards you do receive in the course of doing business.

So much of the book is practical advice that everyone should know—and while I regularly followed many of the tips before reading the book, I also learned a few new things that I am now implementing. The author also discusses what should and shouldn’t be on a business card. Remember comedian George Carlin’s 7 words you can’t say on TV? Well, none of them belong on your business cards.

One of the great suggestions provided by Popyk that you can use to impress a business contact is, if you see a news item in a trade paper or journal, cut it out and paperclip it to an extra business card, along with a note letting the recipient know you saw the great news about them and thought they might like an extra copy.

There are also many creative ways you can use your business cards, from creating special cards that tell the recipient they won something, to using promotional items as a business card. Paper isn’t the only substrate that can be used for business cards either. If it suits your type of business, think about plastic, leather, odd sizes, or incorporate additional languages such as Japanese or Braille. All of these variations can put you in the spotlight where your customers or business partners will remember you because of the impression your business cards helped you make. Likewise there are many things that you should never do—things that will cause those doing business with you to remember you in a bad light. Such things include handing out a bent or smudged business card, and crossing information out and handwriting in new information because you didn’t go through the trouble to have new business cards made up.

The way I figure it—if reading “Here’s My Card” gets you even one client or helps you make one sale, then it was well worth the cost of the book. 

—Diane Berkenfeld

Friday, June 26, 2009

Becoming Your Best: A Self-Help Guide for Thinking People by Ronald W. Richardson

Becoming Your Best: A Self-Help Guide for Thinking People by Ronald W. Richardson

Had Claire Bellanti not recommended I get this book, it is unlikely I would have discovered it. It’s not a novel and thus not located with the other literary works, and Jane Austen’s name is not on the front cover. Her name is, however, all over the back cover, and her work offers instruction in the development of “emotional maturity” that Richardson argues we must develop in our own lives.

People often ask me, when they come to understand how devoted I am to the life and work of Jane Austen, why she resonates so well with me, and with modern audiences. Richardson provides a succinct and clear answer: the stories are “so much more than the conventional romantic love stories” into which Hollywood sometimes morphs them. The stories, Richardson explains, “are truly about her characters struggling to become better people, the best they can be, and how this increases their satisfaction and happiness in life.” Add to that “her wit, her sense of irony, and her exceptional writing,” and suddenly, novels about how better to “live the values we profess” become sheer pleasures to read. The characters, delivered to us by a distinctly-voiced narrator, teach us what we should aim to be—and not to be.

The text begins with a lot of psychological theory, which is somewhat repetitive but which also makes sense. Then Richardson explores how Austen’s novels demonstrate, naturally and comedically, that “being a better person leads to better and happier relationships.” Richardson provides examples from his own therapeutic practice, examples from Austen’s work, and strategies for directly applying the lessons to our own lives. It is a brilliant idea, and if not quite as riveting as a Viera Rigler novel, worth some investment of time. After all, even if we are not motivated sufficiently by principle to become better human beings, should not our own happiness provide sufficient impetus for analysis, and perhaps, change?

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Teens' Top Ten 2009: Geek Charming

Geek Charming by Robin Palmer is one of the Teens’ Top Ten Nominations for 2009.  Becca Kaufeld, a teen from Allen County Public Library writes:

“This book is awesome. At different points, I saw little subtle touches of reality thrown in. The characters are so real, it feels like you’re not just reading it. It could be the story of somebody you know. I know people who would fit Josh’s profile, or even become Dylan.”

To read Becca’s full review, click here.  To request this book from Wake County Public Libraries, click here.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Cat Who Saw Red

Braun, Lilian Jackson. The Cat Who Saw Red. New york: Jove Books, 1986.

Only 183 pages long The Cat Who Saw Red  was a really quick, really fun read. Although it had all the elements of an on-your-toes thriller: a possible murder, intrigue, scandalous affiars, missing persons, and too many possible suspects to count, it was what I would call a “gentle” mystery. A quiet, light suspense ripples throughout the plot. There is just as much humor as danger.
James Qwilleran is an award winning journalist sent on assignment to write a food column. As a former cop Qwill, as he is known by everyone, smells as mystery sooner than a burning souffle. Sniffing out leads, it is not long before he is using his restaurant experiences to wine and dine clues out  of unsuspecting suspects.
As an aside: every chapter begins with a sentence that mentions James Qwilleran. I found that to be a weird thing to notice.

Tidbit of trivia: I find it amazing that Lilian J. Bruan first started her “The Cat Who…” series back in the 1960’s and then vanished for eighteen years. Her triumphant return was with The Cat Who Saw Red.

Funny conversation: “…’This is crummy soup.’
                                             ’Is it canned?’
                                              ’No, worse! It tastes like I made it.’” (p 101)

BookLust Twist: From Book Lust in the chapter called, “Cat Crazy” (p 52).

I Say Father Abraham

I keep a life list of birds since Christmas of ‘95, and a daily journal since June of ‘98. Records are useful for a person who tends to sluff off bits of life and later wonder where he left them. This year we are celebrating the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth, and I wish I had kept a list of Lincoln books read from grade school on. Probably most were not so great but I don’t remember feeling that way, and my feeling now is there will always be a need for another great book on Lincoln.

For all of my self-anointed skill at picking books I missed this one. A friend rectified my blunder by giving it as a present. Wise and kind of him. Ronald C. White, Jr., author of A. Lincoln: A Biography, does not need any praise from me but he gets it anyway. This is the best biography you will read this year. It will stay with you as a standard by which to measure other biographies as well as other presidents.

White gives us a full Lincoln from his beginning hard luck scrabble to make more of himself than circumstances dictated to a self-educating lawyer and thinker to a consummate politician and public persuader to a president who struggled to first save the Union and then to birth it as a Union fulfilling the promise of the Declaration of Independence. Along this lifeline nothing is treated as unimportant if it was important to Lincoln at the time. It is not the mythic Lincoln in this book but the ugly A. Lincoln who worked each day to make it his own.

Lincoln was so uncommonly more than others that he casts a shadow on all who lived during his lifetime. He remains a constant reminder that we should not be so lenient in appraising the smallness of our thoughts and responses to others, or so quick to accept limits on what we can do. I can not imagine what would have become of the nation if he had not been there to finally be our Father Abraham. I cannot imagine what we could have become if a self-righteous political zealot had not cut him down. We suffered from this lose in the decades that followed and we suffer today. Charles Marlin

Monday, June 22, 2009

The War at Ellsmere, by Faith Erin Hicks

Publisher: SLG Publishing
Genre: Graphic novel, YA
Call number: J Hicks

Juniper is a scholarship student at the posh, academically rigorous boarding school, Ellsmere Academy. She already knows she isn’t going to fit in when she sees her incredibly fancy dorm room and thinks, “Apparently I’m going to school in a Disneyland postcard.” She has a smart mouth and a whole lotta attitude, which helps her when she incurs the wrath of Emily, a rich, snobbish but equally clever student. Of course, her smart mouth is also what gets her into trouble with Emily in the first place. Luckily, she makes friends with her roommate Cassie, who is sweet-natured and a little kooky; she often mentions things like alien abductions, and she’s the one who tells Jun all the crazy stories about the school’s mysterious history and the creature said to roam the nearby woods punishing evil. (This story turns out to be somewhat true.)

This graphic novels melds a lot of great elements: there’s the “misfit at boarding school” story, the developing friendship between Cassie and Jun, the rivalry between Emily and Jun, and the weird hints of magic on the school grounds. The dialog is snappy and realistic and the characters are real — even Emily, who could develop “stock-evil-rich-girl” syndrome but somehow doesn’t. (Maybe because she’s so cunning in her evil plans.) Juniper makes for a great heroine — she’s smart, determined, and sarcastic, always a great combo. Finally, the black and white art is fantastic. It’s quirky and offbeat, like the characters and the story, but not so much that it gets really cartoony.

I haven’t read anything by Faith Erin Hicks before, but she has other graphic novels out, including one called Zombies Calling that is about a group of teens that have to fight off zombies with only the rules of zombie horror movies to help them survive. Sounds fantastic.

"Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order" by Stephen Lendman

Dandelion Salad

by Stephen Lendman
Global Research, June 22, 2009
- 2009-06-21

Review of F. William Engdahl’s book

For over 30 years, F. William Engdahl has been a leading researcher, economist, and analyst of the New World Order with extensive writing to his credit on energy, politics, and economics. He contributes regularly to business and other publications, is a frequent speaker on geopolitical, economic and energy issues, and is a distinguished Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.

Engdahl’s two previous books include “A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order” explaining that America’s post-WW II dominance rests on two pillars and one commodity – unchallengeable military power and the dollar as the world’s reserve currency along with the quest to control global oil and other energy resources.

Engdahl’s other book is titled “Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation” on how four Anglo-American agribusiness giants plan world domination by patenting all life forms to force-feed GMO foods on everyone – even though eating them poses serious human health risks.

Engdahl’s newest book is reviewed below. Titled “Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order,” it discusses America’s grand strategy, first revealed in the 1998 US Space Command document – Vision for 2020. Later released in 2000 as DOD Joint Vision 2020, it called for “full spectrum dominance” over all land, surface and sub-surface sea, air, space, electromagnetic spectrum and information systems with enough overwhelming power to fight and win global wars against any adversary, including with nuclear weapons preemptively.

Other means as well, including propaganda, NGOs and Color Revolutions for regime change, expanding NATO eastward, and “a vast array of psychological and economic warfare techniques” as part of a “Revolution in Military Affairs” discussed below.

September 11, 2001 served as pretext to consolidate power, destroy civil liberties and human rights, and wage permanent wars against invented enemies for global dominance over world markets, resources, and cheap labor – at the expense of democratic freedoms and social justice. Engdahl’s book presents a frightening view of the future, arriving much sooner than most think.

Introduction

After the Soviet Union’s dissolution in late 1989, America had a choice. As the sole remaining superpower, it could have worked for a new era of peace and prosperity, ended decades of Cold War tensions, halted the insane arms race, turned swords into plowshares, and diverted hundreds of billions annually from “defense” to “rebuild(ing) civilian infrastructure and repair(ing) impoverished cities.”

Instead, Washington, under GHW Bush and his successors, “chose stealth, deception, lies and wars to attempt to control the Eurasian Heartland – its only potential rival as an economic region – by military (political, and economic) force,” and by extension planet earth through an agenda later called “full spectrum dominance.”

As a result, the Cold War never ended and today rages with over a trillion dollars spent annually on “defense” in all forms even though America has no enemy, nor did it after the Japanese surrendered in August 1945. So the solution was to invent them, and so they were.

Post-Soviet Russia, “The ‘new’ Cold War assumed various disguises and deceptive tactics until September 11, 2001″ changed the game. It let George Bush “declare (a) permanent (Global War on Terror) against an enemy who was everywhere and nowhere, who allegedly threatened the American way of life, justified (police state) laws,” and is now destroying our freedoms and futures.

The roots of the scheme go back decades – at least to 1939 when powerful New York Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) insiders planned a post-war world with one nation alone triumphant and unchallengeable.

Engdahl’s book is a geopolitical analysis of the past two decades – peering into “the dark corners of Pentagon strategy and actions and the extreme dangers (’full spectrum dominance’ holds for) the future,” not just to America but the entire world.

Things are so out-of-control today that democratic freedoms and planetary life itself are threatened by “the growing risk of nuclear war by miscalculation” or the foolhardy assumption that waging it can be limited, controlled, and safe – like turning a faucet on and off. The very notion is implausible and reckless on its face, yet powerful forces in the country think this way and plan accordingly.

The Guns of August 2008

On the 8th day of the 8th month of the 8th year of the new century, a place few people in the West ever heard of made headlines when Georgia’s army invaded South Ossetia – its province that broke away in 1991 and declared its independence. For a brief period, world tensions were more heightened than at any time since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis when only cooler heads avoided possible nuclear war.

Like then, the crisis was a Washington provocation with tiny Georgia a mere pawn in a dangerous high-stakes confrontation – a new Great Game that former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski described in his 1997 book, “The Grand Chessboard.”

He called Eurasia the “center of world power extending from Germany and Poland in the East through Russia and China to the Pacific and including the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent.” He explained that America’s urgent task was to assure that “no state or combination of states gains the capacity to expel the United States from Eurasia or even to diminish significantly its decisive arbitration role.” Dominating that part of the world is key to controlling the planet, and its the main reason for NATO’s existence. From inception, its mission was offense.

Post-Cold War, Washington used the illusion of democracy to dominate everywhere – with the long arm of the Pentagon and NATO as enforcers. Euphoric East Europeans couldn’t know that American-style democracy was even more repressive than what had ended. Decades of Voice of America and Radio Free Europe propaganda was soon revealed to be no different than the Soviet system they rejected and in some ways much worse.

Western-imposed “shock therapy” meant “free market” hokum, mass privatizations, ending the public sphere, unrestricted access for foreign corporations unemcumbered by pesky regulations, deep social service cuts, loss of job security, poverty wages, repressive laws, and entire economies transformed to benefit a powerful corporate ruling class partnered with corrupted political elites. Globally, Russia got billionaire “oligarchs,” China “the princelings,” Chile “the piranhas,” and in new millennium America the Bush-Cheney “Pioneers” and Obama Wall Street Top Guns wrecking global havoc for self-enrichment.

As for ordinary people, Russia is instructive for what’s heading everywhere:

– mass impoverishment;

– an epidemic of unemployment;

– loss of pensions and social benefits;

– 80% of farmers bankrupted;

– tens of thousands of factories closed and the country de-industrialized;

– schools closed;

– housing in disrepair;

– skyrocketing alcoholism, drug abuse, HIV/AIDS, suicides, and violent crime; and

– a declining population and life expectancy because the country was looted for profit and all safety nets ended; what Milton Friedman called “freedom.”

Mikhail Gorvachev tried to revitalize Soviet Russia with Glasnost and Perestroika but failed. In return for agreeing to “shock therapy” and nuclear disarmament, GHW Bush promised no eastward NATO extension into newly liberated Warsaw Pact countries. The Russian Duma, in fact, ratified Start II, providing a firm disarmament schedule – contingent on both countries prohibiting a missile defense deployment as stipulated under the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM).

On December 14, 2001, the Bush administration withdrew from ABM and much more. It claimed the right to develop and test new nuclear weapons (in violation of NPT), rescinded the Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention, greatly increased military spending, refused to consider a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty to increase already large stockpiles, and claimed the right to wage preventive wars under the doctrine of “anticipatory self-defense” using first-strike nuclear weapons.

The door was now open for enhanced militarization, creation of the US Missile Defense Agency, and proof again that trusting America is foolhardy and dangerous. Both GHW Bush and Bill Clinton lied by enticing former Warsaw Pact countries into NATO, one by one.

At the beginning of the 1990s, Zbigniew Brzezinski described America’s arrogance this way:

“Presidential travels abroad assumed the trappings of imperial expeditions, overshadowing in scale and security demands the circumstances of any other statesman (reflecting) America’s anointment as the world’s leader (to be) in some respects reminiscent of Napoleon’s self-coronation.”

Brzezinski understood the dangers of imperial arrogance, causing the decline and fall of previous empires. Even a superpower like the US is vulnerable. He was very comfortable with an American Century, only leery of the means to achieve and keeping it. In 2008, with 28 NATO country members, including 10 former Warsaw Pact ones, Washington sought admission for Georgia and Ukraine, and did so after announcing in early 2007 the planned installation of interceptor missiles in Poland and advanced tracking radar in the Czech Republic, both NATO members.

Allegedly for defense against Iran and other “rogue” states, it clearly targeted Russia by guaranteeing America a nuclear first-strike edge, and that provoked a sharp Kremlin response. Washington’s deployment is for offense as are all US/NATO installations globally.

Vladimir Putin expressed outrage in his February 2007 Munich International Conference on Security address stating:

“NATO has put its frontline forces on our borders. (It) does not have any relation with the modernisation of the Alliance itself or with ensuring security in Europe. On the contrary, it represent a serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust. And we have a right to ask: against whom is this expansion intended? And what happened to the assurances our western partners made after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact?”

Putin’s speech drew a storm of US media Russia-bashing. Last August, it got this writer to comment in an article titled “Reinventing the Evil Empire,” saying: Russia is back, proud and re-assertive, and not about to roll over for America, especially in Eurasia. For Washington, it’s back to the future with a new Cold War, but this time for greater stakes and with much larger threats to world peace.

Over the past two decades, Washington upped the ante, encroaching on Russia’s borders and encircling it with NATO/US bases clearly designed for offense and to block the spread of democratic freedoms to former Soviet Republics. “Diabolical propaganda” made it work by projecting imperial America as a colonial liberator bringing “free market” capitalism to the East. It succeeded as “long as the United States was the world’s largest economy and American dollars were in demand as (the) de facto world reserve currency….” For decades, America “portray(ed) itself as the beacon of liberty for newly independent nations of Africa and Asia,” as well as former Soviet Republics and Warsaw Pact nations.

Geopolitical Reality – America’s New Manifest Destiny, Global Expansion to the Vastness of Eurasia

For over a century, America sought “total economic and military control over (Soviet) Russia” through the full strength of its military-industrial-security sectors – by war or other means. From 1945, the Pentagon planned a first-strike nuclear war, an “all out conventional war (called) TOTALITY (as) drafted by General Dwight Eisenhower” per Harry Truman’s order, the same man who used atomic weapons against a defeated Japan instead of accepting its requested surrender.

With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, America’s superpower supremacy depends on “precluding Eurasian countries from developing their own defense pillars or security structures independent of US-controlled NATO,” especially to prevent a powerful China-Russia alliance capable of serious challenge, along with other Eurasian states, notably oil rich ones.

As geopolitical strategist Halford Mackinder (1861 – 1947) observed in his most famous dictum:

“Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland;
Who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island;
Who rules the World-Island commands the World.”

Mackinder’s World-Island was Eurasia, all of Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

Early in the last century and notably post-WW II, America determined to rule even at the risk of all out nuclear war. For its part, Britain intended to stay in the game, and in April 1945, Winston Churchill urged Dwight Eisenhower and Franklin Roosevelt “to launch an immediate full-scale war against the Soviet Union, using up to 12 captured German divisions (as) cannon fodder to destroy Russia once and for all.”

Instead, Washington invented a post-war enemy, and got Europe and Asian countries to feel threatened enough to agree to US dictates, even ones contrary to their own interests. As for America, in 1945, Truman ordered Eisenhower “to prepare secret plans for a surprise nuclear strike on some (Soviet) cities (despite knowing the Kremlin) posed no direct or immediate threat to the United States” or its close allies.

A nuclear-armed Russia with intercontinental missile capabilities halted the threat – until the 2001 Bush Doctrine asserted the right to wage preventive wars, with first-strike nuclear weapons, to depose foreign regimes perceived dangerous to US security and interests. That was the strategy behind the 2008 Georgian conflict that could have escalated into nuclear war.

Defused for the moment, “a number of leading US policy makers (see Russia today) as unfinished business (and seek its) complete dismemberment (as) an independent pivot for Eurasia.” Nuclear superiority, encirclement, and “diabolical propaganda” are three tools among others to finish the job and leave America the sole remaining superpower. Disempowering Russia and China will create an open field for a “total global American Century – the realization of ‘full spectrum dominance,’ as the Pentagon called it.”

Today, under Obama as under Bush, the risk of nuclear war by miscalculation is highest in nearly half a century. With America the clear aggressor, Russia may feel its only option is strike first while able or delay and face the consequences when it’s too late. The closer offensive nuclear missiles are to its borders, the nearer it gets to disempowerment, further dismemberment, and possible nuclear annihilation.

Its reaction left few doubts of its response. In February 2007, Strategic Rocket Forces commander Col. Gen. Nikolai Solovtsov said “Moscow would target US Ballistic Missile Defense sites with its nuclear arsenal if Washington” proceeded with its plans. Putin delivered harsh rhetoric and announced Russia would spend $190 billion over the next eight years to modernize its military by 2015 and that state-of-the-art weapons would take precedence. His message was clear. A New Cold War/nuclear arms race was on with Russia ready to contend “out of national survival considerations,” not a desire for confrontation.

“Missile Defense” for Offense

On March 23, 1983, Ronald Reagan proposed the idea in a speech calling for greater Cold War military spending, including a huge R & D program for what became known as “Star Wars” – in impermeable anti-missile space shield called the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI). The idea then (and now) was fantasy, but a glorious one for defense contractors who’ve profited hugely ever since.

The Clinton administration gave it modest support until the National Missile Defense Act of 1999 proposed an active missile defense “as soon as is technologically possible….”

When George Bush became president, Donald Rumsfeld wanted war preparations to include missile defense and space-based weapons to destroy targets anywhere in the world quickly for “full spectrum dominance.” The strategy included “deployment of a revolutionary new technique of regime change to impose or install ‘US-friendly’ regimes throughout the former Soviet Union and across Eurasia.”

Controlling Russia – Color Revolutions and Swarming Coups

“Swarming” is a RAND Corporation term referring to “communication patterns and movement of” bees and other insects and applying it to military conflict by other means. It plays out through covert CIA actions to overthrow democratically elected governments, remove foreign leaders and key officials, prop up friendly dictators, and target individuals anywhere in the world.

Also through propaganda and activities of the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the International Republican Institute (IRI), and National Democratic Institute (NDI) – posing as NGOs but, in fact, are US government-funded organizations charged with subverting democracy, uprooting it where it exists, or preventing its creation by criminally disruptive means. Methods include non-violent strikes, mass street protests, and major media agitprop for regime change – much like what’s now playing out in Iran after its presidential election.

Other recent examples include the Belgrade 2000 coup against Slobodan Misosevic, Georgia’s 2003 Rose Revolution ousting Eduard Shevardnadze for the US-installed stooge, Mikheil Saakashvili, and the 2004-05 Ukraine Orange Revolution, based on faked electoral fraud, to install another Washington favorite, Viktor Yushchenko. The idea is to isolate Russia by cutting off its economic lifeline – the “pipeline networks that (carry its) huge reserves of oil and natural gas from the Urals and Serbia to Western Europe and Eurasia…” They run through Ukraine, a nation “so intertwined (with Russia) economically, socially and culturally, especially in the east of the country, that they were almost indistinguishable from one another.”

Achieving geopolitical aims this way is far simpler and cheaper than waging wars “while convincing the world (that regime change was the result of) spontaneous outbursts for freedom. (It’s) a dangerously effective weapon.”

In 1953, cruder CIA methods toppled democratically elected Iranian Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh – the agency’s first successful coup d’etat to install Reza Shah Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran.

In 1954, it deposed the popularly elected Jacobo Arbenz and replaced him with a military dictator – on the pretext of removing a non-existent communist threat. Arbenz, like other targets, threatened US business interests by favoring land reform, strong unions, and wealth distribution to alleviate extreme poverty in their countries.

Short of war, various tactics aim to prevent them: “propaganda, stuffed ballot boxes, bought elections, extortion, blackmail, sexual intrigue, false stories about opponents in the local media, transportation strikes, infiltration and disruption of opposing political parties, kidnapping, beating, torture, intimidation, economic sabotage, death squads and even assassination (culminating in) a military (or other coup to install) a ‘pro-American’ right-wing dictator” – while claiming it’s democracy in action. For decades, countries in Latin America, the Middle East, and other world regions have been frequent victims.

Since the CIA’s 1947 creation, “national security” and a fake communist threat justified every imaginable crime from propaganda to economic warfare, sabotage, assassinations, coup d’etats, torture, foreign wars and much more.

However, by the 1960s, new forms of covert regime change emerged along the lines that RAND studies called “swarming” – the idea being to develop social manipulation techniques or disruptive outbreaks short of wars or violent uprisings. After 2000, as mentioned above, they played out in Central Europe’s Color Revolutions. According to State Department and intelligence community officials, “It seemed to be the perfect model for eliminating regimes opposed to US policy,” whether or not popularly elected. Every regime is now vulnerable to “new methods of warfare” by other means, including economic ones very much in play now and earlier.

Organizations like the Gene Sharp Albert Einstein Institution, George Soros’ Open Society Foundation, Freedom House and others are very much involved, and Sharp’s web site admits being active with “pro-democracy” groups in Burma, Thailand, Tibet, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Belarus, and Serbia. They all conveniently “coincided with the US State Department’s targets for regime change over the same period.”

Eurasian Pipeline Wars

Central to the current conflict is control of the region’s vast oil and gas reserves, and as long as Russia can use its resources “to win economic allies in Western Europe, China, and elsewhere, it (can’t) be politically isolated.” As a result, Moscow reacts harshly to military encirclement and bordering Color Revolutions – hostile acts, the geopolitical equivalence of war.

For America to remain the sole superpower, controlling global oil and gas flows is crucial along with cutting off China from Caspian Sea reserves and securing the energy routes and networks between Russia and the EU.

It’s why America invaded and occupies Afghanistan and Iraq, incited Baltic wars in the 1990s, attacked Kosovo and Serbia in 1999, threatens Iran repeatedly and imposes sanctions, and keeps trying to oust Hugo Chavez. For its part under Vladimir Putin, Russia’s economy began to grow for the first time in decades. It’s rich in oil and gas, and uses them strategically to gain influence enough to rival Washington, especially in alliance with China and other former Soviet states like Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, united in the 2001-formed Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) with Iran and India having observer status.

Under Bush-Cheney, Washington reacted aggressively. “Full spectrum dominance” is the aim with Russia and China the main targets. Controlling world energy resources is central, and nothing under Obama has changed. Iraq’s occupation continues and Afghanistan operations are enhanced with increased troop deployments under newly appointed General Stanley McChrystal’s command – a hired gun, a man with a reputation for brutishness that includes torture, assassinations, indifference to civilian deaths, and willingness to destroy villages to save them.

As long as Russia and China stay free from US control, “full spectrum dominance” is impossible. Encircling the former with NATO bases, Color Revolutions, and incorporating former Soviet states into NATO and the EU are all part of the same grand strategy – “deconstruct(ing) Russia once and for all as a potential rival to a sole US Superpower hegemony.”

Vladimir Putin stands in the way, “a dynamic nationalist (leader) committed to rebuilding” his country. In 2003, a defining geopolitical event occurred when Putin had billionaire oligarch, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, arrested on charges of tax evasion and put his shares in giant Yukos Oil group under state control.

It followed a decisive Russian Duma (lower house) election in which Khodorkovsky “was reliably alleged” to have used his wealth for enough votes to gain a majority – to challenge Putin in 2004 for president. Khodorkovsky violated his pledge to stay out of politics in return for keeping his assets and stolen billions provided he repatriate enough of them back home.

His arrest also came after a report surfaced about a meeting with Dick Cheney in Washington, followed by others with ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco. They discussed acquiring a major stake of up to 40% of Yukos or enough to give Washington and Big Oil “de facto veto power over future Russian oil and gas pipelines and oil deals.” Khodorkovsky also met with GHW Bush and had ties to the Carlyle Group, the influential US firm with figures like James Baker one of its partners.

Had Exxon and Chevron consummated the deal, it would have been an “energy coup d’etat. Cheney knew it; Bush knew it; Khodorkovsky knew it. Above all, Vladimir Putin knew it and moved decisively to block it” and hit hard on Khodorkosky in the process. It “signaled a decisive turn….towards rebuilding Russia and erecting strategic defenses.” By late 2004, Moscow understood that a New Cold War was on over “strategic energy control and unilateral nuclear primacy,” and Putin moved from defense to a “new dynamic offensive aimed at securing a more viable geopolitical position by using (Russia’s) energy as the lever.”

It involves reclaiming Russia’s oil and gas reserves given away by Boris Yeltsin. Also strengthening and modernizing the country’s military and nuclear deterrent to enhance its long-term security. Russia remains a military powerhouse and displays impressive technology at international trade shows, including the S-300 and more powerful S-400, reportedly more potent than comparable US systems.

Controlling China with Synthetic Democracy

From the 1940s to today, America’s China strategy has been “divide and conquer,” only tactics have varied from “big stick” to “carrot-and-stick” diplomacy. Key is to keep Russia and China from cooperating economically and militarily, “maintain a strategy of tension across Asia, and particularly Eurasia” (that, of course includes the Middle East and its oil riches) – for the overarching goal of total “control of China as the potential economic colossus of Asia.”

With America embroiled in Eurasian wars, policy now “masquerad(es) behind the issues of human rights and ‘democracy’ as weapons of psychological and economic warfare.”

Another initiative as well is ongoing – the 2007 AFRICOM authorization, the US Africa Command to control the continent’s 53 countries no differently than the rest of the world, using military force as necessary. China’s increasing need for Africa’s resources (including oil), not terrorism, is the reason.

The 2008 Army Modernization Strategy (AMS) focuses on “full spectrum dominance,” controlling world resources, and the prospect of wars for three to four decades to secure them. China and Russia are most feared as serious competitors – the former for its explosive economic growth and resource requirements and the latter for its energy, other raw material riches, and military strength.

AMS also included another threat – “population growth” threatening America and the West with “radical ideologies” and hence instability as well as unwanted “resource competition” that expanding economies require – everything from food to water, energy and other raw materials. These issues lay behind AFRICOM’s creation and strategy for hardline militarism globally.

America’s second president, John Adams, once said: “there are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation. One is by the sword. The other is by debt,” or more broadly economic warfare. With much of US manufacturing offshored in China, both methods are constrained so an alternative scheme is used – human rights and democracy by an America disdaining both at home or abroad.

Nonetheless, in 2004, the State Department’s Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor targeted China on these issues with millions in funding, headed by a right-wing conservative, Paula Dobriansky. She’s a CFR member, NED vice chairman, Freedom House board member, senior fellow at the neo-conservative Hudson Institute, and member of the Project for a New American Century (PNAC) at which she endorsed attacking Iraq in 1998. Now she targets China with “soft warfare” strategy that’s just as deadly.

Other tools include the Dalai Lama organizations in Tibet, Falun Gong in China, “an arsenal of (global) NGOs” carefully recruited for their mission, and, of course, the Western media, including public television and radio in America and BBC globally.

Weaponizing Human Rights – From Darfur to Myanmar to Tibet

In targeting China, Washington’s human rights/democracy offensive focused on Myanmar, Tibet, and oil-rich Darfur. Called the “Saffron Revolution” in Myanmar (formerly Burma), it featured Western media images of saffron-robed Buddhist Monks on Yangon (formerly Rangoon) streets calling for more democracy. “Behind the scenes, however, was a battle of major geopolitical consequence” with Myanmar’s people mere props for a Washington-hatched scheme – employing Eurasian Color Revolution tactics:

– “hit-and-run swarming” mobs of monks;

– connecting protest groups through internet blogs and mobile text-messaging links; and

– having command-and-control over protest cells, dispersed and re-formed as ordered with no idea who pulled the strings or why – a hidden sinister objective targeting China for greater geopolitical control and destabilizing Myanmar to do it.

Also at stake is control of vital sea lanes from the Persian Gulf to the South China Sea with the Myanmar coastline “providing shipping and naval access to one of the world’s most strategic waterways, the Strait of Malacca, the narrow ship passage between Malaysia and Indonesia.”

Since 9/11, the Pentagon tried but failed to militarize the region except for an airbase on Indonesia’s northernmost tip. Myanmar rejected similar overtures – hence its being targeted for its strategic importance. “The Strait of Malacca, linking the Indian and Pacific Oceans, (is) the shortest sea route between the Persian Gulf and China. (It’s) the key chokepoint in Asia” so controlling it is key. China has close ties to Myanmar. It’s provided billions in military assistance and developed the infrastructure. The country is also oil-rich, on its territory and offshore.

China is the world’s fastest growing energy market. Over 80% of its oil imports pass through the Strait. Controlling it keeps a chokehold over China’s life-line, and if it’s ever closed, about half the world’s tanker fleet would have thousands of extra miles to travel at far higher freight costs.

In summer 2007, Myanmar and PetroChina signed a long-term Memorandum of Understanding – to supply China with substantial natural gas from its Shwe gas field in the Bay of Bengal. India was the main loser after China offered to invest billions for a strategic China-Myanmar oil and gas pipeline across the country to China’s Yunnan Province. The same pipeline could give China access to Middle East and African oil by bypassing the Malacca Strait. “Myanmar would become China’s ‘bridge’ linking Bangladesh and countries westward to the China mainland” trumping Washington should it succeed in controlling the Strait – a potential geopolitical disaster America had to prevent, hence the 2007 “Saffron Revolution” that failed.

India’s Dangerous Alliance Shift

From 2005, India was “pushed into a strategic alliance with Washington” to counter China’s growing influence in Asia and to have a “capable partner who can take on more responsibility for low-end operations” – directed at China and to provide bases and access to project US power in the region. To sweeten the deal, the Bush administration offered to sell (nuclear outlaw) India advanced nuclear technology. At the same time, it bashed Iran for its legitimate commercial operations, and now Obama threatens hardened sanctions and perhaps war without year end 2009 compliance with clearly outrageous demands.

Part II continues Engdahl’s important analysis to conclusion.

Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday – Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on world and national issues. All programs are archived for easy listening.

© Copyright Stephen Lendman, Global Research, 2009

The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14046

see

The Eurasian Pipeline Calculus by F. William Engdahl

Are the Iranian Election Protests Another US Orchestrated ‘Color Revolution’? By Paul Craig Roberts

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Book Review: A Deadly Habit, by Andrea Sisco

A Deadly Habit is an unusual mystery as far as mysteries go. It is laugh-out-loud funny and features a feisty, willful heroine that will both test your patience and steal your heart.

Penelope Santuci — known to friends as Pen — is a probation officer. When her big shot laywer ex-husband is murdered, she becomes the first suspect. She would wait for the police to solve the mystery – if only they had brains! Refusing to put her fate on the officers’ hands, she decides to take charge and prove her innocence herself. Of course, she has a handsome lawyer (she bullied him into taking her case, but what else is new?), but he wants to do things by the book and unfortunately, that’s not Pen’s style. However, Pen accepts when she needs help, so she recruits — against their will — a nun and a priest to help her. This leads to all types of funny situations. Will Pen find the true murderer and prove her innocence before she completely corrupts them, drives her lawyer crazy, and gets herself killed?

A Deadly Habit is one of the most humorous novels I’ve read in a long time – more so because it is a mystery. The protagonist’s distinct, strong voice combines street smarts, naivete and stubborness and will easily find its way into readers’ hearts. The story moves at a quick pace and is full of twists and turns. The dialogue is one of the best aspects of the novel, sharp and witty. This is the first book in the Penelope Santuci mystery series and Andrea Sisco’s debut novel. I already look forward to the next book. This is one of those series that makes you wonder what the protagonist will be up to next.

For those of you who don’t know it, the author, Andrea Sisco, is the co-founder/owner of the popular review site, Armchair Interviews. I had the chance of interviewing Andrea last year on the subject of book reviewing. You may read the interview here on Blogcritics.

Pre-order from Amazon.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Mein Kampf: A Book Report

 

¨What’s in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet.”
William Shakespear

“I can fight only for what I love, love only what I respect,
and respect only what I know”
Adolf Hitler-Mein Kampf

Obviously the former has to do with the latter. Although Hitler´s Mein Kampf is considered to be the Nazi Bible and is banned to the extent where owning and trading a copy is illegal in various countries, it has also been retracted in various others due to it´s racist content and the historical effect of Nazism, this does not diminish the merit of the work.

Now here is where my understanding of the book and controversy becomes antagonistic. Mein Kampf was published in 1925, for all intents and purposes I´m only concentrating on Volume 1. Hitler´s commentary in regards to Sparta is made in 1928 where it may have suggested a prediction of genocide as well as an amplification of documented ideals, I´m not pretending to advocate mass carnage OR excusing the subsequent years to publication OR discussing successive publications, Volume 2 or the ¨Second Book¨

In reality all that I gathered was that it was an autobiographical account of military experience, a bystander´s opinion in regards to logically assessd failures of the current government and any revolutionary attempts, a witnessed account of the suffering of a nation, an allegation as to who was responsible based on observation of society, and besides SPECIFIC quotes being applied logic, in my opinion they were solely based on social Darwinism defined as ¨social theories derived from evolution¨ The ¨purity¨ factor is eugenics “the study of, or belief in, the possibility of improving the qualities of the human species¨ based on ancient culture and philosophy, although not a matter of my own opinion, it is argued with historical fact queued to ones interpretation of history and in no way suggests the famous ¨Final Solution¨ . Also not only is Aristotle´s theory regarding Sparta corroberated By Volume 1, as an equal amount of emphasis is placed on education as well as militarism by various quotes provided by the work, but a recipe for nationalism is proposed based on healthy social conditions regarding the education of the individual. According to court ruling as well as later distribution during Hitler´s Reich the book is characterized as propoganda.Politically related quotes can be interpreted otherwise out of context

¨Adolf Hitler Nazi leader Germany IQ 141¨

http://www.archure.net/psychology/IQs.html

If you require any clarification of any of the topics I have addressed such as the specific quotes I am refering to,the merit factor, the court decision regarding propaganda and or censorship, the refrence to Sparta and Aristotle, eugenics, or social darwinism I´d be happy to provide the information as it was included in my original article and extensively elaborated how I reached my conclusions attacking documented authenticity. Also if for any reason my political OR religious beliefs OR my nationality are to be scrutinized for posting commentary in regards to a literary work I´d be more than happy to oblige. Any commentary is welcome, whether negative or positive I do not advocate censorship and my response is guaranteed.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Book Review: Eyes Wide Open

Title: Eyes Wide Open: See and Live the Real You

Author: Jud Wilhite

Publisher Synopsis:  I had it all backwards. The main thing was not my love for God, but his love for me. And from that love I respond to God as one deeply flawed, yet loved. I’m not looking to prove my worth. I’m not searching for acceptance. I’m living out of the worth God already declares I have. I’m embracing his view of me and in the process discovering the person he created me to be.
In Eyes Wide Open, Jud Wilhite invites you to discover the real you. Not the you who pretends to be perfect to satisfy everyone’s expectations. Not the you who always feels guilty before God. Not the you who secretly feels God forgives everyone else but only tolerates you. Not the you who looks in the mirror and sees a failure. The real you, loved and forgiven by God, living out of your identity in Christ.

A travel guide through real spirituality from one incomplete person to another, Eyes Wide Open is a book of stories about following God in the messes of life, about broken pasts and our lifelong need for grace. It is a book about seeing ourselves and God with new eyes–eyes wide open to a God of love.

The timing of this book was amazing.  I received it three or more weeks ago but I didn’t start reading it until Sunday.  What is so ironic about the timing is that last week I posted my goals for this week.  We’re having week at a time challenges on Hearth Keepers right now and this week’s is a personal challenge.  I posted, “Trying to wake up each day as if I’m Ella in a new life and live each day as though there is no “routine”, no rut, no past failures to torment me, no expectations of too much or too little from me… just me being ME.  The me that is inside and constantly fighting to get out.” The real me– it’s like God said, ask and… you know how the rest of that goes.

To be honest, after the deep, thought provoking information from The Disappearance of God, I wasn’t sure what to expect from this book.  So often these things end up nothing more than feel-good drivel that does little more than keep you in your current pit of sin.  So, here I am reading this book and I’m convicted.  The truths Mr. Wilhite presents are simple but powerful.  For example:

  • God loves us.  Period.  Not if we love Him back, not if we’re ‘good enough’ or if we’ve followed the proper theological footwork… He loves us.  Period.
  • God isn’t the Cosmic Accountant.
  • God is on our team.
  • You are a saint.  Period.
  • You are a priest.

And finally… love the unloveable.

But, I have to admit, in the midst of my current focus, one concept really stood out more than any other.  The idea that God created me to be me.  I’m not supposed to be like every other Christian around me.  Yes, I am to be conformed to Christ, but that doesn’t mean I look exactly like every other person conformed to Christ.  I am fearfully and wonderfully made.  I was created for a purpose– and no one else can fill that purpose but me.  My uniqueness is a gift of the Lord.  What He wants me to do with that uniqueness is His gift to me.  I need to embrace it.  I don’t have to look like Susie Spiritual or Ronald Righteous.  I have to look like the Chautona Jesus wants to see on the day of judgment.  The Chautona that I want Jesus to see and say, “Well done good and faithful servant.”  I really don’t want to hear “Good job cookie cutter Christian Chautona.  I love you regardless.”  (and no, I don’t think Jesus would say that!)

I’m not giving up this book anytime soon.  I’ll share it with friends and family for a while and I might keep it on my shelf for a few years to make sure I’ve absorbed what I need to put into practice.  Then I’ll find the next Christian that needs a gentle reminder that God made them to be them… not me, not the latest Christian fad, not the “perfect Christian” down the street.  Just them.  Exactly how God made them.

He loves you.

He loves you.

He loves you.

He loves you.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

'Modern Interiors' by Andrea Goldsmith

1991, 242p.

This is Andrea Goldsmith’s second book, and one that I hadn’t heard of before.  I read it for my C.A.E. bookgroup – a night of wine, laughter, affection amongst the women my daughter has dubbed “The Ladies Who Say Oooooh” (because apparently we work ourselves up into a chorus of  ‘oooooh’ at some stage during the night. I’m not sure if this is a compliment or not).

The book’s main character, Phillipa Finemore, is a wealthy widow whose adult children expect her to share the family money with them and subside into a well-heeled widow’s existence as their mother and grandmother.  Instead she sells the big family home, shifts into a terrace house in Carlton, starts a charitable foundation, travels with her deceased husband’s lover and secretary, and befriends a Jewish bookstore owner and then a 25 year old university student.

The goodies and baddies are stereotyped and one-dimensional.  There’s the grasping daughter and embezzling son-in-law; the insipid and incompetent son, and the good gay son who gets on well with his mother.  There are overdrawn parodies of the self-aggrandizing business school and a grasping evangelical preacher and his young wholesome wife.  The slabs of Goldsmith’s own opinions about the perils of family and the commodification of university education, voiced through the characters, became laboured too.

In spite of all this, though, I enjoyed reading the book.  It was almost Anne Tyler-ish in places, and although very wordy, captured emotions and descriptions well.  I felt glee at the come-uppance of such unpleasant people, so I must have been engaged with this book in spite of myself.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Timeline of America: Sound Bytes from the Consumer Culture

Floyd Orr has succeeded in compiling a complete and completely off-beat history of American pop culture from before the first documented UFO sighting in 1644 to the failure of New Coke in 1985 to the rise of the Dixie Chicks as musical pundits. Timeline of America is not a typical history book – remember those 700-page clunkers that are heavy on war, atrocity and death? – Timeline is a book about the “fun stuff.” It is a celebration of the minutia that has defined our culture; the memorable movies, the power of television advertising, the rise and fall of popular music, sports as a consumable, popular cars, toys, computers and gossip. Somewhere between a non-fiction narrative and a list of dates, Timeline of America is a book like no other, a version of U.S. history told while sitting in the basement of That 70’s Show.

Organized into a series of narrative timelines that cover general history, movies, music, cars, television, sports, toys and “the nerd channel” it can either be read cover to cover (I did that) or used as a reference that allows you to skip to your favorite category or year without concern. It succeeds in connecting the dots and organizing all the white noise of pop culture into a tidy little capsule where all components can be viewed as pieces to a giant puzzle (I never realized that John Bonham and John Lennon died less than 90 days apart), and lets you see connections you never knew existed. Did you know that Starbucks and cell phones, two things that literally go hand-in-hand, both arrived in 1971?

Filled with interesting trivia (250 grave robbers were shot to death in 1900???) the book is meticulously researched and overflowing with nostalgia. It’s at its best when it covers the years when you grew up and resurrects countless suppressed memories (I had forgotten about the made-for-TV post-nuclear holocaust movie “The Day After”). Along with reminding you of all the great toys, shows and gossip of your youth, it’s also filled with many things you’ll be glad you missed – Heinz purple ketchup?

The strongest and most detailed prose can be found in the car section and Orr is clearly an enthusiast. I am not but I enjoyed learning how to determine the decade a car was produced by measuring the amount of chrome on its body. The details here are very convincing and Orr comes off as an expert. In fact, his knowledge of automobile history is so rich that it’s almost too much. It is packed with so many details that after awhile I was swimming in a sea of letters and numbers that looked almost like someone had taken a Scrabble game and tossed it on the floor with a stack of Uno cards (2000GT F150 Honda DX 1998). After awhile the makes and models didn’t mean much. Knowing that the 1998 Cobra had independent rear suspension was probably a bit too micro – I wanted to read more about Rod Stewart getting mugged and OJ fleeing from the cops in his Ford Bronco. And not a single mention of Back to the Future? Let’s hear less on specs and more on Nick Nolte’s hilarious DWI mug shot.

The movie section is pure nostalgia. Filled with movies I forgot that I loved and many I know I need to see it was great to read the yearly progression of movie history. The television section proved how quickly the arrival of the boob tube radically changed our innovation of snack foods. Can you image a dark age with no nacho-flavored Bugles or without mint and orange Kit-Kat bars? The music section is dedicated mostly it to rock music, categorizing and rightfully omitting rap, bubblegum and commercialized country music as “just plain trash.” Orr’s commentary includes such gems as “What is true rock and roll without talent, angst and rebellion? Without those things, all that is left is bad taste.” And he’s right on the money, strengthening his argument by referring to Shania Twain and Snoop Dog by their real names and not their corporate inspired monikers.

While some tidbits require further elaboration, like how reruns of Green Acres provided decades of entertainment for potheads, there will be some things that are missing entirely. No Kids in the Hall? What about The Daily Show? But Orr warns you that your favorites may not be found as not everything can be included. He alludes to a sequel and we hope we see one as the book ends with 2006 and almost begs for a second edition.

A masterpiece of nostalgia the book contains one nearly-fatal flaw: the cover. Clearly a symbol of the downhill slide music takes when corporate profits push art aside its tacky “road of life” image was clearly designed on a home computer. Normally I don’t go here and limit my reviews to the content of the book but in this case Orr risks sacrificing a wonderful read.

I’m reminded of the fictional rock band Spinal Tap, laboring over their album’s controversial cover and eventually releasing it in all black with no words or pictures. Let’s hope Orr doesn’t go that far when he produces his next edition but instead realizes that he has written a highly entertaining book – one that can be that much better.

Strengths: nostalgia!!! a fun, light read, painstakingly researched, filled with humor, well-written

Opportunities: not many but the car section gets bogged down in details, the cover

Will appeal to: movie buffs, car enthusiasts, history buffs, music lovers (especially rock music), people who enjoy gossip columns and anyone who loves their books American as apple pie.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Mistborn Trilogy by Brandson Sanderson

The basic premise of the Mistborn trilogy goes something like this: an evil force stalks the land, causing suffering and death. No one can stop it, causing widespread despair. But the ancient prophecies speak of one man who might journey to a distant place and there discover a power that can vanquish this evil. A sage discovers an unlikely man who fits the portents, and through much adversity he eventually does succeed in his quest.

If that sounds like a generic fantasy plot, it is. The twist here is that this all happened a thousand years ago. The hero, upon vanquishing the evil force, made himself the Lord Ruler of the world he had saved. Under his reign the vast peasantry are oppressed in miserable conditions while the opulant nobility carries on at their expense. Generation after generation has come and gone, but he remains, immortal and invincible.

Apparently when the first book in the trilogy, The Final Empire, came out the marketing leaned heavily on this setup as being mind-blowingly subversive. Well, it’s nothing mind-blowing for even a moderately well-read fantasy reader, but it’s certainly a good beginning. On this foundation, Sanderson builds an entertaining heist plot in the first book, a very detailed and well-thought-out magic system, and the usual mix of action, intrigue, and romance. Unfortunately, while this is a work with multiple viewpoints, it has a main character, Vin, who I personally found to be boring. She had a hard life before her unexpected awakening into magic powers, and now she…eh, whatever. Kelsier, Vin’s mentor, is more interesting, but for me at least the attraction here is not the characters.

It’s not really the world-building, either. Sanderson is not much interested in geography, so there aren’t long Tolkienian landscape descriptions. He’s more interested in the society he’s constructed. That would have been fine by me, since I have similar preferences, except the trilogy wastes much of its time on well-travelled ground. For example, the oppressive nobility gained their status because their ancestors helped the Lord Ruler when he was a young hero. Since then, they’ve become fractious, wasteful, and even occasionally rebellious, but he tolerates them due to the fond memories he has of their long-forgotten (by everyone else) ancestors. Obviously this is not how nobility worked either historically or in most fantasy, but alas this fascinating difference was remarked upon and left alone. When it comes to the nobility most of the trilogy’s energies are spent on whether or not every one of them is complicit in the Lord Ruler’s oppression and if so what punishment they might deserve, if not who is and who isn’t, etc. That’s fine as far as it goes, but it’s nothing I haven’t seen before.

I should mention that Sanderson has built an elegant magic system that is complicated without being confusing. The Mistborn of the title generate magic through the digestion of various types of metal, and much of the power comes from the abilities they gain to magically manipulate metal. Sanderson has rigorously worked out the implications for magical combat, and so the fight scenes are remarkable. Unfortunately these days I have less patience for textual choreography, but if you enjoy fun action there’s no shortage of it here.

What the trilogy does really well, however, has to do with the plot and backstory. Because I’ve already said that I found Mistborn decent but not amazing in the areas we traditionally grade fiction (characters, world-building), this is going to sound like faint praise. But the fact is, there are tons of sprawling fantasy series being written these days and hardly any of them come together in a reasonably satisfying way. Either the author loses control of the story, or the ending makes no sense, or the whole thing is brutally predictable. Sanderson, displaying perhaps the same rigor he used in developing his magic system, has done a superlative job laying out a backstory and plot that never are hard to understand but also steadily dole out surprising revelations. With many series, readers complain afterward that loose ends were left untied. Here, not only are the loose ends tied up, but the whole thing is so well-orchestrated that I never realized the loose ends were there until they were dealt with. Successive revelations forced reexaminations of past events, reexaminations that made me realize things hadn’t been hanging together as well as I (and the characters) had thought, but upon learning this new information everything made sense again.

The result is a story that fits together like a gleaming crystal, each facet carefully polished to achieve the desired effect. This is not my favorite fantasy trilogy since as I discussed before it didn’t cover precisely my personal favorite themes, but it is surely the best constructed that I’ve ever read. In light of this, I recommend that the trilogy be read all at once, for the more you remember from the first two books when finishing the third the more you’ll be able to see everything fit together perfectly.

9 Books that changed my Life

I haven’t always been a lifestyle designer with a zen twist, it had to start somewhere and I can blame it all on a book that probably everyone who is into lifestyle design knows by now. The four hour workweek by Tim Ferris. This book opened my eyes to the possibilities of Internet and changed my view on “work”. This is not the only book however so I’m presenting you with a list of the books that had the biggest influence on me. Some of these I read before I read the 4HWW and although I wasn’t familiar with “lifestyle design” I guess I was already working on it. In no particular order these books are:

Tim Ferris – The four hour workweek
A book dedicated to lifestyle design. Promoting the 80/20 way of thinking and letting me know that my dreams can become real goals. If this book didn’t exist this blog might just have never existed as well. As I said, this book nudged me in the right direction and gave my way of thinking a name.

Shunryu Suzuki – Zen mind, Beginners mind
A small book about zen meditation and real life. This book tells you just about anything you want to know about Zen Buddhism that’s worth knowing. It was my first book specifically about zen and I still think it’s one of the best I have. I started reading about zen roughly two years ago and had my very first zazen meditation session on June 7th 2008. I’ve been meditation a year now and the changes are huge. I’ve become calmer, more focused and everything has become so much clearer.

Tony Buzan – The speed reading book
I bought this book yeas ago to learn how to speed read. Although I haven’t managed to reach my target of 1000 words a minute but my reading definitely got faster because of this book. In this information age we’re constantly bombarded with information, most of it in writing. How many hours a day do you read blogs, articles, websites, books, newspapers? This book has the power to cut your reading time in half easily. Or you could read twice as much in the same time. The normal reading speed for adults is roughly 200-300 words a minute. The record holder is Sean Adams with 3850 words a minute. There is wide gap there, even though you probably won’t reach the 3000 words a minute, even 1000+ words a minute will change your life.

Rolf Potts – Vagabonding, an uncommon guide to the art of long-term world travel
Although I’m not a vagabond (yet) this book showed me that travel doesn’t need to be expensive. I’ve always dreamed of traveling, this book has offered me the tools and tips to make those dreams into goals. I think this is one of the essential books to read for anyone into lifestyle design. And anyone who wants to become a Location Independent Professional (LIP) probably already read this one.

Peter Ralston – The principles of effortless power
This is the book for anyone who is interested in the internal martial arts. It completely changed my thinking about T’ai Chi that I was practicing at the time. I found a Cheng Hsin group (Cheng Hsin being the martial art that Peter developed) near my home and started training there. Although I haven’t trained in over a year now this book and the training changed the way I move. It’s hard to explain this book but if you practice aikido, t’ai chi or any other internal martial art please pick up this book if you haven’t already. You might also want to read this book if you dance for a living or are a physiotherapist.

Karen Kingston – Clear your clutter with Feng Shui
Although I’m not much for Feng Shui this book still provided me with some great insight. It’s this book that initially got me to minimalize my living space. Although it’s not minimal yet I’ve been working at reaching the 100 things I wrote about a few months ago. Do you have clutter in your home or do you know someone who is a clutterbug? This is the book for you. With 183 pages you can easily read this book in an evening. A warning though, if you read this book you will want to clear your clutter right away. It’s addictive.


J.J. Gibbs – Dancing with your books, the zen way of studying
I bought this book when I was struggling with the last part of my bachelor’s degree. Now I think of it and see an underlined passage, this book was the reason I started zazen meditation. The underlined passage: “On practice that should be incorporated into everyone’s program of study is daily meditation… The purpose of meditation is to relax and silence the constant internal dialogue that goes on in our mind so you can devote your full attention to studying.” I bought the book on March 23d 2008 (I have the habit of writing the date inside the book at the same time I write my name in it.) This book will change how you think about studying, it will become fun!

Michael Masterson – Automatic wealth for grads
Together with “Your money or your life” this book changed the way I think about money. I was terrible with money and squandered thousands of euro’s, I have no idea where it all went. But now I have an overview (down to the cent) of all my spendings, assets and liabilities. I live below my means as much as possible and have realized that it’s perfectly possible to eventually reach the crossover point (The point where the income from your invested capital surpasses your monthly expenses, your basic life necessities and all the components of your chosen lifestyle, are covered by your monthly investment income.) within my lifetime. Although both these books are written for people who work (the 9-5 grind) I plan on using the knowledge in this book to reach that point with my freedom business. One of the big goals in my life is reaching this crossover point.

Robert M. Pirsig – Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance
The only novel in my list. If ever a novel had an impact on it’s reader it’s this one. From the back cover “The most explosive book you will ever read!” and I agree. This book will make you think about your thinking and about the world. Although I don’t have much to say about this book, if you haven’t read it yet, please do! This book made me think deeper about everything, taking nothing for granted.

What books influenced your life? What books should we read? Please tell us about the books you think we should read in the comments.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

The Secret History of the Pink Carnation

—3—

Before I start in on the real review, may I first say, who in the world is attracted to books with ridiculous covers like this?!  I am super sick of book covers featuring porcelain-skinned ladies from another century.  Even when the plot sounds mildly interesting, covers like this make me think “I’m going to be embarrassed reading this in public!”  I would have preferred a nice carnation instead.  

But I digress…

The Secret History of the Pink Carnation by Lauren Willig begins with Harvard graduate student, Eloise, pursuing a subject for her dissertation in England.  Recently separated from a cheating boyfriend, she seeks refuge in trying to find the true identity of an early 19th century spy, the Pink Carnation, of whom she has been secretly fantasizing about in her post-break-up haze.  The Pink Carnation is famous for infiltrating Napoleon’s court and in order to discover his name Eloise tracks down the records of another famous spy, the Purple Gentian.  

A new novel thus begins within this one, as we become voyeurs (almost literally) to Amy Balcourt and her hunt for the Purple Gentian.  Amy and her cousin Jane have been enraptured with espionage since childhood, and now are off to France to do some spying of their own.  On their way Amy meets a young man who, unbeknown to her, is the Purple Gentian, and so sets off a strange love triangle between two people.  

Along the way we break back into Eloise story, as the documents owner’s nephew Colin tries to stop Amy from discovering the family secret of the Pink Carnation.  And of course Colin is also very attractive and maddening.  

Eloise took FOREVER to figure out who the Pink Carnation was.  Isn’t a Harvard scholar supposed to be brighter than this?  Despite that fact, I actually enjoyed the character Eloise more than 19th century Amy, who is much too flighty to have a whole story built around.  There was a little to much “romance” (read: bodice-ripping ridiculousness) and not enough adventure, excitiment, and intrigue!  Although, what should I have expected with a cover like that…

3/5


Friday, June 12, 2009

Sag Harbor by Colson Whitehead

I just finished Colson Whitehead’s Sag Harbor and it is a phenomenal read. My only criticism is that the book is a tad too long.

The story centers around a young boy Benji who shares his childhood and adolescent experiences of living in Sag Harbor an all black community in the Hamptons.

This is definitely a summer read and as the summer unfolds for Benji and his friends, a pastiche of the mid 80s is revealed to the reader, roller-rinks, bbq’s, boardwalks, minimum wage jobs. Benji and his friends try to define themselves against the previous generations of their black community and yet the realization hits home that they are no different than their parents, their love affairs, their adventures, their encounters with racism, abuse, violence, boredom, and more.

Colson Whitehead writes not so much about people but place, as I recently tweeted to Mr. Whitehead on twitter, his books are enjoyable, at least to me, not because of the WHO, but because of the WHERE. It is how the summer and this particular location in the Hamptons, an all black community that guides the story. The plot is fairly loose in this novel and meanders along much in the same way that Benji and his friends explore the summer. It presents the readers with a series of reflections on adolescence: the awkwardness of the first kiss, competition amongst friends to define themselves and create an identity during the teen years.

If you’re looking for a light summer read, this is definitely the book for you. If you’re headed anywhere warm such as a beach or lake front, pick this up, you will not be disappointed.

One of the strengths and one of my favorite themes of the book centers around how different the cottage, lake-house, the place that we occupy during the summer months is  as opposed to the rest of the year. There is a separate life that exists in the summer, our friends and family behave and act differently during the summer compared with the winter, a second alternative self is reborn each summer. Benji and Mr. Colson Whitehead explore this second self and what it means when that last summer weekend encroaches. A question that Benji often asks and fears is how he will change as he returns to the city and the fast paced life of school and work in the fall.

outside the box of traditional church

There seems to be a fresh wind blowing in the body of Christ – the belief that God is speaking to us to stop playing church and “go back to the first things.” I too believe that He is speaking to His children, the Church, to turn our backs on the world’s system and turn towards Him. Specifically,

2 Chroniclas 7:14 if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.    (copied from Biblegateway.com free bible website)

Perhaps, He is calling us to turn away from our pagan traditions and rituals. Perhaps, He is calling us to really seek HIM and HIS will as the first Christians did. Our religious practices, etc. mirror none of their lives…

There is one thing that bothers me about this emphasis… and I say this with love. But why are we saying that pastors should not get “paid” and yet everyone is ok with people writing about what God is speaking to them and SELLING it to other believers? Isn’t that like plagerism – using God’s words – that He spoke to you for free – and yet you SELL them to other believers??

Let’s be careful not to “cherrypick” parts of the body that we need to fix. If God has given you a gift – and you are using it to edify the body – please don’t prostitute God’s words by SELLING your God given gift!! GIVE IT FREELY LIKE HE GAVE IT TO YOU… Giving to others is a great demonstration of the first believers. If other believers want to donate – that is wonderful!

just a thought,

Thursday, June 11, 2009

A Thousand Splendid Suns

—4.5—

I received Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns TWO CHRISTMASES AGO from my lovely little friend Kristen.  I want to say a belated THANKS KRISTEN, because I finally read it and I wish I had read it sooner.  I can’t really explain my hesitation; my only thought is that perhaps I was worried it wouldn’t compare to The Kite Runner, which was absolutely stunning.  It must have been really intimidating for Hosseini to have to follow-up on that huge success.  But what a job he did!  I was incredibly moved by A Thousand Splendid Suns.  It was as uplifting as much as it was tragic.

I think one of the reasons I enjoyed this novel was that Hosseini turned his storytelling to several generations of women: growing, learning, and loving during the past 30 years of Afghanistan history.  This country in turmoil is an excellent backdrop to examine what makes each of us alike and each of us human.  The struggle these women had to go through to find happiness, and the surprising places they found it, made A Thousand Splendid Suns remarkably profound.

I usually give a clearer plot summary, but I don’t think I could do this book justice, and I think you should just read it yourself!

4.5/5


Tuesday, June 9, 2009

John Donne: Poet-Priest

Simon Schama’s BBC Documentary on John Donne was screened just after I had finished reading John Stubbs’ excellent biography (See Levi Stahl for a balanced review), Donne: The Reformed Soul. It set me thinking.

There is a lot we can learn from looking at the life and work of this man. He lived in a turbulent time on the run in to the English Civil War and Puritan Revolution. He began life as a Catholic and ended it as an Anglican priest, Dean of St Paul’s. In between he was a reprobate and love poet before transforming into a great religious poet and one of the greatest sermon writers of any age in England or perhaps anywhere.

He is perhaps most famous for the quote ‘no man is an island, entire of itself’.

The context is:

 Who casts not up his eye to the sun when it rises? but who takes off his eye from a comet when that breaks out? Who bends not his ear to any bell which upon any occasion rings? but who can remove it from that bell which is passing a piece of himself out of this world? No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend’s or of thine own were: any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. 

Who casts not up his eye to the sun when it rises? but who takes off his eye from a comet when that breaks out? Who bends not his ear to any bell which upon any occasion rings? but who can remove it from that bell which is passing a piece of himself out of this world? No man is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main.

If a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friend’s or of thine own were: any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind, and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. 

The words ring down the centuries with absolute conviction:

any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind.

Our need to understand them and act on that understanding has never been greater. And the advice he gave in one of his satires (Number Three) would help us broaden our sympathies and diminish our prejudices:

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . On a huge hill,
Cragged and steep, Truth stands, and he that will
Reach her, about must and about must go,
And what the hill’s suddenness resists, win so.
Yet strive so that before age, death’s twilight,
Thy soul rest, for none can work in that night.
To will implies delay, therefore now do;
Hard deeds, the body’s pains; hard knowledge too
The mind’s endeavours reach, and mysteries
Are like the sun, dazzling, yet plain to all eyes.
Keep the truth which thou hast found; men do not stand
In so ill case, that God hath with his hand
Sign’d kings’ blank charters to kill whom they hate;
Nor are they vicars, but hangmen to fate.
Fool and wretch, wilt thou let thy soul be tied
To man’s laws, by which she shall not be tried
At the last day? Oh, will it then boot thee
To say a Philip, or a Gregory,
A Harry, or a Martin, taught thee this?

Both these sentiments are echoed in our own times by Bahá’u'lláh:

O Children of Men! Know ye not why We created you all from the same dust? That no one should exalt himself over the other. Ponder at all times in your hearts how ye were created. Since We have created you all from one same substance it is incumbent on you to be even as one soul, to walk with the same feet, eat with the same mouth and dwell in the same land, that from your inmost being, by your deeds and actions, the signs of oneness and the essence of detachment may be made manifest. Such is My counsel to you, O concourse of light! Heed ye this counsel that ye may obtain the fruit of holiness from the tree of wondrous glory.

(The Hidden Words of Bahá’u’lláh, Arabic No. 68) 

and

O SON OF SPIRIT! The best beloved of all things in My sight is Justice; turn not away therefrom if thou desirest Me, and neglect it not that I may confide in thee. By its aid thou shalt see with thine own eyes and not through the eyes of others, and shalt know of thine own knowledge and not through the knowledge of thy neighbour. Ponder this in thy heart; how it behooveth thee to be. Verily justice is My gift to thee and the sign of My loving-kindness. Set it then before thine eyes. 

(Ibid: Arabic No. 2)

If only most of us could live according to those two principles the world would be transformed. How many times must they be repeated before we get the point?

Monday, June 8, 2009

<i>Smiley's People</i>, by John Le Carré

Perhaps it comes from growing up a James Bond fan, but I had trouble getting into John Le Carré’s Smiley’s People as a spy novel. There were no flying cars, no laser watches, and very little action of any kind. Than again, 007 is about as far from actual espionage as Jack Sparrow is from a Somali gunman, and that’s what this novel is about. Le Carré strips away the romantic glamor of a “spy novel” and deals with the heart of espionage, people.

George Smiley is a retired British spy master, brought back into the fray when one of his former contacts is assassinated. He is supposed to do a simple clean up of the situation, more to make sure the service’s hands are clean than anything else. Smiley does a thorough job in his investigation, however, and finds out that “The General” had become involved in something greater than just old war stories. Ignoring the new rules of a weakened MI6, Smiley returns to the Cold War for one final face-off with his Russian counterpart Karla.

Much of the book is consumed by talking, storytelling. There are long passages, chapters long, where one character reveals or reviews their knowledge for Smiley’s benefit. He works over his own information, revisiting old case files, and interviews other people extensively. He talks to former associates and colleagues, some of whom he had sworn never to see again. In doing so, he pieces together the story which will lead to the final showdown with Karla, a shadowy figure at best who seems to have outlasted Smiley in the spy business. At times the dialogue feels tedious, as some characters attempt to hide or restrict information. Likewise, Smiley’s careful investigation, moving from one source to another, starts to feel a little monotonous after awhile. But, if you are trying to write a real spy novel, especially of the Cold War, there is simply no other way to proceed. Much of intelligence gathering, like other over-imagined professions, is a slow, laborious process. This verisimilitude was intriguing in its own right, but also left me begging for a faster pace more often than not.

Smiley is a central character in several of Le Carré’s novels, so it is no surprise that the most detailed characterization work centers on George. Retired from MI6 for a second time, he easily slips back into his old patterns of thought and behavior. This is not a truly triumphant return, however. The service has changed. There are few people working who remember Smiley or the contributions he made. They are taking espionage in a new direction, ignoring the lessons of the past. The old allies are corroded, and it is a painful effort for George to muster them for one last mission. At the heart of it all is the discovery of a human weakness in the seemingly impenetrable Karla. For Smiley, this is justice, as Karla once used George’s great weakness–his philandering wife Ann–to turn Smiley’s trusted colleague into a traitor.

Rather than reveling in the key to his nemesis’ destruction, Smiley seems disturbed. Though it never turns into an explicit discussion, the book can be read as an exploration of the symbiotic relationship between hero and villain. Karla is the Russian reflection of Smiley. There are several incidents, pointed out by secondary characters, where Karla makes a move seemingly identical to what Smiley would have done in the same position. George fervently denies the similarities, and yet he has an almost a protective reaction on first unraveling Karla’s secret. Indeed, when there is no choice left but to use this vulnerability to take Karla down, Smiley does so with a tense, melancholic air. By ending the threat with which only he can deal, Smiley is also terminating his own usefulness. It’s Batman without the Joker, Optimus Prime without Megatron.

This is not, in my opinion, Le Carré’s best work. It is not as compact or precise as The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, and the plot has become a little dated twenty years past the Berlin Wall’s demolition. Nevertheless, the ending is satisfying and it would be a worthwhile read for anyone interested in fictional characters which are more than simple stereotypes.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

The Trinity: A Guide for the Perplexed (1)

The Trinity: A Guide for the Perplexed

  • Author: Paul M. Collins
  • Paperback: 194 pages
  • Publisher: T & T Clark International (December 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0567031853
  • ISBN-13: 978-0567031853
    .
  • Amazon
  • Continuum
  • Eisenbrauns
  • Dove Booksellers
  • .

    With thanks to the kind folks at Continuum for this review copy!

    Paul M. Collins is a priest in the Church of England and a Reader in Theology at the University of Chichester, UK. The Trinity: A Guide for the Perplexed is an intermediate level work designed with the expressed intention of getting students of Trinitarian theology to think. Collins says that his “intention in writing this guide is not so much to provide answers as to equip the reader in framing good questions of Scripture and tradition and of those who seek to interpret them.” (p. 5)

    In chapter 1 Collins’ driving question is “Why Trinity at all?” In seeking to answer this he examines certain NT passages which gave rise to the doctrine of the Trinity, the Church’s worship, and the mystical theology of various theologians, ancient and contemporary. He concludes of the NT that “later Trinitarian reflection is neither an aberration nor inauthentic,” and that it “secur[es] the Apostles’ experience of Christ… rather than a radical misunderstanding. (p. 16) And while the shape of the Church’s worship is decidedly Trinitarian Collins correctly notes that this doesn’t “necessarily guarantee any explicit Trinitarian understanding or devotion among members of a congregation.” (p. 16) Yet it’s the Church’s experience of “God in the Christ event and the event of Pentecost” (p. 25) that forms the root of the doctrine of the Trinity. Ancient writers such as Dionysius the Areopagite sought to speak of God apophatically which gave rise to later theologians asking if it is possible to know God, and if so to what extent. Rahner contends that that “human beings ‘know’ God by knowing themselves in relation to the mystery of being alive.” (p. 24)  One wonders how much of a ‘mystery’ being alive actually is though. 

    In chapter 2 Collins turns his attention to four ‘moments’ throughout the Church’s history that have had serious impacts on Trinitarian hermeneutics. In reverse chronological order he begins with “de Régnon’s paradigm” and the influence it has had on modern social Trinitarianism. Essentially the “paradigm” is a caricature that says the Eastern fathers started with God’s threeness while the Western fathers started with God’s oneness. Taking this as their point of departure modern social Trinitarians opt for the Eastern model and focus on relationality by conceiving God as a society of persons in communion. This reading of the Eastern fathers (i.e., the Cappadocians, esp. Gregory of Nyssa) has been challenged recently by scholars such as Sara Coakley who argues that social Trinitarians are misreading the sources which are actually more concerned with “underscoring the unity of divine will in the Trinity.” (p. 34) Despite the critiques against social Trinitarianism Collins believes that it can be defended on the basis of what Rowan Williams calls an appeal to the “world of particulars” (see p. 37, 38). “Such an appeal would focus on Christology, as rooted in an understanding of the concrete events of revelation in the economy.” (p. 38)  Such a reading is alleged to be superior to essentialist readings that focus on God’s ontology. 

    Next he examines the role that Socinianism played in shaping Trinitarian theology from the 16th to 19th centuries.  In short, the orthodox theologians saw the doctrine of Socinus as akin to Arianism which called for a reexamination of the ante-Nicene faith.  Certain orthodox theologians concluded that the ante-Nicene fathers were more in line with Arianism while other orthodox theologians came to radically different conclusions and saw Athanasius as the more faithful interpreter of the faith that preceded him.  From here he continues back in time to the Great Schism between the Eastern and Western Church.  Of course a brief treatment of the filioque controversy follows but Collins is quick to note that this wasn’t the only, or even the main factor in the split.  “Rather, it can be argued that the main differences between East and West concern their epistemological approaches and ontological affirmations about the being and nature of God.” (p. 45)  Taking Gregory Palamas and Thomas Aquinas as the medieval representatives of Eastern and Western theology respectively, Collins highlights the differences in their understanding of God’s essence and energies.  For Palamas God’s essence is “utterly inaccessible and unknowable for human beings” while Aquinas “argued that  the divine essence might be known through the habitus (habit or state) of created grace, enabling the human mind to perceive divine truth.” (p. 45)  Collins is sure to note the similarities between the two theologians and the theologies they represent though in the belief that “even a redeemed human being does not actually know or participate in the very being of God.” (p. 45)

    Collins rounds the chapter out with a brief discussion on the reception of Nicene orthodoxy.  He focuses on Augustine and notes the manner in which he functionalized the doctrine.  “This did not entail a reformulation of the doctrine but its reception in ways which were novel and creative. [...] By appealing to the salvific, Augustine is able to remove the doctrine of the Trinity from merely being a rule by which to judge statements and turn it into something which has a functionality which is both existential and redemptive.” (p. 49-50)  He sees Augustine’s functionalization of the doctrine as “support of the contemporary appeal to relationality,” (p. 50) especially in the work of theologians such as John Zizioulas, but he also recognizes that such an approach might diverge from Eastern apophatic reflection on God.

    To be continued…

    B”H

    Saturday, June 6, 2009

    The State of Jones

    The good folks at Doubleday sent me a review copy of The State of Jones: The Small Southern County That Seceded from the Confederacy by Sally Jenkins and John Stauffer. It is available for pre-order now from WigWags Books and will be published on June 23rd.

    • Hardcover: 416 pages
    • Publisher: Doubleday (June 23, 2009)
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-10: 0385525931
    • ISBN-13: 978-0385525930
    • Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches

    This is the story of Newton Knight who was a Unionist living in Mississippi and strongly anti-slavery. The authors suggest that he was “the South’s strangest soldier.”

    Some quick facts:

    • In Jones County Mississippi, fifty-three men had not only fought as anti-Confederate guerrillas, but formally enlisted in the Union army in New Orleans
    • Knight’s group of guerrillas “remained unconquered though surrounded by Confederate Armies from start to finish.”
    • Jones was drafted into the Confederate army but refused to fight and eventually deserted.
    • Knight had two families, one white and one black. His black family was with a slave named Rachel who was owned by his family and who helped him during the war. He acknowledged her children as his own.

    I profess to getting behind in my reading for school because of this book. I promise to write a proper review after I’m finished reading it. I can say that it is VERY well written.

    Newton Knight’s story is being made into a film currently in production. Filmmaker Gary Ross is writer, director, and  one of several producers.

    Sally Jenkins is an award-winning journalist currently with the Washington Post. She has authored eight books, three of New York Times bestsellers.

    John Stauffer is Professor of English and African American Studies and Chair of the Committee on Higher Degrees in the History of American Civilization.
    His prior book, GIANTS: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln, I mentioned in a previous post which you can read here.

    Thursday, June 4, 2009

    Be the Surprise - Who . . . Me?

    Author Terry Esau creates a second refreshing look into active Christianity, and the unexpected journey it can become. Be the Surprise is his second book, following God Surprise Me (2005). Terry’s writing style seemed a bit ADD-ish at first. His book is a collection of short stories, poems, song lyrics and anecdotes supporting the title, asking God to be active and make him the surprise in other people’s lives. After digging into his personal history, I discovered that before becoming an author, Terry wrote commercial jingles. His resulting adjunct writing style doesn’t detract from the book, but rather creates a fun and unexpected delivery, like a memorable bit advertising a new soda pop.

    Terry’s theme revolves around giving and receiving. As Christ followers, while we are called to give to others, it seems we easily become focused on receiving. Terry calls giving and receiving Siamese twins, co-joined at the heart. You can’t fully have one without the other. As he talks about his journey from God Surprise Me to Be the Surprise Terry also makes a comparison to the natural process of breathing. A person inhales, which is like watching God work in your life. Exhaling completes the cycle as we take what god has given us, and give of the living waters to someone else. You can’t have one without the other.

    The body of the book retells examples of those who chose to be the surprise, and the lessons Terry collected along the way. Almost living parables, Be the Surprise gives the reader uncomplicated illustration of how to be the surprise and unexpectedly give of God’s life. On p.22 Terry quotes one of the people he met along his journey. A woman in a restaurant who bussed tables and washed dishes said “You can’t do good without being good. And God is the good in me.” Through another incident, he was reminded that often Christ followers try too hard to be religious, and impress or influence others. Our goal should be to become transparent, and genuine. Ultimately we are the gift, Christ living in us. We can influence the world and build His kingdom: inhaling and exhaling, giving and receiving.

    Terry’s book is a wonderful example of how a Christian’s faith can influence the world, and I recommend it highly. We aren’t called to be blow torches setting the world on fire, or theatrical search lights piercing the night sky in front of some retailer’s sale of the decade. Christ followers are a light set on a table, a city on a hill by which others can find their way home.