Courage is very important. Like a muscle, it is strengthened by use.
Saturday Mornings
Thursday, July 03, 2025
Wednesday, July 02, 2025
'Big Beautiful(?) Bill', Con’t
Please read this. We don’t have time to wait. People will suffer.
Senator Chris Murphy just sent out this report from the Senate Floor: He specifies what each American can do, pronto. He says we do not have the luxury of waiting until mid-terms or 2 years at the rate the dismantling and deletions of our programs have taken place:
“Last night in the Senate, something really important happened. Republicans forced us to debate their billionaire bailout budget framework. We started voting at 6 PM because they knew doing it in the dark of night would minimize media coverage. And they do not want the American people to see how blatant their handover of our government to the billionaire class is.
So I want to explain what happened last night and what we did to fight back:
The apex of Republicans’ plan to turn over our government to their wealthy cronies is a giant tax cut for billionaires and corporations. And they plan to pay for it with cuts to programs that working people rely on. Popular and necessary programs like Medicaid, Medicare, and SNAP, are all being targeted. In order to pass the tax cut, Republicans have to go through a series of procedural steps. Last night, they took the first step which requires them to pass an outline of their plan, but with it, any senator can offer as many amendments as we want. So my Democratic colleagues and I did just that.
Now, we knew that Republicans would largely unanimously oppose them, but we had two objectives here. One, Republicans were forced to put their opinion on record — many for the first time — on the most corrupt parts of Trump and Musk’s agenda. Two, as I’ve been saying, I am going to make every process and procedure as slow and painful as possible for as long as my colleagues choose to ignore the constitutional crisis happening before our eyes.
So what did we propose?
We proposed no tax cuts for anyone who makes a billion dollars a year.
We made them vote on whether or not Elon Musk and DOGE should have limitless access to Americans’ personal data.
We made them vote on whether to protect IVF and require insurers to cover it. Every single amendment Democrats proposed was shot down.
On almost every single amendment, Republicans universally opposed it. Every Republican voted against our proposal to prevent more tax cuts for billionaires. The corruption and theft is happening in the open here.
The whole game for Republicans is taking your money and giving it to the wealthiest corporations and billionaires — even if it means kicking your parents out of a nursing home or turning off Medicaid for the poorest children.
They know what they are doing is deeply unpopular. They are offering a tax cut to the most wealthy that is 850 times larger than what they are offering working people. Oh and by the way, any tax cuts for working people are going to be washed out by higher costs for basic necessities, like health care and food. It’s a fundamental injustice.
Thanks to your pressure and support, many of my Democratic colleagues have joined my effort to do everything we can to make sure they cannot destroy democracy and steal your money in the dark of the night. We are being loud about what is happening. I’m going to continue to grind the gears of Congress down as much as possible to make it that much harder and slower to get away with this corruption. That’s why the votes lasted until nearly 5 AM.
DO NOT PRESS SHARE. JUST COPY THE ENTIRE POST AND PASTE IT ON YOUR OWN WALL.
This is a five-alarm fire. I don’t think we have two years to plan and fight back. I think we have months. It’s still in our power to stop the destruction of our democracy with mass mobilization and effective opposition from elected officials.
So we can’t miss any opportunity to take advantage of opportunities to put Republicans on the record and shine a light on what is happening.
And you have a role to play in this as well. I need you to amplify what’s happening, support the leaders who are fighting for you to make sure they can continue speaking truth to power against Musk and Trump’s billionaire cronies, and show up at rallies and town halls.
Use every tool at your disposal to send a message loud and clear about how you expect my colleagues to lead and fight in this moment.”
-- Chris Patrick Murphy, US Senator
The insidious part (of which there are many) is that our President is gloating about what this will enable him to expand against people he has wholesale characterized in terms quite similar to those used in Nazi Germany less than 100 years ago (just trade Jews then for immigrants now).
Tuesday, July 01, 2025
Differentiation Comes From Clarity
Companies that offer too many options often struggle to differentiate. Differentiation comes from clarity of WHY, not excess of WHAT.
-- Simon Sinek
Monday, June 30, 2025
'Big Beautiful(?) Bill'
GOP tax bill would cost poor Americans $1,600 a year and boost highest earners by $12,000, CBO says
And, this may not even be the worst part of it.
Have you seen what it funds (besides more of this)? And, what it takes money away from to do so (not to mention how much money it adds to the deficit), like this and this?
Even Elon Musk calls it political suicide (but, here might be why...).
Such things, in the end, reflect what we value. In this case (though it's not the first time, to be sure), it seems primarily about how to make more money now (not about what's good for us or our future).
It's like money is our god or something (somebody else mentioned that once)....
And, there's really nothing beautiful about it.
Sunday, June 29, 2025
Saturday, June 28, 2025
3 Observations & A Question
How we see ourselves is critical and the lens we use to do so is important.
Don’t develop the habit of isolating yourself — it’s too easy to do.
Fox News is the bane of the older evangelical generation.
Don't we know yet how repulsive self-righteousness is?
Prior 3 Observations & A Question….
Friday, June 27, 2025
Father of U.S. Marines punched and arrested by Border Patrol agents in Orange County
Thursday, June 26, 2025
Lying
When lying becomes prolific, it’s hard to believe anything is true. Believing is the operative concept here — a function of trust. If a person cannot be trusted, it’s hard to believe anything they say. When we say, "I don’t believe you", we’re essentially saying "I can’t trust you". Though we will never do it perfectly consistently, we have to be committed to telling the truth.
Now, we do have to get one the right — to admit that we only ever see portions of the truth. In other words, none of us is a repository of all truth. Each of us participates with the broader concepts of truth, but always in a limited way. This is not as particularly a disadvantage as it may sound. It acknowledges our right size relationship with truth (we are not God...thankfully). The beauty of this is that it is the pooling of each of our limited perspectives of what is true that reveals the reality of that greater truth. We are meant to come together to share our individual and collective truth (one does, actually, depend on the other). This is, in fact, what makes truth one. And so, by acknowledging our individual limitations, a key ingredient to seeking the truth is our interest and openness to finding it, in discovering it, and looking for it. And, this commitment needs to be a shared one for it to work well.
This commitment also includes discipline with regard to things like lying, the intentional distortion of truth. We must uphold the long-term value of telling the truth over the short-term advantage of lying.
Lying is a contagion when it is normalized. When lying is viewed without morality — merely as a means to an end — it spreads both widely and deeply. Our, otherwise constructive, energy is siphoned off to combat the forces of lying. It is really a misuse of our energy that could be applied to the perpetuation of the ideals of truth. Further, it is challenging (to say the least) not to become suspicious; not only of the liar, but of anyone who associates with a liar…and their unwillingness to see or find truth. This is, among other things, the insidiousness of it, as it disempowers the forces of energy for both the purposes and benefits of truth.
The collective has to win the battle for truth. And, that is achieved by the personal commitment to seeking and telling...the truth.
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Excel At Things
The greatest business failures often come not from playing the game poorly, but from continuing to excel at things that no longer matter.
-- Shane Parrish
Monday, June 23, 2025
Sugar
I’ve noticed…the more sugar I eat, the more sugar I want to eat.
…literally, and metaphorically.
Sunday, June 22, 2025
Your Perception of God
Is God present in our world today?
Of course, this can't really be proven (especially with man-made instrumentation). Like it or not, we're really down to our perception of God's presence then, aren't we?
So, what impacts your perception of God's presence in the world the most?
A recent experience mountain-top experience of the beauty and magnitude of nature?
An encounter somewhere along your journey with the devastation that humanity brings on itself and its surroundings?
Intimate relationships that perpetuate the ideals of love?
The damage you’ve seen or experienced from someone or something?
In other words, is it the height of your experience with beauty and joy or the depth of it with depravity and despair?
What would you add to the list…or to the question?
Saturday, June 21, 2025
3 Observations & A Question
Authoritarianism, Con’t
Friday, June 20, 2025
Mesmerized
We often seem mesmerized by the marvels of technology.
Perhaps, as a species, we always have been, which if so may signal that much of what is seemingly new isn't...all that much.
Something about man-made technology seems to pull us away from the technology of the natural world.
I was on a walk early one morning and heard the blast of a train horn off in the distance. I remember having a feeling about it. It was cool. Cool, because of what it represented and the technology involved with building a device that can carry large weights and quantities of things over great distances. Cool, also, probably because of something nostalgic about it that struck a cord in me.
Meanwhile, birds were tweeting. Bullfrogs were belching. The leaves of trees were rustling all around me. There was nearly constant sound, multiple simultaneous sounds, as the world was waking up.
I read something recently that promoted the notion that you really have to look at something for more than a minute or two to actually see something. In other words, it’s not just staring at something, it is receiving what you’re seeing in a way that allows you to truly see what the image represents. In our scrolling-laden age, we look at millions of things and don’t really see very much of anything. We’re not, I suppose, really looking; contemplating what we're seeing, taking in their significance.
Whether listening or seeing, we’re missing so much of what is all around us, as we mesmerize ourselves with the latest man-made technology, largely fascinating, but not very enlightening.
And this, perhaps, is as much a function of the information itself. Not all information is of equal value. Some of it, just because it exists, is meaningless. It’s just there. It may be entertaining, but offers very little to life (not everything is 'life-changing', nor should it be). We seem to take great pride in our ability to process information when, in fact, we’re not really processing much of it at all, not to mention what of it is actually of any value to us.
This is likely why, time and again, distancing ourselves from the bright-and-shiny of technology, and returning to the basic environments, systems, and beauty of the natural world often reveal (not only the distinction) something more valuable to the core of who we are as human-beings.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
LT: What You Do, How You Do It
Talk all you want, but leadership comes down to what you do and the way you do it.
Monday, June 16, 2025
Where The Shoots Through
Ever noticed…on a wooded trail, the majority of flowers seem to be positioned exactly where light shoots through?
Sunday, June 15, 2025
Guardian Angel or…?
Saturday, June 14, 2025
3 Observations & A Question
It’s a shame if your perspective of the world is limited by your lack of experience of the world.
What keeps you on your toes?
The Parade
Friday, June 13, 2025
Dad and Ron
2025 has been a year of seismic shifts. The loss of two men I greatly loved, admired, and respected seemed to punctuate those changes for me.
Thursday, June 12, 2025
President of the United States: "Animals"?
Try as we may, we just can't avoid the escalating drama in our federal government. This, in part, is due to what appears to be the intention — to create that drama. Both by rhetoric and show of physical force, trying to ignore it is no longer an option.
Unbelievably, the President of the United States is making wholesale references to American citizens who protest as 'animals':
The use of this term, in this context, is an overt attempt to pit those referred to against what would otherwise be the case. In other words, to describe human beings as animals is overtly dehumanizing. Trump must think that doing so is effective – that it will garner something in the audience (as it has in the past by other leaders with a lust for power).
Further, and against that backdrop, it appears that anyone who protests (not just in LA) will be subject to "...very big force":
If there’s any protester wants to come out, they will be met with very big force…. For those people that want to protest, they’re going to be met with very big force.
-- Donald Trump
We didn't seem to take him seriously the first time around; will we now (maybe, we finally are)? ...more facts / less theatre (a parade?!?) here and here.
Democracy is under assault right before our eyes. This moment we have feared has arrived. He’s taking a wrecking ball…to our founding fathers’ historic project: three coequal branches of independent government.
I know many of you are feeling deep anxiety, stress, and fear. But I want you to know that you are the antidote to that fear and that anxiety. What Donald Trump wants most is your fealty, your silence, to be complicit in this moment. Do not give in to him.
-- Gavin Newsom
The correct way to connect the authoritarian presence in LA and the Big Beautiful Bill is that the bill gives the government the resources to do this in dozens of cities at once. So if you don't like what's happening in LA, it's coming to your town if the bill passes.
-- David Dayen, The American Prospect
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Reclaim Large Areas of Peace
Ultimately, we have just one moral duty; to reclaim large areas of peace in ourselves.
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Monday, June 09, 2025
Nature of Change
I’m wondering…about the real nature of change in the world.
It seems we tend to largely think about change through a technological lens. Certainly, technology has introduced some significant changes over the course of human history.
But, when you think about the nature of real change throughout human history, it seems that technology is more like a participant in something more significant. Real change seems to dwell in the hearts of human-beings collectively (and individually).
Sunday, June 08, 2025
We Can Become
Saturday, June 07, 2025
4 Observations (from Others)
When we are no longer able to change a situation, we are challenged to change ourselves.
-- Viktor Frankl
Comfort can be dangerous. Comfort provides a floor, but also a ceiling.
-- Trevor Noah
Action absorbs anxiety. Do Something.
-- Dan Harris
The measure of a person is the congruence between their words and actions, their kindness, their confidence, and their decisiveness about who they are in the world and who they intend to remain.
-- Peter Cundill
Prior 4 Observations (from Others).
Friday, June 06, 2025
Thursday, June 05, 2025
Awareness
How aware are we?
It doesn’t take much observation to recognize that there’s a lot going on in life and in the world that we know very little (or nothing) about. And, this may or may not necessarily be an indictment. We are creatures of our surroundings and, by implication, that means that whatever we’re not surrounded by likely will not impose itself on us very deeply.
For example, this observation should terrify most people. It also seems quite clear that most Republicans right now would scoff at it. And, the most likely reason is that most of these same people do not feel any impact from it, because their surroundings are relatively untouched by it. But, for those are more than touched by it, there is a pervasive sense of fear about it that dominates their lives.
We are in Colorado today visiting one of our kids and her family, for their one-year old’s birthday. And, like we were at that point in our lives, they are immersed in the surroundings of young family life (as they should be), perhaps without a ton of awareness of the kinds of things referenced in the observation above (probably good for them right now anyway). A baby’s awareness is highly focused at the beginning of their lives and expands as they grow and mature. Their surroundings impact it a lot. It is quite fascinating to watch this process in our 5 grandkids, each at different ages, contexts, and temperaments, even as doing so causes us to reflect on that of our own kids.
It seems important to recognize that awareness development doesn’t (or shouldn’t) stop once we arrive at adulthood. It needs to continue, in order to cope with the world in a healthy way. When it doesn’t, we can easily see all around us the susceptibilities that leak into the mix (not to mention the consequences).
My wife and I are at a different points in our lives now than where we were when we were younger with our own young family. Accordingly, we have different kinds of bandwidths, than what our kids do at the moment, which allows us to maintain awareness of things like the above. Even with more bandwidth now for certain things, our awareness is still quite limited, mostly by what our means allow us to experience (and not). Unlike some people, we don’t have certain fears because of our position and resources in life. And, we don’t have certain burdens for the same reasons.
By general disposition (personality, etc.), people seem to be more aware of certain things and less on other things. I feel more aware certain things, because of my nature and what I work on in my life, than my wife. Likewise, She also has more awareness of certain things than I do.
But, at some point, our lack of awareness is an issue, both interpersonally and with regard to the systems that impact our lives. For example, we all have a sense that America is changing. The question is in what ways and for what reasons. Just hoping for the good ole’ days, isn’t awareness (in many cases, it’s actually closer to naïveté). There are forces of self-interest and power that are heavily in play right now (whether we are aware of them or not), which require other forces to countermand them or they will prevail to significant effect for everyone. When that happens, we will become truly aware of what has changed and how it actually does impact the surroundings of our lives.
At whatever point we happen to be in the courses of our existence, awareness is a valuable means of understanding the nature of that existence — not only for ourselves, but also for those whose surroundings (experiences), at any given moment, are different than ours.
To that end, we have both an opportunity and an obligation to become increasingly…aware.
Wednesday, June 04, 2025
Tuesday, June 03, 2025
Our Best Interest At Heart
Monday, June 02, 2025
How I'm Doing
I’ve noticed…that I have to get out of bed in the morning to more accurately assess how I'm doing.
Sunday, June 01, 2025
Private Evacuation Plan
Saturday, May 31, 2025
3 Observations & A Question
Life seems to require persistence.
Just as there are often benefits, there are also limitations to nearly any system.
You can become so good (so focused, that is) at the way you see things that you no longer notice that other people are equally as good at the way that they see things.
When do you ask if this is good — when you do, do you also ask for whom?
Prior 3 Observations & A Question….
Authoritarian Playbook
The Constitution does not permit the Executive to commandeer the entire appointments power by unilaterally creating a federal agency…and insulating its principal officer from the Constitution as an ‘advisor’ in name only.
-- Tanya Chutkan, U.S. District Judge
Friday, May 30, 2025
Play With Me
Thursday, May 29, 2025
The Earth and Goodness
The Earth and goodness are alike in many ways.
Perhaps, this is because they are kind of like personifications of each other.
Like many good things, the earth both persists and prevails over time. The rate and degree, however, can be significantly repressed, in the short-term. Usually, this happens by lack of understanding and wisdom, not to mention exploitation.
A world view that excludes reciprocity quickly leans into this lack of understanding (and its consequences). If we don’t recognize the Earth as a function of goodness, then we will tend to exploit tit through an extraction mentality. Capitalism is just one way this can so easily happen.
Harmony is a much broader concept than just two people getting along. It contains the totalities of our whole existence. We are all interconnected — and not just with each other, but with everything in our collectively shared environments.
Here are a couple of examples:
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
People Worthy of Your Commitment
Monday, May 26, 2025
Memorial Day
[O]n behalf of the American people, I own the store, and I set prices, and I'll say, if you want to shop here, this is what you have to pay.
-- Donald Trump
Is this really the kind of thing our veterans fought and died for, for our highest leader to think of himself as a king who controls everything, including what people should pay for things they buy?
Sunday, May 25, 2025
Trust Your Experience
Saturday, May 24, 2025
3 Observations & A Question
Where we're going is always impacted by where we've been.
A census is more interesting than we tend to think — it reflects what is deemed as worth counting (and what isn’t)...in other words, what we value.
The Bible is not nearly as much about history (particularly, in the modern understanding of the term), as it is about the story of history.
How long can we survive without considering what we mean by the common good?
Friday, May 23, 2025
A Terrible Idea / The Erosion of Character In America
This would be a stunning restriction on the power of the federal courts...continue here.
Thursday, May 22, 2025
Eternal Life
What does it really mean to have a eternal life?
I, likely, grew up with a somewhat fanciful vision of eternal life. That’s not to say that vision isn’t true (at least, any of it). But, like many things perceived as a child, there is surely more to the notion of what eternal life is. There appears to be something embedded in the human psyche that has a desire for something eternal. And, we tend to like the idea of that being related to life.
Perhaps, if the truth really were told, that is more of a function of our notions about death, than it is about life. Large swaths of American culture have a misunderstanding (if not aversion) of the role of death in life. This may, in fact, be where the real fantasy exists. The one that is infatuated with the notion that we could somehow live forever. Of course, when we imagine that idea, we are largely doing so in the frame of living in one, persistent, universal form — pretty much how we see ourselves at our best moments in our lives...forever.
Of course, there are virtually no domains of existence that conform to this particular fantasy. Everything is born, grows, and dies (including Jesus, by the way, if that's where you're coming from on the question of eternal things). In fact, the ability for that very process to be perpetual is the feature of both life and death...and there is something eternal about it. Life does, in fact, go on. What goes on about it simply changes. DNA structures, for example, demonstrate this truth. Parts of us, at the core of who we are, live on (almost always), just not in exactly the same form. We can even observe this, without too much sophistication, in both our offspring and in people groups at large. We can see this in animal kingdoms. We can see this in plant kingdoms. In living things of nearly every kind, in fact. Something about the universe itself lives on, endlessly perpetuating, in spite of death. Life and death are not mutually exclusive after all.
Against that back-drop, life is rather...eternal.
Time (or, should I say, time-keeping), then, is mostly something like an accessory we came up with. We're rather fixated on it, again perhaps from our cultural affinity for desiring to live forever. But, eternity doesn't really work in that dimension. Time, in fact, from the viewpoint of nature is rather ambivalent about our point of view. We would likely do better to notice nature's perspectives on such things. It seems to prefer the measurements of things like day and night, celestial cycles, and seasons.
And then, from the Christian Bible,
...the one who believes has eternal life.
-- John 6:47
The most obvious question here would seem to be, 'believes' in what? Because that answer would likely infer what the meaning of eternal life really is. What one believes in is a function of what one understands. In the context here then, I would take it that what one believes is the key to eternal life. According to the plain language of the verse, it appears to be something (perhaps, somewhat surprisingly) that one already has. In other words, it is the current believing that is key to the thing that one already has — in this case, eternal life.
And, here might be the greater clue. We often think of eternal things in the frame of something ahead of us. But, note that the present tense is the focus of the concept of eternal life. The idea doesn’t seem to have as much to do with the future, as it does the present. If you believe, you have whatever is eternal about life. It is not primarily as much something about what you will have, as it is what you already have.
So, if what is eternal is something we have now, then what does that look like?
Most of what we think about the eternal is related to our understanding of life and, in that sense, it is likely assumed that that life has something good (after all, why would you want something eternal, if it was bad?). So, if life is a representation of something that is good and that goodness has a quality of the eternal about it, then it would seem to follow that whatever is eternal now is about whatever is good…now. In other words, whatever is good about life now is something eternal — something that we would like…to last forever.
Have you ever had moments where something felt so good — so rich, so satisfying, so peaceful, so inclusive and at harmony with all things — that you just wish it could...last forever? That is what we want both now and in the future.
Eternal life in original understandings seemed to have more to do with a state of being, than with how long we would live (exist in the future). When that state of being is the experience of what is truly good, it is...eternal.
When you have this understanding and you experience it, you have...eternal life.