"Independence Day"

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I wrote this last Independence Day. That was the day that I succumbed to my utter frustration with what passes for news, frustration with Internet commentary and frustration with the grip conflict has on us, no matter which side of a given issue we take. I succumbed by registering the propeace.net Internet domain, vowing personally to remove myself from the problem and work for a solution. Not a "win" for our side and a "loss" for their side, but a solution that transcends the problem altogether and creates a "win" for everyone. That was the day the future changed...

It's July 4, 2004, and in the United States of America, it is Independence Day. Many Americans cannot even bring themselves to call this holiday by its proper name. We greet each other by saying "happy 4th" instead of "happy Independence Day."

We must expose the lack of peace-oriented news and to begin to reverse that situation. You may have noticed that most of what you are fed by news outlets focuses on problems rather than solutions, conflict rather than compromise, differences rather than commonalities. Most peace-oriented initiatives do not get any media attention at all, or if they do it is not nearly as in depth as violence- and power-oriented stories. We must look at our human nature to understand why.

The drama of violence and power in stories attracts us. We drawn to the passion that it evokes within us. We feel something, and whether it is righteousness and pride or outrage and anger depends on the side of the issue with which we align. We are taught from early childhood that a story contains conflict and resolution. When we read or follow a story in the media, that is what we look for. If there is no conflict in a story then it is uninteresting, perhaps pointless. Human beings process what goes on in the world, especially those things reported by news media, as stories.

In this respect the liberal and conservative media are no different. The warmongering rhetoric, including all of its paranoia and righteousness satisfies the same thirst as the antiwar trumpeting which focuses almost exclusively on its outrage. Just being outraged about war and focusing on outrage provides no solution. While this outrage may be a necessary step in our evolution toward peace, we must grow beyond it to actually achieve peace. Outrage is not peaceful.

Let us focus on the stories of hope. The stories that will not play to your sense of drama but to your sense of harmony. You will see that there are people working to unlock those chained to conflict. There are people whose actions are inspired not by fear, suspicion, anger, greed or outrage, but by a sense of greater good, of the interconnectedness of all human beings and of all life on our beautiful, small planet. These are the future leaders of our world. They will lead us out of the isolating darkness into the lives we all deserve to share with one another.

Let your level of appreciation for this long-awaited good news be a measure of the grip that drama has on you. If you are thirsty for drama, you may not enjoy these types of stories but I urge you to take account of yourself. If you are saturated with the drama of conflict, you may find relief in stories of peace. If you have stepped beyond it, then it is time to connect, to organize and to support the efforts of those who are working for harmony.

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Independence Day Indeed!

Violence has motion and peace is still. Motion snares our senses at a precognitive level all the way down in the brainstem before the higher centers can intervene. Violence is salient and powerful. We must honor violence - study it hard and know it well - for we cannot live without our reptilian brain.

Even at Rockridge in the study of positive progressive framing, we are learning to be mindful of the shadow of our frames. We cannot eliminate the shadows because we need the frames, and we need the light on the frame that casts the shadow, and we need shadows in order to recognize light. Remember what we learned in "Bleep" about how the bottom-feeder can't conceptualize the water because there is nothing with which to compare it? Therefore, we must learn to put the shadow side to work for us in our own best interest.

Here's an example of what I mean by being mindful of the shadow side. In one of the stories linked below, you will find out that while mainstream media has ignored the proceedings of the World Tribunal on Iraq, Deep Dish TV has covered it, and their website has had 15,000 hits from 100 countries. That's the positive progressive frame. Am I supposed to rejoice about this coverage? Why so few hits, even counting non-American hits? How can we get this coverage on our mainstream news like we did during Watergate?

We can put our rage to work for us by using it to protect our source of power. I'll publish the whole story in my blog in a few minutes; I didn't think it was appropriate to this community, but apparently I was wrong because here stands the issue. The violence in you can be put to good use to protect your power source. Then strike out with your empowered weapons - your heart and your mind. Also, please see my earlier essay on progressive values for a discussion of BALANCE. If we value peace, we must honor violence.

We cannot deny that violence is a part of nature on all scales. Aren't we being a bit presumptuous to strive to eliminate violence? Even the DoP legislation doesn't go that far; it only calls for us to provide a viable alternative to violence in the form of non-violent conflict resolution. But it is realistic enough to honor violence by also providing for de-escalation action and mediation/arbitration techniques in the event of its inevitable outbreak.

A forest fire is violent, but while it causes death and destruction to some, there are seeds that will not germinate unless they are exposed to that extreme heat. An earthquake is violent, but tectonic plates are in motion and collision is inevitable. However, for every rift that swallows acres, a mountain is born somewhere else. Without earthquakes, the planet would be smooth and flat. A volcano is violent and wipes out whole villages, but thus is formed new earthcrust. The sperm is violent in its penetration of the egg, but a new life is created. A supernova is violent, but new heavenly bodies are formed. On all scales, destruction and creation, chaos and order, walk hand in hand.

How can we demonstrate our solidarity with our Iraqi brothers and sisters if we spend our Independence Day in a futile search for "stories of hope?" Use your creative power to forge weapons of hope and truth and light. Don't let your shame keep you indoors on July 4th. Here are some ways you can do non-violent consciousness-raising in your community to illustrate that there is no independence to celebrate in the formerly sovereign nation of Iraq.

Are you as ashamed as I am of your leaders who are creating situations in Iraq that deny your brothers and sisters the basic needs of life like water? Have you seen the results of the deliberation of the World Tribunal? How can we hold our leaders accountable? I'm willing to submit to these authorities. Are you? Does anyone know how to turn off the water and the electicity at the white house? "What good to me is freedom if my sisters are in chains?"

Don't let your innocence rock you to sleep! Let's give these issues some thought and get salient!

"Blue in a Red State"