Friday, September 16, 2011

Carter speaks the plain truth again!

And this quote from the Huffington Post is part of why I LOVE JIMMY CARTER!

At the 30th annual Carter Town Hall on Wednesday, former President Jimmy Carter told his audience he thought the Supreme Court decision to roll back restrictions on corporate spending in federal campaigns was "one of the stupidest rulings ever consummated or perpetrated on the American people."

The Citizens United ruling was decided 5-4 in 2010 and received criticism for allowing a flood of special interest money in politics. President Barack Obama was a major critic, saying the decision was "a major victory for big oil, Wall Street banks, health insurance companies and the other powerful interests that marshal their power every day in Washington to drown out the voices of everyday Americans."


Yep. I love that man!

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Great Gay Marriage Posters!

I LOVE these! Click here and enjoy signs like these :




Friday, September 02, 2011

A Fine Litany

A Litany for 9/11/11:

In Memory of All Victims of War and Terrorism

This litany was taken from a mailing I receive from
The Shalom Center

[Please feel free to use this Litany in memory of 9/11, so long as you cite the sources. The litany requires either actually standing at a running river, lake, or ocean, or if that is not feasible bringing a large basin of water into the center of a church, synagogue, mosque, temple, or public space. If the basin, change "river" to "water" in the litany. At best, it includes having a list of names of people of various countries who died on 9/11/01 as victims of the terrorist attacks.]



Ashes, Stones, and Flowers



For vibrant lives suddenly and shamelessly sacrificed, we lift up the ashes of our loss,

O Source of Life.



For the lives that continue, haunted forever by the pain of absence,

we lift up the ashes of our remorse, O Wellspring of Compassion.



For the conflagration of flames and nightmare images

forever seared into our memories,

we lift up the ashes of our pain, O Breathing Spirit of the World.



For the charred visions of peace and the dry taste of fear,

we lift up the ashes of our grief, O Infinite.



For all the deaths that have been justified

by turning the love of God or country into fanatical arrogance,

we lift up the ashes of our shame, O God.



As we cast these ashes into the troubled water of our times, Transforming One,

hear our plea that by your power they will make fertile the soil of our future

and by your mercy nourish the seeds of peace.



[The people recite the names of the dead.]



In silence, the people cast the ashes into the river

[or a bowl of water].



***

For the ways humanity pursues violence rather than understanding,

we lift up the stones of our anger, O Breathing Spirit of the World.



For the ways we allow national, religious and ethnic boundaries

to circumscribe our compassion, we lift up the stones of our hardness, O Wellspring of Compassion.



For our addiction to weapons and the ways of militarism we lift up the stones of our fear, O Source of Life.



For the ways we cast blame and create enemies we lift up the stones of our self-righteousness, O God



As we cast these stones into this ancient river, Transforming One, hear our plea:



Just as water wears away the hardest of stones,

so too may the power of your compassion soften the hardness of our hearts

and draw us into a future of justice and peace.



[The people recite the names of the dead.]



In silence, the people cast the stones into the river

[or a bowl of water].



***

For sowing seeds of justice to blossom into harmony,

we cast these flowers into the river, O Source of Peace.



For seeing clearly the many rainbow colors of humanity and earth,

we cast these flowers into the river, O Infinite.



For calling us to life beyond our grieving,

we cast these flowers into the river, O Breathing Spirit of the World.



As we cast these flowers into this ancient river,

Transforming One, hear our plea:



Just as water births life in a desert and gives hope to the wounded,

so too may the power of your nurturing renew our commitment to peace.



[The people recite the names of the dead.]



In silence, the people cast the flowers into the river

[or a bowl of water].





Litany by Rev. Patricia Pearce, former pastor

of Tabernacle United Church, Philadelphia,

and Rabbi Arthur Waskow, director of The Shalom Center.
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