Tuesday, November 23, 2010

A Challenge for Christians


The following video is a bit of my story and challenges those who support
me as a gay Christian to be vocal in their churches and to remain silent no longer.
I also want LGBT people of faith and their supporters to know that there are
churches that are welcoming, affirming and supportive of LGBT Christians
using their gifts in service to the church and to the community. The conservative
Christian church does not speak for all Christians.

How cool is this?

DADT

Here is an article about Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, who had the courage to say it was wrong to ask service members to lie about who they are. Link.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Report from the Border


From Bob Howard:

Friday afternoon, RJ & I accompanied the East Valley youth group (from four churches) down to Tucson, to help some folks from Humane Borders refill water stations in the desert the next day. On Saturday we headed west from Tucson, into the desert, checking the levels of 8 water stations (they didn't need refilling -- which is itself suggestive of a number of explanations). These are a few of the dozens of stations placed all over southern Arizona to provide water to keep illegal immigrants from dying. As it is, almost 300 have died so far this year, but who knows how many lives were saved by the water stations. In the desert, the human body needs at least a gallon of water a day. If you can't keep up with the "coyote" (person who you pay to lead you across the border), you are left behind. Some stumble onto a highway and sit beside it, waiting to be picked up. Others wander for days until they collapse. In the summer, the heat can reach 120 Farenheit, in the winter (starting now, really), nighttime temperatures can dip below freezing. And the current afternoon humidity is in the teens, which sucks the moisture out of even healthy bodies. The wind picked up between 9:30 & 10 am, raising the dust, and accelerating dehydration. So, in order to try to reduce the deaths of those who are coming over the border anyway, and specifically as an act of Christian love, the Humane Borders group (and others) started setting up barrels of water along the most-traveled desert routes taken by the immigrants. With the erection of the fence along the border in the past few years, the route has shifted to even more forbidding terrain. The picture here shows one of the less difficult places where water was set up -- and it was 15 minutes away by car from the nearest even semi-graded road.

The stations have two barrels (obtained from the Coca-Cola company), which have a spigot at one end, and a blue flag on a 40-foot pole (you can see the pole in the picture, but not the flag). Why blue? Because it is the easiest to see against the desert terrain & vegetation. Sometimes there is a barrel for trash as well. At another location, we cleaned up some trash left behind in an arroyo, including various plastic bottles, a Bit-O-Honey wrapper, and also a hat, a jacket, and a backpack semi-buried in the dirt (which tells that they had been there for a while) -- all the time keeping a lookout for snakes, and prying up the debris with a long stick before picking it up and dropping it in a trash bag. At the final water station we checked, we held hands in a circle and prayed for all those who traveled the desert, that these stations would preserve their lives.

Chances are that at one or more of the water stations, we were observed by immigrant travelers who were hiding in the brush.

You'll notice vegetation in the picture. The Sonoran Desert is a semi-arid desert, which means that it is not just vast expanses of sand, but has all sorts of trees, bushes, cacti, underbrush, and even grass -- and most of 'em with thorns. We drove over dirt roads, some of which were scarred by runoff ruts, while others had sand or dust several inches thick -- kind of like driving through loose snow, with all of its lovely worries. If you weren't the lead vehicle, you learned to keep the windows closed, lest you breath (& wear!) a bit of Arizona dust.

On the way back to Tucson, our caravan passed through a Border Patrol checkpoint. We were told by the Humane Borders worker Lance to lower our windows as we approached the agents. They looked in each vehicle while a drug-sniffing dog and its handler circled it, and asked if we were all U.S. citizens. When we said we were, the waved us on with a "have a nice day."

Did our act encourage illegal immigration? How can it? They are not coming over for the water. We were simply trying to save the lives of those who were already here. The presence or absence of the water stations in no way affects governmental policies or numbers of human beings coming to the U.S. But it is definitely intended to reduce the numbers of deaths in the desert.

That's why we went, and that's why I'll go again.

Love,
Bob

Cheap Shrimp: Hidden Costs

A friend of mine from High School taught the students who produced this series of stories. It is pretty impressive from a production stand point, and, although there is no uncertainty about the point the investigative journalists are making, I think it gives enough information to have a more moderate opinion. Which I think is really cool. Link here.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Scary Story Scarier Comments

The link is to a story about a woman who graduated from ASU Law with me. Alma is working to help victims of domestic violence. Almost as alarming as the tales of violence are the comments that show what happens when we allow racism to run unchecked in our dialogue. Why exactly do we so hate newcomers who evade our administrative requirements? What other administrative requirement would engender such hatred?

Thursday, November 11, 2010

A troubling study from this fall

The Pew Foundation conducted a study that looked at the views of Americans on various issues of social justice. Immigration, Death Penalty, Abortion, Environment. What the study shows me is the (1) White, mainline Protestants have typically justice-oriented views on these topics, BUT (2) White, mainline Protestants do not see any connection to these views and their faith.

Troubling.