Saturday, September 30, 2006

new column:

Consensual Acts
Versus
“You’re Either With Us Or Against Us”


There are all sorts of ‘power.’

There is a sense of power found through force.
There is a sense of power found through intimidation.
There is a sense of power found through anger.
There is a sense of power found through opposition.
There is a sense of power found through offense
There is a sense of power found through defense.

Mistakenly, many tend to believe that these types of power are the only ways to be ‘power’ful and achieve their goals. However, these only offer a sense of power because true power is actually not attainable by anyone. All situations where power is involved are situational and fleeting.

A dictator only has so much control over a specific population, and even within that there is always dissidence. Even a bully loses power outside of the circumstances of the proverbial schoolyard. Even a master can lose control and lose face.

That is why those seeking power for its own sake are looking falsely and will never achieve what they truly want. Power in and of itself is not achievable.

Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke of a different way to achieve goals. Through civil disobedience and heartfelt reasoning, they showed that power did not have to be filled with rage or by wielding fists or taking up arms. Goals could be achieved by showcasing truth and love and through tapping into the better instincts of humans.

One of the things I’ve always loved about the LGBT community is that we often come together though a spirit of love. When I first joined the community and began attending my first meetings, I remember being so shocked that everyone hugged each other, and often kissed. It wasn’t just a handshake showing recognition, but a hug showing love and care. We knew we had all been through our own internal and external struggles and we know that these struggles don’t necessarily ever end and we support each other throughout.

However, it can be so easy to forget our larger struggles and goals and hopes, and quest for some unspoken power. Power has that ability to fuel itself and overtake us completely. We LGBT people are just as guilty as everyone else in being human and being drawn to the quest for power. Our movement has for the most part followed the Gandhi and King routes and worked from a more positive place. And we are all the better for that and change is here and still coming.

Sometimes we do still mistakenly believe, just as all humans, that if we wield some type of power through intimidation or force, we can gain something larger. This is a mistake because the greater strength is to work with each other. Consensus is not easy and can create difficulties, but in the long run produces better futures for us all. And it comes from a stronger, better place within. And we LGBT people know more than anyone that true strength comes from within.

I was in the LGBT Center’s 3 Dollar Bill Café the other day and overheard a terrific intellectual conversation about the power that can come from both a dominant and submissive position in a sexual coupling. They had an interesting political take on that by saying that even though, for instance, the president of the United States is powerful, the position is ultimately subservient to the people. Within this context, this puts a new twist on the idea of who is actually serving whom.

Bush’s famous mantra of ‘you’re either with us or against us’ is a classic example of a delusion of power. Yes, he may have some sense of power and he may wield his forces to his liking and he may win some battles. But his ultimate ‘power’ lies only in the willingness of those of us who oppose him and his ideas to acquiesce to him. Had he tried to work with his opponents instead of what he has done, he would have been able to achieve a great deal more in the long run. Instead, he is seeing the beginnings of his true downfall because he has lost the respect and moral authority he so desperately desired for so long.

Consensus is not easy and takes time, but it recognizes that true power does not exist in itself. Power is not a goal. Power is a red herring in the fight for the goals upon which we seek. I am proud to be within a community that values seeking within ourselves inner strength and the ability to work together. It is why we shall achieve our goals in the long run.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

my parents recently went out west to find the wild horses running free. they found many and my mom took some pictures as they followed them around the western landscape:

Monday, September 25, 2006

A profile of the Missouri Senate race-- a major race in the possibility of taking back the Senate. Voters in Missouri are extra valuable and important this year:
"If GOP is in trouble, Missouri will reflect it: Senate race likely to mirror national view of Iraq war"

Sunday, September 24, 2006

gave a brief presentation at city college about a month ago in front of our congresswoman nancy pelosi and various other elected people of san francisco and college people, including the chancellor (pictured behind me), as part of the big opening celebration of a new health center at city college and in my role on behalf of my boss at work. it went really well. the chancellor even sent a nice note to me afterwards. and the college kindly sent me these photos from my part of the day. how do i look? (the glasses went dark because it was outside and sunny)

Friday, September 22, 2006

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Sunday, September 17, 2006

my niece and sister were here the last several days. we had fun at exploratorium and zeum where my sister spent a good amount of time making this cute rendition of a kitty out of clay in zeum's claymation room-- where i had my birthday party a year ago! it's really quite good

Friday, September 15, 2006

Explor-explor-exploratora-yum dada

A bus with a bug as a bug

A bus with a bug as a bug

A bus with a bug as a bug

This is good to remember:

DESPITE COUNTLESS five-year retrospectives on the 9/11 attacks, we seem to have forgotten at least one act of courage — Rep. Barbara Lee's fearless dissent from a congressional rush to judgment. We should remember the Oakland Democrat's speech. It was both principled and prophetic, and we can learn from it today.

The carnage of Sept. 11, 2001 was a defining moment in the American experience. We were stunned, deeply hurt by the loss of so many. Then we were angry. We wanted those responsible brought to justice or summarily killed. Amidst the rubble in New York, President Bush promised to use all necessary means to punish those responsible.

Five years ago today, on Sept. 14, 2001, Congress passed a joint resolution authorizing the president to use military force against those "he determines" were responsible for the attacks.

Only one member of Congress, Barbara Lee, voted against the resolution. She counseled against a rush to judgment, warned that an angry use of force could inflame our growing prejudice against Arab Americans, Muslims, Southeast Asians or others.

She told us "not to embark on an open-ended war with neither an exit-strategy nor a focused target." And, in her most prophetic moment, she said, "As we act, let us not become the evil we deplore."

Have we not begun that slow descent?

We have long claimed to be against torture and imprisonment without criminal charges, but our actions at Abu Ghraib and Haditha and the detentions at Guantanamo Bay and secret CIA prisons around the world suggest otherwise.

We have enshrined in our Bill of Rights the right to counsel and to a fair trial, but our long denial of counsel to Jose Padilla and our plan to try so-called "enemy combatants" in military tribunals instead of civil courts make our professions of piety empty and meaningless.

We profess the virtues of a democracy, commitment to open deliberation and debate but stood silently by while the administration presented speculative evidence as fact, limited press access to crucial information, and circumvented even the minimal justifications required by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Perhaps most importantly, we pay homage to a government "of laws and not men," whose leaders swear to uphold the Constitution.

In no area of policy is the Constitution more important than in the decision to wage war. Lee knew this. She warned us not to "repeat past mistakes," and reminded us of one of our worst.

In 1964, Congress gave similar powers to President Lyndon Johnson for two alleged attacks against U.S. Navy ships in the Gulf of Tonkin. The resolution became the legal basis for the Vietnam War, one that lasted years, divided the nation, cost billions of dollars and took 58,000 American lives. In so doing, Lee insisted, "This House abandoned its own constitutional responsibilities and launched our country into years of undeclared war in Vietnam."

Under our Constitution, only Congress has the power to declare war. It is Congress' most sacred duty and responsibility. The separation of powers doctrine is at the very heart of our system of liberty and government by executive decree represents a kind of authoritarianism we have always fought against.

Either we demand that Congress reassert its obligations and function as a check on the executive branch or we are merely playing out some script of a democracy, affirming only the freedom of our crimes. Either we uphold our system of law and our civic principles or we become something different.

We become, as Barbara Lee feared we might, the evil we deplore.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

i went to my very last young democrats meeting last night as a member. you see, i 'age-out' next friday the 22nd when i turn 36. to be a 'young dem' you have to be 35yo or younger. happily, i was still a young dem for the endorsement vote last night in order to vote in the election of the club for the november endorsements. and it was good to see all my old friends from the club one last time while still a member. come next friday, i get taken out to the cornfield i guess. but hopefully there will be lots of presents!

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

this is a really sad hideline:
"Former Texas Governor Ann Richards Dies"

she was one of my role models as a young student of politics in my political-coming-of-age-years in the early 90's. her election to the governorship in 1990 was one of the very first elections i really paid attention to and understood what was going on (my first vote was actually in 1988, but i didn't really know what i was doing then, nor knew what was happening around me). but in 1990 i remember watching her win the election after a series of terrible attacks by this nut cowboy who wouldn't even shake her hand during debates. she gave me hope that regular people could win elections. she was just terrific and everything i love about southern women. in 1994, she would have won re-election had it not been a terrible year for democrats nationally and had it not been for karl rove and george w. bush running against her. had it been a more normal year, she would have won because she was so well-liked generally by all. but then, it was a republican year and texas was beginning its strong republican tilt by then. regardless, she will always be fondly remembered by all and will continue to be in my thoughts about how regular folk and strong women can make it to the top even in a world that doesn't allow it.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

"Sometimes life hits you on the head with a saucepan. But I'm not here to talk about saucepans."-- Actress Toni Collette

Saturday, September 09, 2006

kittypants

Friday, September 08, 2006

beef. it does a body good.

Monday, September 04, 2006

omg, i have to go to all these places in myrtle beach south carolina. if i ever get to the east coast again, i have to go

Stating the obvious

Weekend private free rentals

Saturday, September 02, 2006

new alice newsletter is up

i posted some photos via flickr this morning from my visit with my neighbor Zach and a viewing of his artistically renovated apartment building and his exquisite "futon gardens", but for whatever reason flickr didn't work out. so here below are a number of photos from the visit. he's just a marvelous job at renovating and improving life for the neighborhood.