Fleeting Thoughts
[2008.09.09] I am a bit concerned about
McCain's choice of Palin as his running-mate. Somehow, I don't believe that
he made that choice. This choice was made for him as a pre-condition to
getting the support of the Republican base, which is necessary for him to
have a real shot at the presidency. The question is who made that choice?
Who would want a real rookie in the White House? Who would want a newbie as
chief executor with hardly any real connections to experienced people to
lean on and with hardly any opinions on what matters? Who would want a
person with a journalism undergraduate degree from a second-rate institution
as a heart-beat-away-commander-in-chief? Perhaps they are the same people
who propelled a C-student from Yale to the White House and then used him as
a prop for advancing their agenda. Who else? Lipstick aside, Palin's
conservative credentials are convenient but clearly not the real reason she
got the nod. She got nominated because when the time will come for making
the decisions that matter, she cannot but rely on those who put her in that
position. Deja Vu? Scary!
[2008.02.12] Mark my words, the first
non-white-male in the White House will have to be a republican. I just
cannot see it happen in any other way.
[2008.01.08] There are two questions related
to Obama's religion. The first is "what does Obama embrace as his religious
beliefs?" The second is "what do various religious groups believe Obama's
religion to be?" The answer to the first question can only be given by
Obama: He is Christian -- end of story; deal with it! Interestingly,
however, that answer does not settle the second question, whose answer
depends on who you ask. For some, religion is a choice; for others, it is
not. For some, religion is a deeply personal choice -- a choice affirmed
through practices such as fasting, baptism, and communion. For others
religion is an inheritance from one's parents -- an inheritance that one
cannot disown without risking being labeled an apostate. Obama is lucky to
be living in a country where he can freely practice the religion of his
choice in spite of his inheritance. He, more than anybody else, is uniquely
positioned to take on the religious intolerance of countries that refuse to
grant such freedom to their own citizens!
[2006.11.03] I am not sure what Senator John
Kerry meant when he implied that failing academically in high school would
land one in Iraq. I am not sure if he truly meant it as a joke or if it was
a Freudian Slip. But, interestingly, the truth of the matter is that (unlike
in Vietnam and under the draft), the US Armed Forces (especially the
infantry) is made up mostly of recruits who find that career path most
fitting for their level of education. If you have any doubt, just check the
many stories about who the US Army recruiters target (I tell you, it is not
college-bound graduates) -- not to mention non-US Citizens who use this as a
path to citizenship. Now, of course, there are many in the US Armed Forces
who are enlisting for all the right patriotic reasons, but we would be
kidding ourselves to believe that this is the rule rather than the
exception. If Kerry's comment was a Freudian slip, then he needs to
apologize not because the comment is not true, but because it makes the
generalization that all (as opposed to most) of those stuck in Iraq have
nothing better to do with their careers. Independently, he should apologize
for his stupid vote supporting Bush's war purely in anticipation of his
presidential ambitions.
[2005.08.15] Those who deny evolution are
robbing God from one of his most amazing creations. The recent arguments
about evolution versus intelligent design sent me back to some old notes I
had prepared for a college-level bible study I led in 1989 when I was still
a graduate student at Harvard. In these notes, I argued that those who
portray evolution as incompatible with creationism are in fact implying that
God is not capable of "creating" the process of evolution. Back then, I
argued that computers provide a good analogy. By following the detailed
instructions in a program, computers can do wonders--from solving a set of
differential equations to rendering complex graphics. But who should really
get credit for these wonders? Should we give credit to the program or to the
"creative mind" that came up with that program? It is definitely the latter.
Any other conclusion would be completely unfair to the "intelligent being"
who created the machine and invented the program, which when executed
produced these wonders. Indeed, those who deny evolution are robbing God
from one of his most amazing creations. How true!
[2005.03.23] Today is my Dad's birthday--the
first one he is celebrating in heavens and the first one we celebrate here
on earth without him in our midst. Looking back at my father's life, and at
all the tribulations he had to endure so patiently, I can truly understand
the words of wisdom he once wrote to me in a letter of encouragement a
number of years ago as I was going through tribulations of my own. In that
letter, Dad wrote: "Patience with others is Love. Patience with self is
Hope. Patience with God is Faith." How true! For, as Paul proclaims in his
letter to the Corinthians, "these three remain: faith, hope, and love" and
as a loving father exemplified with his own life, its patience that
underlies these three virtues.
[2004.11.29] I wonder if Mr. Bush has ever
considered Nietzche's famous quote that "Whoever fights monsters should see
to it that he does not become a monster in the process. And when you gaze
into the abyss for a long time, the abyss also gazes into you."
[2004.10.04] With the consorted efforts to
further weaken the underpinnings of marriage as a religious institution, I
am wondering whether it would not be a good idea for those of us keen on
preserving this institution to start using a different word for
it--traditional marriage, for example. I am just wondering whether in a few
years, we will have to deal with those unhappy that their "marriage" is not
"traditional". See, this whole debate is not about ensuring equality for
those with alternative lifestyles, but rather it is about restricting the
freedom of expression of those who do not wish to approve of that
alternative lifestyle!
[2004.05.04] It is the economy, stupid! There
is a very good explanation for why it is that all these "red" states are so
supportive of our Armed Forces. It is not that they are more patriotic than
those of us in the "blue" states--they aren't. It is not that they believe
in or even understand what our government is using our Armed Forces
for--they really don't. It is much simpler than that. Many of these "red"
states would not be economically viable if it were not for the fact that the
US Armed Forces is nothing more that a huge welfare program for these
states. Their "support our troops" bumper stickers are self serving after
all.
[2004.03.02] Why is everybody so upset about
the "Let His blood be on us and our children" self-incriminating cry by the
mob that killed Jesus, when the One whose blood was shed accepted their
arrogant admission, and issued a verdict of "not guilty"? Not only did He
determine they were not guilty, but in effect He became their (and
everybody's) intercessor by crying out: "Father, forgive them for they don't
know what they are doing". A true Christian cannot take the words of the mob
over those of Christ! So, please, find something other than Christ's Passion
to blame for fears of anti-Semitism, and be careful not to fall into the
self-incrimination trap yet again!
[2004.03.01] I wonder how many of those
people accusing Mel Gibson of being "too graphic" actually read the Passion
of The Christ according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John? The truth is
sometimes too much for people to handle, but that does not mean that it
should not be told!
[2004.02.29] The end does not justify the
means. Even if establishing a democracy in Iraq and freeing its people from
a dictatorship were the intended goals of the Bush adventure, then
accomplishing these noble goals by lying to a whole country is morally
broke. Mr. Bush should have had the moral courage to tell the people he is
taxing to pay for this war--and the men and women whose lives expired in
pursuit of this war--the real motives behind his decision. Somehow, I don't
think the well-being of Iraqis is really the reason...
[2003.11.29] For an act of infidelity that
did not cost taxpayers a penny and did not endanger the life of a single US
citizen, our US Congress wasn't content with simply censuring President Bill
Clinton, but went all the way to impeach him. As a taxpayer whose
hard-earned dollars (not to mention the future earnings of my three
children) are funding this uncalled-for Bush adventure, I urge you to at
least censure Mr. Bush not only for bluntly misleading the whole country but
more so for wasting the lives of so many US service men and women who died
believing that they are protecting us all from "an imminent threat" which is
proving to be nothing but a premeditated lie.
[2003.06.12] In the very early days of the
Bush presidency, a little incident (now long forgotten) may shed some light
on the Bush Don-Quixotism, which led us to this state of affairs with Iraq
(and who knows what next). Do you recall the US air-force encroachment over
China--an encroachment that resulted in one of their planes crashing and in
a couple of our planes coming back in pieces? I wonder how "accidental" was
this incident? and I wonder what would have transpired had the 9/11
catastrophe not given Bush a better way to create a diversion from his
stealing the elections a few months earlier.
[2003.03.23] Dear Dad: When God wanted us to
visualize Him, He chose the image of A Loving Father. It is now, as a
father, that I realize how awesome of a responsibility it is to be an
earthly father. And, it is now more that ever that I feel so blessed to
having you as a father and role model, Dad. Happy Birthday with all my love
and prayers.
[2002.03.23] Somewhere I read that "Fathers
shape our view of God". How true! Thank you father for showing me what is
Godly and thank You God for giving me Dad.
[2001.10.31] When armed forces are put in a
situation in which they don't know what to do, they'll do what they do best!