I Do Not Choose to Be a Common Man, by Dean Alfange

26 10 2008

Sedona in September

It is my right to be uncommon—if I can.

I seek opportunity—not security. I do not wish to be a kept citizen, humbled and dulled by having the state look after me.

I want to take the calculated risk; to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed.

I refuse to barter incentive for a dole. I prefer the challenges of life to the guaranteed existence; the thrill of fulfillment to the stale calm of utopia.

I will not trade freedom for beneficence nor my dignity for a handout. I will never cower before any master nor bend to any threat.

It is my heritage to stand erect, proud and unafraid; to think and act for myself, enjoy the benefit of my creations and to face the world boldly and say, “This I have done.”

By Dean Alfange
______________

*Originally published in This Week Magazine.
Later printed in The Reader’s Digest, October 1952 and January 1954.

The Honorable Dean Alfange was an American statesman born December 2, 1899, in Constantinople (now Istanbul). He was raised in upstate New York. He served in the U.S. Army during World War I and attended Hamilton College, graduating in the class of 1922.

Found at www.daveramsey.com on Sunday, October 26, 2008.





The 2008 Carter Family Reunion

19 10 2008

Although the quality dropped disasterously between my Macbook and the video upload, see below for a glimpse into the recent Carter Family Reunion in Panama City, Florida (aka: the Redneck Riviera):

Another Carter Family Reunion video put our recent get together to shame, however…





Porn is slavery

12 10 2008

It is remarkable to me that our culture would so revile incidences of human trafficking and forced child prostitution, but fail to see the interconnectedness of these socially intolerable crimes with the more accepted forms of exploitation of women and children– namely, pornography.  Particularly during a time when there are so many initiatives brewing that claim to seek the end of the commoditization of people, perhaps the single most effective solution would be for dudes to simply stop downloading porn.

There is an economy at work here, one in which “illegal” child prostitution, pornography, strip clubs, erotic chat rooms and call centers, sex tourism, and adult films are products within the same system– the sex industry.  The interconnectedness lies in the fact that if there were no buyer, there would be no seller, and there would be no victim– the only difference is the social acceptability of each practice within this economy.  Although human trafficking and prostitution are perhaps the most poignant and vilified manifestation of this economy, these crimes are given roots in a culture that is hyper-sexualized, dehumanizing and even accommodating to instances of man’s grotesque lusts– one only has to walk the streets of New York City to see the many “gentlemen’s clubs” that speak of this cultural concession.

We hear often about the audacious claims by abolitionists to end the modern day slave trade which oppresses nearly 27 million people through forced labor, prostitution, and indentured servitude.  But what is the purported abolition of slavery without the restoration of the soil in which this ancient weed has sprouted, for as William Wilberforce so insightfully remarked, “God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the reformation of manners.”  There is no abolition of slavery without the reformation of our society, and it is to this end we must labor.

For a thoroughly Biblical treatment of this topic, you can check out Mark Driscoll’s latest, Porn Again ChristianShared Hope International is also leading the effort on decreasing the demand for sexual slavery.

******

CALL+RESPONSE Update

Thank you all to those of you who attended the opening screening of CALL+RESPONSE in Seattle last Thursday.  The film has achieved high marks from major media sources around the country including:

MSNBC’s Morning Joe: Dillon and Kristof Talk about C+R to millions!  If you missed this morning’s special segment featuring Justin and Nicholas Kristof, please check out the video HERE.

Washington Post: Call+Response “is a harrowing ‘rockumentary’ built on difficult images interspersed with musical performances that are meant to give voice to the oppressed — as music often has — and spread their cries for freedom.“  Read the Review and be sure to check out the exclusive interview with Justin in the video right next to the article!

The Seattle Times says CALL+RESPONSE is “impassioned . . .eye-opening” and “ignoring this crisis is no longer an option.Read the Review Here by Jeff Shannon.

Julia Ormond and Justin Dillon were on Dr. Phil today for a full hour-long show on Call+Response.

We still need your help to make this film a success.  On www.CallandResponse.com, we have provided some great event posters, with information for each theater. Simply click on a city and download a poster to hand out or email.  The RESPONSE is growing…





Blazing Bagels to the rescue

12 10 2008

A special thanks to Blazing Bagels for sending me home with a massive box of their bagel goodness.  I’ve never seen the five guys I live with so happy.  Be sure to visit Blazing Bagels in Redmond to find such treasures as bagel balls, bagel chips, pecan bars, cheesy bagel dogs, and, of course, bagels.





Human Traffic

5 10 2008

Original story was posted HERE by The Austin Chronical on October 3, 2008.

A new rockumentary aims to do something about the modern slave trade

BY DOUG FREEMAN

Often, the causes that call us are the culmination of coincidence, an awareness brought to action by the aligning of circumstance. The seeds of Justin Dillon’s fight to bring attention to the plight of modern-day slavery were planted while recording with his band in L.A. in 2004, when the songwriter came across Peter Landesman’s New York Times Magazine article “The Girls Next Door.”

“That story was just in my head, and then the band got asked to go play music in Russia,” relates Dillon. “We were playing shows there for a week, and we met all these girls that were just telling us about these opportunities to come to the States or to Italy to be waitresses or all this other stuff. And these are smart girls, they’re educated, but they’re 17 and 18 and so desirous to get out of there that even when we told them that they were prime victims for trafficking, they did not want to hear it. They’d show me some of their offers, and it was all bogus. It wasn’t a business deal; no one would do a deal like that. And they just didn’t want to believe it. When I experienced that, the fact that this is happening in the open, that’s when I came back and began contacting organizations to see how I could help.”

The result is Dillon’s Call + Response, a harrowing and important documentary on the contemporary slave trade that attempts to engage an audience that he recognizes is largely unaware that the problem even exists. The worldwide statistics are staggering, but in the United States alone, an estimated 200,000 people are living in slavery.

Dillon’s approach is emotionally effective, even if narratively digressive, juxtaposing interviews with journalists and politicians and brutally horrific testimonials from survivors and activists with immaculately shot performances from musicians such as Imogen Heap, Rocco DeLuca, Talib Kweli, Cold War Kids, and Matisyahu (whose segment was filmed in Austin), as well as a fascinating history of the relationship between music and slavery delivered by Cornel West. Most moving is Emmanuel Jal’s witness with his autobiographical anthem “Warchild.”

“My hunch was that the music was going to pull information past firewalls that just information alone won’t hit,” offers Dillon. “It’s not really a bait and switch, but it’s more about a marriage between the information and music that can maybe take the information a little bit further. The whole idea is just getting a response out of people, and music can bring that information further into the heart and the soul and the mind.”

As its title suggests, Call + Response attempts to offset the overwhelming paralysis in audiences made suddenly aware of the extreme reach of the injustices by inciting a simple yet necessary response. In the globalized market, we all are unwittingly culpable in sustaining slave labor through consumption of goods as innocuous as cell phones and coffee; only in a demand for and creation of a viable market for slave-free products will corporations ultimately audit their supply chains.

As Dillon points out, slavery operates in the open, but because we don’t recognize it as a 21st century problem, we simply don’t see it. Call + Response is at the very least an attempt to open our eyes.