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663.1 | Up to his old tricks? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Heaven - a perfectly useless state. | Sun Feb 28 1988 19:36 | 29 |
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Note 168.2 Boulder Book Burners Bite Bullet 2 of 2
NEXUS::MORGAN "Heaven - a perfectly useless state." 21 lines 28-FEB-1988 19:36
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Note 197.1 Boulder Book Burners Bite Bullet 1 of 1
NEXUS::MORGAN "Heaven - a perfectly useless state." 13 lines 28-FEB-1988 19:35
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On this disguising the book burning as a weenie roast...
I have a friend who called the EPA about the Boulder Book Burning
a week or so before the scheduled event. Evidently others had done
the samething. The EPA threatened to sue the church if they polluted
the air with their book burning.
Consequently the pastor wimped out (musta' been a woman, Russ!) and
tried to disgusie the burning as a church picnic. Needless to say
the free spirited Boulderites doused his little weenie roaster and
absconded with most of the nights fare.
I would have loved to have been there... Party time!
|
663.2 | | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | Philadelphia Freedom | Mon Feb 29 1988 12:22 | 11 |
| The Fundamentalists are fulfilling the same purpose this time around,
that the Pharisees and Saducees (the religious "establishment" at
the time of Christ) fulfilled back then.
********************************************************************
Matthew
15:14 (Christ speaking of the Pharisees) Let them alone; they be
blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind, both
shall fall into the ditch.
DW
|
663.3 | HITLER BURNED BOOKS ALSO | DV780::WILSONP | I'm a traveler on the path... | Mon Feb 29 1988 17:54 | 26 |
| My wife and I and two friends went up with Doug Johnson (the vocal
person mentioned in the Rocky Mountain News article) to the book
burning. Rev. Day Tried preaching out in the parking lot (where
they tried to burn the books) and was telling everybody that they
were going to hell. He preached against channelling, divanation
(SP.), and all new age beliefs. After preaching against channelling,
he started to speak in tounges. He even tried to cast demons out
of a protester who laid down on top of the books to keep them from
being burned.
The church members were so paranoid about my friend Doug Johnson,
they tried to put their own body guards between him and and the
two ministers. They thought he was there to cause violence.
BTW, The BBQ grill that they had out front to burn books was only
a decoy. They let the protesters get up to and dump it early in
the evening. They had another one going behind the church at the
same time. They first tried to set the books on fire by the stand
where the were speaking from. The protesters blocked that. Then
they brought around the second grill. As they started to burn the
books, the fire got hit by one five gal bucket of water and one
fire ext. by protesters.
Blessed Be,
Pat
|
663.4 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Wed Mar 02 1988 16:25 | 20 |
| Here's what I think, for what it's worth...
I think that, once upon a time, their lived a group of religious
leaders whose intentions were that men of evil should not get ahold
of knowledge which could be used against good. The religious leaders
began making certain knowledge "sacred", "secret"; after a while,
the fact that it was being kept from potentially evil sources made
it be interpreted as evil, in and of itself. The leaders attempted
to close the door to this knowledge. But human nature is to expand
on knowledge, not to throw it out, and certain seekers of this
knowledge have practiced in secrecy all this time.
With the current rise in the numbers of people seeking this knowledge
comes the realization that, if there is, indeed, power in this
knowledge, then those with evil intent will find it, as well.
These people who would burn books still fear this knowledge; still
fear evil; and what are we, if we do not conquer our fears? Is
not fear related to darkness? Is not fear, that which allows evil
to rule?
|
663.5 | .... | DREAMN::FSTEIN | | Thu Mar 03 1988 13:11 | 1 |
| I cry for the tourment of the ignorant.
|
663.6 | another Scenerio | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Tue Mar 08 1988 11:38 | 12 |
| Re: .4,
Once upon a time. . .
I think you're on target. There was this empire that collapsed a few
thousand years back which really did a job on Europe. After the Roman
Empire fell, all knowledge was considered OLD. There was no new
knowledge, and what knowledge was available was preserved by the church.
The knowledge saved by the church was considered holy and sacred. Any
knowledge not known by the church was considered wrong, or evil.
Dave
|
663.7 | Holy smoke! | ERASER::KALLIS | A Dhole isn't a political animal. | Tue Mar 08 1988 12:08 | 49 |
| Re .6 (Dave):
>................................................ There was no new
>knowledge, and what knowledge was available was preserved by the church.
>The knowledge saved by the church was considered holy and sacred. Any
>knowledge not known by the church was considered wrong, or evil.
That might be a little simplistic. Actually, there was "new knowledge"
throughout the Medieval period, though much of it rested with the
clergy. The development of the cam, for example, was a Medieval
invention, plus water-powered bellows, smithing hammer, and the
like. The "formalistic" knowledge (e.g., rhetoric) was salvaged
scraps from the classical period, and monastaries of the period
were always looking for new material.
The last burning of the library at Alexandria was not done by
Christians, but under the command of a Moslewm general who indicated
that if the wordfs of the library's books were not in the Koran,
they were wrong; and if they were, they were superfluous (since
the Koran existed); in either case, the library should be burned,
and so it was.
I tend to get a bit weary of "pop history" views of the process
within Western Europe. It happened that the Roman Empire fell due
to internal weaknesses (coreruption, etc.) that made it easy prey
for the less civilized (and _much_ less educated) Germanic tribes
overran parts of the empire (well, the Western Empire -- the Eastern
held out for some time longer; it wasn't until the fall of
Constantinople that the Roman experiment came to a _complete_ close).
The _only_ repositories of knowledge in Western Europe were the
monastaries, and some of them kept the trust quite well. Naturally,
there was a monastic Christian bias to what was circulated most
widely, but much Classical literature, some undeniably Pagan, was
saved [_as literature_]. Indeed, the reason the "Humanities" courses
taught in some colleges and universities are primarily Graeco-Roman
is because of their association with the religious orders through
the dark time of Europe. [Point of trivia: the reason that graduation
clothes in colleges are black robes originated with the earliest
schools, which either were run by or were closely associated with
churches. Every undergraduate was, at least administratively, a
special class of mild clergy, and the graduation robe was considered
a clerical gown. This is also why the degrees from some of the
oldest and most prestegious universities are written in Latin, the
"language of the Church."]
The Medieval Christian church may havbe made some mistakes, but
it was hardly the impediment to progress it's oftebn painted.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
663.8 | Are you happy... B^( | NEXUS::MORGAN | Human Reality Engineering, Inc. | Mon Mar 21 1988 23:03 | 65 |
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Note 168.7 Boulder Book Burners Bite Bullet 7 of 7
NEXUS::MORGAN "Human Reality Engineering, Inc." 44 lines 21-MAR-1988 22:50
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This is an account off another net by a person who was there...
Leigh Ann,
Once upon a time, in a land far, far away (called Boulder), a group of
fundies decided to hold a book burning; and Lo and behold, the MEDIA found out
(the fundies told them). This caused a great outrage among the people of this
distant land and among some folks in the Denver area too. As the time of the
burning approached, many groups (big, small, formal, informal, organized,
and/or disorganized) decided to react. (I was part of one of these patriotic
groups.) The "Satanic" books were gathered. These included the Koran and the
Talmud along with an assortment of New-Age and Pagan books.
The Appointed time came (about one Moon ago). People showed up with copies of
the first amendment. People showed up with protest signs. One group, the
"Clannettes" I believe they were called, showed up as KKK chearleaders and did
pseudo-fundie cheers. One fellow named Doug (A [polar] bear of a man who was
camped near you last August, running security) showed up with a large American
flag on a stout pole. When the fundies called for ministers who wished to join
them on the podium, Doug (U.L.C. credentials in hand) joined them at the
podium. That was NOT what they had in mind!
As they tried to preach at the crowd, they were met with "Don't Burn
Books!!", "Freedom!", and other protest chants. They were met with waving
signs. They were met with jeering crowds (They were badly outnumbered) They
were met with a large man carrying a large flag who was at the podium
(remember him?) shouting in their faces. They were met with a man who lay
across the books that they had planned to burn. As they tried to exorcise him,
they were speaking in tounges (sounds like a bad job of channeling to me B-),
and at least one counter-spell was audible if you were in the right part of
the crowd (actually it was more toward the left rear portion of the crowd).
Eventually they lit their barbeque - a transparent attempt to circumvent
Boulder's open burning ordinance - and part of the crowd spilled it on the
ground. They got out their second "barbie" and managed to get 3 or 4 books on
it before someone put it out with a fire extinguisher. They were NOT happy!
After burning only these pittifully few books, they invited the press inside
for a press conference. A number of protesters were heard to say things like
"Oh, wait a minute, I brought my press card with me didn't I!" (often with an
evil sounding chuckle) and "D*** it, I left my press card at home!!!!" In the
space of the next half-hour or so, a Christian magician and several of her &
my pagan friends had picked up the trash that had been left lying around.
Does that answer your question, Leigh Ann?
B*B
Dragonfriend
P.S. Doug made all of the local news broadcasts and both daily papers for his
part in the anti-burning protest. R.A.A.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Here is the Clannettes cheer...
If your happy and you know it Burn a Witch. Rah, Rah,
If your happy and you know it Burn a Witch. Rah, Rah,
If your happy and you know it,
Then you really outta' show it,
If your happy and you know it Burn a Witch. Rah, Rah.
|
663.9 | There is another way to look at this... | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Enjoy your life. If you don't no one else will | Sat Mar 26 1988 22:42 | 18 |
| There is another way of looking at this...
I've heard a claim that these books were donated to these preachers
by people who wanted these things (New Age, Occult, Witchcraft,
etc.) out of their lives. In essence, they were doing a ritual
to rid themselves of it. Then, a group of rowdies came along and
prevented them from completing their ritual, and stole the books.
If a Pagan ritual had been similarly disrupted by a group of
Fundamentalist Christians, who believed they were preventing the
Pagans from bringing the devil into the world, we would be very
up-in-arms.
If Pagans expect tolerance from others, we must be tolerant to
others - even those whose practices we find abhorrent (I personally
find the practice of burning *any* books abhorrent).
Elizabeth
|
663.10 | A clarification | NEXUS::MORGAN | Human Reality Engineering, Inc. | Sun Mar 27 1988 15:58 | 30 |
| Reply to .9, Betty,
On the other hand the fundies advertized their ritual before hand. They
called up local television stations and invited them down for the
event. Had they done so privately, without media coverage, on their own
property quietly, nothing would have happened but that their own magic
would affect them; transforming the fundies even further along their
path.
The main purpose of magic is self transformation. An attempt to
transform the public at large, with the public unaware of what was
happening to them, without the publics express permission, is black
magic. Fundies are steeped in this and they don't even know it. (Let's
all pray for the apostate Mikie?) The psychic force of thousands
would have an affect if I/we didn't take precautions to ground such
activity before hand.
As such they invited dissent, which they wanted anyway, so why
dissappoint them.
The fundies wanted to make a statement, which they did, that denegrated
the occult, new age and pagan communities. I think the response was
totally justified. It will probably be sometime before another fundie
church in Boulder tries that little trick again.
Now, to amplify the obvious, if they had burned their books, on their
grills, in private, transforming themselves, the willing, no one would
be justified in interfering. Such was not the case. The general
public, unaware, was attacked throuh magical and mundane means.
|
663.11 | They were wrong | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Mon Mar 28 1988 19:23 | 10 |
| RE: .10
I'm with Elizabeth on this one, Mikie. The New Agers had a right
to *peaceful* protest, but no right to take books that were not
theirs to take. Books are sacred objects in our culture, and people
get upset at seeing them burned. But people have the right to burn
their own books (but for the air pollution it causes). Peace has
never been served by violent protest...even mildly violent protest.
John M.
|
663.12 | This will do for a start... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Human Reality Engineering, Inc. | Mon Mar 28 1988 20:26 | 62 |
| Reply to .11, John,
The issue has nothing to do with books really. When one thinks about it
one finds that the real issue, buried under the passion and rhetoric of
the moment, is that a power-over situation was being used to control
the public at large. Why else was the media invited?
Priests and pastors are respected members of a community. They have
power over individuals of the community. Through the media the pastor
says to the individual "Look at me, LOOK AT ME! I'm an important
person. I'm a man of God. I'm burning this occult book because I want
you to burn your occult book too. If you don't do what I want you too,
what all these other people who support me want you too, you'll suffer.
You'll be tainted, cast out, in danger, left out."
In Starhawks latest book _Truth_or_Dare_, she talks about power-over,
partiarchal society, rebellion and resistence. The whole book is
about liberation psychology. Specifically the liberation of the
indivudual to resist and create a new society.
Now in our society power and rebellion are clearly defined. We
experience the power of the power-over and we respond in the manner
the power-over structure has previously defined. Whether it's
compliance or rebellion a predetermined route of action has been
assigned.
The books really didn't matter and still don't. They could have been
burned, stolen, left alone, etc. Boulder is a college town. There are
many 10s of thousands of books there. The message delievered to the
public is what was being contested. I really don't know that the
fundies didn't abandon the books while caught in the heat of the moment.
Did they forget/abandon about the books when the *real* issue was being
contested? I don't know. Did the protestors pick them up when the issue
changed? I don't know. I would have picked up a book if I thought the
previous owner didn't want it and was going to make no effort to
retrieve it for whatever ends.
The real issue was/is who is going to control the public's mind. Will
it be those who want to limit our options or will it be those who
expand our horizions. Now while couch potatoes are fairly inactive
they still have money to contribute to contractive causes. I vote for
the expanders and against the contractors. I'm willing to take
responsibility for creating an enviroment that nurtures expansion. Let
the bench warmers warm the bench. I'm out to create a new corner of my
world. A healthy, expansive, aware corner.
Starhawk said that creation is the ultimate act of resistence.
Something was created during that event. I refuse to pass judgement
upon it. If it happens again and I can make it, I'll be there.
What has not been said is that Boulder is very progressive. In fact
Boulder is a hot bed of radical feminism, paganism, socialism,
intellectualism, secularism, you name it... A book burning is a slap in
the face for them, a contractive step backwards to the dark ages.
While theft of personal property is not ethical, loud, active protest
is totally justified when dealing with power-overs. The trick is in not
falling into the preprogrammed traps the power-over structure has
designed into rebellion. No one was slaped, no one was hurt. I'm not
sure what you mean by mildly violent. If I have a loud disagreement
with you is that mildly violent? I think not.
|
663.13 | Some clarifications to .12 | NEXUS::MORGAN | Human Reality Engineering, Inc. | Mon Mar 28 1988 20:46 | 21 |
| A couple clarifications on .12,
Book burnings are fun to protest. No one gets hurt or thrown in
jail.
There are more serious issues in life that have to be faced. Nuclear
proliferation, nuclear weapons, ecoside, troops in Hondrus, death
with integrity, aparthide, racism, creating a responsible society
through responsible investiment. In short, creating a better world
for all living creatures. For these our bodies will have to be put
upon the line. Otherwise we all lose, especially those that follow.
The responsibility is ours and the responsibility is now.
If a little book burning protest bothers someone, they might as
well check out now. There is much work to be done. We're in an awful
mess, and it's time to clean up our house.
The second item is that we must resist in a way that doesn't fall
into the traps set by those in power. One way to do that is through
creating a better mental enviroment. Education, debate, peaceful
controntation are vital. Creation is the ultimate act of resistence.
|
663.14 | Hardly peaceful | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Mon Mar 28 1988 22:05 | 76 |
| RE: .12 (Mikie)
> Through the media the pastor says to the individual "Look at me, LOOK
AT ME! I'm an important person. I'm a man of God. I'm burning this
occult book because I want you to burn your occult book too. <
Trust me, followers of this pastor are not going to own occult books in
the first place. Those who do not follow him and read such books are certainly
not going to torch their libraries. If this man thinks pagans are going
straight to hell, then he has a right to tell the world.
> The real issue was/is who is going to control the public's mind. Will
it be those who want to limit our options or will it be those who
expand our horizions. <
How about letting the public control their own minds?
> Starhawk said that creation is the ultimate act of resistance.
Something was created during that event. I refuse to pass judgment upon
it. <
Ah, but you are quick to pass judgment on the book burners!
> What has not been said is that Boulder is very progressive. In fact
Boulder is a hot bed of radical feminism, paganism, socialism,
intellectualism, secularism, you name it... A book burning is a slap in
the face for them, a contractive step backwards to the dark ages. <
I couldn't agree with you more. But I would also say that the New Agers
played right into the good reverend's hands. Doubtless he received far
more publicity than he would have if he'd been ignored.
> While theft of personal property is not ethical, loud, active protest
is totally justified when dealing with power-overs. The trick is in not
falling into the preprogrammed traps the power-over structure has
designed into rebellion. No one was slaped, no one was hurt. I'm not
sure what you mean by mildly violent. <
The following are from the report in the base note:
> More books were stolen than burned last night at a fundamentalist
> rally in Boulder that disintegrated into a shouting match between
> more than 250 supporters and protesters.
> However, all but three of the books were pilfered by a throng of
> poster-carrying, slogan-chanting protesters who swiped the books
> from a pile on the ground outside the church where Gordon and Day
> were attempting to speak to the rowdy dissenters.
> "They stole them right out from under us," Gordon said after a
> circuslike ceremony.
> It wasn't long after Gordon had the books burning in a modified barbecue
> grill that protesters doused the flames with a fire extinguisher and
> overturned the smoldering grill.
> Doug Johnson of Denver took the evening's honors for most visible
> and vocal protester. Armed with an American flag, Johnson heckled
> Day and Gordon from a distance of about 2 feet.
Shouting at somebody from two feet away isn't protest, its harassment.
Clearly, the protesters had no right to take the books or overturn the
grill. Or were they just being "creative?"
Let's hope the next protest is more peaceful.
John M.
|
663.15 | | EVER11::EKLOF | We're everywhere. | Tue Mar 29 1988 04:13 | 26 |
|
While I look on book burning with contempt, I can find little to
recommend the actions of the protesters in this case.
Mickie?, you've made the assertion that the burners were attempting
black magik by trying to direct the public's will. While that may or may not
have been the objective, I doubt it would have had much effect. With no
protest, or even a very reserved protest, the incident would have gotten
far less media coverage. In the main, the people who already agree with
the burners would have been happy that 'something is being done', people who
are opposed (probably in the majority, if your description of the character
of boulder is correct) would look askance on the incident, and people who
didn't care either way would continue not to care. You then argue that the
point of the protest was change the message, not stop it, thereby seeing that
it was the protesters, not the burners who influenced 'the public mind.' How
does this make the magik of the protesters to be any less black?
As it stands, the protesters have lent the burners power, for if they
weren't important, why was it necessary to stop them. The protesters have
also insured that the burners got far more media coverage than they otherwise
would have. I would also tend to suspect that at least some people will look
at the actions of the protesters and classify them as 'wrong', and therefore
wonder if maybe there isn't some truth to the burners' assertion that these
books are an 'evil' influence.
Mark
|
663.16 | | GENRAL::DANIEL | If it's sloppy, eat over the sink. | Tue Mar 29 1988 11:48 | 106 |
| re; < Note 663.14 by DECWET::MITCHELL "Let's call 'em sea monkeys!" >
>RE: .12 (Mikie)
>
> > Through the media the pastor says to the individual "Look at me, LOOK
> AT ME! I'm an important person. I'm a man of God. I'm burning this
> occult book because I want you to burn your occult book too. <
>
>Trust me, followers of this pastor are not going to own occult books in
>the first place. Those who do not follow him and read such books are certainly
>not going to torch their libraries. If this man thinks pagans are going
>straight to hell, then he has a right to tell the world.
But the pastor speaks to many more individuals, via the media, than
he would have if he were only addressing his congregation. The people
about whom we might have concern, are those who have yet to decide as
to whether or not they wish to pursue education on occult matters.
These people may be more vulnerable to stimulus.
Having been in the media myself, I would say that there was a better
way for those who opposed the burning, to handle themselves. Physical
action (i.e., overturning the "modified barbeque") and loud taunts
serve to make the opposition look bad; oftentimes, such abrasive
actions also serve to lend to the cause of the other side. I would
suggest that, if such an event is to happen again, those who oppose
it should attend calmly, quietly, and speak directly to the camera
crews of TV stations and directly into the microphone of the radio
station's tape recorder to further their cause. They should present
logical, rational, calm arguments as to why their group is opposed
to the book burning, and remember to mention the positive attitudes
of whatever group/school of thought they wish to represent.
> > The real issue was/is who is going to control the public's mind. Will
> it be those who want to limit our options or will it be those who
> expand our horizions. <
>
>How about letting the public control their own minds?
Nice ideal, John; however, in reality, there are many who seek to
follow, rather than lead. When the leaders put a bias on information;
when the leaders conveniently omit pieces of the truth; when the
leaders act from fear and try to win others to their viewpoint through
dishonest means (which include, but are not limited to, the above),
then the masses-who-follow are being misled. The question then
becomes one of, do you really want followers who follow blindly, or
followers who will work to know what it is they say they believe?
I am of the opinion that, if one chooses to have followers of the
latter type, one will notice that one doesn't have as many followers.
>...I would also say that the New Agers
>played right into the good reverend's hands. Doubtless he received far
>more publicity than he would have if he'd been ignored.
Sad, but true. One can even see in NOTES files how many people
get upset when a disagreement becomes excited. I tend to think
of it in positive terms (the natural progression of certain
issues) *to a point*, but many are simply turned off by certain
types of aggression, and may change their opinions if they see too
much of it in any one argument.
> > While theft of personal property is not ethical, loud, active protest
> is totally justified when dealing with power-overs. The trick is in not
> falling into the preprogrammed traps the power-over structure has
> designed into rebellion. No one was slaped, no one was hurt. I'm not
> sure what you mean by mildly violent. <
I think that having the media present for what was to become a
shouting match with a little physical action *was* part of the
pre-programmed trap. Seems to me that the Revs were inviting the
burning to become what it was.
>> More books were stolen than burned last night at a fundamentalist
>> rally in Boulder that disintegrated into a shouting match between
>> more than 250 supporters and protesters.
>
>> However, all but three of the books were pilfered by a throng of
>> poster-carrying, slogan-chanting protesters who swiped the books
>> from a pile on the ground outside the church where Gordon and Day
>> were attempting to speak to the rowdy dissenters.
Remember the 60's...the loud nature and physical action of a protest
only served to make the Establishment stronger in its opinions. They
*wanted* the protestors to look like "a bunch of hooligans".
>> "They stole them right out from under us," Gordon said after a
>> circuslike ceremony.
Pre-planned on Gordon's part??
> Doug Johnson of Denver took the evening's honors for most visible
> and vocal protester. Armed with an American flag, Johnson heckled
> Day and Gordon from a distance of about 2 feet.
Very 60's-remniscent.
>Shouting at somebody from two feet away isn't protest, its harassment.
>Clearly, the protesters had no right to take the books or overturn the
>grill. Or were they just being "creative?"
And...the louder and more aggressively you cry, the less likely
is the other side to listen.
I hope that, if there is another such protest, that those upholding
the opposing viewpoint will calmly and clearly state their views to
the media.
|
663.17 | Strong words ahead | NEXUS::MORGAN | Human Reality Engineering, Inc. | Wed Mar 30 1988 20:50 | 159 |
|
Reply to .14, John,
>Trust me, followers of this pastor are not going to own occult books in the
>first place. Those who do not follow him and read such books are certainly
>not going to torch their libraries. If this man thinks pagans are going
>straight to hell, then he has a right to tell the world.
Then where did the followers get the books in the first place? The
library? I don't think so. I can't see Pentacostals stealing books
from the library. They either had the books, bought the books or
had friends give them the books. This is not a main point anyway.
And if Pagans think this man is sick and confused then we have the
right to say so and publicly. We have the right to say so to his
face. We have right to counter his sick influence upon the public.
>How about letting the public control their own minds?
This is a delicate point and one that I have a hard time
countering myself. My mind is changing though. I'm beginning to
think that those who are responsible will act to whatever ends.
Someone will act. It is notable that the protestors didn't really
care until the book burning went public. I don't see them having
anti-Pentacostal protests now. They simply responded to a sicking
threat.
There is nothing new under the sun. We either actively create a
positive, pluaristic society or we suffer the consequences. If one
wants to sit upon the bench they have no right to complain when
something comes along they don't like. They do, however, have the
right to get the hell off the bench and do something. These
protestors wern't warming the bench, they weere doing something.
Now while armchair philosophers have the ability to critize the
actions of the protestors their opinion is of no real consequence.
Who is this file has done any civil disobedience actions? I have.
Who has protested and demonstrated against an unjust cause? I have.
Let them speak out. I want to hear what they have to say and what
they have experienced, their criticism and suggestions.
> Starhawk said that creation is the ultimate act of resistance.
Something was created during that event. I refuse to pass judgment upon
it. <
>Ah, but you are quick to pass judgment on the book burners!
And you seem ready and able to criticize and judge meat eaters. You
do that because you feel it is necessary. You may be right. One
doesn't look at the open sore on their leg and say "This is good."
One finds a problem and offers a solution. what solution are your
offering?
> What has not been said is that Boulder is very progressive. In fact
Boulder is a hot bed of radical feminism, paganism, socialism,
intellectualism, secularism, you name it... A book burning is a slap in
the face for them, a contractive step backwards to the dark ages. <
>I couldn't agree with you more. But I would also say that the New Agers
>played right into the good reverend's hands. Doubtless he received far
>more publicity than he would have if he'd been ignored.
Here we broach the highly debatable topic of what is useful and who
uses who. I don't think the protestors fell into his hands, I think
he brought upon himself a little too much. His wife was somewhat in
shock. What will happen is that the pentacostals will think they
are being persecuted. They brought the socalled persecution upon
themselves.
If the Good Reverend had done his thing on television, unopposed
he would have made a unchallenged statement to the public. He
didn't get clear air time. His screwball message was confronted
with American values, values that demand action in the face of a
preceived evil. I don't see many actors in society, I see actees.
> While theft of personal property is not ethical, loud, active protest
is totally justified when dealing with power-overs. The trick is in not
falling into the preprogrammed traps the power-over structure has
designed into rebellion. No one was slaped, no one was hurt. I'm not
sure what you mean by mildly violent. <
>Shouting at somebody from two feet away isn't protest, its harassment.
>Clearly, the protesters had no right to take the books or overturn the
>grill. Or were they just being "creative?"
>Let's hope the next protest is more peaceful.
>
>John M.
Were you there, did you respond to a threat, or are you an armchair
philosopher?
Let's get something straight. Those Book Burning A$$holes in Boulder are
ignorant bigots. That pisses me off. And any attitude that lets those
bigots get off scot free pisses me off too.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reply to .15, Elkof,
> Mickie?, you've made the assertion that the burners were
>attempting black magik by trying to direct the public's will. While
>that may or may not have been the objective, I doubt it would have had
>much effect. With no protest, or even a very reserved protest, the
>incident would have gotten far less media coverage. In the main, the
>people who already agree with the burners would have been happy that
>'something is being done', people who are opposed (probably in the
>majority, if your description of the character of boulder is correct)
>would look askance on the incident, and people who didn't care either
>way would continue not to care. You then argue that the point of the
>protest was change the message, not stop it, thereby seeing that it was
>the protesters, not the burners who influenced 'the public mind.' How
>does this make the magik of the protesters to be any less black?
Please, it's Mikie? B^) This seems to me to be typical of a certain
attitude that says, "oh, just ignore it, it will go away." I get
your message. Let's say that one message was that new age, magic,
reincarnation, various forms of religion are of the devil and
against God's Divine Will. The other message was that exposure to
other belief systems, other philosophies, other ways of thinking is
healthy. Along with that message was the message that said it is ok
to express your anger, it's ok to do something about your life,
it's ok to be responsible, it's ok to create a new attitude.
The point of the protest was to expose and oppose the sickness
until it shutup or got well. It is a sick mind that says my way is
the only way, do what I say or God will burn you in Hell.
In my writing I tend to confuse the reader by not saying that I
think that psychology is the new WitchCraft. Political psychology,
social psychology and religious psychology are tools used to
control people. Regular, everyday ole' WitchCraft, along with many
other belief systems, teaches the initiate to deal with
antagonistic psychological influences, internal and external.
Sadly the standard issue couch potatoe is not aware of what is
being used upon them. The best nonviolent way to handle that
situation is to expose the sickness. The fundies are the ones who
initiated the protest. Had they attempted the ritual privately,
there would have been no protest.
> As it stands, the protesters have lent the burners power, for if
>they weren't important, why was it necessary to stop them. The
>protesters have also insured that the burners got far more media
>coverage than they otherwise would have. I would also tend to suspect
>that at least some people will look at the actions of the protesters and
>classify them as 'wrong', and therefore wonder if maybe there isn't some
>truth to the burners' assertion that these books are an 'evil'
>influence.
>Mark
There is a quaint mind mush that says that if we all get together
and meditate hard enough all the problems of the world will go
away. Such is not the case. Power is a commodity. Power will be
used to whatever ends. We either act together in a positive,
creative power-with situation, (as opposed to power-over) or the
power-overs will have their way with us. Sooner or latter we will
be a political threat. They will take action action sooner or
latter. Just ask Sun Young Moon.
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663.18 | Need more voices | SCOPE::PAINTER | | Wed Mar 30 1988 21:56 | 8 |
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Mikie,
For what it's worth - I wish you'd been there when 'they' were
destroying the library at Alexandria (hope that's right....it has
been a while.....).
Cindy
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