Monday, April 4, 2005

CULTURE OF LIFE

The always-wonderful Tank Gurl (always wonderful because she writes incisive posts about current events and situations, the kind that make me grind my teeth and need blood pressure medicine, but at the same time she manages to put in her own brand of twisted humor and make me LAUGH.  same post, tooth-grinding AND laughing.) has a recent post where she ponders the question:  what could the expression "Culture of Life" actually MEAN?  And a good question it is, too, isn't it?  When looked at as the inventors of the phrase seem to do.  Today's Alternet has a good article posing (a minimal) ten items that a Culture of Life for Progressives might contain.  Here's the basic ten, looking a lot different from what we've been hearing from the Bush brothers and company lately.

At minimum, a true "culture of life" would support the following ten positions:

1. Withdraw the Troops

More than 1,500 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq, along with tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians (some estimates are as high as 100,000.) Meanwhile, we're hunkering down building long-term military bases and sending more troops. How many more soldiers have to die before we set a timetable for bringing them home?

2. Stop the Death Penalty

Fifty-nine prisoners were executed last year, 23 of them in Texas alone. Yet study after study has shown the death penalty to be unequally applied by race, and hundreds of inmates have been found innocent at the eleventh hour. If we are all created in God's image, then it is up to God, not us, to deal the ultimate in punishment.

3. Pass Effective Gun Control Laws

More than 80 Americans are killed by firearms each day. Yet Congress has made it easier for criminals to get their hands on weapons -- most recently with the repeal of the assault weapons ban -- instead of following the lead of states like Massachusetts and New York, which have passed tougher laws and decreased handgun deaths.

4. Fund Social Services

Hundreds of homeless people, many of them war veterans, die on the streets each year because they can't gain access to basic services such as housing and health care. A truly compassionate person would fight against Bush's mean-spirited budget that cuts Medicaid benefits, veterans‚ health care, community services block grants, and other life-saving programs in favor of tax cuts for the rich.

5. Create Universal Health Care for Children

The U.S. remains the only industrial nation not to provide health care for all its citizens. At the very least, we could coverage to the most vulnerable among us. Meanwhile, our infant mortality rate recently rose for the first time in four decades, to 28,000 deaths a year.

6. Research Alternative Energy

It's a fact that access to the world's oil has fueled conflict in the Middle East for years. Developing wind and solar power could be the best protection we have against more of our soldiers dying overseas in the future. At the same time, reducing greenhouse gases could slow global warming, held responsible for the increasing severity of natural disasters like the Southeast Asian tsunami that claimed the lives of 175,000 people (with another 100,000 missing).

7. Investigate Prisoner Abuses

While the face of abuse of foreign detainees are those revolting pictures of torture from Abu Ghraib, even more disturbing stories of prisoners dying while in custody have trickled out of Iraq and Afghanistan. A true culture of life would conduct a full investigation into the abuse, with those responsible being held to account.

8. Support AIDS Clinics Abroad

In Bush's 2003 State of the Union, he pledged $15 billion to combat AIDS in Africa -- since then not only has the program been under-funded, but the majority of it has gone into non-generic drug treatment and abstinence-only prevention programs. With more than 3 million HIV/AIDS deaths in Africa a year, a truly compassionate AIDS policy would work immediately with the United Nations programs that have proven the most effective against the disease.

9. Implement a Fair Guestworker Program

Last year, more than 300 undocumented migrants died crossing the border to work in the U.S. There is no getting around the fact that these workers from Mexico and other countries are essential to the functioning of our economy. A fair guestworker program would not only recognize the contributions of these workers, but also prevent needless deaths.

10. Join the International Criminal Court

Ethnic cleansing, war crimes, and genocide are alive and well in the world, in places like Kosovo, Rwanda, and most recently the Sudan. Yet the U.S. is one of only a handful of countries (including China and Israel) that refuse to join the International Criminal Court. Last week, over our country's objections, the United Nations finally referred to the ICC the case of Darfur, where an estimated 300,000 Sudanese have been brutally killed.

Together, these issues account for the needless deaths of tens of thousands of people a day. A culture that valued their lives is one we could all celebrate.

Michael Blanding is a freelance writer living in Boston. Read more of his work at www.michaelblanding.com

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Republican right only values lives it can use to increase its political power, or improve its hypermoral, "god-fearing" image among the uninformed electorate.  A true "Culture of Life" is about the furthest thing in the world from their agenda.  Lisa  :-]

Anonymous said...

I would expand Universal Health Care for all, not just children, not just citizens over 65.  However, I would do this while greatly modifying the way health care services are delivered today.  First, I would empower all pharmacists to provide first-line medication suggestions directly to consumers without a doctor's prescription.  This is the way it is done in Mexico and it works quite well.  You describe your symptoms to the trained pharmacist, then he or she will suggest the appropriate anti-biotic or pharmacy drug and/or recommend seeing a doctor (the latter usually comes only if the first line drug treatment doesn't seeem to work).  The pharmasist, not the doctor, is your first step to recovery.  Secondly, all labs are open directly to the public -- you should not need a doctor's order for basic blood work.  By removing M.D. intervention, the costliest component of health care, from the beginning of every illness and placing it where it belongs (doctors should intervene only in serious cases), you will slash health care costs by nearly 60%.  Universal Health Care is affordable for American.  Subsidizing insurance companies and over-paid doctors is not.  This IS a Culture of Life issue.

Anonymous said...

Here's my approach to 'culture of life'.  As a rule I am always deeply suspicious of any group or slogans that I cannot fathom an opposition. Pro-life, for instance, fits this category. Pro-life? You have to stop and wonder, is their opposition pro-death? Likewise with this 'culture of life' nonsense. Let's face it folks, we humans, along with the rest of life on earth, are pretty much pro-life and we all believe in a 'culture of life.'  This is just common sense. So when people form groups around such unquestionable premises, there must be something fishy going on. And there is. The same culture of life anti-choice folks don't mind the fact that we murdered over a million Iraqis during the twelve years of sanctions. They don't mind that well over 100,000 Iraqis have been killed since hostilities began. They stand behind the untennable posiition that the best way to show people that murder is wrong is to murder people, ie. the death penalty. The list goes on and on and the hypocrisy is overwhelming because it is so sad.

What the Right don't seem to get is that when we say we're pro-life and believe in a culture of life we actually mean it. We mean it for everybody regardless of where they happened to be born or what their life circumstances are.

dave

Anonymous said...

I always thought that frozen peach yogurt was the culture of life...

Neil

Anonymous said...

Hey thanks for calling me wonderful. I'm not really, but I am funny ocassionally. If I can make you laugh, I have done something worthwhile. Laughter is the best medicine.

But I wonder why only the extreme right gets to take credit for morality? Why don't progressives start preaching the gospel right back at them? I believe in Christian principles. Love, fairness, equality, generosity. I believe we should respect the planet, the Devine's Creation, and take joy in the beauty of it. I believe that as the world's weathiest nation, we should take the lead to end poverty.

I think I've found Jesus! And He's a liberal!

Who knew?

Peace, love, and chocolate,
Tank Gurl

Anonymous said...

yeah, neil -  yoghurt, the culture of life.  that, and sourdough starter.

Anonymous said...

I love Tank....... Hers was one of the first journals I ever read here. Great post in conjunction.... judi

Anonymous said...

Such good discussion here.  Thanks.
Virginia

Anonymous said...

Correct, but I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for implimentation.  :)

That Happy Chica,
Marcia Ellen

Anonymous said...

Here's something from T. A. Barron, writing in the NRDC's blog...

"Today, though, I'd like to propose a new meaning for the term 'pro-life.' Even
before the Terry Schiavo case, the term had become more politically charged
than Tom Delay's cell phone. But the word 'life' is far too big, complex and
wondrous a term to be reduced to political shorthand. Life on our lonely planet
is truly a miracle, whose diversity and beauty is simply stunning to behold.
Whether or not life exists elsewhere in the universe, all we know now is that
here on Earth, life is both utterly amazing -- and utterly endangered. That is
why I believe that nobody is really more pro-life than an environmentalist."

http://blog.nrdcactionfund.org/

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