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Hope in Action - in Wisconsin

Hope without action doesn't go very far. A praxis - reflection and action, is what gives me the most hope for us working together to make the world a more just place for everyone.
I was excited weeks ago, hearing about the demonstrations in Tunisia and Egypt, but in the back of my mind was the thought that it would be nice to see some demonstrating for democracy in the United States.
So I'm even more excited now by the demonstrations that begun in Wisconsin, are also taking place in Ohio and Indiana with demonstrations of support for true democracy around the whole country. I see these demonstrations also being demands for truth-telling. The changes the WI governor is trying to push through are not about budget cuts, but about democracy.
I was so pleased to be standing in front of the Massachussetts state house last Tuesday with hundreds (maybe even 1,000) other demonstrators. The energy and enthusiasm of the crowd gave me hope. Among all the homemade signs, the one I liked the best said "Working for Democracy - from the Mid-East to the Mid-West."
ESWoW member Brian Solomon is a gradaute of the Sunday School program at the Baltimore Ethical Society. He is also an alder on the Madison, WI City Council. I was so pleased to find the blog Brian wrote, reflecting on the demonstrations in Wisconsin, and especially noticing that it is not enough. Brian's blog clearly spells out for us that in order to continue having hope, we must continue to have action. Yes, it is possible for people to demonstrate and make changes. I'm hopeful that what we take from this demonstrating is that it is worthwhile to demonstrate, it is worthwhile to make our opinions known, to our legislators and to our neighbors. Read more »
Love and Dictators

I offer a yin-and-yang of topics on this ESWoW blog: love and dictators Over the past couple of weeks much of my attention has been split between following the remarkable events unfolding in the Middle East and working to advance marriage equality here in Maryland. Both issues have induced in me a sense of rising idealism. I find myself framing them in terms of inevitable and joyous movement toward a better world. And yet, there is so much ugliness and pragmatic reality to sort through.
First, let's start with dictators. Now on the surface they are not generally the sort of individuals moderate Americans like myself support I respect freedom and democracy, condemn authoritarian rule, and cheer on the common people marching through Cairo. It is, however, disconcerting to discover how ignorant I am about Egypt. I did not realize how oppressive Mubarak’s rule – made possible in small part to my tax dollars - had been over the past 30 years I did not know, for example, that he had extended Egypt’s "state of emergency" which had been in effect virtually continuously since the 1950’s. This status allowed for the suspension of constitutional rights and gave the government the legal right to censor and to detain political prisoners without trial. In recent years estimates placed the number of such prisoners as high as 30,000. How convenient it was for me to be blithely unaware of my complicity in such oppression until the masses began marching allowing me to cheer them on. Read more »
Reason for Hope - with help from Matthew Ies Spetter

Opening Words
... in the Ethical religion, hope is not an illusion. We each live in history, not in general, but in the here and now in particular. Our own life is always at stake and that poses the deepest spiritual issue of our entire existence. Hope is a gift which requires our total involvement. It is not sentimental, not passively "hoping for the best." The hopeful person is an emotionally active person, for hope does not come gift-wrapped. The heart of the matter is always that we each must find our own help and that does not come over the bargain counter. On the contrary, hope depends upon our response to life. It is the burden and promise for people like ourselves, not intellectual giants, but people who want to base their lives upon what we can understand and upon what our hands can find to do. Hope resides in that which is as yet unawakened in us, pregnant within us, what we can urge into birth by deepening our lives. That is the religious humanist position and it can provide us with a sense of confidence about our place in life. - Matthew Ies Spetter
In looking for a piece I wrote years ago about hope, I came across a Platform Address with the title "Reasons for Hope" given by Dr. Matthew Ies Spetter in 1986. Dr. Spetter was the Leader of the Riverdale-Yonkers Society for Ethical Culture (in the Bronx, NY) for over 40 years, retiring from there in the mid 1990's. This Platform was given at the American Ethical Union Assembly held that year in St. Louis, MO, and was given as part of the presentation of the Elliott-Black Award to Helen Caldicott. Read more »
ESWoW Community Call - Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011
What gives you hope in your life? What role does hope play? This month we'll be exploring different sources of hope, the need for hope and how humanists find hope. Please join us for our Community Call Sunday, Feb. 6, 2011 at 12m PT, 1pm MT, 2pm CT, and 3pm ET.
Please join us to share your thoughts and concerns. The number to join the call is 866-740-1260 and the access code is 5766842#. Please invite others who might be interested in this topic to join our call.
Susan Rose has shared some of her thoughts about hope and gardening in her blog, "A Year of Living Ethically - Hope and Gardening". Take a look and share your thoughts.
Have a nice weekend!
A Year of Living Ethically - Hope and Gardening

Living with hope is my focus this month for a year of living ethically. While shoveling snow on a gray day earlier this week, adding to the piles that are already 5 feet high, I needed to dig deep to connect to my sense of hope. Read more »
ESWoW Community Call - Follow-Up to No Impact Man
Have you read No Impact Man or watched the video? Will you be listening to Colin Beaven speak at the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester on Sunday morning, Jan. 16? Have you read Susan's blog about No Impact Man?
Please join us to discuss your thoughts about No Impact Man, and what impact the experience of this family might have on your behavior.
Please join us for our call at noon PT, 1pm MT, 2 pm CT, 3 pm ET. The number to join the call is toll-free - 866-740-1260 and the access code is 5766842#. Please invite anyone who might be interested in this topic to join us for our conversation which will last about an hour. For safety reasons, we ask that people on our call not operate a motor vehicle while participating in the call.
Tucson and Too Much

It’s all too much! It is enough to make me want to scream. But I won’t. I will count to ten. (1…,2…,3…,4…,5…,6…,7…,8…9,…10. There, that’s better.)
I am talking about all the spin coming out of the tragedy in Tuscon. The networks are offering too much coverage of this dramatic event, clearly appealing to our ghoulish predilection to participate vicariously in violent tragedy. I have seen way too much of Jared Lee Loughner’s smiling face anytime I go to a news source, only multiplying the crazed motives of psychopaths around the country seeking fame and significance, albeit of a notorious nature.
But mostly I am talking about how there is too much political hay being made out of the shooting. Even before Representative Giffords has had a chance to survive the critical three-day peak of brain swelling, the pundits were out in force explaining how this awful event proves that the other side is evil.
First, many people rushed to judgment that the seemingly disturbed Mr. Loughner was motivated by the cross-hair targets on Sarah Palin’s website or by Giffords’ Republican opponent last fall, Jesse Kelly. His campaign placed an advertisement saying, "Get on target for victory in November/ Help remove Gabrielle Giffords from office/ Shoot a fully automatic M16 with Jesse Kelly.” We don’t know Mr. Loughner’s state of mind, but I am sure we will find out much too much more over the coming weeks. But, that obscures the larger point: both Palin and Kelly’s use of violent images is deplorable, that is certain. Read more »
Call with Colin Beaven, the No Impact Man, at the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester
Colin Beaven, No Impact Man, will be speaking at the Ethical Culture Society of Westchester, on Sunday, January 16, 2011. Leader Bart Worden has invited people from around the Ethical Movement to participate in the Platform by teleconference and video streaming. I'll have the details of how to connect to share with you soon, but for now, please save the date, and invite your friends to join the call. We'd like to have as big an impact as possible with the No Impact Man.
The call, which takes place during the regularly scheduled Platform meeting of the Society, will start at 10:30 ET, 9:30 CT, 8:30 MT and 7:30 PT.
No Impact Man

Living for a year having no impact on the environment. That's quite a challenge. Yet that is what Colin Beaven and his family, wife Michelle Conlin and daughter Isabella did. I'm not sure why, but I resisted watching the video I got out from the library. I don't know if I expected someone who was holier than thou about living in an ecological manner, maybe I thought I'd feel guilty that I am not doing enough to protect the environment, to conserve energy.
It didn't help when someone told me that they were less impressed because the documentary was about a family with lots of financial resources, living on Fifth Ave. in Manhattan.
But I knew I needed to watch it, so I finally popped the DVD in and thought I'd give it at least ten minutes. I was hooked right from the start. Here was a real family and they were making real choices and sacrifices, and at the same time, were going to make a lot more people aware of how their consumption affects the planet, and especially the future of our planet.
I found myself thinking yes, I can pay more attention to not buying things with lots of plastic packaging, I can be more careful to bring bags to the supermarket, I can take more political action around energy legislation. And as someone who uses my bicycle as my main means of transportation I was pleased to see them getting around in NY on bicycles.
There were some things they did which I can't see myself doing - going without electricity for months, but it does make me think more about seeking alternative forms of power generation for my home. I've been told that this location won't work well for wind generation, and my house isn't pointed in the right direction for solar panels, but that was a while ago and I know advances are being made all the time, so who knows. Read more »
American Ethical Union Dialogue Online - Winter 2010
Welcome to the Premier Issue of Dialogue Online
A Publication of the American Ethical Union
As announced in previous issues, Dialogue, a Publication of the American Ethical Union, has gone electronic beginning with the Winter 2010 Edition. Click the link below to open the current issue of Dialogue at the AEU website. We hope you will appreciate the new multimedia rich layout which can only be created in a web based online environment.
Click for the Winter 2010 Edition of Dialogue.
Law'nence Miller
Director of Administration
American Ethical Union
P.S.: Your feedback, pointing to flaws of this first electronic edition and suggesting improvements, are appreciated.
Note from Susan Rose - please feel free to share positive feedback too. This is a great way to know what is going on in the American Ethical Union and at other Societies around the Movement. The editor, Michele Sharon is a member of ESWoW.





