A personal blog by a graying (mostly Anglo with light African-American roots) gay left leaning liberal progressive married college-educated Buddhist Baha'i BBC/NPR-listening Professor Emeritus now following the Dharma in Minas Gerais, Brasil.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 21, 2013
Perfect Awakening
Being
self-aware in the midst of our daily lives provides us with so much
material with which to notice the reality of our imperfect selves but,
at the same time, to be brought to realize how we are embraced by
Ultimate Wisdom and Compassion at all times. There’s no practice a
person can specifically do to attain perfect awakening, whether it’s
meditation or trying to follow precepts. Of course these are good
practices, but we can never totally free ourselves of our blind
passions. If we believe we can do it this way, the calculation is a
reflection of our ego-selves. Instead, we can be mindful of the dharma
as we go about our lives.
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- Reverend Patricia Kanaya Usuki, "The Great Compassion"
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Vi JMG: New Site: The Regnerus Fallout
Via press release:
The University of Central Florida (UCF) has ramped up its legal efforts to block the release of over 50,000 documents related to the flawed same-sex parenting study by Mark Regnerus that appeared last year in the publication Social Science Research, housed at UCF. A judge ruled the university had to release the documents, deemed public records under Florida law. Late last week, UCF retained legal counsel and ignored the court order. The Law Office of Andrea Flynn Mogensen, P.A., and Barrett, Chapman & Ruta, P.A – which represents John Becker, the reporter who initially sought the documents under Florida public records law - immediately filed an emergency motion for civil contempt. "What is UCF hiding?" asked Becker. "And why are they fighting tooth and nail - spending taxpayer dollars in the process - to keep these public records under seal?"Visit Regernus Fallout.
Judge Donald Grincewicz ruled on November 13 that emails and documents possessed by UCF related to the Regnerus study’s peer-review process must be turned over to Becker. UCF houses the journal Social Science Research, and the editor of the journal, UCF Professor James Wright, led the peer-review process for the research. Grincewicz has since inexplicably recused himself. And yesterday, an appellate court in Orlando granted a stay in the case until such time as a new judge can be appointed. The Human Rights Campaign Foundation funded the litigation and today launched “The Regnerus Fallout” web site (www.regnerusfallout.org) detailing the flaws, funding, and real purpose of the so-called study.
Labels: crackpots, gay families, gay parenting, hate groups, HRC, Mark Regnerus, marriage equality, religion
VIa JMG: ILLINOIS: Gov To Sign Marriage Bill Today
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn will sign the marriage equality bill today and according to one report he will sign the bill on Abraham Lincoln's desk, which Quinn is quietly having shipped from the state capital to his office in Chicago. Oh-em-Jeebus, the Tea Things will scream. I'll post a live stream of the signing ceremony later today.
Reposted from Joe Jervis
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 20, 2013
Great Responsibility
You
see, the past is past, and the future is yet to come. That means the
future is in your hands—the future entirely depends on the present. That
realization gives you a great responsibility.
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- H.H. the Dalai Lama, "The Experience of Change"
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 19, 2013
A Complete Practice
When
people talk about practicing the buddhadharma, I think they sometimes
fail to realize that the buddhadharma is a comprehensive religious
system. It doesn’t just mean sitting on your meditation cushion and
focusing on your breath. Buddhism is a practice for your whole life.
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- Charles Prebish, "Pursuing an American Buddhism"
Monday, November 18, 2013
Via JMG: Op-Ed Of The Day - Patricia Madrid
"Some will recall that as attorney general, I stopped the Rio Rancho county clerk from issuing marriage licenses. But that had nothing to do with the constitutionality of same-sex marriage and everything to do with individual county clerks acting on their own without the law behind them. I applaud the clerks for asking for a swift resolution by the state Supreme Court of the current checkerboard, where some counties grant marriage licenses and others do not. While I’m hopeful the state Supreme Court will grant marriage equality in New Mexico, I believe that is where the issue should be decided. The Legislature should resist any temptation to continue to make marriage a divisive issue.
"New Mexico has always been a land of freedom, of live and let live, and we all try to apply the Golden Rule — to treat others as we want to be treated ourselves. To me, that speaks directly to the freedom to marry. Marriage has been the cornerstone of my life, and I hope that soon in New Mexico, our gay and lesbian friends, neighbors and family members can have that same mix of celebration and security." - Former New Mexico Attorney General Patricia Madrid, writing for the Albuquerque Journal. (Tipped by JMG reader George)
Openly Gay Teen Scientist Honored by Vatican as Positive Role Model
CROWNSVILLE, Md. — An openly gay teen scientist has been honored by the Vatican for his work to develop a cost-effective method to detect pancreatic cancer.
Jack Andraka, a high school junior from Crownsville, Md., was awarded the International Giuseppe Sciacca Award for his work Saturday. The Vatican awards the prize to recognize youth who are positive role models and outstanding in their fields.
Andraka was hoping to meet Pope Francis while he is in Rome.
He told WBAL Radio he felt is was amazing to be recognized by the Vatican even though he is gay. He says it shows how much the world has grown to accept gay people.
Andraka developed the cancer test when he was 15 after the death of a family friend from pancreatic cancer.
He is talking with two biotech firms to manufacture the test.
Read more about Jack in LGBTQ Nation’s profile of the teen scientist →
and
http://www.lgbtqnation.com/2013/11/openly-gay-teen-scientist-honored-by-vatican-as-positive-role-model/
Jack Andraka, a high school junior from Crownsville, Md., was awarded the International Giuseppe Sciacca Award for his work Saturday. The Vatican awards the prize to recognize youth who are positive role models and outstanding in their fields.
Andraka was hoping to meet Pope Francis while he is in Rome.
He told WBAL Radio he felt is was amazing to be recognized by the Vatican even though he is gay. He says it shows how much the world has grown to accept gay people.
Andraka developed the cancer test when he was 15 after the death of a family friend from pancreatic cancer.
He is talking with two biotech firms to manufacture the test.
Read more about Jack in LGBTQ Nation’s profile of the teen scientist →
and
http://www.lgbtqnation.com/2013/11/openly-gay-teen-scientist-honored-by-vatican-as-positive-role-model/
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma November 18, 2013 Reconditioning the Mind There is a place at a certain point for overcoming concepts and conditioning, but there is also a lot of reconceiving and reconditioning. The idea is to transform the mind, not just to extract it from all cultural influences. Buddhism itself is a culture—one that attempts to train and condition minds in specific ways conducive to awakening. - David McMahan, "Context Matters" Read the entire article in the Wisdom Collection through November 19, 2013 For full access at any time, become a Tricycle Community Supporting or Sustaining Member Read Article
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 18, 2013
Reconditioning the Mind
There
is a place at a certain point for overcoming concepts and conditioning,
but there is also a lot of reconceiving and reconditioning. The idea is
to transform the mind, not just to extract it from all cultural
influences. Buddhism itself is a culture—one that attempts to train and
condition minds in specific ways conducive to awakening.
|
- David McMahan, "Context Matters"
November 18, 2013
Reconditioning the Mind
There
is a place at a certain point for overcoming concepts and conditioning,
but there is also a lot of reconceiving and reconditioning. The idea is
to transform the mind, not just to extract it from all cultural
influences. Buddhism itself is a culture—one that attempts to train and
condition minds in specific ways conducive to awakening.
|
- David McMahan, "Context Matters"
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Via Tricycle Daily Dharma
Tricycle Daily Dharma November 17, 2013
Not about Comfort
A
central component of spiritual life is recognizing that practice is not
about ensuring that we feel secure or comfortable. It’s not that we
won’t feel these things when we practice; rather, it’s that we are also
bound to sometimes feel very uncomfortable and insecure, particularly
when exploring and working with our darker emotions and unhealed pain.
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- Ezra Bayda, “The Three Things we Fear Most”
Saturday, November 16, 2013
8 Openly Homophobic Companies To Avoid
If
CEOs these days were smart, they would realize that over half of
America supports marriage equality. Companies like Amazon, Microsoft,
Starbucks, Google, and many more have famously “gone gay” and come out
in support of LGBT rights through monetary donations, employee
protection, and publicly promoting equality. It seems like publicly
opposing equality would be PR suicide these days, doesn’t it?
Surprisingly, this isn’t the case. The Human Rights Campaign conducts an
annual Corporate Equality Index and consistently hands out failing
grades to companies for either being un-inclusive, or downright
homophobic. Some of the following companies might be familiar to you,
but you might be surprised by who else made the list.
Via JMG: City Of Night Turns 50
John Rechy's landmark novel, City Of Night, was published 50 years ago this week. From the Los Angeles Times:
The book is a landmark not only of gay literature -- it tells the story of a street hustler as he moves through the shadow world of the 1950s -- but also of American literature. “City of Night” was not the first overtly gay-themed book (Radclyffe Hall’s “The Well of Loneliness” appeared in 1928, and in 1956, Allen Ginsberg published his long poem “Howl,” followed, three years later, by William S. Burroughs with “Naked Lunch”) but it may be the most unapologetic, a searing screed of life on the edge. “Later I would think of America as one vast City of Night,” Rechy writes in the novel’s opening sentence, “stretching gaudily from Times Square to Hollywood Boulevard -- jukebox-winking, rock-n-roll-moaning: America at night fusing its darkcities into the unmistakable shape of loneliness.”Years ago I mentioned here that City Of Night remains my favorite novel of all time. Since I first read it decades ago in college, I've gifted it to friends dozens of times. (I still hate the ending.) You might also enjoy Rechy's Numbers and The Sexual Outlaw.
Labels: books, gay writers, John Rechy, LGBT History
Via JMG: God Sent The Russian Meteor Because He Was Pissed About All That Gayness
According to Russian television host Arkady Mamontov, the meteor that hit Russia earlier this year was sent by God because of "gay activity."
RELATED: Yesterday I reported about the secret recordings of LGBT groups made by the Russia government. It was on Mamontov's show that the recordings were aired.
Reposted from Joe
In a reference to the Old Testament story of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, famous journalist Arkady Mamontov said on his program that the fall of the Chelyabinsk meteorite on February 15 in Russia was related to the country’s growing gay activity. Mamontov’s program ‘Special Correspondent’ airs on state channel Rossiya 1. The host called the meteorite a warning "to all of us that we should keep the family tradition, traditional love, or else something else - not only the Chelyabinsk meteorite - will hit us." The Russian LGBT Network rights group filed a complaint with the prosecutor’s office on Thursday. The group accused the show of hate speech, according to group chairman Igor Kochetkov. He said that Mamontov also claimed that gays and lesbians want to "destroy [traditional] Russia.”Over 1500 people (including hundreds of children) were injured by the meteor's shock wave.
RELATED: Yesterday I reported about the secret recordings of LGBT groups made by the Russia government. It was on Mamontov's show that the recordings were aired.
Labels: batshittery, bovine spongiform encephalopathy, crackpots, crazy people, get the net, religion, Russia
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