Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Via Sangha Virtual - Thich Nhat Hanh - Brasil

Qual é a visão budista sobre a homossexualidade?

Pergunta: Qual é a visão budista sobre a homossexualidade?

Thich Nhat Hanh: O espírito do Budismo é a inclusividade. Olhando profundamente a natureza de uma nuvem, vemos o cosmos. Uma flor é uma flor, mas se olharmos profundamente para ela, veremos o cosmos. Tudo tem um lugar. A base, o fundamento de tudo, é o mesmo. Quando você olha para o oceano, você vê diferentes tipos de ondas, muitos tamanhos e formas, mas todas as ondas têm a água como seu fundamento e substância.

Se você nasceu gay ou lésbica, o fundamento do ser é o mesmo que o meu. Nós somos diferentes, mas compartilhamos o mesmo fundamento do ser. O teólogo protestante Paul Tillich disse que Deus é o fundamento do ser. Você deve ser você mesmo. Se Deus me criou como uma rosa, então eu deveria me aceitar como uma rosa. Se você é lésbica, então, seja lésbica. Olhando profundamente em sua natureza, você vai ver-se como você realmente é. Você será capaz de tocar o solo do seu ser e encontrar a paz.

Alguém que discrimina contra vocês, por causa de sua raça ou a cor de sua pele ou sua orientação sexual, é ignorante. Ele não conhece o seu próprio fundamento do ser. Ele não percebe que todos partilham a mesma base do ser, é por isso que ele pode discriminá-lo. Alguém que discrimina os outros e faz com que eles sofram é alguém que não está feliz consigo mesmo. Uma vez que você tocou a profundidade e a natureza do seu fundamento do ser, você vai ser equipado com o tipo de entendimento que pode dar origem a compaixão e tolerância, e você será capaz de perdoar até mesmo aqueles que o discriminam. Não acredite que o alívio ou a justiça virá através de sociedade por si só. Verdadeira emancipação reside na sua capacidade de olhar profundamente. Quando você sofre por causa da discriminação, há sempre uma vontade de falar. Mas mesmo se você passar mil anos falando, o seu sofrimento não será aliviado. Somente através da compreensão profunda e libertação da ignorância você pode ser libertado de seu sofrimento.

Às vezes, aqueles nos discriminam agem em nome de Deus, da verdade. Podemos pertencer ao terceiro mundo, ou podemos pertencer a uma raça em particular, podemos ser pessoas de cor, podemos ser gays ou lésbicas, e nós temos sido discriminados por milhares de anos. Então como nos libertar do sofrimento de sermos vítimas de discriminação e opressão? No cristianismo, é dito que Deus criou tudo, inclusive o homem, e não há uma distinção entre o criador e a criatura. A criatura é algo criado por Deus. Quando eu olho para uma rosa, uma tulipa, ou um crisântemo, eu sei, eu vejo, eu penso, que esta flor é uma criação de Deus. Porque eu tenho praticado como um budista, eu sei que entre o criador e a criatura, deve haver algum tipo de ligação, caso contrário, a criação não seria possível. Assim, o crisântemo pode dizer que Deus é uma flor, e eu concordo, porque deve haver o elemento "flor" em Deus, para que a flor possa se tornar realidade. Assim, a flor tem o direito de dizer que Deus é uma flor.

A pessoa branca tem o direito de dizer que Deus é branco, e o negro também tem o direito de dizer que Deus é negro. Na verdade, se você for para a África, vai ver que a Virgem Maria é negra. Se você não fizer a estátua da Virgem Maria negra, não inspira as pessoas. Porque para os negros, "black is beautiful", de modo que uma pessoa negra tem o direito de dizer que Deus é preto, e na verdade eu também acredito que Deus seja negro, mas Deus não é só preto, Deus também é branco, Deus é também uma flor. Assim, quando uma lésbica pensa em seu relacionamento com Deus, se ela pratica profundamente, ela pode descobrir que Deus é também uma lésbica. Caso contrário, como você poderia estar lá? Deus é uma lésbica e Deus é gay também. Deus não é menos. Deus é lésbica, mas também gay, negro, branco, crisântemo. É porque você não entende isso, que discrimina.

Quando você discriminar o negro ou o branco, ou a flor, ou a lésbica, você discrimina contra Deus, que é a bondade fundamental em você. Você cria o sofrimento ao seu redor, e você cria o sofrimento dentro de si mesmo, e é a ilusão, a ignorância, que é a base de sua ação, a sua atitude de discriminação. 

Via Armário X: O Budismo e a homossexualidade

O Budismo e a homossexualidade

por Marco Antonio García

Nos últimos anos o Budismo virou a religião da moda nos paises ocidentais. São diversas revistas e livros falando sobre os benefícios da meditação, yoga e outras praticas budistas. Mas o que o budismo pensa a cerca da homossexualidade? Como nós homossexuais somos vistos por esta religião milenar? Estas e outras perguntas fundamentais para se entender o budismo foram respondidas pela Associação Brasil Soka Gakkai Internacional (http://www.bsgi.org.br/) e pela Lama Chagdud Khadro, diretora da Escola Nyingma do Budismo Vajrayana – Chagdud Gonpa (http://www.odsal-ling.org/), exclusivamente para o Armário X. 

Via Salon: “Anti-Christian religious bigotry” is apparently what conservatives are now calling LGBTQ rights

 
"Anti-Christian religious bigotry" is apparently what conservatives are now calling LGBTQ rights 
NOM President Brian Brown (Credit: Wikipedia)
 
In lamenting the demise of Arizona’s anti-LGBTQ discrimination bill and recent victories to secure other basic protections for LGBTQ individuals, National Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown encouraged his fellow bigots to try to change the frame on these debates by accusing LGBTQ rights advocates of pushing “anti-Christian bigotry”:
So, when [LGBTQ people and their allies] bring up discrimination, we need to turn it on its head and say, this is about anti-religious, specifically in some cases, anti-Christian religious bigotry, and there’s no place for this in this country. The discrimination is there, but right now what’s happening is the discrimination is coming from those that want to punish, repress and marginalize individuals and organizations that stand up for their religious beliefs.
Referencing a New Mexico photographer who refused to shoot a gay couple’s commitment ceremony (the Supreme Court refused on Monday to hear her case, probably because of anti-Christian bigotry), Brown said, “Whether it’s being forced to photograph a ceremony that you don’t agree with, forced to create a same-sex marriage wedding cake that you don’t agree with, whatever it is, that’s a very different thing than saying this is somehow Jim Crow all over again. In fact, it’s the reverse.”
But not every person of faith shares Brown’s bigoted paranoia.

Kansas state Rep. Louis Ruiz, a practicing Catholic, is the sponsor of a LGBTQ rights protection bill in his state. A month after his colleagues floated a proposal to enshrine anti-LGBTQ discrimination into state law, Ruiz introduced a counter measure, asking his colleagues, “What’s our message when we have these type of discriminatory bills that come out at either the federal or the state level? We’re defeating our own purpose as a country that wants to be inclusive. To me, this is a no-brainer.”
 
Ruiz said at the time that he believes his own faith is well protected, and wants to see those protections extended to others: “If you look at the bills that people are trying to pass that would permanently enshrine open discrimination against gay and lesbian Kansans, can you think of a better reason why we should introduce something [like this LGBTQ anti-discrimination bill]?”
Katie McDonough is an assistant editor for Salon, focusing on lifestyle. Follow her on Twitter @kmcdonovgh or email her at kmcdonough@salon.com.

Via JMG: LBJ's Daughters: Our Father Would Likely Have Supported Same-Sex Marriage



Katie Couric interviewed Luci Baines Johnson and Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, the daughters of late President Lyndon B. Johnson, and asked them about their father's civil rights legacy in the light of the current battle for same-sex marriage.
“I think my father felt very strongly that when there was bigotry anywhere, prejudice anywhere, all of us lose out,” Johnson said. “Because it's just one more expression of hate.” For her part, Robb said she didn’t know what her father would say, because same-sex marriage was not an issue when he was in public life. “It's hard to project what Daddy would have thought about that because that wasn't an issue that had come upon the stage at that time,” Robb said. “But I know he really wanted everybody to be able to live up to the best that God gave them.” Both Robb and Johnson said they personally believe gay marriage should be allowed. “I certainly think that, if God made you a homosexual, that you should have love and affection with somebody,” Robb said. “And I would not want to deny anybody that opportunity to be happy.”
This week marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, which some historians consider to be the crowning achievement of the LBJ administration. Watch the interview below.

(Via Towleroad)


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via JMG: Anti-Gay Group Targets Mozilla


Back in December, Faith Driven Consumer used the Human Rights Campaign's Corporate Equality Index to create a list of pro-gay companies for Christians to boycott during their holiday shopping. Today the group issued a press release which demands that Mozilla respond to three questions.
According to pro-gay advocates, it’s theoretically acceptable for companies like Mozilla to hire Christians as long as they are never permitted to assume leadership roles. The same people who claim to support equal treatment for everyone want to deny access to employment opportunities based on personal convictions – in effect a new “glass ceiling” for a faith-driven worldview. Faith Driven Consumer reached out to Mozilla to clarify what their policy is toward faith-driven employees, asking them to respond to three specific questions:

1. Will faith-driven employees be discriminated against and forced into the closet for their personal views on marriage? 2. Is there a “pro gay marriage” litmus test for working at Mozilla? 3. Will the next CEO be required to openly express support for gay marriage as a condition for being hired? While we wait to hear back, let’s make sure they HEAR from YOU.
Last last month as the controversy was at its peak, Mozilla posted a statement affirming its corporate support of marriage equality. That statement also addresses the questions posed today by Faith Driven Consumer.
Mozilla’s mission is to make the Web more open so that humanity is stronger, more inclusive and more just. This is why BOTH Mozilla Corporation and Mozilla Foundation support equality for all, including marriage equality for LGBT couples. No matter who you are or who you love, everyone deserves the same rights and to be treated equally.

We realize that not everyone in our community or who uses our products will agree with this. But we have always maintained that as long as you are willing to respect others, and come together for our larger mission, you are welcome. Mozilla’s community is made up of people who have very diverse personal beliefs working on a common cause, which is a free and open internet. That is a very rare and special thing.

Mozilla has always worked to be a welcoming community, committed to inclusiveness and equality for all people. One voice will not limit opportunity for anyone. That was true yesterday and will be true tomorrow.
Faith Driven Consumer doesn't need to "wait to hear back" from Mozilla as anybody with a computer can learn their position. But that doesn't fuel the outrage machine, does it? The hypocrisy of boycotting companies for supporting marriage equality and then making this kind of demand is truly mind-numbing.


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via FB:


Nick Drake - Pink Moon


Via Daily Dharma


All Politics are Local | April 8, 2014

Why do I consider it so crucial to balance the outer aspects of nonviolence and compassion with the inner support of contemplative practice? Because in the end, all politics are local, and we cannot love life and humanity if we do not love each other, one on one.  
 
—Lama Surya Das, "Why Sit?"
 

Monday, April 7, 2014

VIa UTNE: Free Your Mind: Practice Vipassana Meditation

After years of heavy addiction, Chris Grosso found himself literally on his knees, utterly lost and broken. Grasping for life, he needed to find a new path, one that went beyond conventional religious or spiritual doctrineone free of bullshit. Indie Spiritualist (Beyond Words Publishing, 2014) empowers readers to accept themselves as they are, in all their humanity and imperfect perfection. In this excerpt learn the basics of vipassana meditation, a simple relaxation practice that can be done by anyone and in any setting.

Vipassana Meditation

Besides being asked, “What’s an Indie Spiritualist?” the second most common question I’m typically asked is “What type of meditation do you practice?”

While I personally practice many different types of medita­tion—never feeling like I have to stay within the confines of only one tradition—I typically respond with vipassana, as I’ve found it to be the most universally applicable form of meditation around. Any form of meditation that resonates with you—whether guided, man­tra, movement, and so forth—will definitely be of benefit.

I adore meditation because there are countless ways to meditate, with no particular style being any better than another. It’s all about what resonates with you. You can find many free guided medita­tions online by searching Google or YouTube, as well as by visiting your local library. Most meditation practices are to spirituality what Bob Ross was to painting—very laid back and go with the flow. And while your practice may not provide you with happy little trees, it will over time create a greater sense of peace, clarity, and serenity in your life, and that’s sorta like happy little trees, right?

Through years of drug addiction, I did considerable damage to myself, resulting in heavy bouts of depression and anxiety. For years, I relied on antidepressant and anti-anxiety medications to keep me in a somewhat balanced state, but after cultivating a dedicated meditation practice I eventually found myself at a place where, under doctor supervision, I was able to taper off the medication and no longer needed it.

Let me make it perfectly clear, however, that there is absolutely nothing wrong with taking prescribed medication for conditions like anxiety, depression, and so forth. I recognize that they were very nec­essary in my life at that time, as I was very chemically off-balance. There is nothing unspiritual about taking prescribed medication when needed, because our own mental and emotional well-being must come first before we can truly help others.

Whether we are on medication or not, meditation practices will certainly help us to not only cultivate more calm in our lives, but also to handle things like stress, anxiety, and depression in gentler ways. For the benefit of those who are new to meditation, I’m providing these simple guided instructions for the practice of vipassana.

Make the jump here to read the full blog

10 Crazy Christian Quotes You May Not Have Heard

We all hear of the uber-crazy stuff that high-profile fundamentalists Christians say. Stupid Christian quotes are gleefully reported by the liberal media, and rightly so. For those of us who are SANE Christians, it’s a reminder of the reasons that non-believers think all Christians are crazy. As a member of the Christian Left, I say “let’s expose these kooks”! Here are some quotes by fundamentalist Christians that you may not have heard. Y’all enjoy.
  1. “When the temptation to masturbate is strong, yell “Stop!” to those thoughts as loudly as you can in your mind. Then recite a portion of the Bible or sing a hymn.”  –Mormon Guide to Self-Control
  2. “We don’t have to protect the environment, the Second Coming is at hand.” –James Watt, Secretary of the Interior during the Reagan years.
  3. “I called to buy some meth, but I threw it away.” —Rev. Ted Haggard, when details began to emerge about his visits to a male prostitute, in 2006.
  4. Our culture is superior. Our culture is superior because our religion is Christianity and that is the truth that makes men free. –Pat Buchanan
  5. “This Christmas I want you to do the most loving thing and I want you to buy each of your children an SKS rifle and 500 rounds of ammunition.” —A speaker at the 1995 convention of the U.S. Taxpayers Party. A few months later, Dobson endorsed their candidate for president, Howard Phillips.
  6. “Kids today are looking for something to die for… If you give them something to die for, they’ll go to the edge of the earth for you.”  —James Dobson’s son Ryan, in 2005. His book, 2Die4 : The Dangerous Truth About Following Christ advocates “murderous war because our enemies are deadly.”
  7. “The right of holding slaves is clearly established in the Holy Scriptures, both by precept and example.”  –R. Furman, Baptist, of South Carolina
  8. “Sex education classes in our public schools are promoting incest.” –Jimmy Swaggart
  9. “Nobody has the right to worship on this planet any other God than Jehovah. And therefore the state does not have the responsibility to defend anybody’s pseudo-right to worship an idol.”  –Rev. Joseph Morecraft, Chalcedon Presbyterian Church, “Biblical Role of Civil Government” speech given 8/31/93 at Biblical Worldview and Christian Education Conference
  10. “When you know the LORD you have no need for masturbation.” –Brice Wellington

Politician Says Marriage Equality is Murder: April 7 MNW


Via JMG: Sullivan Doubles-Down On Mozilla Flap


Yesterday Andrew Sullivan acknowledged that the resignation of Mozilla CEO Brendan Eich was not the work of gay activists but came as the result of pressure from the "techie straight left." (Ben Shapiro appears to concede that point as well.) But Sullivan remains outraged.

A civil rights movement without toleration is not a civil rights movement; it is a cultural campaign to expunge and destroy its opponents. A moral movement without mercy is not moral; it is, when push comes to shove, cruel. For a decade and half, we have fought the battle for equal dignity for gay people with sincerity, openness, toleration and reason. It appears increasingly as if we will have to fight and fight again to prevent this precious and highly successful legacy from being hijacked by a righteous, absolutely certain, and often hateful mob. We are better than this. And we must not give in to it.
Sullivan says he's gotten hundreds of emails from readers who "overwhelmingly disagree" with him about the controversy.


posted by Joe Jervis

Via Tricycle

April 7, 2014 | New at Tricycle: A Buddhist visits Burning Man; Karma Trinlay Rinpoche's online retreat on the six paramitas; a look at the different kinds of debt (social, economic, spiritual); an escape from the least livable city on Earth; an institute updates the age-old tradition of the scholar-practitioner; and interviews with the leading voices in contemporary Buddhism in our newest e-book, Conversations: Volume 1


MAGAZINE: DHARMA ON THE PLAYA
Psychedelic experimentation, intimate connections, and all-night partying: all activities we normally associate with the annual art and music festival Burning Man. But when contributing editor Allan Badiner visited the playa—Burning Man's desert city—he found a community based on generosity, nonjudgment, and principles that reminded him of the eightfold path.

Via Daily Dharma


Pure Gold | April 7, 2014

Free passion is radiation without a radiator, a fluid, pervasive warmth that flows effortlessly. It is not destructive because it is a balanced state of being and highly intelligent. Self-consciousness inhibits this intelligent, balanced state of being. By opening, by dropping our self-conscious grasping, we see not only the surface of an object, but we see the whole way through. We appreciate not in terms of sensational qualities alone, but we see in terms of whole qualities, which are pure gold.  
 
—Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, “Love Story”
 

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Via Daily Dharma:


The Only Place | April 6, 2014

Just as we cannot live without water, so are joy and peace essential for our inner fulfillment. We may not even be aware that we are searching for something. It manifests only in our restlessness as we move from here to there, trying out different friends, different ideas, different jobs, different countries. Whatever we attempt is a reflection of our inner thirst, which we hope to quench in all these external ways. What we are looking for lies within us, and if we gave out time and energy to an interior search, we would come across it much faster, since that is the only place where it is to be found. 
—Ayya Khema, “Thirsting for Enlightenment”
 

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Via Daily Kos: Harvey Milk becomes the first openly ‪#‎lgbt‬ elected official on a U.S. stamp!

"Harvey Milk becomes the first openly ‪#‎lgbt‬ elected official on a U.S. stamp! A fitting honor for such an inspiring leader."


Via JMG: Quote Of The Day - Markos Moulitsas


"Would Sullivan rush to this guy's defense if it turned out he was a Grand Wizard in the KKK? Of course not. We are allowed to be intolerant of people who operate outside the bounds of civil decency. This wasn't governmental action infringing on any Constitutional rights. This was Mozilla developers saying they refused to do work with a bigot, private websites blocking access to the Firefox browser because they refused to do business with a bigot, and employees of the firm speaking up because they refused to work for a bigot. In short, it was the free market expressing itself. Eich was perfectly within his rights to stay at Mozilla, but he would then face a hostile market and eventually faced the reality that he couldn't do his job in that environment. The free market spoke, and a free market enterprise was forced to react." - Markos Moulitsas, founder of Daily Kos, writing for his site.


Reposted from Joe Jervis

Via FB:


Via JMG: NOM Launches Mozilla Boycott to Support a Holocaust Denier


On Thursday hate group leader Brian Brown launched a petition in support of former Mozilla CEO Brendan Eich. Late Friday afternoon he launched a boycott of Mozilla.
"When Brendon Eich made his modest contribution to support Proposition 8, Barack Obama was on the ballot as a candidate who said he believed marriage was the union of one man and one woman. Now Eich has been the target of a vicious character attack by gay activists who have forced him out of the company he has helped lead for years. This is a McCarthyesque witch hunt that makes the term 'thought police' seem modest. We urge all consumers to remove Mozilla's Firefox web browser from their computers as a sign of protest. This attack to deny Mr. Eich his livelihood for supporting true marriage is a continuation of the shameful pattern we have consistently seen from gay activists. It basically says to all those in America and around the world who believe in a view of marriage that is consistent with the teachings of their faith that they are all bigots and haters and there is no place for them in civil society. This is the totalitarian worldview we will all be under if marriage ultimately is redefined in the law."
VERY FUCKING RELATED: Two years ago NOM launched their continuing boycott of Starbucks after the company issued a statement endorsing marriage equality in Washington state. Several months after the boycott started, hate group leader Tony Perkins declared to his national radio audience that NOM's boycott had cost Starbucks over $10B in stock value.
It didn’t take long for Starbucks to lose bucks over marriage. Hello, I’m Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council in Washington. In January, Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said endorsing same-sex marriage would be good for business. Boy was he wrong! Siding with radical homosexuals has its price in this country. And in Starbucks case, the cost is about ten billion dollars. That’s how much the coffee giant’s lost in stock value since the campaign to Dump Starbucks got underway. In the last eight months, the company's missed sales projections and watched stocks dive from $61 to $48, for a loss of more than $10.2 billion. How many companies will fall for the lie that endorsing same-sex marriage will help business? J.C. Penney’s tried it. Target’s tried it. Now Starbucks. And every time, there’s a reason to believe that alienating millions of customers will directly affect a company’s bottom line. On the flip side, look at Chick-fil-A. They found out that supporting traditional values pays just as many cultural dividends as financial ones.
From Joe:

Brian Brown and his clown car of evil are trying to sell the claim that they are super concerned about evil homofascsists destroying the livelihood of Brendan Eich, but they bragged about having caused a $10B stock loss that may have devastated the investment portfolios of uncountable retirees, families, and pension funds. So what if thousands of people who also oppose same-sex marriage suddenly saw their nest eggs dwindle? And if a dive in stock price prompted Starbucks to enact massive layoffs among straight minimum wage workers? Serves them homos right.

The truth, of course, is that NOM's boycott had nothing to do with the price of Starbucks stock and everything to do with the volatility experienced by much of the restaurant sector at that time. In early 2012 at the start of NOM's boycott, Starbucks traded at $43. It closed today at $71.55. That's a 66% increase. Other companies are probably lighting candles in the hope of a boycott from NOM.

But all that is only part of the story.

Shortly after NOM's boycott of Starbucks began in America, Brian Brown posted a gloating update in which he announced that NOM had purchased Arabic-language banner ads to promote the boycott on websites based in several Middle Eastern countries that carry the death penalty for homosexuality. His intent, obviously, was to whip up anti-gay sentiment in places where our brothers and sisters already lead lives of quiet terror at best. Perhaps he even hoped for a madman to take out the entire staff at one of those overseas Starbucks. THAT would send a message back home, huh?

REMINDER: When major national Christian groups with millions of followers call for boycotts, that is a righteous use of the free market in order to preserve morality, marriage, family, and the American way. But if a gay keyboard activist tweets a call for a boycott, THAT is homofascist intimidation, intolerance, bullying, a stifling of religious liberty, and an attempt to deny the freedom of speech. And don't you forget it.


Reposted from Joe Jervis