The difference?
The day was about moving forward. It was about uniting to meet the challenges. It was about hope.
The day was about moving forward. It was about uniting to meet the challenges. It was about hope.
Will Biden's message of unity bring America back together?
Yes, as long as we understand the work ahead of us. Don't expect everybody to come on board. That all or nothing attitude will stand in the way of moving forward. It will take all of us who are ready to change the harmful outcomes of the past four years to do our part.
An example of what needs to change is in an article I read from the Associated Press.
Some expect President Joe Biden to bring a unifying tone now that he has been inaugurated, but say that alone won't be enough to bring unity. How the people react will be key.
Jonathan Jones' front-row seat to what happens next is his restaurant that is decorated with Black Lives Matter signs and art near the Oregon State Capitol. Epilogue Kitchen and Cocktails has been vandalized by a white supremacist. One day, police showed up as Jones and his friends were being accosted by neo-fascist Proud Boys. The police at first confronted Jones' group as if they were the threat.
“There’s not a person who stood with me that day who didn’t think that they might die,” Jones said. “And the most awful part was not knowing if it was going to come from the police or from the Proud Boys.
This is from Amanda Gorman' s poem The Hill We Climb she read at today's Inauguration. It gives us hope.
We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it,
Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.
And this effort very nearly succeeded.
But while democracy can be periodically delayed,
It can never be permanently defeated.
As I wrote this post, the sun came out.
Damir Spanic
The comfort of rituals. |
Frank Miller, a retired civil engineer, needed to play catch. A former baseball player in high school and college, he wandered his house in Dallas practicing the grips for a slider, curve and cutter after reading a book about pitching. So his wife, Alice, put out a call on social media: Does anybody want to play catch with my 74-year-old husband? |
The response showed them they’d tapped into something bigger than baseball. Players and strangers of all ages and talents turned out at a neighborhood park, ready to let the turbulence of recent weeks fade into the background and toss the ball around. |
“Isn’t baseball beautiful?” Mr. Miller said at the end of the session. “It’s a piece of art, really.” |
By Remy Tumin and Jeremiah M. Bogert, Jr. NY Times The Morning Anybody want to play catch? I know where my glove is. |
The alliances and treaties put in place after WWII were there to create political stability. The building of trading partners was to build a better world. After the First World War, the Germans and it's allies were punished with all sorts of sanctions. The idea was to isolate them. The result was the rise of fascism, and an unstable geopolitical climate. 75 million people perished in World War Two. Economies were left in ruin.
Today we're faced with repairing all those alliances and partnerships to rebuild the US and rebuild trust in us. But, are our allies willing to trust us?
There is a real hesitation from our allies after four years of America First.
For America’s allies and rivals alike, the chaos unfolding during Trump’s final days as president is the logical result of four years of global instability brought on by the man who promised to change the way the world viewed the U.S. From the outside, the nation has never looked so vulnerable — or unpredictable. Alliances that had held for generations have frayed badly — from leaving the Paris climate accord and the Iran nuclear deal to quitting the World Health Organization amid a pandemic. By seeking to overturn his loss to Joe Biden, Trump upended the bedrock principle of democratic elections that the U.S. has tried to export around the world, Lori Hinnant reports from Paris. (Ap)
Whenever we exclude people and their potential, it comes at a cost to all of us. Discrimination comes in many forms. The EEOC investigates discrimination complaints based on an individual's race, color, national origin, religion, sex, age, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, and retaliation for reporting, participating in, and/or opposing a discriminatory practice.
Whenever we discriminate there is a cost in lost potential. Two thirds of the US economy is based on consumer spending. By holding people from participating in the economy, we're hold back potential for economic growth.
Citigroup did some research on the issue. The study found that over the past 20 years the US economy lost $16 trillion to racial discrimination against African Americans alone. Ending discrimination would give a $5 trillion boost to the economy over the next five years.
Specifically, the study came up with $16 trillion in lost GDP by noting four key racial gaps between African Americans and whites:In its hurry to use its final days in power to execute federal prisoners, the administration of President Donald Trump has trampled over an array of barriers, both legal and practical, according to court records that have not been previously reported.
Officials gave public explanations for their choice of which prisoners should die that misstated key facts from the cases. They moved ahead with executions in the middle of the night. They left one prisoner strapped to the gurney while lawyers worked to remove a court order. They executed a second prisoner while an appeal was still pending, leaving the court to then dismiss the appeal as “moot” because the man was already dead. They bought drugs from a secret pharmacy that failed a quality test. They hired private executioners and paid them in cash.
The Trump administration has executed more federal prisoners than any presidency since Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s. Roosevelt was president for 12 years, and his total includes six saboteurs who were tried by a military commission.
Does the vengeance of capital punishment offers bring healing, peace of mind, and closure to the families of the victims? Good question. There is plenty of evidence to suggest not.
Behaviors of rage and seeking vengeance are learned. The justification is a whole genre of popular movies where a super hero takes on whole groups of people alone. Well, they are armed with superior fire power, so never mind the law. Besides, the villains are so obviously bad.
If revenge is a learned behavior, it can be unlearned.
I found a website called Ditch the Label. It offers advice to teens and young adult. They're global youth organization helping young people overcome the issues that affect and hold them back the most. Their core strands of support include bullying, digital wellbeing, mental health, relationships and identity.
They've come up with Seven Reasons Why Seeking Revenge Is A Bad Idea.
1. IT WON’T MAKE YOU FEEL BETTER.
Sadly, evidence shows that people who seek revenge instead of forgiving or letting go, tend to feel worse in the long run. You are much better off channelling your energy into moving forward positively with your life.
2. IN FACT, IT MIGHT MAKE YOU FEEL WORSE.
While you might feel hurt or betrayed right now, eventually you will be able to put those feelings behind you, but if you burden your conscience with guilt, you are more likely to ruminate over your actions – this makes moving on much harder and only puts your life on hold.
3. IT COULD BACKFIRE.
Gandhi once said, “An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind.” It is far better to save yourself from the possibility of further trauma. Focus on the good things in your life and look at how you can move forward, putting the person who hurt you firmly in the past.
4. YOU ARE WASTING PRECIOUS TIME.
Do you really want to waste your precious time on someone that doesn’t deserve it?
How can you make way for new, positive experiences if you are preoccupied with wreaking havoc?
5. BECAUSE, KARMA.
Whether you believe in it or not, karma makes a much better friend than a foe – make sure to keep on the right side of it:
6. TWO WRONGS DON’T MAKE A RIGHT.
Fact. Seeking revenge isn’t going to undo the actions of the person who has wronged you. So do the right thing, be the bigger person – you will be glad you did so in the long run.
7. YOU COULD GET CAUGHT IN AN ENDLESS REVENGE LOOP.
So, you seek revenge on the person who hurt you. They then take revenge on your revenge…and the cycle continues. Make sure you don’t get caught in a loop, it will only cause you further pain and hurt. Try and leave negativity and people who bring you down in the past. They are not worth your time and energy.
Something Ditch the Label forgot to mention is a strong support group. Nobody said forgiving and moving on was going to be easy.
The slow roll out of COVID 19 vaccine can be attributed to the absence of a unified plan. There's a lack of understanding of the big picture when it comes to inoculating 300 million people.
There is resistance to any sort of national guidance or plan for the distribution of the COVID 19 vaccine. The fear is of the slippery slope to communism, or the fulfillment of a conspiracy theory.
The lack of planning and guidance is actually leading to delays and unnecessary suffering and death.
We are all a part of something much greater. We are all interconnected. Nothing we do is done in a vacuum. Alone, I can do my part. Together, we can do so much more. I'm looking forward to a collaboration of communities in 2021.