Archive for July, 2010

What Constitutes News?

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

I have quit watching the national and local news shows.  And I don’t take the local newspapers.  They are just not that informative any more.  They assume I have a 2-minute attention span, the IQ of a 5th grader, and are hooked on celebrity news.  Sometimes it difficult to tell the difference between the national nightly news and Entertainment Tonight (ET). 

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Those Who Are Different

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

In a recent opinion piece in the Sunday SLTrib, a mother described her problems in a store when some children started to mock her disabled child.  When she attempted to correct the offending children, their mother stepped in and aggresively defended them. 

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Urban Farm

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Time recently listed Will Allen as one their 100 Most Influential (10 May 2010).  His kudos were written by Van Jones (founder of Green for All and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress):

“At one time, the term urban farm sounded like an oxymormon.  No longer.  A new movement is sprouting up in America’s low-income neighborhoods.  Some urban residents, sick of fast food and the scarcity of grocery stores, have decided to grow good food for themselves.

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Temple Square

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

The first time I went through a LDS Temple was while I was in the Mission Home in SLC.  In those days (60s), they didn’t have the MTC; all missionaries went through a week of training in a dormitory-style building that sat next to the Salt Lake Temple.  On Thursday of that week, we all went through the House of the Lord.  For me, the experience was like being kicked in the stomach.  I was certainly not prepared for the experience.  It was far from the spiritual encounter that I had hoped for.

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Discrimination

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

I think many LDS Church members would like to believe that historic Church teachings about afro-Americans didn’t impact individual behavior.  These members might want to consider the following:

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Theosis (Mormon Style)

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Mormons believe that all human beings are the literal children of God, and thus have the divine potential to become like Him.  Some have noted that the doctrine is not broached as frequently today as it used to be.  But it is still discussed.

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Kampala Blast Kills 74

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

The following appeared on msnbc.com on 12 Jul 2010:

“An al-Qaida-linked Somali militant group claimed responsiblity for twin bombings in Uganda that killed 74 people who were watching the World Cup final on TV, saying the militants would carry out attacks “against our enemy” wherever they are.

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Church, as Divine Organization

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

The following penned by Laurie N. DiPadova-Stocks appeared in Dialogue (june 2010):

“Bennion (Lowell), drawing on Weber’s (Max) warnings about bureaucracy, devoted his career to the daunting task of helping LDS students reconcile personal integrity and difficulties with any organization, including the Church (Mormon), to which they might be committed.  As he explained in his classes, every organization is characterized by contradictions.  It is simply unavoidable.  A school might embrace the ideal to offer the best educational opportunity to students yet find that it cannot affort to meet that ideal.  The police department might embrace the ideal of swift and timely justice, only to have to conform to the tedious requirements of due process along the way.  The first priority of any organization is to survive and to protect itself from perceived threats, at time emplying operational requirements that can be inconsistent with its own central purpose.

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Perpetual Anarchy

Friday, July 9th, 2010

I’ve always admired the oximoronic idea of “organized chaos” or “creative pandemonium” or “efficient tumult.”  For me, organizations spend way to much time perpetuating their institutional structure and not nearly enough time on their stated mission.  Organizations, as they mature, get increasingly rigid, and less creative.  Maybe they even have life cycles just like all of God’s creatures.  It is difficult for aging institutions to stay vibrant and young, to maintain their creative juices.  They frequently don’t know when to die.

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Belief in God

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Pascal’s Wager:  “Since we can’t know wheher God exists–should we believe in Him or not?  If He does exist, He will reward us for our belief; and if He does not exist, we lose nohing for having believed.”

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