Category Archives: Uncategorized

Setting our laws into stone + our gun industry’s selling of fear = a toxic situation. #Repeal2A #Australia http://t.co/AOGhiDbMgj directly from Twitter

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via Twitter https://twitter.com/HarryUnderwood3

October 05, 2015 at 10:54AM

I liked a @YouTube video http://t.co/aMeMeh5DMh Al Jazeera America profiles the Office of Neighborhood Safety and it’s Peacemaker directly from Twitter

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via Twitter https://twitter.com/HarryUnderwood3

October 05, 2015 at 02:22AM

RT @tedlieu: History shows US can’t prop up govts, nor can we prop up foreign armies. http://t.co/RCXglntQ9L We need to stop wasting taxpayer money. directly from Twitter

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via Twitter https://twitter.com/HarryUnderwood3

October 04, 2015 at 06:06PM

RT @FWD_us: 3 years later, the young immigrants Obama protected are feeling less afraid — and more American http://t.co/FbaOZFHIpS via @voxdotcom #DACA directly from Twitter

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via Twitter https://twitter.com/HarryUnderwood3

October 04, 2015 at 11:55AM

Religious Diversity and the Commons

Just thought about this. Here in the United States, we don’t have a shared sense of the government-sponsored commons as is understood in countries where the majority of a population belong to a shared religious sect (i.e., a Catholic country). I think a few economists have tied this to why so many of us have an allergic reaction to government-promoted commons such as the Affordable Care Act.

“Not only are such commons being used by people who don’t look like us, but they are being used by people who don’t share the same ethical or religious cosmology as us.”

Religion plays a large socio-economic role in the lives of so many Americans because the government, by being nonsectarian and agnostic in a country populated by a multitude of religious allegiances, does not speak entirely in the language which so many of us are taught by our intimate such-and-such religion.

But what’s so undermining about our approach to religious diversity and its impact on the separation of religion and state is that our sense of religious diversity inherits the exclusivity of Abrahamic religions from the Middle East and Europe. “You can only be one sect of Christianity/Islam/Judaism”, according to their gatekeepers. “Nevermind those sinners in Latin America who practice Yoruba/Ife traditions and venerate the orisha while also venerating Catholic saints. They’re going to Hell for not following the exclusivity clause.”

Meanwhile, in East Asia, Buddhists can also practice folk religion, Confucianism, Daoism, all at the same time, in the same lifetime, and not think of them as contradictory but as complimentary. They have no problem with practicing more than one religion, and are still supportive of government-promoted commons.

So why do Americans have a problem with practicing more than one religion? And if we were more acknowledging of multi-religious practice, could that allow us to better support secular, government-sponsored common resources?

The Forward March of Black TV

Reading this history of African-Americans in television by the late J. Fred MacDonald, I think his history only goes up to around 2000. It literally ends during the latter day of dominance by cable/satellite/PPV. I would say that his fourth era of African-American television, marked by narrowcasting, niche channels, competing providers stacking channels upon channels, would be better timed as lasting from 1983 to 2007.

There’s this yawning chasm which occurs over the decades as the AfAm-featuring content on terrestrial broadcasting remains woefully static and focused on family comedies and police procedurals while subscription channels like HBO and Showtime push furthest for African-American leading casts and characters. I recall “Soul Food”, “The Wire”, “Oz” leading the way, while “Everybody Hates Chris”.

This period ends c. 2007 with the rise of social media, Internet-based video-on-demand, mobile devices, binge watching, digital subchannels, web series and Shonda Rhimes. It is also accompanied by a slow progression of terrestrial television networks toward more diverse casts, crew and target markets in more genres, as previously pushed by subscription-driven networks.

The Chicago Defender just asked if, thanks to the works of Rhimes and the series “Empire” as well as the Emmy noms for Henson, Davis, Aduba and Washington, we are in the “Golden Age” of Black TV. If anything, we are in the 5th age of Black TV representation (and of TV in general).

We are no longer satisfied by the steady diet of/participation in music, comedies, and police procedurals. We are no longer satisfied by tokens. We are no longer satisfied by reality shows, even though they glut much of the schedule among the dilapidated cable schedule.