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Showing posts with label Peacemakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peacemakers. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Gunfight at OK Corral


 

The Gunfight at OK Corral

 “The Gunfight at the OK Corral remains an archetype of the American Old West, illustrating the blurred lines between heroism and lawlessness.”

 We‘re a young country. Our founding fathers tried to establish a Democracy, a system of government we believed was the best. “It’s a federal constitutional republic characterized by a separation of powers among three branches: legislative, executive, and judicial.”

We thought a division of powers would keep Kings, Pharaohs, Priests, Dictators, and the Power-Hungry Controllers away from our doors. It would be a government by the people, a democracy, with representatives who supposedly have our best interests at heart.  Our population was large enough to require a CEO to keep things in order, and we assumed our leader would use the legislative, executive, and judicial branches to assist in the process.

 We goofed.

 We let the CEO have control of the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, so he stacked the deck.

 So, here we are back in the Wild West, where they had the moguls, the rich and powerful who controlled something like the railroad, or the land, or loans. Mortgages before the 1930s typically lasted only 3-5 years. And those loans required an enormous down payment—up to 50% of the price of the land and dwellings. And then to make matters worse, they had a balloon payment at the end of the term. Those old silent movies of the mortgage collector, “You must pay the mortgage,” “I can’t pay the mortgage,” were accurate, akin to tying someone on the railroad track.

 

In 1934, the FHA under FDR stepped in and helped stabilize the market, but it wasn’t until 1968 that anti-discrimination practices came into effect. Between the 30’s and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, there was a lot of graft, land grabbing, racial discrimination, and redlining, where finance companies would mark an area where they refused mortgages to people of color. Whites who would be fine living next to a black family wouldn’t move into that area because they feared their property value would go down, thus when it came time to sell, their house would be “Underwater.” Meaning they would owe more on their house than they could sell it for. 

The Fair Housing Act of 1968 was one of the best legislative acts to come across the board, along with the VA Loans and the FHA government-insured loans. Those organizations have been watchdogs that have enabled more people to own homes.

When people play by two separate sets of rules, the principles of compromise and dialogue fall by the wayside, cheating happens, and chaos erupts.

 

During the pioneer days, people didn’t get the message, and they still don't, that our land, all the money, and resources aren’t only for the rich. They are for everybody.

 

In the Wild West, people had different priorities, different focuses, and different dreams. They had the rich, the powerful, the would-be jailers, the haves, the have-nots, the bullies, the peacemakers, the helpers, the intellectuals, the scholars, the dreamers, the artists, the performers, and the religious extremes who wanted to convert everybody to their way of thinking. And they had the laborers who kept the cogs turning—who built the cars, created factories, invented labor-saving devices, toys, and tilled the fields so people could eat.

 

It’s the same today. We just have fancier toys.

 

And we still have the Wild West attitude: “Stone them back to the dark ages.” We have fights over resources, which have always happened (like water rights), but now that we are capable of feeding everybody, we have wind, water, and sun sources; one would think we could be more into sharing and negotiation. But no. It’s grab grab grab. Even the rich are into either a lack mentality (why would they want more, more, and more?) or into competition, like the one with the most toys wins?

 Are they going into the afterlife dragging a bag of what society determines to be riches behind them?

 

Oprah Winfrey said she comes as one but walks into a room with 10,000 behind her. “Our job,” she said, “isn't to worry about where we came from but about where we are going.”

 

Sometimes we’re proud of our heritage, sometimes not. We came from our parents, they came from theirs, many of our great-grandparents immigrated. (Gasp, Immigrants, a terrible word these days. It’s right up there with the word “Liberal.” And now the leader of our country calls Democrats, Dumocrats, and any election that doesn’t go his way he claims is  rigged. If the Democrats are such good election riggers, he wouldn’t be President.

 

He is the President of the whole country, not just his party. He has ruined our fun of complaining about the other side.)

 

Even if you’re a Native American, your folks came from someplace else—probably Africa. Our Native Americans weren’t created on the spot. As people, we go back some 300,000 years. (I don’t know if we will beat the dinosaurs in longevity; they were here for 165 to 180 million years. Our longevity of 300 thousand is paltry compared to theirs.

 

We have inherited a lot of stuff, physical and mental. Besides the rigors of childhood and society, we had the conditioning from parents, school, and society about “the way children were supposed to be raised,” like “spare the rod and spoil the child.” Many have been abused or molested by family members. It’s amazing any of us are sane.

 

So, like a bunch of kids, we got ourselves into a mess, but we have no parents to get us out, so we’re left to our own devices.

 

And here we are like a bunch of chimpanzees who are capable of extreme kindness, love, and caring, but also warring, murder, and intimidation.

 

However, the tide is turning.💓💓💓💓💓

 

An Awakening is happening.

💓💓💓💓💓💓

 

Here again is Jon Stewart’s great affirmation:

 

“Close your eyes and dream that when the electorate in this great nation repudiates this putrid regime, my brother, the day that happens there will be a joyful noise from the bowels of this great country that makes Hungry repudiating the Orban will look like an Amish Sabbath.”—Jon Stewart

Sunday, January 26, 2025

The Fantastic Human Being

 

Hello fellow Homo sapiens,

Imagine yourself like those two kids. You have it in you.

Throughout the ages, there have been controllers who put their fellow humans in boxes, huts, chains, on gallows, crosses, electric chairs, or made to drink poison.

Controllers have used manipulation, coercion, blackmail, belittlement, ostracizing, ignoring, blaming, threatening, propaganda, lies, excommunication, and deportation to control people and thus gain power. And we use such tactics to attempt to change people's thinking.

Yet look at those faces above. Feel their joy.

You know that Homo sapiens are hard to control.

Toddlers rebel against control. As parents, we tried to control them, schools tried, and governments tried—often with extreme tactics, yet out of this came individuals who fought for peace, advancement, freedoms, liberty of thought, and expression.

These people were artists, adventurers, philosophers, scientists, and ministers. Many had no desire to change the world, but they worked on their passions and passed them on.

They inspired and motivated others to action.

Think of the Buddha, Krishna, Plato, Socrates, Aristotle, Pythagoras, Jesus, Abraham Lincoln, Susan B. Antony, John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King Jr, and John Lennon. All were peacemakers. Most lost their lives to controllers who believed in violence, not discussion, and yet…

The Peacemakers changed the world.

I read that the actor Steve Martin became popular at the end of the Vietnam War when a "Wild and Crazy Man" made people laugh. He came at the perfect time and place. We needed absurdity. 

We need laughter now. Laughter is a little heart massage--or maybe it's a big one.

And cream rises to the top.

And individuals will improve on a phone until it is a hand-held computer resembling a Star Trek communicator.

I heard this story (Twilight Zone music here) that in space, there are spaceships built on the same design they have used for thousands of years. Yet if you gave one of those ships to a Homo sapiens, he would try to improve it.

That desire to Make Better is built into us.

We can't help it.

Perhaps that is one of our strengths as Homo sapiens. If we are lost in the jungle, we would try to protect ourselves by making a weapon. At night, we would build a hut. If that hut fell on us that night, we would make a better one the next night. We would search for landmarks to get back home. We would look to the sky and say," I think that star was over there the first night I was lost, maybe I'm going in the wrong direction."

Put restrictions on people, and some young whippersnapper will poke his head up and find a way around it. (Or a not so young person.)

Take the individual who worked for the government and believed that certain secrets should be shared with the world.  It was not an attempt to give them to an enemy.

He downloaded them on a microchip and placed it inside a Rubik's Cube. He had constantly fiddled with that Rubik's Cube; thus, the people he worked for and with were accustomed to seeing him with it. On the day of the microchip escape, he threw the Rubik's Cube to the guard as a sort of joke, that way he got past the detector.

"I define a hero," exclaimed actress Shailene Woodley, "as somebody who against the judgment of other people, if they believe something will positively impact the world and they choose to do it and honor their integrity, that's what I (sort of) consider a hero, no matter how big or small a feat they create."

Take Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, who asked the President to be merciful to scared people. Yes, she called him out in a Church Service, she embarrassed him, yet if she had said it in private, it would not have caused a ripple.

People get ready

There’s a train a-coming

You don’t need no baggage

You just get on board

All you need is faith

To hear the diesels humming

Don’t need no ticket

You just thank the Lord

Songwriter: Curtis Mayfield

 

“It has always been a coalition of the faithful that have brought about change.”—Bishop Mariann Edgar Buddes

 You know we want to be FREE. Being controlled isn't in our genetics. We're a lively bunch, a faithful bunch, we're tired of lies and mayhem. Let's get on that train.

Listen on YouTube to the Bishop Mariann Edgar Buddes’ 2022 sermon on her epiphany that challenged her courage. “Finding Courage in the Face of Injustice.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne6SQH4qMYU