Sunday, November 26, 2023

Patriarchy and moral issues

Even though a lot of my thoughts on our issues with patriarchy come from attempts to police the sexuality and gender of others, I think I can best make my points for this week by talking about abortion.

It is easy for someone who believes in chastity and values family to believe abortion is wrong, and never a good choice. It is similarly easy to feel justified in condemning those who believe differently, and even trying to make your way the law.

It is easy to feel virtuous about protecting the unborn.

All of that ease makes for some appalling, abhorrent behavior, made more disgusting by the smug self-righteousness.

Otherwise, explain to me how an attempt to protect life results in more death without saving a life. 

Savita Halappanavar's child had no chance of living, but Savita could have lived.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Savita_Halappanavar

Agnieska T.'s children died in the womb, but that they were already dead was not enough to allow her life to be saved.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2022/jan/26/poland-death-of-woman-refused-abortion

Women in Nicaragua have died or been left waiting for death because of anti-abortion laws.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1647381/

Since Roe v Wade was overturned in the United States, we mainly have stories of near death, especially in Texas:

https://www.cnn.com/2022/11/16/health/abortion-texas-sepsis/index.html

Those are anecdotes. There is a general consensus that maternal mortality has increased, along with racism, which has a strong connection with maternal mortality in our country:

https://abcnews.go.com/Health/majority-obgyns-overturning-roe-led-maternal-deaths-survey/story?id=100241112 

But the fight against abortion doesn't just kill and almost kill women. It harasses them. It makes it harder for them to get the health care they need because it intimidates doctors. 

It adds danger and criminalization to miscarriages that may already be heartbreaking: 

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2022/11/15/1135882310/miscarriage-hemorrhage-abortion-law-ohio

It tracks women who might be pregnant to make sure they can't travel to get an abortion, and it requests tracking the periods of high school students just in case they might get pregnant:

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/florida-schools-ask-student-athletes-menstrual-history-parents-worry-p-rcna50794

And even though those pregnancies should all involve a man, the tracking and the harassment and the prosecution all focuses on women.

It even allows abusive men to sue the women trying to escape them and their friends:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2023/05/04/texas-abortion-wrongful-death-countersuit/

https://www.axios.com/2023/03/11/abortion-texas-lawsuit-wrongful-death 

If you were judging whether the people involved truly valued life versus valuing the ability to control others, the evidence has a strong slant toward control.

These stories are selected for that purpose, of course, but what if we were looking at it from the other side? What if we were looking for a way to truly demonstrate that we value life? 

I hope to spend more time on that next week.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

The patriarchy behind one of my favorite scriptures

Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world. ~ James 1:27

Let me say right out that I love James, and the first chapter is great. 

Verse 5 is not only a key part of the restoration of the gospel but also an important promise. 

For verse 27, it struck me as profound in that it highlights two aspects to gospel living -- chastity and charity -- that people often fail to balance. If we can combine those two things, like Jesus (the writer's brother) did, then we are approaching what we are supposed to be.

It can be easy to stay pure in many ways but empty of the pure love of Christ, ending up prudish and frigid. 

There are also people who have kind and loving hearts, but who miss out on the importance of moderation and self-control, which has its own problems.

Now, there is room for a lot of discussion on the chastity part, because as a society we have failed miserably at being even able to talk realistically about sex or what is good about it, apparently only leaving room for judging others. I do not think I am the best person to lead that discussion, but I am quite passionate and have a lot of thoughts on the other side.

Notice how the charity section focuses on widows and... not just orphans, but specifically those without fathers. Why? Because of the male supremacy of that time meant that a woman being strong and capable wasn't enough, for herself or for her children. If there were not someone who owned them as family, then they were at the mercy of the world.

(While "own" can be used to mean acknowledgement, the more common meaning is more applicable than you would hope.)

I do not blame James for that; this verse is a response to the world as it was.

I want to point out that in the entire epistle, there is a lot more condemnation of the rich than focusing on different lusts. I suspect that the people of his time were a lot like the people of our time... at least the ones who would be reading the epistles.

Yes, I see a lot of people around me whom I have no reason to doubt are morally pure, but I do doubt how much love they have for those around them.

Yes, we focus a lot more on shoplifting than on wage theft (which James 5:4 specifically mentions), even though wage theft involves much larger amounts, and robs people who can afford it less.

I think that comes from a tendency to side with power that is part of dominator culture. As long as there are people below you, that you can look down on, some people find that adequate consolation for the abuse and scorn of those above.

It is worth remembering that a framework that supports abuse downward will flow back upward as well. 

On an individual level, some people who don't have enough status will use violence to lash out.  

On a structural level, the people above will always want more, pushing those below them further down.

Consider, for example, that it used to be quite common that a white man with a steady job could support a wife and multiple children on that single income. 

Families of other races generally needed more household members working. Indeed, it was often legally prohibited for a Black woman to be a housewife. (That sounds ridiculous, but it is true.)

Today a family with two regular incomes may still struggle. While the racial wealth gap still exists, the economic status of white families has fallen. 

That all is possible because of a historic devaluation of the labor of women, and of people of color, and of women of color, until all that devaluation became a pattern that devalued those white men too.

Despite that, many white people will tell you that Native Americans don't pay taxes (false), or that Black people get their college paid for without having good grades or paying tuition (false), and aggrieved white men will say that they are the only ones who can't catch a break, and that there are programs to help women (I wish I could find them).

Those things are relevant, but perhaps it is most important to remember that this is not what we are supposed to be doing at all.

We are supposed to be loving each other and valuing each other and wishing each other well. We should be serving each other. The loss of family members has ramifications that are not financial, and sometimes we could all use a break.

Perhaps a good thing to remember is that when Jesus was using his divine powers, he was using them for blessing, healing, feeding, reaching out and providing safety.

When he demonstrated his power to destroy, he did it on a barren tree.

The one who had the power to dominate did not.

Go and do thou likewise.

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Being people fit for these times

And I am not sure what else to do, so I blog.

That was my concluding line two weeks ago. It is discouraging how little the blogging does to help.

To the extent that my writing helps me have my own head on straight, I believe in the value of that because I believe that individuals matter and that includes me.

If it occasionally helps someone else too, that person is worth helping.

Setting that against the backdrop of genocide and hate... that does not change the value of any individual, but there is a lot of room for discouragement.

I believe what is coming up for future posts is additional repudiation of dominator culture and affirmation of my faith.

For now, there are two things that discourage me the most. Any subsiding on those fronts would be good.

One is a lack of honesty. 

That includes both people calling a pro-Palestine rally a pro-Hamas rally and people saying that their chant is not calling for the destruction of Israel.

It may be worth noting that those people would not say that they are lying; they mean it, they are sincere, and they have lots of proof to justify what they are saying.

They are not being honest with themselves, and therefore they cannot be completely honest regardless of the audience.

One thing that we need to commit to is absolute honesty.

That means facing things that are complicated and uncomfortable head-on. It means looking for additional information when we don't have enough. 

The press is largely failing, which makes that part harder, but that should not affect our commitment to truth.

The other thing we need is growing charity.

That's harder than the honesty, I know, but it is part of it too.

If you can just decide that Israel is bad, then you can just condemn them, and maybe you could be pro-Hamas.

You definitely get to hate the president and various senators and celebrities. Maybe none of them deserved that much praise, but is the hate fair? Is it helpful?

If you can just decide that Palestine is evil and has no right to exist and neither do Palestinians, well that makes things really easy too, but is wrong, and that one will actually require hardening your heart much more quickly.

We need to wish each other well, have sympathy for the fears and angers that get in the way of that, and yet still always choose protection and harm reduction and healing first.

It is a position that will hurt a lot -- the opposite of a hard heart is often a broken one -- but it is what is needed, now and eternally.

Sunday, November 5, 2023

So easy to slip

One point I kind of hit on last week is that criticism of Israel is not automatically anti-Semitic, though defenders of Israel may be quick to claim that any criticism is.

It is important to note that there is still a lot of anti-Semitism out there. Even during times when it is less prominent, it is always just under the surface, quick to rise back up.

Because of that, it is not surprising that some people are being openly anti-Semitic. Some others are getting really close. I am not going to judge anyone's motives, but some of it is pretty disturbing.

One is the rapid adoption of the chant, "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free." Freedom for Palestinians is definitely important, and having freedom over a large unfettered area could be nice, but that phrase does sound an awful lot like the early PLO segment about driving the Jews into the sea.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/11/2/from-the-river-to-the-sea-what-does-the-palestinian-slogan-really-mean

Granted, it does not have to automatically mean that. There are also many Israelis calling for a total destruction of Palestine and backing it up with deadly attacks.

I get it, but it's wrong. It may be easier to reclaim that phrase than to reclaim the swastika or Confederate flag, but maybe reclaiming is not the answer. Maybe moving forward to something new and kinder is a better option.

For the people saying they don't mean it like that... maybe you don't, but it is quite possible you are marching next to people who do; are you comfortable with that? Should you be?

I also see people who criticize any attempt at diplomacy that is not a call on Israel for a complete ceasefire.

I get that too, but Hamas is openly saying that they will replicate the attacks, and do it again and again until Israel is gone as it "has no place on our land."

https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/we-must-teach-israel-a-lesson-hamas-official-warns-october-7-attack-will-be-repeated-again-and-again-101698898245182.html

I know Israel has bigger weapons and they attack more effectively, what they are doing is sickening, but it doesn't justify that.

It is not helpful to take sides. 

Hamas and Netanyahu both have a lot to answer for, including Netanyahu's funding of Hamas over the years. Neither of those things warrants the destruction of an entire people.

None of that provides a solution, but I mention it because it is a reminder of how easy it is to slip into hate. We are called to love.

A lot of people talking right now don't seem to be able to offer anything but spite. 

There are reasons for the spite, but it won't help.