Tuesday, March 19, 2013

WHEN THE UNIMAGINABLE BECOMES THE UNSPEAKABLE




PROSECUTING RAPE IN AMERICA:
IT’S MORE THAN “GENDER BIAS”
A woman is raped every minute in America



(Tuesday March 19, 2013.  Steubenville, OH)  Rape.  The word alone conjures up some of the darkest images a mind can harbor.  Rape:  the most isolating of crimes for the victims that can be perpetrated.  Let’s be clear here so as not to muddy the waters of this discussion; rape is sexual assault, with the non-consensual, forcible commission of sexual acts including vaginal penetration using penis, hand, fingers or other objects committed by a man to a woman.   Rape, is rape.  Rape is primarily an act of aggression and violence wherein the sex act(s) themselves are often secondary to the dominance and exerted control by the perpetrator often with the infliction of physical pain – purely sadistic tactics - for the emotional, psychological and physical pleasure of the assailant.  We all know what rape is, don’t we?  Don’t we?

It is a sad statement about our culture and society, our priorities and values when that question must be asked and asked again and again.  It seems that not a week goes by that there is not some horrific but media sensationalized report of a sexual assault or rape involving younger and younger victims and perpetrators.  What is behind this trend?  What is it in our culture that can lead some young boys to commit the most heinous of crimes and, in many cases, record their exploits on cellphone cameras to be posted as clips on YouTube and their Facebook pages?  To deny that there are not insidious dark currents coursing just below the surface of the waters our young boys swim is to deny reality.  There is no one causative factor to be identified, not a singular influence that can explain the prevalence of rape in our teen population.

IMPLIED AMBIGUITY

During the election season concluded last November rape became an issue but it was for all the wrong reasons.  It was not a topic for debate regarding the prosecution of alleged rapists or a discussion of victims’ services or any other positive or proactive political agenda item.  No, it became an issue because several Republican candidates for Congress absurdly, insultingly, sought to make rape a political issue in the Conservatives never ending battle against women’s rights and women’s health concerns.  Todd Akin a senate candidate from Missouri exposed himself as a blithering, insensitive, chauvinistic imbecile when he commented during a televised interview that rape needed further definition because, in his idiotic estimation, there is a qualifying definition he called “legitimate” rape.  He compounded his exhibition of his own misogynistic world view when he claimed that “a woman’s body has a way to shut the whole thing down” and that this mechanism prevented the rape victim from becoming pregnant.  He had co-authored legislation in the House of Representatives with the GOP vice presidential candidate, Paul Ryan that would narrowly define rape as a means to further their extreme right wing anti-abortion, anti-women policies. 

It is indeed the first perilous step down the proverbial slippery slope when those holding or seeking elective office distort reality; posit moronic positions and work to add nuanced distinctions and definitions for a crime that is not subject to such distinctions.  There are already sufficient designations recognized in jurisprudence on both the federal and state levels.  Most states recognize “statutory” rape when there is a certain age difference between victim and victimizer.  “date Rape” has been introduced into our cultural and legal lexicon in the last 15 years or so to make the prosecution of perpetrators who know and are often involved in a long term relationship with their victims better codified.  Rape, like murder, is typically a crime where the victim is known in some way to the perpetrator.  The serial rapist of fiction and cinema is a rare breed.  The FBI has interviewed hundreds of convicted rapists of every classification and has established relatively reliable “profiling” methods that aid in their apprehension.  Sadly the occurrence of date rape is on the increase yet successful prosecution in such cases often proves to be more difficult than it should.

When a young woman is stigmatized and often terrified to come forward after a rape then not only does her assailant go unpunished but each one of these cases further erodes the basic elements upon which our society is built.  In what other crimes are the victims saddled with a disproportionate responsibility regarding the burden of proof?  In what other crime does a victim need to submit to an invasive, degrading, humiliating medical examination to collect evidence?  Rape is the crime that keeps on victimizing.

AN UNHOLY TRIAD

Steubenville, Ohio a small community of 18,000 in the grimy gritty corner of southeast Ohio just miles from West Virginia, has been embroiled in  a recent case of rape, sexual abuse, and an alleged cover-up due to the perpetrators “status” in this hardscrabble Rust Belt town that  has gained national and international attention.  For better or worse this trial has unearthed the nexus of disparate elements of our culture and exposed our misaligned values as much as it has sliced open wounds that have split the community and will bleed for some time to come.

This case is not simply an indictment of one small town where high school football is one of the cohesive elements and a source of pride for residents who have little positive to rally around.  This horrific tale of a crime purposely concealed to protect the accused has played out in towns large and small, in athletic programs on the high school and college levels and in professional athletics as well.  The gist of this sordid tale has become all too familiar. The reactions of those on either side of the prosecution stand on well-worn turf and the predictability of their arguments and attitudes are a bit ragged, tattered and torn from years of overuse. 

In Steubenville a window has been thrown open and peering inside we are forced to look upon the unholy triad that can make the prosecution of rape so painful for the victim, so divisive for a community, and lends itself to various degrees of “justice” in the courts.  The story here is not unique; actually, it is becoming all too familiar.  Some local high school football players on a powerhouse football team attend a party where alcohol flows freely and a young woman, who was rendered unconscious by her alcohol consumption, was physically sexually assaulted by several of the “star” athletes in attendance.  Many others present observed and stood idly by as the rape occurred; some even captured scenes of the atrocity and posted them on social media sites.  There is growing evidence that the football coach, parents and others in positions of authority may have in fact made efforts to thwart the prosecution of the two boys accused.  While two perpetrators were found guilty and sentenced last Sunday, the Ohio Attorney General has indicated that he will continue to investigate allegations of a cover up and interference with the prosecution.

SPECTATOR RAPE:  THE INDIFFERENCE OF WITNESSES

Rape has typically been an atrocity committed in the dark, in the shadowy alleys, dimly lit foyers and stairways of apartment buildings and out of sight in private residences, dormitory rooms and in anonymous secluded locales.  Disturbingly, the rape cases that are becoming more prevalent or seem to at least receive more media coverage (which we’ll address later) than in the past, are “gang” rapes; crimes where multiple assailants brutalize a single victim.  As  some of these group rapes have found their way onto the social media networks where the laughing perpetrators proudly display clips of their heinous crimes, we must take stock of ourselves as a culture and ask what are the dynamics at work that make some rapes a spectator sport?

The Steubenville case illustrates a confluence of societal and cultural factors as much as it does the reality of group rape perpetrated at a party be it in a private home, frat house or other setting.  When rape can take place out in the open, publicly, and is not a vile attack of a lone assailant driven by psychosis and deviance, there is something gone terribly wrong in society. 

PUBLIC STATUS, PREJUDICED JUDGMENT

Time and time again we have seen how those among us with wealth and status, fame and fans, have access to a brand of justice, of legal defense that the rest of us do not.  In our culture of personality where athletes are coddled and held above their peers from the moment they first demonstrate superior athletic prowess and celebrities of every stripe escape conviction by purchasing the services of high powered lawyers and defense teams laden with expert witnesses, jury consultant, investigators and a host of defense specialists, our confused priorities are exposed.  The list of notorious cases and head spinning acquittals and exonerations is lengthened every month.  Be they college athletes protected by their influential athletic departments, Hollywood characters getting mere “slaps on the wrists” after all sorts of crimes, or priests, rabbis, teachers, counselors entrusted to mentor our youth, we see not an equitable system of “blind justice” but rather a biased, skewed, bastardization of the criminal justice system, a hybrid jurisprudence fueled by money, public support, and the de facto “benefit of the doubt” afforded to those we hold above the rest convoluted into a “benefit of the doubt” that undermines the entire system.

GENDER BENDER

Although over half of the population of the United States are female most of our institutions, public and private, remain majority male dominated.  A quick glance at our Senate shows a portrait of a very powerful and exclusive virtually all-male – all white male – fraternity.  This is another poor reflection of our society but the ramifications of this reality are far more reaching than one might initially realize.  There is an inherent “gender bias” pervasive throughout all facets of our society and culture, in the board rooms of America and, due to the male dominated  Congress, that dominance extends into the metaphorical  and literal bedrooms of America as well. 

Men write the law, largely enforce the law, and a significant number of right wing zealots in elective office use their positions and the power of their offices to further a conservative agenda shamelessly branded as “Christian Conservatism” to deny access to certain medical care for women, as well as the access to birth control and abortion.  Theirs is a battle that has claimed many lives and will claim more in violence and inadequate medical services for the women most in need of specific care in our society.    The deck is stacked decidedly against women across the board; in every conceivable way women find more of their “choices” and options limited by men. 

If anything what is sorely lacking and desperately needed in our male-centric society is a concerted effort in our schools, perhaps starting at an earlier age then has typically been the case, to educate young boys and girls about all aspects of interaction between the sexes and what constitutes acceptable, respectful behavior.  A host of cultural variables have contributed to sending no precise message or the wrong messages to our children when it comes to maturity, proper conduct as well as the sensitive matters of sexuality. 

A chilling illustration:  girls 11 years of age and younger constitute 30% of rape victims today.


AGE AND RAGE

As noted earlier rape is not primarily a sexually motivated act.  It is an act of intense anger, rage and aggression with the actual sexual contact being secondary, in most cases, to the “thrill of the hunt” as many sexual offenders have called it during interviews with FBI profilers.  In the Steubenville case it appears to have been a wonton act of callous disregard, an almost “recreational” exploit committed by boys who thought themselves to be something special.  They thought they were special because they have always been treated as special and they likely did not anticipate getting caught, let alone prosecuted in court.

Were these high school “star, promising athletes” angry at their unconscious victim?  Did they see their behavior as being accepted among the others present, their peers?  What were the missing elements and influences in the minds and characters of these boys that allowed them to abuse over the course of an extended period of time a young girl who had drank herself into unconsciousness?  The account of that night’s activity is one of debasing, almost barbaric abuse that included other vile acts prior to as well as after she was violated vaginally.  The questions are not infinite but rather actually quite limited.  It is the elusiveness of the answers, of any answers, and that the defense attorneys attempted to frame this horrid crime in a less brutal manner was an outrage. 

That rape perpetrators and victims are becoming younger and younger should be interpreted as a dangerous trend that is arguably illustrative of profound flaws in the way we are raising our children, what we allow them to be exposed to on TV, in music, movies and video games. But those external influences are not responsible for what we are seeing with ominous frequency in every corner our country, across all socioeconomic strata, in big cities and rural communities.  The pie chart above is a stark graphic that should encourage moms and dads, teachers and coaches to begin the dialogue with the children in their charge and conduct it in a frank, candid, unambiguous fashion.  Boys must learn that no means no.  Any young boy or man who cannot accept that fact has obvious problems that might be a manifestation of deeper psychopathology.

For whatever reason or combination of reasons our youth are more angry, more impressionable, more aggressive, careless, and undisciplined than any other generation.  Kids are shooting classmates, neighbors are sexually assaulting neighbors, high schoolers are perpetrating more serious crime at an alarming rate.  This much we know, this much we need no reminders of if we read a newspaper once in a while or watch the local TV news.  It seems our children are in a twisted race to grow up and that the innocence of youth in all respects is lost at a younger age than at any other time in history.  But the societal, anthropological, psychological, and cultural variables and their confluence and impact is another discussion for another time.  Yes, it is directly related to what happened in Steubenville late last August and is playing out every day somewhere in America. 

Clichés are clichés only because they are true.  Employing clichés can be seen as a cope out, they can be heard as hollow words meant to be pacifying more than comforting or instructive.  But, we must get our children back; we, as a society must teach our children better, show our children better and have them learn the hard lessons of life before they learn them in the streets or roaming aimlessly through the mall with their friends.  It is a huge challenge but a challenge made incrementally smaller if each parent or guardian does their part along the way.

Our girls and women need to be respected just as all our fellow citizens, neighbors, classmates, team mates,  and play mates.  Our skewed priorities must somehow be remedied. 


TAGS: STEUBENVILLE OHIO, STEUBENVILLE HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL, STEUBENVILLE RAPE TRIAL, RAPE, VICTIMS RIGHTS, PROSECUTING RAPE, RAPE IS RAPE, MYSOGNY, SOCIETY, CULTURAL INFLUENCES, MORALS, GENDER BIAS, WOMENS RIGHTS, LEGAL ABORTION, “CONSERVATIVE” CHRISTIAN HYPOCRISY, RIGHT WING ZEALOTS, PARENTING, EDUCATION


LINKS:  RECENT CASES IN UNITED STATES






























RAPE & GENDER BIAS AROUND THE WORLD




















VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN ACT (VAWA)















GENERAL RAPE LINKS















Copyright The Brooding Cynyx 2013 © All Rights Reserved



Saturday, March 16, 2013

THE GOD PARTICLE?



FROM CHAOS, ORDER
A speculative romp through the nebulous land

between science and faith, the natural and supernatural


A SPIRITUAL AND SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY

(Or, maybe not)


(Saturday March 16, 2013.  On the corner between Science and Faith) Generally speaking there is probably not a group more aspiritual, agnostic, or atheist than scientists.  Historically science and religion have been at odds as each has claimed the higher ground.  Scientists and mathematicians exist in the stark but ordered world of experiments, proofs, equations, and calculations.  Theirs is a world that celebrates the elegance of nature and numbers as long as they provide irrefutable proof of that which they endeavor to understand.  Yes, there was a time when religion reigned supreme as during the Dark Ages where scientists, astronomers, some of the most important members of the pantheon of brilliant minds who helped change the world, where ostracized, imprisoned, tortured and even put to death.  Much blood has been spilled in the name of organized religion and the various deities’ that define them.

Since the “Age of Enlightenment” until today religion has not ever approached the level of influence exerted over the sciences and scientific inquiry.  Religion, while still a powerful force had to retreat and surrender as one by one each scientific theory that had been controversial was found to be true.  From the times of Copernicus, Galileo, Newton and Mendel, through the profound contributions to our overall database of scientific and medical knowledge as provided by Lamarck, Darwin, Einstein and all the other titans of the past, scientific discovery and medical advancement eclipsed religion as the preeminent realm of truth. 

One of the greatest minds, Albert Einstein once said, “I am a scientist who believes in God”; quite an endorsement from the man whose work in physics advanced our understanding of the laws of nature, those that dictate the properties of time and space.  Yet where Einstein saw the hand of God in the complexity of the universe, a universe theoretically conquered by his theorems and equations, science as a whole has had little regard for religion or God.  Actually, science had taken to dismissing the existence of God, mocking the idea of a Supreme Being, deriding the notion that the God of the bible was in any way “responsible” for the universe we exist in, and essentially perceiving the notion of God and Faith as antiquated and frivolous, certainly side show attractions to the increasing mountains of knowledge they were amassing across all the many and varied scientific disciplines, medicine, mathematics, and technology.    

The scientific communities disdain for God, organized religion and even the concepts of Faith and Spirituality has allowed for an uninterrupted era of progress and development made possible by the roaring machinery of the sciences.  Our world is dramatically altered as a result of this era and our universe has been rendered smaller by these achievements.  So it was certainly a surprise to read God’s name in world-wide headlines and austere peer reviewed academic journals alongside a long sought after fundamental element of nature, “The Higgs boson” or, as it is being derisively or comically, sarcastically or cynically,  designated, “The God Particle”.  God Particle? 

Long sought as the “Holy Grail” of physics, the Higgs boson is theorized to be the missing element of particular and quantum physics that provides key answers regarding the composition of matter, the state and relationships among atoms, and helps unify theories about the very nature of the atomic and subatomic world.  Arguably, there are probably not 500 people of the face of the Earth who actually know the significance of this alleged “discovery” or its implications on a non-theoretical, practical level.  This is all pretty heady stuff not readily accessible to an untrained, not very highly educated population. 

A NEW PARTICLE AND A NEW POPE

In a strange juxtaposition of science and religion this past week saw once in a lifetime events; At the Vatican in Rome, Italy the Roman Catholic Church named a new Pontiff after a sitting Pope retired for the first time in 600 years.  At the site of the immense atomic super collider, The Large Hadron Collider that sits in a 17-mile long circular tunnel straddling France and Switzerland, atoms smashed revealing in a fraction of a fraction of a nanosecond the elusive particle known as the Higgs boson.  One of the oldest institutions on the planet and one residing on the most cutting edge of modern science each laid claim to a first within a matter of hours.  The new Pope Francis, God’s Vicar on Earth and the Higgs Boson, The God Particle each made their auspicious debut. 

There is no small irony in this coincidence.  The fact that the very group of people who most malign the belief in God chose to evoke his name to designate their long sought “missing link” of the Standard Model of physics.  The proposed existence of the Higgs boson was first posited in 1964 by the scientist whose name is also used to designate it. Peter Higgs and colleagues asserted that there had to be a particle that was pivotal in giving mass the ability to be mass.  Although this was an intriguing theory for those intrigued by such things, there was at that time a slim chance that their theory could ever be proven.  Technology that has produced the Super Collider was not even yet a distant glimmer in the eyes of physicists.  The last 50 years provided the technology needed to run the type of experiments required to prove the elusive boson of Higgs theory did in fact exist.  

Some involved directly in this largely obtuse but to them extremely critical pursuit say they have actually identified the Higgs boson while for others there exists some degree of uncertainty.  For the former, the quest is over; for the latter they see a “footprint” of the elusive boson and are awaiting further analysis of the collected data.  Even in the scientific community there are doubters.

THEORETICAL VERSUS REALITY: THE PROVEN AND THE UNPROVEN

The scientists, physicists, and mathematicians with the most invested in the chase for the Higgs boson oddly enough fall within the “theoretical" sect of their respective disciplines.  There is an element of hypocrisy when theoretical physicists and theoretical mathematicians proclaim “proof” of some of the fundamental components of their areas of expertise.  Theoretical implies “not fully understood or proven”.  To those who live outside the rarified air of academia and research in these disciplines, all the “theories” in the world are just that, theories.  They are constructs largely based on supposition, extrapolation and, in some instances, imagination.  They hold up computer models and exotic calculations and equations as validation if not vindication for their closely held and oh so precious theories.  More than tenure and reputation are at stake for them; they may have spent their entire careers married to a theory or set of axioms that eventually are shown to be flawed if not completely bogus.  After all, who wants to go to a physician who practices “theoretical” medicine?  Not many would be comfortable with such a practitioner.  Yet, in the more arcane and highly specialized and speculative disciplines being a “theorist” is a distinction of some grandeur garnering respect of peers.

The question that follows is how can theorists simply dismiss God?  How can scientists pursuing answers to questions that can only be “proven” on a blackboard or with the aid of super computers attest to any measure of certainty?  There is more than a healthy dose of arrogance and hubris, intellectual superiority and condescension emanating from such individuals.  If anything, one could logically ask the question that one can be a theoretical believer in God and possess a theoretical Faith, correct?  If not, why? 

WHAT WE SEE IS WHAT WE GET

The average person lives in a world largely unencumbered by the esoteric questions that scientists revel in.  Yes, one might wonder idly about some of the practical mysteries of modernity and the technology that is so pervasive in our lives.  We may use computers and iPods, tablets and cell phones, swipe our debit cards at the market and microwave our food and occasionally wonder how such devices actually work.  It is easy to take for granted that they do; remarkably so. 

There was a time not too distant in our past here the technology of the day was understandable by the masses.  The kitchen appliances used to cook, bake, broil and toast were simple straightforward mechanisms.  The internal combustion engine and other basic machinery were but the newest versions of levers and pulleys; they were but technological refinements and advances of their primitive forerunners, the basic equipment that brought us to the threshold of the age of technology.

Not many people sit at the kitchen table and ponder it as a collection of frenzied molecules in perpetual motion held together by the same elemental forces that comprise the universe.  We may look at the night sky and marvel at its enormity without thoughts about its origins or whether it is expanding or contracting.  We may stumble across a program on the National Geographic or Discovery while channel surfing and listen to some astrophysicist discussing the ability of his discipline and its technology to actually being able to “hear” the eons old reverberations of the birth of the universe at the time of the “The Big Bang” in the form of radio-magnetic waves.  Are his beliefs faith or folly?  Is that which he sees as the Prime Mover just another name for that which a person who believes in God worships?    Are they separated in their beliefs only by that which they assign as the cause for the effect?

NO KNOW

If all the phenomena of nature, the seen and the unseen, and all the dogma, tenets, beliefs and catechisms of faith could be represented by an enormous mountain, those on one side of the mountain would see the sun rise while those on the others would simultaneously see the sun set.  A singular event perceived as polar opposite due to perspective.  Perhaps there is a corollary in the divide between science and faith in this analogy.  Certainly both elicit similar actions and provoke related beliefs in their respective adherents.  The scientist and the faithful each hold a degree of certitude in that which they cannot see.  Scientists use experiments and observation, calculations and linear implications of each to bolster their beliefs while the person of Faith, capital “F” Faith embraces natural occurrences as part of a pre-ordained or at least Divine plan that they need not have physical confirmation of.  While the scientist may dismiss the Faithful as simplistic, naïve’, or foolish, he must also concede how fragile are some of the bedrock principles he places his “faith” in.

The certitude of science is not contrary to but a rather a distant cousin of the moral certitude of the Faithful.   In the long run it is irrelevant and unimportant the two reconcile; it serves neither’s purpose to do so.  The gradients of shadows that separate these two groups are not always in such sharp relief; the empirical suffices for the scientist, the spiritual for the faithful. 

Despite the antagonism between science and faith throughout history and even today, there is a sublime similarity not in what they each believe but simply in that they each believe.  If earthbound cosmologists can “factually” attest to the atmospheric content of a distant star than the faithful can make just as solid a claim as to God’s hand in creation of that star.

 MIND AND MATTER

In recent years science has made forays into the nebulous tract of terrain between the natural and, for lack of a better word, the supernatural.  It is in this shadow land that science has made efforts to reconcile the centuries old Cartesian Duality; the premise that mind and body are distinct substances.  In this and other arguments mind is a synonym for the soul, that spiritual belief that connotes a vital “essence” of self that continues on in a different plane of existence after the corporeal body has ceased to function. The belief in soul or life essence is present in virtually all religions and spiritual sects.  Science maintains that mind is but a construct of the brain, no more mysterious or Divine than any of the numerous capacities of the central nervous system.  Science sees the “ghost in the machine” as no more than the intricate dynamical working between neurons and axons, dendrites, synapses and the neurochemical stewin which they are bathed.

Scientists and theologians have struggled with the daunting challenge of maintaining religious beliefs while accepting science’s view of the natural world.  This pursuit brings the issue closer to home and presents itself on a more manageable scale and scope of investigation.  Why seek answers in the cosmos when the neurosciences have evolved to such a level of advancement that they continue to unlock the mind’s mysteries?  The answers sought might be closer to home than ever before or they will remain hidden, elusive and, perhaps unattainable via the scientific method.    

ORDER FROM CHAOS

Among all the myriad advances across all disciplines of the sciences over the past 50 years, one of the most exciting and practically promising is that of Complexity and Chaos Theory.  The basics of premises underlying these theories are deceptively simple and have already proven to have numerous and diverse practical applications.  Essentially the hypothesis that order can be and often is a product of chaos has opened new frontiers across the entire spectrum of the hard and “soft” sciences.  These concepts build on and in some ways disassemble the Laws of Thermodynamics particularly that of entropy.  That the universe and all it contains is in a perpetual state of movement towards disorganization, complexity and chaos theory supports the opposite supposition.

Some have “found” the hand of God in the complexity of a universe in constant motion not to disarray but rather towards more order.  Random occurrences are no longer as random as they were once thought; and cohesive patterns, distinct displays of order emerge from the most chaotic environments despite the numerous variables at play.  It is here among these theories and observations that science may edge that much closer to a “hidden order”, a “blind watchmaker”, a “prime mover” that may be called by a scientific name or called God.  So very much remains unknown and as yet unknowable but it is in this realm of systems and feedback loops, fractals and elemental relationships that even the most objective observer would be hard pressed to deny the possibility, just the remotest of probability that there is indeed a Higher Power.  It is comforting in a sense that this discourse is ongoing and gaining adherents along the way as more and more evidence accumulates pointing to a universal principle of order from chaos, a brand of harmony amidst the astonishing complexity of nature.

CALL IT WHAT YOU WILL

And now we return to where we began after this rather haphazard traipsing through disputed territory.  We would not have made this trip if not for the interest generated by the apparent discovery of the Higgs boson – The God Particle.  Everything remains open to interpretation and everything can be seen through the viewer’s own beliefs, ideas, and perspectives.  That will always be so as it should be.

It all comes down, perhaps, to a matter of choice.  We can chose our beliefs and interpret the natural world through our own unique prism of perception.  Some of us will see science at its best, others, the nudging force of  a supernatural hand behind the quarks and quirks of life on  this insignificant planet locked in an elliptical orbit around an insignificant star in a remote corner of a universe of such vastness it is difficult for even the most intelligent to fully comprehend.  but we can all contemplate; we can each consider that which might capture our imagination or strain our limits of credibility.  That is both the challenge and the beauty of our world and our lives today.  We are free to examine what we will by whatever means we will and accept or deny conclusions or, at least piecemeal explanations for the questions we ask.

Science will continue to unlock the mysteries of mind and matter and, in this march forward people of faith will see more and more of God's intentionality.  Science may never locate the physical anatomic location of the soul and the machinations of brain may explain the intricacies of mind.  Whatever the future holds there will always be huge swathes of contested ground between science and faith.  That distinct irrefutable proofs are not forthcoming and the universe will continue to protect her mysteries will suffice.  Everyone on either side of the gulf can find their own answers within the confines of their own conscience and consciousness.  To agree to disagree may be enough. 

LINKS:

















Copyright The Brooding Cynyx 2013 © All Rights Reserved

Monday, March 11, 2013

MICHAEL BLOOMBERG: REDEFINING ROLE OF MAYOR



CRUSADE OF INITIATIVES STRETCH LIMITS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT
What will he outlaw next?

Updated Tuesday March 12, 2013:  
A judge struck down New York’s limits on large sugary drinks on Monday, one day before they were to take effect, in a significant blow to one of the most ambitious and divisive initiatives of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s tenure.  

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/12/nyregion/judge-invalidates-bloombergs-soda-ban.html?hp&_r=0

 http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/bloomberg-soda-ban-national-article-1.1285235

 http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/bloomberg-supersized-ego-soda-ban-article-1.1285724


(Monday March 11, 2013.The Bronx, NY) When Michael Bloomberg took the oath of office and became mayor of the largest City in America, he inherited a City in good shape according to all the quantifiable metrics used to assess the state of the City.  Crime was already showing steep declines in all major categories, the local economy was running smoothly thanks to an expanding tax base, record high tourism,  and a climate favorable to businesses that had left in bleaker times returning to New York City.  Bloomberg has presided over a solid decade of improved “quality of life” and in his low keyed manner made New York City government a model to be emulated. 

As a self-made billionaire he built a successful business enterprise and created a brand that carries his name.  He brought his business acumen and superior managerial skills to City Hall and has quietly (most of the time) kept the vast, diverse, often disparate facets of the City governmental apparatus functioning more effectively and efficiently than it has in generations.  Sure, his tenure has not been without its missteps and mistakes, labor confrontations and natural disasters but, for the most part, he has navigated the challenges well and the City shows the hallmark signs of ascendancy that have made it the safest large city in America as well as the number one tourist destination on the planet.

Bloomberg was his predecessor’s hand-picked heir apparent and on that resounding endorsement by Rudy Giuliani who, at the time was riding a tidal wave of popularity earned by his public performance in the wake of September 11, 2001, New Yorkers elected another Republican.  Shortly after his electoral victory Bloomberg changed his political affiliation to “Independent” which was a more accurate labeling for his populist, libertarian ideology.  If anything most New Yorkers seemed to view the mild mannered Mayor more as a steward, an executive custodian whose job was to build on the accomplishments achieved by Rudy Giuliani and his years of often combative heavy lifting.

As it has turned out Bloomberg found the City in such good shape that he apparently became restless.  As his City hummed along like a fairly well-oiled machine, His Honor cast his gaze far and wide for new challenges, new issues to which he could apply his “better” judgment towards really improving the lives of his constituents.  As he looked around his City from the lofty perch of his Wall Streeteseque, cubicled “work space” in City Hall what he glimpsed was disturbing.  He saw citizens in need of a parent, of a monitor who should regulate the public’s behavior via unprecedented local ordinances, statutes, and laws.  Yes, our Mayor was going to do for us what we could not do for ourselves; us being the reckless, undisciplined, ignorant, bad-habit ridden louts we are.

In a perverse, almost comic version of “Father knows best”, Big Mike was going to lead us all to healthier, more wholesome, orderly lives.  Indeed, he would help us all live better and longer lives by curtailing our smoking, snacking, soft drink consumption, and now, in his latest spasm of paternal largesse, he wants to preserve our hearing.  He thinks that ear buds and headphones, the lifelines of so many of our plugged in digital existence, are causing our collective auditory abilities to be destroyed.  What?  What’s that you say, Mike?  Yes it is true; our Big Daddy of a Mayor has identified our personal decibel exposure as a matter to be regulated.

That our Uncle Mickey is well intended is not in doubt; he certainly must feel that he needs to protect us from the evils of poor nutrition, nicotine, sugar and now noise.  Conversely he also must believe that we are incapable of regulating ourselves when it comes to our vices, habits and tastes.  His crusades have raised profound questions about the role and reach of government, in our case, Municipal government.  This is a debate that has been raging seemingly forever on the national level.  Big Government versus Small Government: the metaphorical divide between Democrats and Republicans, Liberals and Conservatives, the “Left” and the “Right”.

Good intentions aside the question Bloomberg’s initiatives raise speak to the fundamentals of our Republic.  What is the “role” of a governing body in America?  Where are the lines drawn between regulation and freedom?  By what authority can a government regulate personal behavior and, more importantly, should it be able to do so at all?  These are far from rhetorical questions or fodder for think tank debate; they are at the very core of so many of the seemingly intractable issues that plaque our government on the federal, state and local levels. 

FOR THE GREATER GOOD ?

While Bloomy’s “nanny state” approach to governing ranges from laughable to insulting his underlying premises deserve attention if not hold some degree of merit.  His anti-smoking, anti-trans fats, anti- large sized sugary soft drinks, and now anti-ear bud measures all reside under the rubric of public health. Since the costs associated with treating New Yorker’s with lung cancer, obesity-related chronic conditions such as hypertension and atherosclerosis (high blood pressure & coronary artery disease), type I & II diabetes, and a host of other ailments are so great and the number of un- and under- insured New Yorker’s is at an all-time high, an argument can be made that our Mayor has a “right”, or at least some legal claim to control the health care costs incurred by The City from treating for those citizens who suffer from such conditions.   Whether or not such initiatives are Constitutional is another matter.

If America was not collectively engulfed in a health insurance crisis, the Mayor’s position would be moot.  The citizens who acquired health problems from what are arguably called “poor personal health choices” would have access to care as would all Americans.  This is not a rallying cry for “socialized medicine” but rather a simple statement of fact.  The cost of health care and health care insurance in America is so high that, income and socioeconomic factors dictate the quality of care an individual receives. This should be unacceptable to all of us but it seems not to be. 

So, in the absence of equality in the realm of access to medical care including preventative and regular surveillance screening to diagnose problems at the earliest possible point of intervention which alone would reduce long-term overall costs, Bloomberg has stepped into the breach. 

DRINK UP

As of one minute after midnight tonight Bloomberg’s ban on large size sugary drinks goes into effect.  For all the hype it has generated, all the late night shows jokes, and some modest efforts at organized protest, it will become “law” though how it can and will be enforced remains to be seen.  This ban primarily aimed at soft drinks but also affecting coffee shops such as Starbucks, might prove to be more symbolic than substantive. Merely regulating the size of individual beverages may curb consumption, it is doubtful it will have a broader impact of New Yorkers behavior.  If anything it may negatively affect those among us occupying the lower socioeconomic strata, those most likely to have no health care coverage, limited incomes, and less availability to alternative beverages.  In some of the poorest neighborhoods in our City large chain grocery stores are few and far between.  The residents in these neighborhoods rely on small mom and pop markets, green grocers and bodegas for all their food shopping needs.  These retailers tend to have a very limited inventory. 

It is one matter when it comes to controlling the size of soft drinks in movie theaters and other public venues. It is quite another matter to further limit an already limited array of choices in the smaller grocery retailers.  Bloomberg may be sincere in his altruistic approach to public health but he seems to be disconnected from the reality of the poor.  His initiative to provide better, more nutritionally sound school lunches should be applauded since it is well within his authority to do so.  However his altruism may become an onerous challenge for parents who shop locally in their neighborhoods and have to stretch their grocery budgets just to provide the essentials.

Time may tell what impact the “sugary drink ban” will have on New Yorkers.  But one thing is certain; we must separate good intentions from intrusive governmental intervention in our personal lives in all respects from birth control to what we eat and drink.  Each time the reach of government extends further and further into our personal lives, our homes, and the health care or dietary decisions we make our rights become just that much more eroded.  Perhaps you can tax tobacco products enough to discourage smoking and perhaps prompt some to abandon the habit.  But it is on shaky ground our Mayor stands when he assumes the role of self-appointed beneficent leader who knows better than we do how to conduct our own lives.



TAGS: MICHAEL BLOOMBERG, SUGARY DRINK BAN, NYC PUBLIC HEALTH, MAYOR BLOOMBERGS HEALTH INITIATIVES, NYC SMOKING LAWS, NYC TRANS FAT BAN, NYC SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAM, BIG GOVERNMENT VERSUS SMALL GOVERNMENT, ROLE OF GOVERNMENT THE “NANNY STATE”




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