Preval Prevails in Haiti

Though likely to go widely unnoticed, the results of the U.S. purchased elections in Haiti constitute yet another populist slap in the face to the Bush Administration’s policy of spreading ‘democracy’ by force. The illegal overthrow of democratically elected President Bertrand Aristide by a bloody coup sponsored by Washington, threw the country into the hands … Read more

Carter’s Irony

KING: … what do you make of warrantless wiretapping? The president defends it almost daily. In a major speech in Nashville today he did a long defense of it as he did in the State of the Union. CARTER: I think it’s illegal and improper and unnecessary. There’s no reason at all why this president, … Read more

TABOR comes to Arizona

From People for the American Way: As part of a national crusade to undermine government’s ability to serve its citizens, right-wing activists are trying to impose a reckless constitutional amendment on Arizona.  HCR 2022, better known by the propagandistic name of "Taxpayers’ Bill of Rights," or TABOR, seeks to put elected officials in a budgeting … Read more

10 Reasons Why Gay Marriage is Wrong

F.O.I: 01) Being gay is not natural. Real Americans always reject unnatural things like eyeglasses, polyester, and air conditioning. 02) Gay marriage will encourage people to be gay, in the same way that hanging around tall people will make you tall. 03) Legalizing gay marriage will open the door to all kinds of crazy behavior. … Read more

Bono’s Sermon

I am a subscriber to Jim Wallis’ Sojourners magazine. He recently put a speech by Bono, the rock star from the band U2, at the National Prayer Breakfast on his newsletter.

Jim_wallis1jpgThe
National Prayer Breakfast is normally a time for reaffirming
spiritual truths and testifying to the power of faith in
people’s individual lives, but not so much a moment for
prophetic and controversial social utterances. There have been
exceptions – when Sen. Mark Hatfield spoke courageously about
the moral "shame" of the Vietnam War in the presence of Richard
Nixon and Henry Kissinger (I know a lot about that prayer
breakfast speech because I helped write it when I was a
seminarian in Chicago); when Mother Theresa spoke about the
sacredness of life and raised the issue of abortion with the
Clintons on hand; and yesterday, when Bono spoke like a
modern-day prophet about extreme global poverty and pandemic
disease and called upon the American government, with George
Bush and Congressional leaders present, to do much more.

The speech, published below, was the most explicit about
religion and the role of faith that I had ever heard Bono
deliver, and his insistence on the biblical requirements of
justice and not just charity was reiterated over and over again.
In a small session with religious editors afterward, Bono spoke
about how the churches had led on the issue of debt cancellation
with the Jubilee 2000 campaign, on HIV/AIDS, and now on global
poverty reduction. "You’re the bigger crowd," he said, "much
more than my stadium audiences." He said the church will just
hear "fanfare" from musicians.

But Bono is offering far more than fanfare, as his talk below
demonstrates. To the religious editors he stressed how the
justice issue is "really it," and said that the churches had to
figure out how to make that clear to people and that "movement
is the way" we will finally succeed. Bono said he believed that
something is moving now and we have to create the momentum to
accomplish our goals. On the way to the car afterward, we spoke
together about how really crucial that movement building is, how
nothing else will suffice to make the changes in our world that
are so vitally and morally necessary, and how the strategy in
the religious community is so key. We also talked about the
Isaiah 58 passage he had quoted in his speech – that when we
respond to the poor as the prophet instructs, "God will cover
your back." This is one speech you will want to read and pass on
to your friends.

I did, and I do…