Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Jerry Falwell - R.I.P.
#31
[quote trisho.][quote Kiva][quote trisho.][quote $tevie][quote Kiva]For those of you who wish to react to Falwell's anger and hatred w/ more hatred, I have this, by Frederick Buechner:

"Of the Seven Deadly Sins, anger is possibly the most fun. To lick your wounds, to smack your lips over grievances long past, to roll over your tongue the prospect of bitter confrontations still to come, to savor to the last toothsome morsel both the pain you are given and the pain you are giving back -- in many ways it is a feast fit for a king. The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is yourself. The skeleton at the feast is you."

Falwell was a man so full of fear. If you hate him right back, you're just as bad as he was.

kiva
I agree with you up to a point. But I don't think a moment or two of disrespect is nearly the equivalent of an entire lifetime spreading hate and fear. I doubt if anyone on this thread actively hates Falwell to the point of savoring to the last toothsome morsel. Well, except perhaps for chas_m.
Definitely agreed with $tevie. I didn't say I hated Falwell. I was saying I'm just glad he's finally dead. And Strom Thurman. Anger and Glee are two different sentiments.
I think you may be missing the point of the quote. To dance on somebody's grave does nobody any good but feed a part of you that doesn't need feeding. this is not to say that anger is something that isn't useful, at times...think of it as the 'fuel' that gets things going. But, when it starts influencing beyond that, it becomes a problem and, IMO, doesn't help anybody.

I feel empathy for a man who appeared to live such a miserable existence and even more empathy for all the people who submitted to his influence. We need to continue to speak out against such injustice and bigotry; I hear what you're saying about the "moment or two" not being equivalent to the anger Buechner refers to..that makes sense. but pissing on somebody's grave (chas_m ;-) or being happy they're dead - that's a bit different. I just don't see how that helps anybody.

Don't get me wrong....it takes a *lot* of effort for me not to say "rot in hell, you bastard"....but I just don't see how that helps. it just further propagates the very thing that made us so disgusted by the man in the first place.

good discussion... Smile

kiva
And how does it help anybody to be glad he's dead? It gives you a sense of hope and renewal that another supreme douche bag leader that a LOT of people listened to is now gone. What's left is to hopefully combat the remaining crowd that is now sans leader and is possibly fractured and questioning the movement.
I see what you're getting at. Thanks for the clarification. Personally, the well of hope I choose to drink from is more about the hope that people do evolve and change and that most people, when treated with love, figure out that people like Falwell are full of it. I don't always stay there, but it's the one that is best for me.

I also think that just because he's dead, things are unlikely to change. He'll just be replaced by another ignorant, fearful man calling himself a christian but doing almost nothing that Jesus would have wanted.

I guess that, for me, I feel my energies are best spent elsewhere. I hear what you're saying though as far as severity of feeling and that has some validity. Depends on the individual. I've spent enough of my life in the place of anger and judgement that I don't need any more reinforcement there :-) I just see so much polarization and us vs. them in the media and other parts of society...i'm just done contributing to it..even if just in thought...

though i'm sure i'll screw up later today...constant battle, i guess..

kiva
Reply
#32
>>>The quote from Buechner is a good one, and would perhaps apply if there were such a thing as sin (there isn't) and if I was consumed with hatred and anger (I'm not).
Falwell's death is a welcome piece of good news in the unrelenting bleakness of NeoCon Hell all thinking people have been living through for the past six years, and we can only hope that Dick Cheney is not far behind.
PS. Those of us who lived through the 80s and lost friends to AIDS more or less directly because of Falwell's influence on the Reagan administration have a SPECIAL hatred for the man that younger people, I think, do not fully appreciate.

You seem happy to wish death on anyone you disagree with. Is that any better than someone being glad your lost friends are dead?

At any rate, I lived through the 80's and am very sure your PS. is an oversimplification, if not completely untrue.

Along the line of what Kiva has been saying, psychologists long ago observed that emotions affect behavior pervasively. If you carry anger, it affects all your behavior, not just the behavior you decide to let it affect. In other words, you can't just reserve hatred for those who deserve it. It comes out all over the place. Not to mention the effect you have on other people. kj.
Reply
#33
When Pat Robertson joins him in future, won't miss his teachings either...
Reply
#34
While his family is mourning the loss, the rest of us who despise people who use the concept of religion for political gain, and who objectify human beings with the same religious rationale... well, we don't miss him.

And we won't miss the fundamentalist Islamic types either when they go.
Reply
#35
[quote Kiva]Again, how does being angry and glad that he is dead *help* you or him or anybody else?
1. It helps me because it makes me happy. I like things that make me happy.

2. His death prevents him from amassing any more power. While he was alive, he usually used his power and influence to deny healthcare to people who needed it, to discriminate against people who disagreed with him, to encourage idealogues and zealots into public office where they cause untold harm to billions (I refer you to the Katrina survivors, AIDS epidemic survivors and Iraq War veterans amongst our number, all victims of Falwell's ilk). He also blamed Americans -- yes, AMERICANS -- for causing 9/11 and NEVER retracted those remarks.

3. As I said before, I'm not angry. I'm DELIGHTED. Giddy as a schoolgirl. Think I'll go put on a copy of "Ding Dong the Wicked Witch is Dead."

I'm not saying he wasn't an evil SOB...but how does what you're doing *help*?

It helps because if people who didn't know him firsthand learn that he was a world-class, unamerican, unpatriotic, unchristian A$$H*LE, they won't want to emulate him. You know, sort of how we keep reminding the world about Saddam, and Hitler, and Kim Jung-Il and so on.

It helps because we must be vigilant against evil. Jerry Falwell was, by YOUR admission, evil ... so we should just forget that and not speak of it now that he's dead? How does that protect future generations from evil if we don't hold up examples?

For a Unitarian's discussion about sin, I really liked this: http://www.firstunitarianportland.org/se...chterm=sin

kiva

I sincerely appreciate the link and look forward to reading it. Sounds like an interesting perspective.
Reply
#36
[quote cbelt3]
And we won't miss the fundamentalist Islamic types either when they go.
I was listening to this quote of the good doctor on NPR this afternoon:

I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians ... the A.C.L.U., People for the American Way, all of them who have tried to secularize America, I point the finger in their face and say, 'You helped this happen.'"

-- Jerry Falwell, September 13th, on The 700 Club about last week's terrorist attacks


And couldn't help but think of the irony that he has a lot in common with the terrorists. I'm sure they despise gays, pagans, abortionists and the secularization of their countries. Religious fanatics are the same.
Reply
#37
I think Kiva is saying, if someone preaches an ideology that would deprive you of your rights and potentially your life, you should just be "big" and bend over and take it. Smacks of the perspective of someone who has never known persecution.
Thanks for standing firm, chas.

[quote chas_m][quote Kiva]Again, how does being angry and glad that he is dead *help* you or him or anybody else?
1. It helps me because it makes me happy. I like things that make me happy.

2. His death prevents him from amassing any more power. While he was alive, he usually used his power and influence to deny healthcare to people who needed it, to discriminate against people who disagreed with him, to encourage idealogues and zealots into public office where they cause untold harm to billions (I refer you to the Katrina survivors, AIDS epidemic survivors and Iraq War veterans amongst our number, all victims of Falwell's ilk). He also blamed Americans -- yes, AMERICANS -- for causing 9/11 and NEVER retracted those remarks.

3. As I said before, I'm not angry. I'm DELIGHTED. Giddy as a schoolgirl. Think I'll go put on a copy of "Ding Dong the Wicked Witch is Dead."

I'm not saying he wasn't an evil SOB...but how does what you're doing *help*?

It helps because if people who didn't know him firsthand learn that he was a world-class, unamerican, unpatriotic, unchristian A$$H*LE, they won't want to emulate him. You know, sort of how we keep reminding the world about Saddam, and Hitler, and Kim Jung-Il and so on.

It helps because we must be vigilant against evil. Jerry Falwell was, by YOUR admission, evil ... so we should just forget that and not speak of it now that he's dead? How does that protect future generations from evil if we don't hold up examples?

For a Unitarian's discussion about sin, I really liked this: http://www.firstunitarianportland.org/se...chterm=sin

kiva

I sincerely appreciate the link and look forward to reading it. Sounds like an interesting perspective.
Reply
#38
[quote Ombligo]The leader of the far right, moral majority has passed.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/05/15/jerry.f...index.html
No matter your views, condolences to his family.
Cheap shot to use the occasion of someone's death to troll.
Reply
#39
[quote h']I think Kiva is saying, if someone preaches an ideology that would deprive you of your rights and potentially your life, you should just be "big" and bend over and take it. Smacks of the perspective of someone who has never known persecution.
Thanks for standing firm, chas.

[quote chas_m][quote Kiva]Again, how does being angry and glad that he is dead *help* you or him or anybody else?
1. It helps me because it makes me happy. I like things that make me happy.

2. His death prevents him from amassing any more power. While he was alive, he usually used his power and influence to deny healthcare to people who needed it, to discriminate against people who disagreed with him, to encourage idealogues and zealots into public office where they cause untold harm to billions (I refer you to the Katrina survivors, AIDS epidemic survivors and Iraq War veterans amongst our number, all victims of Falwell's ilk). He also blamed Americans -- yes, AMERICANS -- for causing 9/11 and NEVER retracted those remarks.

3. As I said before, I'm not angry. I'm DELIGHTED. Giddy as a schoolgirl. Think I'll go put on a copy of "Ding Dong the Wicked Witch is Dead."

I'm not saying he wasn't an evil SOB...but how does what you're doing *help*?

It helps because if people who didn't know him firsthand learn that he was a world-class, unamerican, unpatriotic, unchristian A$$H*LE, they won't want to emulate him. You know, sort of how we keep reminding the world about Saddam, and Hitler, and Kim Jung-Il and so on.

It helps because we must be vigilant against evil. Jerry Falwell was, by YOUR admission, evil ... so we should just forget that and not speak of it now that he's dead? How does that protect future generations from evil if we don't hold up examples?

For a Unitarian's discussion about sin, I really liked this: http://www.firstunitarianportland.org/se...chterm=sin

kiva

I sincerely appreciate the link and look forward to reading it. Sounds like an interesting perspective.
If somebody is that damn evil (he was about as evil as they come in my opinion), then why not just advocate for his outright murder? There are many more of his kind out there. Instead of waiting for him to die, have them killed. Falwell could have been dead al long time ago.

Falwell being dead doesn't mean shit. His kind of evil will continue unabated. You either get busy by thinking globally and acting locally, doing battle to present positive action to defend against those that threaten the greater good, or you succumb to their brand of destruction, degredation and intolerance.

Being happy at the demise of an evil, hurtful person is a natural, human response. You get beat on enough, virtually anyone will wish them dead. That's easy. What's not easy is to remember the evil, stand strong against it, fight for whats right by any legal means necessary, yet honor the life force that represents the original human core of that being. To not sully your own humanity through blind hatred.
Reply
#40
I thought Falwell was pure evil & the sight & sound of him sickened me. A man with that much power & such twisted views, especially wrapped in the cloak of righteousness was a menace. The world is better off without him.

Condolences to his family? Hardly! He was 73 years old! Had he been 43, maybe. It's a fact of life: old people die.

Now when is Pat Robertson's number going to be up?
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)