Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Gettysburg Address’ Stirring Call Still Relevant, 156 Years Later

You can also read the article here in the San Jose Mercury News

One hundred and fifty-six years ago today, on Nov. 19, 1863, Abraham Lincoln delivered an address at the dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery in Gettysburg, Pa., that is as stirring a call for reflection and action in the 21st-century United States as it was in the 19th. Using a mere 272 words and lasting all of two minutes, the 16th president evoked the meaning and purpose of America in the midst of a deadly Civil War that has particular relevance to today’s polarized, diminished and adrift America under President Trump.

The context of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address underscores its relevance. Union armies had defeated the Confederates four months earlier in the decisive Battle of Gettysburg, the bloodiest in the Civil War. Haunted by grief at the war’s toll, Lincoln nevertheless saw himself as the guardian of the nation’s soul in abolishing slavery and preserving the republic. He warned the gathering of 15,000 that the Civil War — which would last another 17 months — was testing whether the nation that was “conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal … can long endure.”

Yet the nation had to endure even if the war was threatening to tear it apart. “We are met on a great battlefield of that war,” said Lincoln. “We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live.” Evoking transcendent words like liberty, dedicate, consecrate, hallow, devotion, birth, freedom and God, Lincoln rallied the Union forces to persevere until the Confederates surrendered and the nation could emerge intact and stronger. He was also using the moral force of his presidency to put principle over privilege, pluralism over tribalism.


America has fallen far since Trump took the oath of office in 2016 through his solipsism and his brazen acts to preempt and pervert the constitution. While the list is long, the words he uses at rallies and in tweets to attack individuals and institutions opposing his maleficence reveal the extent of his transgressions: fake, suck, savages, shifty, liar, lowlife, human scum, go back.

Yet we also hear the echo of Lincoln’s message of duty, honor and warning in the words of public servants speaking out against Trump and his cabal. One such is Marie Yovanovitch, former ambassador to Ukraine, forced out for refusing to play along with Trump’s foreign policy shenanigans. In her deposition to the House impeachment investigators, she said: “I have served this nation honorably for more than 30 years. I, like my colleagues at the State Department, have always believed that we enjoyed a sacred trust with our government. We frequently put ourselves in harm’s way to serve this nation. And we do that willingly, because we believe in America and its special role in the world. We also believe that our government will protect us if we come under attack from foreign interests. That basic understanding no longer holds true.”
As we prepare to vote in the presidential election in less than a year, we should remember the concluding words of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address containing the most profound definition of democracy: “Government of the people, by the people, for the people.” Donald Trump is determined to turn the United States into a “government of me, by me, for me.” On Nov. 3, 2020, we will vote not only for candidates but also for the heart, mind and soul of America, for truth, accountability and rule of law so that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

Saturday, September 21, 2019

Fridays For Future Climate Strike in San Jose, California


With the possible exception of removing Donald Trump from office in the 2020 US election, no challenge looms larger globally than reversing the catastrophic climate change that threatens to destroy the planet we love and call home.

Friday, September 20, 2019, was Global Climate Strike Day. The movement – Fridays for Future - was launched by 16-year-old Swedish student Greta Thurnberg in 2018. It has now spread to 150 countries, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. Students around the world are embracing the idea of “striking” from school on specific Fridays in coming years to demand action.
On Friday, 

Greta spoke to the thousands of “strikers” in New York City. She had disembarked in Lower Manhattan on August 28 after 15 days of sailing across the Atlantic on an emission-free yacht that prominently displayed the Twitter hashtag “#FridaysForFuture.” She is scheduled to address world leaders at the United Nations Climate Action Summit on 23rd September. 

This is what she said to New Yorkers on Friday, September 20:
“This is an emergency. Our house is on fire. We will do everything in our power to stop this crisis from getting worse … Why should we study for a future that is being taken away from us. That is being sold for profit … Everywhere I have been, the situation is more or less same. The people in power, their beautiful words are the same. The number of politicians and celebrities who want to take selfies with us are the same. The empty promises are the same. The lies are the same, and the inaction is the same. The eyes of the world will be on the world leaders at the climate summit on Monday for the U.N. Climate Summit. They have a chance to prove that they too are united behind the science, they have a chance to take leadership, to prove they actually hear us. It should not be that way. We should not be the ones who are fighting for the future, and yet here we are. We demand a safe future. Is that really too much to ask?”
I am a teacher, not a student, but I was there along with mothers, fathers and grandparents, in my hometown of San Jose, California - over a thousand of us - to participate in this protest march against greedy and clueless politicians in the pockets of fossil fuel industries who have been plundering the earth to extinction. We assembled outside the Diridon Railway station in downtown San Jose and then marched along Santa Clara Street to City Hall about a mile away, chanting, singing, and erupting in wild cheers when cars and buses passing us honked in support.
 
“Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Fossil Fuel’s Got to Go.”
“Planet Over Profit.”
“What Do We Want? Planet Justice!” “When Do We Want? Now!”
“Whose Streets? Our Streets!”
“One, Two, Three, Four! Planet’s What We’re Fighting For!”
Posters tell the story better than words. What was so remarkable was how animated everyone was. Most were students but girls outnumbered boys by almost 10:1. That the earth is in danger of extinction, along with humanity and all the flora and fauna, is a truth no one can escape, certainly not through the same damn lies we have been hearing time and again from politicians, hypocrites and leaders blind to scientific evidence.
My pictures give only a glimpse into the thousand of us who marched under a hot sun in San Jose, joining our fellow “strikers” across the globe, to demand that we reverse the threat of catastrophic climate change that is choking the life out of Mother Earth, the planet we love and the only home we know.