"The world is divided into armed camps ready to commit genocide just because we can't agree on whose fairy tales to believe." -Ed Krebs, photographer (b. 1951)

"The average (person), who does not know what to do with (her or) his life, wants another one which will last forever." -Anatole France, novelist, essayist, Nobel laureate (1844-1924)
____________________________________________________________________________________

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Atheists for Christ? - Discussion followed by dinner

Dear friends,

You are invited to join us for a fun discussion followed by dinner. See details below.

Date and time:  November 13, 2010 at 5:30-7:30pm.

Donation: A $3-$4 donation to cover cost of room would be appreciated.

Place: 2251 High Street, Palo Alto, CA 94301

Moderator: Lynn Austin

Readings: Please download readings from: https://sites.google.com/site/sanfranciscobayareahumanists/home/november-13-201

Note there are two items to download: (1) Red Letters of the King James Bible for the press.pdf and (2) Discussion.pdf.

Format: You can (1) read any or all of the article(s) that is provided for each meeting, (2) read something somewhat related to it, or (3) be prepared to share a situation that has some connection to it. We'll have a moderated discussion of all the above.

Rules: Listen and contribute to a diversity of views respectfully, especially ones you don't agree with.

Dinner: After our discussion we'll walk to Szechwan Cafe for dinner. (406 South California Avenue, Palo Alto, CA - (650) 327-1688.)

If anyone has another somewhat related reading they wish to share please let me know.

I look forward to seeing you and anyone you wish to bring along.

Armineh

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Amnesty International USA 2010 Western Regional Conference November 5 - 7, 2010

Amnesty International will be celebrating 50 years of human rights activism and they would like to invite you to kick off the celebration with them at this year's Western Regional Conference!

Amnesty International USA's Western Regional Conference is an annual meeting that brings together Amnesty members and human rights activists from across the 13-state region. This year they will be featuring prominent speakers from the human rights community: Amy Goodman, the host and executive producer of the award-winning independent news program Democracy Now!; Rebiya Kadeer, Uighur human rights activist and former prisoner of conscience; Jorge Bustamante, UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants; and Larry Cox, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA.

Join Amnesty International members and activists for an inspiring weekend full of dynamic speakers, ground-breaking workshops, and amazing panel discussions with human rights defenders.

Location:
University of California, Hastings College of the Law
200 McAllister Street
San Francisco, CA 94102

For further information and registration:
http://www.amnestyusa.org/regional-conferences/west/page.do?id=1691093

Monday, October 18, 2010

Humanist Ethics and the Problem of U.S. Militarism - by Armineh Noravian

The following is a transcript of a talk I gave at the American Humanist Association Conference in San Jose (June 2010).
___________________________________________________________
We live in a world where we see hunger, poverty, cruelty, and injustice; we see human rights violations. As humanists we have causes that are morally justifiable to fight for. But to be consistent with our humanistic values, it is obvious that just any means to that end will not do. We need to always remember the words in the humanist manifesto that define our means loud and clear. Those words are: “differences are resolved cooperatively without resorting to violence.”

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights clearly spells out universal human rights in 30 articles. Nowhere in this document does it condone war as a means to achieving human rights. Nowhere does it suggest that the life of human beings should be jeopardized or sacrificed in defense of deeply held rigid beliefs. In fact, the whole spirit of the Enlightenment and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is to preserve the rights of each individual human being, with the primary right being the right to life.

The United States is currently involved in two war fronts, one in Afghanistan and one in Iraq. I am going to talk about both these wars from the perspective of a humanist and attempt to put a human face on these conflicts.

Let me begin with 9/11.

9/11 was a horrific and unforgettable experience for our country and certainly for those who were directly affected by it. 2,993 people from over 90 countries lost their lives. This attack was orchestrated and carried out by Al Qaeda, a terrorist group, hiding out in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda is a militarized and politicized Islamic group that developed partly as a result of CIA recruitment and training of the Mujahideen militants to defeat the Russians in the 1980s. 9/11 became President Bush’s justification for attacking Afghanistan in October 2001 and we’ve been there ever since.

Since the 9/11 attack was not carried out by the government of Afghanistan, but by a terrorist group made up of mostly Saudi citizens hiding in that country, it would be reasonable for humanists to ask, if a terrorist group hiding out in England were to have been behind the 9/11 attacks, would the United States have declared war on England and attacked England?

I don’t think so.

The attack on Afghanistan held the entire Afghan population responsible for the terror attack.

After 9 years we have not caught Bin Ladin. We have not eliminated Al Qaeda. We have not brought peace or stability to Afghanistan. We have not made Americans safer. We have not diminished the threat of terrorism.

We have however helped Al Qaeda morph into a real 21st century organization of “terrorists without borders.” We have avenged the deaths of the 2993 people who were killed on 9/11 by killing many times that number in Afghanistan.

The invasion of Afghanistan does not seem to have been based on reason, but on vengeance.
Remember, Humanists are big on reason.

The justification for this war has evolved. What began as a war against those who carried out 9/11 nine years ago, is now touted as a good war that is “liberating” the oppressed women of Afghanistan from the hands of the Taliban.

Some of the women of Afghanistan have a very different perspective on this topic. RAWA, which is the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan, says, “The US ‘War on Terrorism’ removed the Taliban regime in October 2001, but it has not removed religious fundamentalism, which is the main cause of all our miseries. In fact, by reinstalling the warlords in power in Afghanistan, the US administration is replacing one fundamentalist regime with another. The US government and Mr. Karzai mostly rely on Northern Alliance criminal leaders who are as brutal and misogynist as the Taliban.”

So we can pat ourselves on the back because in 9 years we have managed to replace one group of thugs with another.

The story of the war in Iraq is even worse.

The war in Iraq was begun in March 2003. President Bush repeatedly asserted that Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, even though the UN inspectors said they could not find any evidence of such weapons. As humanists we are big on evidence. But even though there was no evidence of weapons of mass destruction, some of the supporters of this war were people who call themselves humanists. The reason for this support was obviously not evidence, but fear. This preemptive strike was a strike based on an emotional justification, not a reasoned justification.

The U.S. invasion of Iraq, to rid the country of Saddam Hussein and his two sons (a total of three people), has been the cause of over one million Iraqi deaths , and countless who have been maimed, traumatized, displaced, shell shocked, and forced to live in desperate conditions around the world.

As the war raged on and the death toll rose, and as weapons of mass destruction were not found, President Bush and all those who supported this invasion made up other reasons to justify this war, reasons that fit the myth of “spreading” democracy and human rights, to those uncivilized others, the Arabs and the Muslims.

Women and minority groups who were said to have been repressed by Saddam Hussein and who were also used as justification for the invasion, have now lost virtually all of their rights.
Some claim one of the benefits of this invasion is a democratically elected Iraqi government. But this so-called democratically elected government was elected in an atmosphere of fear, violence, and intimidation.

Let me switch gears here.

People like Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mohandas Gandhi have moved mountains through peaceful means. The changes they have brought about are long lasting. Our Humanist Manifesto captures their deeds with the following words: “Humanists long for and strive toward a world of mutual care and concern, free of cruelty and its consequences, where differences are resolved cooperatively without resorting to violence.”

Neither the war in Afghanistan nor in Iraq has brought about a change that can be considered long lasting or for the good of humanity. Neither war has been based on reason or evidence; both have been justified by pure emotion – vengeance and fear.

King and Gandhi fought with nonviolent means, and they won. They brought about changes that improved the human condition. Compare that with the outcome of the violent, deadly and costly wars we have fought in Afghanistan and Iraq. Although these wars have significantly improved the profits for corporations involved in the military industrial complex, they have not improved the overall human condition.

Unfortunately, I have observed that there are people who hold their belief system dearer than the lives of other people, and would kill people to defend their belief. Our humanist belief system, at its core, is fundamentally about appreciation of human life. It is therefore an absolute contradiction to kill human beings to further such a belief system. In other words, you cannot kill to further humanism.

As an ethnic Armenian, I have inherited a painful history. The Armenian Genocide, which historians call the first genocide of the 20th century, was not something that I experienced, but my grandparents did. Even so, after two generations, I find it difficult to talk about it or to look at photographs of the dead bodies of Armenian men, women, and children without feeling pain. Pain is passed along from generation to generation.

What we have done in Iraq and in Afghanistan will leave a painful legacy that will be suffered for generations to come. The grandchildren of survivors will look back and feel the pain that we, the United States, caused them. They will not forget or forgive us for what we have done.

I was born in the Middle East. I would say that I look like a typical person from the Middle East. I could pass for a person from Afghanistan or Iraq; I could pass for an Arab or a Jew from the Middle East. When I look at those people in Iraq or Afghanistan, or Palestine or Israel, when I see their photos, I think of my parents, my relatives, my cousins, my siblings; I think of them as me.

I feel for their loss as I would feel for the loss of someone who was part of my family. They are not faceless or voiceless for me.

I have two boys who are not too far off in age than the average American soldier who has been either killed or maimed for life in these wars. Our soldiers or their families are not faceless or voiceless for me.

As a humanist, I see all people on this planet as part of one gigantic family. I don’t see their lives as something that I can casually dispense with for any end.

Those who defend these wars in Afghanistan and Iraq often gloss over the lives of people who have been killed, as if they are disposable. In conversations you sometimes hear people say something like, “the deaths toll can’t be ignored, BUT, Saddam was a bad guy who killed people.” There is always the BUT, to justify the deaths of people.

Sometimes they call the killing of civilians “collateral damage”. These deaths are spoken of almost as a side issue, and often not tracked or reported. They are deemed as necessary to achieve an uncertain end.

I could have been born in Iraq or Afghanistan. Life’s circumstances could have dictated that I remained there. I could have been declared collateral damage by those who justify killing civilians in the name of liberating them. I could have been one of the women who is displaced because her home was destroyed, or her spouse and children were maimed and killed. My kids could have been those kids who saw their parents killed right in front of their eyes.

As human beings, we are limited in our ability to imagine the pain of other people. If we are not connected to the pain we cause, we can become good at inflicting pain. If all we see are images that appear like fireworks on TV when our air power is attacking Iraq at night, or dust rising in the distance from our bombs, we don’t feel the pain of those who are maimed, killed, and suffer as a result of our attacks.

As an American and a person who has her roots in the Middle East, I am deeply disturbed to see human beings killed in countries of this region funded by our tax dollars, cheered on by those who support wars, under the guise of defending human rights.

And now to close: As humanists we should remember that deeply held beliefs make it easy to accept the absurd. It can create hubris. Propaganda such as “we are going to war to liberate people” or “we are bringing democracy to people” or “we are protecting America” are the new myths that have replaced the older ones that said “we are bringing civilization and Christianity to the native Americans, or the Mexicans.”

As humanists, we should be able to differentiate between propaganda and facts: War is violence and violence does not bring about security.

As humanists, we should not outsource our moral responsibility; we should seek out those who present pseudo-rational arguments in favor of war and expose them for their lack of reasoning and lack of compassion.

There are numerous possibilities between the extremes of all out war on one hand and appeasement on the other. It is our lack of imagination and our failure to envision other possibilities that limits our options to these two extremes.

Just envision what real diplomacy could do.

Conflict is natural. Conflict resolution is natural. But war is not conflict resolution. Just imagine what a humanistic foreign policy could do.

From a humanist point of view, war is a human catastrophe. As Humanists, we should advocate diplomacy to prevent situations that ultimately lead to wars and to identify solutions that would pave the path for peaceful alternatives to war.

Lastly, one cannot be a humanist and advocate militarism.

_____________________________________________________________
Armineh Noravian was a member of the Board of Directors of the Humanist Community in Silicon Valley between 2007-2010, where she served as Vice President in 2008 and President in 2009 and 2010. She was also President of the Silicon Valley Chapter of Americans United for Separation of Church and state from 2005-2006, and a member of the Board of Directors of the ACLU, Santa Clara Valley chapter from 2006-2008. She holds a M.S. in Engineering and a M.A. in Applied Anthropology (cultural).

Saturday, October 16, 2010