I Think I Believe I am Jesus' little brain cell

1Mar/108

Thoughts on (the Twitter) abortion

A couple of days ago a story caught my eye: A woman was having an abortion and was livetweeting it. I didn't really pay too much attention. It's just one of those headlines that stands out. So I tweeted too.

Today I read that Angie Jackson, the woman's name, has been viciously attacked on Twitter and internet otherwise for she did. Sky News documents some of those attacks,

But she has been astonished her decision has attracted so much attention and vitriol.

Within minutes of her announcement, she begain receiving angry Tweets.

xalisae: "Scorpion mothers will grab one of their children from their backs and eat it if she gets hungry. So u're @ the same level?"

mrsalbrecht: "With so many pregnancies that beat the odds, how can you be sure that killing your baby is absolutely necessary?

voicesforlife: "u've been an advocate 4death 4 aLongTime"

On her blog, Angie, describes more abuse,

Apparently I'm a murderer, a killer, a Nazi, Hitler (also, from another "prolife" advocate, I'm apparently a "dirty jew"[stet].) I've been told I made my choice when I "opened my legs", "dint giv him the brown hole[stet]" or "have dude cum on youre ugly face". People threatened my son, insulted him, called me a child abuser and told me I don't love my kid. (One threatened to call child services, under the mistaken impression, one supposes, that abortion is illegal, or child abuse.)

I'm not surprised by the reaction. I've long been disturbed by the hate and disgust that permeates much of the pro-life movement. Don't get me wrong, the pro-life movement represents a lot of good things: It's a much needed critique of the way human life is commodified and devalued in our self-centred and consumerist culture. It's also a push back of responsibility against over blown rights talk. Thoughtful pro-lifers - I consider myself to be one - are an extremely important critical voice.

What I am talking about is the visceral emotional animus of many pro-lifers. They really hate abortion. It disgusts them. To a degree, this might be an appropriate reaction. But when it causes someone to demonise another human being, as so many pro-lifers do women who seek out abortions, totally disregarding their concrete situation, problems and needs, it's not appropriate. Abortion is not black and white. It's not easy. It's not something anyone has done for fun.

Which brings us back to Angie Jackson. While her livetweeting is a bit dodgy, yes, and seems like a stunt, she's not an evil, selfish person who can't be bothered having a baby so just gets rid of it. If these people would have bothered to look a bit closer, there's a real chance, I think, that they would find adequate reason to sympathise and not demonise.

Here's why.

1. She already has a child. This super cute little boy, in fact. And he has special needs. We can deduce two things from that: One, she's not lazy and irresponsible, having an abortion because she can't be bothered (as many pro-lifers accuse women who have abortions of being). She's a strong and brave mother for raising her son. And two, there's risk that another child might have special needs too.

2. Her first pregnancy was very difficult. Due to sexual abuse when she was younger, she's physically damaged and wasn't supposed to be able to become pregnant because of that. But she did. As she explains in a Q & A with Frisky,

The last time I was pregnant I had trouble keeping on weight. I was in and out of the hospital for fainting spells and severe nausea. I lost 10 lbs while eight months pregnant from a severe stomach virus. My blood pressure was crashing, I was on bed rest. My heart nearly stopped twice and we lost the fetal heart beat a few times. And I was molested as a child, which I’m very open writing about on my blog, and that did extensive damage that led doctors to say I’d never have children. So my son was a surprise to begin with.

So her life is literally in danger if she gets pregnant. She doesn't say, so I might be mistaken, but it also seems like her physical condition was the reason her son is disabled.

3. She's not rich. She's struggling. One more child, possibly a special needs one, would be a serious strain financially, making it very difficult for her and her boyfriend to provide adequately for the children.

I realise this is personal information and I feel a bit awkward listing it like this. If I've misrepresented Angie, I'm sorry (please point it out, someone, if I did, so I can correct it). But here's the point I'm trying to make. I've found this out by browsing the internet for an hour or two. It didn't take much effort. Angie is a very open person. If the pro-lifers calling her a whore and a murderer would have made the same small effort to actually look a bit closer and not just reading the headlines, I think they would have thought twice before demonising her. Or just once.

The three factors above are, in my opinion as largely pro-life, legitimate reasons for having an abortion. Again, it's not black and white. It's not easy. It's morally hazardous. But when your life is in danger and when the health and well-being of your child is too, abortion, I think, becomes a morally sound option.

But even if you don't think that abortion is an option in any case, however dire the circumstances, at least the three factor above will make you sympathise with the woman and her choice. You understand, even if you don't agree.

It's a good and noble thing to be against abortion. But demonising and threatening people? That's just not right. And it doesn't behove the cause.

Finally, Angie, if you couldn't tell, this Christian sympathises. I don't hate or pity you. I understand. Good luck to all three of you.

Edit: I'm an idiot for forgetting this, but another factor making this abortion an option is the fact that it was done in the 5th week of pregnancy. The foetus at the stage isn't capable of feeling pain. And that's very important.

10Jan/100

“Jesus Is A Friend of Mine” organ edition

Is it possible to make unlikely, but wonderful cult Christian anthem "Jesus Is A Friend of Mine" any more holy? Well, yes: Make an organ edition! And courtesy of The God Whisperers here it is! A perfect ringtone for the Christian culture connoisseur.

"Jesus is a Friend of Mine" – Organ Edition

14Oct/090

Semi-daily tidbits 14/10/2009

6a00d83451da9669e20120a63aa726970c-400wiCrucified Ape Unveiled in London (Times Online)
More edgy - more likely to offend, at any rate - is The Privilege of Dominion, in which a waxwork ape appears nailed to a cross. "At the rate we're killing them all the lowland gorillas will be dead by the year 2020," says Fryer. "Do animals have souls? What a question. We should be asking the same question of ourselves."

The Assclown Offensive: How to Enrage the Church of Scientology (Wired)
"Hello, leaders of Scientology. We are Anonymous," the clip began in a robotic, software-generated voice-over accompanied by stock footage of clouds rolling over desolate cityscapes. "Your campaigns of misinformation, your suppression of dissent, your litigious nature: All of these things have caught our eye," the voice explained. "For the good of your followers, for the good of mankind—and for our own enjoyment—we shall proceed to expel you from the Internet and systematically dismantle the Church of Scientology in its present form." The message ended, as it had begun, on a pitch-perfect note of sci-fi comic book menace: "We are Legion," the robot voice intoned. "We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us."

The ecocidal moment (Guardian.co.uk)
Rowan Williams: "How do we live in a way that honours rather than endangers the life of our planet? Or, to put it slightly differently, how do we live in a way that shows an understanding that we genuinely live in a shared world, not one that simply belongs to us? This would be a good question even if we were not faced with the threats associated with global warming, with the reduction of biodiversity, with desertification and deforestation, with fuel and food shortages."

God in the Box
Synopsis: God in the Box is a documentary film, which explores the mystery and controversy behind what God looks like and means to us as Americans in the 21st century. In the midst of today's fractured and confusing claims on God, the film asserts two basic questions: What does God mean to you? What does God look like, to you?
The filmmakers embark on a cross-cuntry journey with their small, mobile studio (and main character), The Box. they invite people to step inside and share what they see in the mind's eye, and if possible, draw what God looks like to them. Along their journey, the filmmakers set The Box up on iconic street corners and diverse locations across America.
A remarkable collection of scholars, archeologists and religious leaders help examine the material and put it into a historical and relevant context. The surprises and revelations about our current interpretations of God come to light, as small glimpses inside the minds of others helps illuminate a much bigger picture.

Abortion Foes Tell of Their Journeys to the Streets (NY Times)
Together, these street activists make up an assertive minority of a few thousand people within the larger anti-abortion movement. Neither the best financed nor largest element in the mix, they are nonetheless the only face of anti-abortion that many Americans see. Indeed, persistent provocation is their defining attribute: day after day on street corners from California to Massachusetts, they stand like town criers, calling to women walking into abortion clinics, or waving graphic signs as disturbing as they are impossible to ignore.

Believing in God and Evolution (Inside Higher Ed)
[T]here is ... a theological and scientific struggle taking place at Christian colleges. Some professors, with support from prominent scientists, are trying to defend the teaching of evolution and to make it safe for those who teach biology and the Bible to talk about ways in which belief in evolution need not represent an abandonment of faith. Many Christian colleges have statements of faith -- which in some cases must be followed by all students and faculty members -- that endorse the literal truth of the Bible or of specific parts of the Bible (six literal days of creation, for example, or that Adam and Eve are the parents of all humans). So teaching evolution as scientific fact, which would just be taken for granted at many non-Christian colleges and universities, raises all kinds of delicate issues.

The Salvation Army has toppled Google to become the most trusted brand in Australia

One Baptist Church To Celebrate Halloween By Burning Bibles

Quote of the day

Yo, God, this creation thing is great, and Imma let you finish, but I just wanted to say that Phil Collins had the best Genesis of all time.

21Jul/090

Sometimes, at work, you just have to laugh out loud, even if it disturbs all your collegues

And when they ask you what you're laughing at, you have to say "No, nothing!", because there's no way they'll understand. Even if they do, they'll only find it moderately funny.

Anyways, here's what I laughed at.

I also scratched my head over the overwhelmingly ridiculous idea that the Holy Spirit of God spoke to an individual and said, "My child, give up Facebook for Lent." In the great tradition of Abraham, she should have said, "Lord, can I still check my MySpace if there be ten righteous Christians logged on?"

This absolutely hi-larious little tidbit comes from a blog I've been secretly reading all day, The Parish. The context, which the previous link provides, is Christians giving up Facebook for lent, which I'm sure you remember reading about.

The Parish is a great blog by the way. You should read it. I'm adding it to the blogroll.

24Jun/090

Will the internet help?

You might have heard about Neda Agha-Soltan. She was shot in the chest by a government gunman on Saturday while watching the demonstrations in Tehran and died only minutes later. She was a beautiful girl, which this series of photos shows. Given the injustice of a bystander being shot without provocation (not that someone who demonstrates and is provocative deserves any more to be shot) and the coincidence of her name Neda meaning "voice", "calling" or "Divine message" in Persian, she has become a symbol of the struggle for democracy of the Iranian people.

Now, I'm no expert on politics. I'm interested in what goes on, of course, and might be a bit better informed than your average guy on the street, but in political conversation I usually ask the questions, instead of providing answers. But here's a thought I've been having lately.

Might the immense solidarity that us Western people are showing the Iranian people protesting injustice mean better relations between the Western and the Muslim world?

I know that speaking of "the Muslim world" and "the Western world" uncritically is problematic for a variety of reasons. But for the sake of the argument, or thought rather, let's leave that to one side. What I mean is this. I read Ed Hussain's The Islamist a year or so ago. According to him, young British and Western Muslims were radicalised by the non-Muslim West's apathy concerning the massacre of Bosnian Muslims in the early nineties. If the West didn't care about their brothers and sisters in Bosnia, they asked, what makes anyone think that the West will care about Muslims nearer to home? Radical Muslim organisations like the Hizb  ut Tahrir capitalised on this feeling, urging frustrated young Muslims to reject the West and start preaching an exclusively Muslim state with a reinstated caliphate. If this is true, it's not hard to imagine the opposite happening to some degree with the support the West is showing of those protesting in Iran. Of course, there are many factors to consider. Iranian officials are attempting to cast the protests as Western conspiracies and it might be thought that some Muslims might use Western support of the protesters as fodder for their anti-Western extremism. Maybe Hussain's account is inflated and the importance of the Bosnian genocide wasn't as big. Maybe Western support and apathy don't really make much difference.

But maybe the green profile photos on Twitter, the many Western members on Facebook groups and the popularity of amateur videos of the protests on YouTube do make a difference. It might prompt some to reconsider the relationship between the West and the Muslim world. We shouldn't ignore the coverage of Western media, of course, but I think the internet plays a special role in this regard. It makes the transcultural experience of solidarity much more immediate and personal. Think about Neda. A video of her death can be viewed online. The tragedy of her meaningless death is felt by us, as much as those protesting in Iran. Thanks to the internet. Maybe a culture-wide impact won't be felt, as Iran's iron fist crushes the protest movement. But somehow I think the wealth of support from us online Westerners will be significant to many individuals in Iran - and those individuals will be significant to many of us. And hopefully that will improve the relations between the Western and the Muslim world. Which in turn will make this world a little bit safer. Hopefully.