Sep. 11th, 2003

johnstonmr: (Default)
Welcome to the second annual "International Enough Day."

This day was declared by Vyomananda Paramacarya ([livejournal.com profile] vyoma) last year with the following LJ Post on September 6th 2002. Permission to reproduce has been given to all provided the author is credited. I urge you to pass this on to anyone you can. I'd love to see this grow.



Dubya, acting upon a joint resolution of Congress, has declared September 11 to be Patriot Day. According to his proclamation, we're supposed to "...observe this day with appropriate ceremonies and activities..." and to "...display the flag at half-staff from their homes and observe a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. EDT," this in honor of the Americans who died in the terorist attack.

You know, personally I think this just stinks to hell. I have a better idea, so I'm making a proclamation of my own, which of course is completely unendorsed by any US politicians I'm aware of.

I'm declaring September 11 "International Enough Day." Enough flag-waving, enough violence, enough nationalism. Enough already. September 11 was not an American tragedy, it was a human tragedy. It was a tragedy not just for the people in the US who died, but for every innocent person killed as a result of the US reaction to the attacks as well. It was a tragedy for the human spirit, regardless of nationality, religion, and anything else.

On September 11, let's say "Enough." No more killing. Let's remember not only the victims of the hijacked airplanes in the US, but of the embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. Let's remember all the Israelis killed by Palestinian bombers and all teh Palestinians killed by Israeli troops. Let's remember all the innocent people slain by Union Carbide in Bhopal, India in 1984. Let's take the day to contemplate the people who've been victims of genocidal warfare in Africa, and the ones who've starved to death because of political games as well. Let's remember the victims of the Holocaust and of the firebombing of Dresden, too. Let's not forget those who were slain in the Mai Lai Massacre. Instead of waving the flag of one nation and thinking only about our own dead, let's make September 11 a day to remember all the people who've died at the hands of someone else's political agenda through no fault of their own, and let's say enough. We should stand up and disavow this, no matter what country we're in, no matter what religion we are, no matter our political affiliation or status or race or anything else.

If we had a moment of silence marking the time of every attrocity ever committed in the name of nationalism, religion... every attrocity committed in the name of the artificial borders that try to make us forget that we're all human, all in this together, all fragile creatures whose lives can be snuffed out in an instant through no fault of our own... then we would never speak again.

So we here in America should, I think, observe September 11 as the day when the nightmares that humans around the world have been living with for decades came lumbering ashore on the East Coast of the US. We should see it for what it is; the day the US truly experienced the horror that rings like a bell around the globe, from South America to the Middle East to Micronesia, the day we joined the human race at a most profound and fundamental level.

There should be no "Patriot Day," no day to further emphasize that we're different. Instead, let's say "Enough." Enough of putting the interests of any one nation above the interests of the human race. Enough dwelling on our small differences. Enough killing each other over them. Enough hate, enough fear, enough hunger, enough violence, enough bombing, enough enough enough ENOUGH.

We should each find our own way of expressing this. A moment of silence... or perhaps a day of silence. Meditation, art, whatever it is that you do... do it. Take the day to celebrate the lives of all of us -- wherever we're from and whatever we believe -- who are still here, and think on those -- wherever they were, whenever they were and whatever they were -- who weren't so lucky. Take the day to remember the fragility of human life and all the nightmares wrought by those who wanted to impose their will upon the whole of humanity. Commit no act of violence, however small. Let go of any hatred and prejudice and thirst for revenge and, for one day, see yourself in the other and the other in yourself.

Do whatever you do, and do it to say ENOUGH.



And that's all I'll likely say about this date.
johnstonmr: (Default)
Someone in North Carolina passed off a $200 bill for $150 in groceries and $50 change.

The cashier has since learned that $200 bills are as real as weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
johnstonmr: (Default)
The good: I get paid tomorrow and I only work half a day.

The bad: I have to sit at home from 1-5 waiting for the frelling Cable guy and I have to work Saturday 8am - noon.

Eh. Like I had anything better to do Saturday morning with Elli going to work early.
johnstonmr: (Default)
Hm. If you know of any studies on Vocal qualities and human responses, please refer me to them. I'm doing research for some fiction.

As a pointer towards what I'm looking for: Actors such as James Earl Jones and Patrick Stewart have voices about which people have said "I'd listen to him read the phone book." There are others, as well. One that comes to mind is James McAvoy, who plays Leto II in Children of Dune. There's a moment in the finale, where he says the line "... to rid humanity of the atrocities commited in muad'dib's name ...", and the delivery of that line, the timbre his voice reaches, does something to my head. I rewound* it and listened to it something like ten times the other night.

Anyway, a character in one of my projects has a voice like that, and I want to study the effects of such things if such a study exists, to aid in the writing of it.

* We need a better name for that now that we're on dvds most often. Or, it could just become one of those weird words that few know the origin of.
johnstonmr: (Default)
Christian Bale is the new Batman.

That'll work. Very well. Now let's hope the script is worthy of his talents.

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