The Christmas Hope: A
To-Do List for a Better World
By John W. Whitehead
“The Christmas hope
for peace and good will toward all men
can no longer be dismissed as a kind of
pious dream of some utopian. If we don’t
have good will toward men in this world,
we will destroy ourselves by the misuse
of our own instruments and our own
power. Wisdom born of experience should
tell us that war is obsolete. We must
either learn to live together as
brothers or we are going to perish
together as fools.”—Reverend Martin
Luther King, Jr., Christmas Eve sermon,
1967
December 26, 2014 "ICH"
- As a child, my Christmas wish list came
right out of the Sears and Roebuck
catalogue—toys, board games, bikes, action
figures, etc. My parents, like so many in
their day, belonged to the working-class
poor, so while I never lacked for the
necessities of life, many of the items on my
wish list never came to be. Even so, I was
no worse off for it.
I wish the same could be
said of those still unfulfilled items on my
adult Christmas wish list. Each year, I wish
for the same things—an end to war, poverty,
hunger, violence and disease—and each year,
I find the world relatively unchanged.
Millions continue to die every year,
casualties of a world that places greater
value on war machines and profit margins
than human life.
I’ve seen enough of the
world in my 68 years to know that wishing is
not enough. We need to be doing.
It’s not possible to solve all of the
world’s problems right away. For most
people, putting an end to world hunger,
poverty, disease and the police state may
seem too insurmountable a task to even
tackle. But as I point out in my book
A Government of Wolves: The Emerging
American Police State, there
are practical steps each of us can take to
hopefully get things moving in the right
direction. Here’s what I would suggest for a
start:
Tone down the
partisan rhetoric, the “us” vs. “them”
mentality. Politicians
frequently perpetuate a “good” versus
“evil,” “us” versus “them” rhetoric which
pits citizen against citizen and allows the
politicians to advance their personal,
political agendas. Instead of wasting time
and resources on political infighting, which
gets us nowhere, it’s time Americans learned
to work together to solve the problems
before us. The best place to start is in
your own communities, neighbor to neighbor.
After all, at the end of the day, it makes
no difference what politician you voted
for—Republican, Democrat or
otherwise—politics will never be the answer.
Politicians have mastered the art of
creating dissension, but they’re all the
same. Grassroots activism is the only kind
of change you can count on.
Turn off the
TV and tune into what’s happening in your
family, in your community and your world. Read
your local newspaper. Attend a school board
or city council meeting. Get involved with a
nonprofit that works in your community.
Whatever you do, reduce your intake of
mindless television and entertainment news.
The only reality programming worth taking
notice of is the one playing in your home
and community.
Show
compassion to those in need, be kind to
those around you, forgive those who have
wronged you, and teach your children to do
the same. Increasingly,
people seem to be forgetting their p’s and
q’s—basic manners that were drilled into
older generations. I’m talking about simple
things like holding a door open for someone,
helping someone stranded on the side of the
road, and saying “please” and “thank you” to
those who do you a service—whether it be to
the teenager bagging your groceries or the
family member who just passed the potatoes.
As author Robert Heinlein observed, “A dying
culture invariably exhibits personal
rudeness. Bad manners. Lack of consideration
for others in minor matters. A loss of
politeness, of gentle manners, is more
significant than is a riot...”
Talk less,
listen more.
Take less, and give more. If
people spent less time dwelling on and
attending to their own needs and more time
trying to help and understand those around
them, many of the problems we currently face
could be eliminated.
Stop acting
entitled and start being empowered. We
have moved into the Age of Entitlement,
where more and more people feel entitled to
certain benefits without having to work for
them. There’s nothing wrong with helping
those less fortunate, but as my parents
taught me, there’s a lot to be said for an
honest day’s work.
Remember that
all people are endowed with inalienable
rights.
I’ve heard a lot of chatter in recent years
in favor of torturing detainees and denying
basic rights to non-citizens, but doing so
not only goes against everything that the
U.S. is supposed to stand for, but it also
goes against every principle common to all
world religions—forgiveness, charity,
nonjudgmentalism, nonviolence, etc. America
cannot continue to lambast terrorist groups
for their contempt for human life and
dignity when our own nation violates these
same principles time and again.
Stop being a
hater.
Increasingly, we as a society have come to
reflect the hostility at work in the world
at large. This is so even in such a virtual
microcrosm as Facebook, where “unfriending”
those with whom you might disagree has
become commonplace. How can we ever hope to
curb the hatred and animosity that have
spurred global terrorism over the past few
decades if we can’t even forgive the human
failings of those in our immediate circles?
Learn
tolerance in the true sense of the word.
There’s no need to legislate tolerance
through hate crime legislation and other
politically correct mechanisms of
compliance. True tolerance stems from a
basic respect for one’s fellow man or woman.
And it should be taught to children from the
time they can understand right from wrong.
Treat women
like people, not things. If
pop culture and the media are any reflection
of how women and girls are viewed
today—primarily as sex objects—then one can
only wonder what exactly the women’s rights
movement has been doing in recent years. The
use of sex and its impact on young girls is
particularly troubling. As professor Henry
A. Giroux observed: “Market strategists are
increasingly using sexually charged images
to sell commodities, often representing the
fantasies of an adult version of sexuality.
For instance, Abercrombie & Fitch, a
clothing franchise for young people, has
earned a reputation for its risqué
catalogues filled with promotional ads of
scantily clad kids and its over-the-top
sexual advice columns for teens and
preteens; one catalogue featured an ad for
thongs for ten-year-olds with the words ‘eye
candy’ and ‘wink wink’ written on them.
Another clothing store sold underwear geared
toward teens with ‘Who needs Credit Cards
...?’ written across the crotch. Children as
young as six years old are being sold lacy
underwear, push-up bras and ‘date night
accessories’ for their various doll
collections. In 2006, the Tesco department
store chain sold a pole dancing kit designed
for young girls to unleash the sex kitten
inside.”
Value your
family.
The traditional family, such that it is, is
already in great disrepair, torn apart by
divorce, infidelity, overscheduling,
overwork, materialism, and an absence of
spirituality. Despite the billions we spend
on childcare, toys, clothes, private
lessons, etc., a concern for our children no
longer seems to be a prime factor in how we
live our lives. And now we are beginning to
see the blowback from collapsing familial
relationships. Indeed, more and more, I hear
about young people refusing to talk to their
parents, grandparents being denied access to
their grandchildren, and older individuals
left to molder away in nursing homes. Yet
without the family, the true building block
of our nation, there can be no freedom.
Feed the
hungry, shelter the homeless and comfort the
lonely and broken-hearted. Volunteer
at a soup kitchen. Take part in local food
drives. Take a meal to a needy family.
“Adopt” an elderly person at a nursing home.
Support the creation of local homeless
shelters in your community. Urge your
churches, synagogues and mosques to act as
rotating thermal shelters for the homeless
during the cold winter months.
Give peace a
chance. So
far, the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and
Pakistan have cost American taxpayers more
than $4 trillion, and that doesn’t even
begin to approach the human cost in lives
lost—military and civilian—and families rent
asunder. The military industrial complex has
a lot to gain financially so long as America
continues to wage its wars at home and
abroad, but you can be sure that the
American people will lose everything unless
we find some way to give peace a chance. We
can start by bringing all of our men and
women in uniform home.
Start your own
teaspoon brigade. You
don’t have to solve all the world’s problems
single-handedly, nor do you have to solve
them overnight. Little by little, you’ll get
there, but you have to start somewhere. It
is up to each of us to do our part to make
this a better world for all. As the
legendary singer, songwriter and activist
Pete Seeger once remarked to me:
I tell everybody a
little parable about the “teaspoon
brigades.” Imagine a big seesaw. One end
of the seesaw is on the ground because
it has a big basket half full of rocks
in it. The other end of the seesaw is up
in the air because it’s got a basket
one-quarter full of sand. Some of us
have teaspoons, and we are trying to
fill it up. Most people are scoffing at
us. They say, “People like you have been
trying for thousands of years, but it is
leaking out of that basket as fast as
you are putting it in.” Our answer is
that we are getting more people with
teaspoons every day. And we believe that
one of these days or years—who
knows—that basket of sand is going to be
so full that you are going to see that
whole seesaw going zoop! in the other
direction. Then people are going to say,
“How did it happen so suddenly?” And we
answer, “Us and our little teaspoons
over thousands of years.”
John W. Whitehead is an
attorney and author who has written, debated
and practiced widely in the area of
constitutional law and human rights.
Whitehead's concern for the persecuted and
oppressed led him, in 1982, to establish The
Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil
liberties and human rights organization
whose international headquarters are located
in Charlottesville, Virginia.
https://www.rutherford.org
Copyright 2014 © The
Rutherford Institute