Wednesday, November 30, 2016

REPOST: Freedom

Here's something I wrote on my old blog almost three years ago. I made this new blog because I found some of my old posts very juvenile and cringe-worthy and wanted a new start, but some of it is still content I want to share. This definitely falls under the category of "musings". (Lightly edited from original text.)

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What it freedom, anyway? It's an abstract concept and it means so many different things to different people. Does it have to be just one of those things? Is there an objective standard of freedom, or can all people be free by acting out their personal ideas of freedom? Are you free as long as you believe you are?

I suppose the easiest way to define freedom is the ability to do what you want to do. But that definition has its failures too. Let me paint a picture for you.

Imagine a little boy lived with his parents in a big house. He was allowed total freedom to roam wherever he wished. He had everything he needed and wanted. The only rule was that there was one particular room he could never enter, or even open the door to it. What he couldn't possibly know was that (here's where it gets a little weird) it's some sort of crazy horrible room. Once you enter, you can never escape. Naturally, as a little boy, he'd be awfully curious as to what's behind that one forbidden door. But are his parents, with their knowledge of the dangers beyond the door, hindering or helping his freedom by keeping him out? It's true that one could say he doesn't have total freedom if he can't go into Every Single Room. But it's also true that allowing him into that room would take away his freedom to go into any of the others. So perhaps, part of freedom is being protected from making choices that would enslave us. Total freedom doesn't mean we can make ANY choice. It means being able to make good choices.

Just a random thought.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

LINK: The Spy Who Added Me on LinkedIn

Reposting this BloombergBusinessweek article (by Garrett Graff) for your enjoyment because it's hands-down one of the best things I've read. It's a medium-long read but simultaneously hilarious and intriguing- a look into the REAL spy world containing some very weird people.

LINK: The Spy Who Added Me on LinkedIn

Spoiler 1: It never actually says that anyone added anyone else on LinkedIn.

Spoiler 2: Contains just a little bit of censored strong language.

Spoiler 3: I love that the Russian spies were recorded complaining that their jobs weren't very James Bond-ish. #relatable

Spoiler 4: This article really highlights the patience of organizations based in less democratic countries. As Americans if we haven't gotten anywhere concrete after two years we're bored- we're halfway to the next president! No way would we just work a cover job for decades with no specific goal other than the potential to get something useful after building deep trust. Russia's old. Russia can wait. America's a baby country compared to Russia.

Spoiler 5: It was very nice of the FBI to take the guy's groceries home after arresting him.

Spoiler 6: My appreciation for journalism has just leapt tremendously. There are lots of boring journalists online, just like there are lots of boring novelists on Wattpad. Then there are excellent writers who include all the right details to drag you into their story. I know so much more about Wall Street and international espionage than I ever thought of before, and the entire time I read this account I could hardly believe it was all true. I promise this article is better than anything original I could have thrown together for you in an afternoon. Hope you enjoy the read!

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

As We Are

[This post is a rewriting of a five-minute impromptu speech I gave a couple of weeks ago. Although I don't consider it the best impromptu I've ever given, it was the most relevant, and I meant every word of it, so I'll share it here before the relevance decreases.]

"All this talk about equality. The only thing people really have in common is that they are all going to die." - Bob Dylan*

Inequality of people in different groups is one of the most common complaints in modern society. Especially in the midst of a remarkably contentious election season, almost everyone has some pet inequality that they vocally despise. We can argue all day over the existence, scope, and impact of certain inequalities and whether or not all people experience inequality equally. But it exists. It's real and it matters.

This is one thing people have in common: no matter who you are, you belong to a group that sometimes faces discrimination. If you are a woman and you ask for a raise, you are less likely to receive one than a male coworker asking for a raise. If you are a man calling a domestic abuse hotline, you are more likely to be turned away or told you're the aggressor than actually offered help. If you're a white student with good grades, you will receive less help getting into college than non-white students with similar grades (except for Asians). If you are a black person encountering a police officer, you are more likely to die in the following interaction than an equally or more dangerous white person.

There are ways to rationalize all of these inequalities, if you try hard. In comparing individual events, the differences may be completely justified. But the inequalities exist. They differ in scope, institutionalization, and severity- yet they are all wrong.

It is wrong for us to treat people differently based on their DNA because we all have the same beginning and end. We came into this world with nothing (Job 1:21) and will turn into dust when we die (Genesis 3:19). We have all failed in our duty to our Creator (Romans 3:23). Anything beyond that is mere details. We share the same origins, status, and destiny in the eyes of the One who made us. The only thing more ridiculous than our obsession with talking about inequality apart from any attempt to offer solutions is our insistence that certain groups are still fundamentally different from us. They're not. We're here, we're fallen, we're dying. No one can escape this.

It's foolishness to discriminate based on skin color, gender, wealth, attractiveness, or anything else because that's not how God sees us. In offering salvation He doesn't divide us the way we divide ourselves. "There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Galatians 3:28). We are one. We are equally hopeless without Him and equally loved as His children. He does not offer one kind of love to black men from low-income families and another kind of love to white women with outstanding volunteer records. Our identity as His children erases all the artificial categories we place ourselves into.

In less than a week, the votes will be cast and America will have its next president. I have heard of no one who looks favorably on both the candidates who have the best chance at winning the election. Most voters detest at least one major party candidate and view people voting for that person with at least some measure of distaste. It is hard to see people with whom you strongly disagree rising to positions of immense power. We cannot change the candidates who have won the primaries. What we can change, long past the time when this election is just a strange memory, is how we treat each other. See people as your brothers and sisters, as your neighbors, before latching on to every way they are different from you. Your neighbors are sometimes very wrong in their views. Sometimes you are wrong too. Their incorrectness, their appearance, and their background do not make them any less worthy of love, respect, life, safety, assistance, or wages for their work. Each one of your neighbors was made in the image of God and bears that dignity. By your witness they may come to know the grace that will sanctify them and reform them into that image. Our calling is not to compete to prove we are the most oppressed, but to fight injustice wherever we find it and honor all those we come into contact with, seeing them as God does. Our equals.



[*I gave the speech about a week after Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel prize in literature. The person who selected the topics each speaker chose from used Dylan quotes for all of them.]