Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. Mark Twain
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What Matters About Me
- Jack C. Getz
- I am who I am, not what I have done. For those who care about pedigree, I have little more than being a former public school teacher and a pastor/denominational adminstrator. The following insights come from a couple of tests I took. They may explain why I am a Contrarian and why I decided to do a blog about it. The first test is a standardized personality profile. The second is something strange called a Brain Type test! 1)“Jack lives outside traditional boundaries and ahead of the curve. When others focus on limitations, Jack creates new possibilities and ideas. He is a doer, not just a dreamer. Well grounded in reality, logic and analytical thinking. He enjoys meeting and working with other creative and ambitious people...a fearless leader. Only 3-5% of U.S. population has these qualities.” 2) Jack's Intellectual Type is Word Warrior. This means he has exceptional verbal skills. He can can easily make sense of complex issues and takes an unusually creative approach to solving problems. His strengths also make him a visionary. Even without trying he's able to come up with lots of new and creative ideas. (Like blogging as Contrarian?)
This challenges common ideas about the purpose of praying. Not a rehash of old dogma.
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Friday, May 18, 2018
Sunday, March 25, 2018
2nd Amendment TRUTH
Most Americans who plan to march on Washington Saturday against gun violence don't believe that private citizens should own high-capacity semi-automatic rifles. They don't understand what many gun rights defenders see as the heart of the Second Amendment: The defense against a tyrannical government.
In recent debates, gun rights activists have offered a number of defenses of what gun control advocates call assault weapons, from the rifles not being more deadly than other firearms to illegalization leaving them only in the hands of criminals. The tyranny argument is often overlooked by people who assume this argument is limited to people on the extreme, militia-end of the gun rights spectrum. But it's become common among gun owners and mainstream conservative figures.
Shannon Alford, the National Rifle Association's Maryland liaison, was among the scores of people who came to the state House of Delegates on March 6 to offer feedback on a number of gun-related pieces of legislation being considered after the Parkland shooting.
"The Second Amendment is not about hunting," Alford told USA TODAY. "It is not about competitive shooting. The Second Amendment is about self-defense. It's about being able to stop people who would do you harm, whether that's a criminal or the government."
'A 30-round magazine might be too small'
That NRA position has been repeated almost word for word by several well-known conservative figures in recent years.
"The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution isn’t for just protecting hunting rights, and it’s not only to safeguard your right to target practice," Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said in a fundraising letter for his 2016 presidential campaign. "It is a Constitutional right to protect your children, your family, your home, our lives, and to serve as the ultimate check against governmental tyranny — for the protection of liberty."
Conservative blogger Erick Erickson said the Second Amendment, "contrary to much of today’s conversation, has just as much to do with the people protecting themselves from tyranny as it does burglars." And Erickson believes that is the main reason gun control advocates don't understand the need for high-capacity semi-automatic firearms.
> That is why there is so little common ground about assault rifles — even charitably ignoring the fact that there really is no such thing. If the 2nd Amendment is to protect the citizenry from even their own government, then the citizenry should be able to be armed ...
>
> You may think a 30 round magazine is too big. Under the real purpose of the second amendment, a 30 round magazine might be too small.
'
USA Today
March 22
In recent debates, gun rights activists have offered a number of defenses of what gun control advocates call assault weapons, from the rifles not being more deadly than other firearms to illegalization leaving them only in the hands of criminals. The tyranny argument is often overlooked by people who assume this argument is limited to people on the extreme, militia-end of the gun rights spectrum. But it's become common among gun owners and mainstream conservative figures.
Shannon Alford, the National Rifle Association's Maryland liaison, was among the scores of people who came to the state House of Delegates on March 6 to offer feedback on a number of gun-related pieces of legislation being considered after the Parkland shooting.
"The Second Amendment is not about hunting," Alford told USA TODAY. "It is not about competitive shooting. The Second Amendment is about self-defense. It's about being able to stop people who would do you harm, whether that's a criminal or the government."
'A 30-round magazine might be too small'
That NRA position has been repeated almost word for word by several well-known conservative figures in recent years.
"The 2nd Amendment to the Constitution isn’t for just protecting hunting rights, and it’s not only to safeguard your right to target practice," Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said in a fundraising letter for his 2016 presidential campaign. "It is a Constitutional right to protect your children, your family, your home, our lives, and to serve as the ultimate check against governmental tyranny — for the protection of liberty."
Conservative blogger Erick Erickson said the Second Amendment, "contrary to much of today’s conversation, has just as much to do with the people protecting themselves from tyranny as it does burglars." And Erickson believes that is the main reason gun control advocates don't understand the need for high-capacity semi-automatic firearms.
> That is why there is so little common ground about assault rifles — even charitably ignoring the fact that there really is no such thing. If the 2nd Amendment is to protect the citizenry from even their own government, then the citizenry should be able to be armed ...
>
> You may think a 30 round magazine is too big. Under the real purpose of the second amendment, a 30 round magazine might be too small.
'
USA Today
March 22
Saturday, March 17, 2018
Keeping It Real
KEEPING IT REAL
Jack C. Getz
David Hume, the 18th century philosopher, said something that strikes me as brilliant; and important in any discussion about God: "To cite the order of the universe is insufficient, since there is also evidence of disorder, and both require explanation by the cause one assigns (The Birth of the Modern Mind by Alan Charles Kors, 74).
Hume's philosophy addressed the popular 18th-century belief that God's existence is proved by the natural order of the universe. You know, every tree or plant speaks brilliantly of the divine through its very existence, function, purpose and interaction with other living or inert organisms: leaves catch the sun and the rain, create sugar through photosynthesis, feed the branches, produce oxygen, discard the carbon, and ultimately provide the roots the ability to restart the cycle. So, because of order and beauty in nature, it's an easy leap to suggest that the Creator has the same qualities.
But Hume poked a hole in that tissue-thick argument by asking a simple, yet difficult question, "What about the disorder?" In other words, did the chaos of nature serve the opposite purpose of popular natural philosophy by regular demonstration that not all the universe was perfect, predictable and orderly?
Hume's logical question is one I claimed before I ever read about him. It was an intuitive response to what Barbara Brown Taylor calls "Solar Christians", those who wax on (and on) about God's beneficence, suggesting every sunset is his "handiwork" and every sunny day is his gift to humankind. I, like Hume, long to counter such sanguine observations by asking how they define and explain the devastation of tsunamis or earthquakes that kill thousands and destroy cities? Are they not also his handiwork, or does the God of creation only get credit for beauty, but never blame for ugliness?
The stunted logic and emotionally spiritualized observations that credits God with order but not chaos bothers me. I am not out to ruin anyone's love-fest with the Almighty, but I would welcome a place where I can join them in their effusive proclamations without selling out my need for balance and logic. So far, I haven't found that place.
The yin and yang of a divine identity search demands that if one believes beautiful sunsets are his doing, then things like tsunamis are either his, or not. The awe-inspiring beauty of the star-filled night must somehow be balanced by chaos and ugliness in the universe. How often do we hear about the good god's "miraculous" healing, but never about the evil god's negligence that allowed a young wife and mother to die in a car accident?
Too many suggest, or worse, really believe that the opposite of divine beauty and order must be either Satan, or sin. You know, Adam and Eve were cast out of paradise because of justifiable divine justice; but the same God had nothing to do with poor Abel’s death. And bless all those weather-watching believers who credit the benevolence of the friendly weather god with providing badly needed rain to drought-stricken California, yet won't ever blame the brute who floods out poor rain-soaked Louisiana.
So is God fairly praised for the rain and the rainbows, but never associated with the same rain that floods the cities somewhere else? If he sends the good rain and gets credit for it, isn't it okay to blame him when it's bad rain? Can the rain god be good when someone's really dry garden gets a good soaking, without being bad when the annual Sunday School picnic gets rained out?
The Bible suggests the rain falls on the just and the unjust, meaning that rain is neither a tool of God's love, nor a symbol of his enmity. It's just rain. Similarly, cancer is not a divine trick to scare a wayward sheep back into the fold, it's cancer. If something is good today and bad tomorrow, maybe it's neither the handiwork or curse of some divine being, but a natural consequence of life. It can't be good when a loved one recovers, and bad when another loved one dies of the same disease. It is not about favor, grace or mercy when it works out, unless it's also rude, negligent and cruel when it doesn't. Remember, Hume says that if God is proved by order, he must be disproved by disorder.
Balance is part of the beauty of nature, of life and of God. A baby is born. Someone dies. Leaves sprout in Spring, then die in the Fall. Big, ugly animals eat eat small, cute bunnies. Mosquitoes and bats exist to each other's benefit, and not every creature is as lovable lovable as a puppy or a kitten. And, human beings joyfully find someone to love, then sadly lose them. If any of life is about God, all of it has to be has to be.
God must be seen in the entire natural cycle of life, not just the happy half. So, if a baby seal is eaten by a polar bear, it doesn't mean God is pro-polar bear, or anti-baby seal. It's just life.
It's an ordered universe, seen in the orbits of the tiniest neutrino and the largest star. It's in the delicate beauty of the spring flower as well as in the violence of a dissolving glacier. To suggest that only the good side of nature represents God is naive at best, and breathlessly foolish at worst.
Recognizing the reasonable balance of both rain and drought, life and death, and beauty and ugliness is a far more accurate way to see God, and those difficult questions about why ugliness exists - and whose fault it is - are swallowed in another powerful question, "Why not?"
Jack C. Getz
Revised 3/15/18
See: Barbara Brown Taylor - Learning To Walk In The Dark
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Thursday, December 14, 2017
PRACTICE MAKES WHAT?
PRACTICE MAKES WHAT?
If you said PERFECT you would be normal. But when it comes to the arts, I say PRACTICE makes PROGRESS. I suggest that PERFECT doesn’t exist in art, or other human endeavor. I suspect not even Bach or Michelangelo would argue that their masterful work was perfect.
If there was a perfect to achieve, there would be no incentive for schleps like me to try. Is the Sistine Chapel perfect? Many suggest it is. If so, why have millions of artists bothered painting anything? If I can’t paint like Michelangelo, or produce a better Mona Lisa, why try at all? The same is true for great writers, thinkers, musicians or poets. Why bother if we can't be as good as Shakespeare or Hemingway? Vince Lombardi, the great football coach, said Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.
Why some think art must be PERFECT to be valuable escapes me. But I hear such thoughts all the time: “I can’t even draw a stick man”. I had an art student named Mary who PRACTICED with me for two years. Others came and left, but she stayed. At first, she was the least promising in the class, mostly because she was 82, completely ignorant of watercolor techniques and disadvantaged by arthritic hands. But Mary was never after perfection. She was after the joy of trying something new, something she always wanted to try, and she was pleased with PROGRESS, not disillusioned by PERFECTION.
My grandsons produce several dozen drawings a day, but none are perfect, judged by standards of perfection. But we still love them and marvel at their sometimes unrecognizable pictures of the family, proudly displaying them on the refrigerator or wall. They haven’t learned yet to worry about perfection. To them, it is perfect, as it is to us. You see those etchings represent something flowing from their blossoming minds and hearts, not something that reminds us of Norman Rockwell.
Forty years ago, when I was learning to paint, I gave a juvenile level painting of a cardinal, painted on typing paper, to a very wealthy friend who immediately tucked it into the frame of her original Norman Rockwell. Why? Was it comparable art? Yikes no! But it was a gift from a new friend. Recently I painted another cardinal, on better paper with better skills, and gave it to a grieving widow because she and her late husband both loved cardinals. It was a simple gift from my heart to hers, far from perfect and maybe not even very good, but it was sincerely sent and gratefully received.
My brush with watercolors started, like Mary's, with a desire to try something that looked like fun. Over the last forty years of PRACTICE, I can point to some PROGRESS, and actually enjoy hearing others tell me how GIFTED I am. But truth be told, every time I hear that word GIFTED associate with my art I bristle. Why? It’s not some faux humility because I believe I am not a gifted artist at all.
To me a gift (including spiritual gifts) implies something is given complete, ready to use. The gift I do acknowledge is even better than painting. My gift is that I have an incredible amount of artistic DESIRE to paint, to write and learn. It’s nothing more than that. My job has always been to PRACTICE and improve every muse that captured my heart. With each form of art, I have practiced them, at different times, for decades, every night, mostly with great failure but occasionally with relative success. For every painting I sell, however, I toss least five. I published a book that took three years, all day, to finish. It wasn’t gifted to me, it was as the great Ben Hogan said about his incomparable golf swing, dug out of the dirt.
I have always envied people who played the guitar or piano well. I suppose a few here and there received a gift to be able to play without much work, but they are a statistical anomaly, not the norm. As a young girl, my wife was required to practice an hour each day, and if she missed a day, tomorrow was two hours. To achieve her paternally enforced quota of practice time, she chose to get up an hour early every day, sometimes while dad was still in bed. Today, she is a marvelous player, not because she is gifted, but because she paid the price of practice, not to become perfect, but to make progress with every scale or tune she played.
We tend to label people as gifted, or say they are geniuses, mostly because we can not understand how they can write or perform at a level we don’t understand. They make beautiful music, create lovely art or think deep thoughts that escape most. So naturally, because of our low self image, they are labeled gifted. Certainly, there are a few prodigies born each century, and some geniuses, but mostly, the best in any field are just people who spend time PRACTICING. Yes, even Einstein went to school to learn about physics.
Steve Jobs said: "It is more important to seek good, high quality work over a long period of time than to seek perfection in any particular project. People are paralyzed by perfection". Fast Company "Progress Versus Perfection".
In his book THE OUTLIERS, Malcolm Gladwell says, the truly great in any field practiced their craft or skills at least 10,000 hours, usually alone at a considerable cost to themselves. An outlier is not your grandson who knows how to use a computer better than you. They are the people everyone knows, even when they are on our personal radar. Some notable outliers include The Beatles, Bill Gates, Wayne Gretzky and those folks who breath the rarified air at the top of any field of human endeavor. 10,000 hours is not a guarantee for greatness, nor is it the only factor in achieving such heights, but is the threshold investment required to excel beyond the merely great, that moves the few toward superstardom.
Whenever I hear a potential art student say "I could never do that. I can't even draw a stick figure" I shudder with frustration. Yes, it’s true that I can never hope to be as great as my watercolor instructor Dylan Pierce, or my friend Vickie. I am not even close, but that doesn't stop me from trying. I won't make a living selling my art, but that doesn't keep me from painting. I mess up far more than I succeed, but it's still fun to try, and I usually learn far more from my failures than from my successes.
(Ibid. See Steve Jobs article in Fast Company)
Remember, the longest trip begins with the first step, and every accomplishment starts with the decision to try.
It's the same with life, isn't it? We hide the bad stuff about ourselves but strut the good stuff, even though we know the truth about both. We deserve less blame for our failures and less credit for our successes, but we learn as children to balance both, if we are to survive. Happily, as long as we seek truth, overcome fear and embrace every inch of PROGRESS, we are winners in life.
My limitations rest only in my lack of DESIRE AND COMMITMENT to make PROGRESS. Do you know whatI see when I compare my first painting to my best Zebra? I see not only a huge difference in quality, but beneath the paper, beyond the brush and behind the colors on the paper, I see growing COURAGE, great COMMITMENT and gratifying DESIRE.
Your muse may not be painting or art, but something else calls you to TRY IT! As Kurt Vonnegut says, sing in the shower, dance to the radio and write a poem to a friend. Remember, the master has failed more times than the beginner has even tried.
For me, art and painting are not the same thing. One creates an image-the other produces a copy (painting) of something recognizable. Both are good. While anyone can create something on a page, not everyone can produce a satisfying and recognizable image, unless they spend a lot of time learning how. Creating something allows the artist to be free from the expectations of perfection or reality. Copying may turn out messy and look foolish or out of sync with the object, but creating your art reflects you and your heart.
It’s the same with music. I have friends who create music that sells, they make a living doing it and more often than not leads to cries of “genius” or “gifted”. Others, equally talented, created sounds that reflect their souls and tell a story they want to tell, usually without receiving any kind of public or private acknowledgement, and certainly not fortune or fame. Should they quit trying because others don’t appreciate or understand their art? I imagine Igor Stravinsky shocked people with his “noise” long before he was called a genius. Bach was a largely unknown church organist unit after his death someone found his stash of priceless music. Similarly, Emily Dickinson’s worth was not widely recognized until after her death. That story goes on and on. I hope someday that list includes me. 😎
My message is simple. Don't shortchange yourself by stopping before you start. As long as you try, you are participating in the PROCESS of discovery, and if you PERSIST, you may not reach someone else's idea of PERFECTION, but you will experience a glow inside that enhances your self-image and increases the tally of beauty in this world.
I was just introduced to this quote from Kurt Vonnegut. He and I are kindred spirits, but only because he an I both decided to try, and we never quit. It’s too much be part of the process. “Go into the arts. I’m not kidding. The arts are not a way to make a living.They are a very human way of making life more bearable. Practicing and art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven’s sake. Sing in the shower. Dance to the radio. Tell stories. Write a poem to a friend, even a lousy poem. Do it as well as you possible can. You will get an enormous reward. You will have created something.” Amen brother.
Jack C. Getz
Revised 9/28/17
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Pitchforks, Torches and Today’s Politics
My take on Al Franken, Roy Moore and associated events.
I hate Al Franken. I hate the way he took the seat from a good man named Norm Coleman, Someone I knew a little. I hate his politics and his attitude about most things.
BUT...my feelings aside, I don’t think Franken, or Moore can be judged fairly now, and eliminated from ELECTED public office for things that allegedly happened years ago, if at all.
Judge Moore is accused by a number of dubious last minute females of things that allegedly happened decades ago. He has run several times for public office and won without their opposition. But today, he is judged guilty by his own party leaders, few of whom could withstand the bright lights themselves. I know he deserves the opportunity to face his accusers and defend himself because he is innocent until proved guilty. The number of accusers may be significant, but they may also be associated with people on the left who are willing to pay for their sudden heroic accusations. I don’t know, neither do you. If the people know the accusations and have heard both them and him, and still elect him, he’s a senator in my book. If he’s proven to have done even a few of the things credited to him by the ladies and the left, throw the bum out. I am quite taken by the fact that this CRITICAL vote in the senate is under attack in this climate of whistle blowing “victims” who carry more clout than they should, at least until both sides are allowed to defend their positions.
Now, Senator Franken is being pressured by many in his own party to step down. Why? He acted like a jerk back when his job was to act like a jerk. A clown, clowning around years ago, but not today.
The principle at play here is one that must be heard in these times of sexual witch hunts. We all have the ability to change, despite previous foolish and harmful behavior. Am I to be judged by who I used to be or by who I am now?
We are in a time of witch hunting over things of the past that don’t match modern values. Thomas Jefferson is a bum because he had slaves. Robert E. Lee and all his armies are to be shamed because their slavery ethics is not our ethic today. Donald Trump was a frivolous young man so he can not be believed today. Judging previous generations by current values is the act of fools and ignorant zealots.
Let me ask you a seasonal question. Was Ebenezer Scrooge a good or a bad man? Am I a bad or a good man? Are you a good or a bad person? Same answer for all of us. It depends on when you make a judgement.
People have the capacity to change and other than sociopaths and the mentally ill, we are far better judging by what we KNOW now, not by what we have heard ABOUT someone, or think we know.
If Franken still does those things, boot him. If Moore has not had any other accusers for thirty years, maybe he deserves his day in court before being shunned and labeled.
I have done things long ago that I cringe thinking about. I have also been falsely accused, but my friends are those who know me now and still love me. You too?
The sad thing is that people who are normally balanced and objective get caught in the web of Political Correctness, or worse, they grab their pitch forks and torches because they fear they will be the next objects of the mob if they don’t. It happened in Salem, Massachusetts long ago and it feels like it’s happening again to undeserving individuals.
If you don’t know for sure, it’s better to go with what you do know...for sure.
Jack C. Getz
I hate Al Franken. I hate the way he took the seat from a good man named Norm Coleman, Someone I knew a little. I hate his politics and his attitude about most things.
BUT...my feelings aside, I don’t think Franken, or Moore can be judged fairly now, and eliminated from ELECTED public office for things that allegedly happened years ago, if at all.
Judge Moore is accused by a number of dubious last minute females of things that allegedly happened decades ago. He has run several times for public office and won without their opposition. But today, he is judged guilty by his own party leaders, few of whom could withstand the bright lights themselves. I know he deserves the opportunity to face his accusers and defend himself because he is innocent until proved guilty. The number of accusers may be significant, but they may also be associated with people on the left who are willing to pay for their sudden heroic accusations. I don’t know, neither do you. If the people know the accusations and have heard both them and him, and still elect him, he’s a senator in my book. If he’s proven to have done even a few of the things credited to him by the ladies and the left, throw the bum out. I am quite taken by the fact that this CRITICAL vote in the senate is under attack in this climate of whistle blowing “victims” who carry more clout than they should, at least until both sides are allowed to defend their positions.
Now, Senator Franken is being pressured by many in his own party to step down. Why? He acted like a jerk back when his job was to act like a jerk. A clown, clowning around years ago, but not today.
The principle at play here is one that must be heard in these times of sexual witch hunts. We all have the ability to change, despite previous foolish and harmful behavior. Am I to be judged by who I used to be or by who I am now?
We are in a time of witch hunting over things of the past that don’t match modern values. Thomas Jefferson is a bum because he had slaves. Robert E. Lee and all his armies are to be shamed because their slavery ethics is not our ethic today. Donald Trump was a frivolous young man so he can not be believed today. Judging previous generations by current values is the act of fools and ignorant zealots.
Let me ask you a seasonal question. Was Ebenezer Scrooge a good or a bad man? Am I a bad or a good man? Are you a good or a bad person? Same answer for all of us. It depends on when you make a judgement.
People have the capacity to change and other than sociopaths and the mentally ill, we are far better judging by what we KNOW now, not by what we have heard ABOUT someone, or think we know.
If Franken still does those things, boot him. If Moore has not had any other accusers for thirty years, maybe he deserves his day in court before being shunned and labeled.
I have done things long ago that I cringe thinking about. I have also been falsely accused, but my friends are those who know me now and still love me. You too?
The sad thing is that people who are normally balanced and objective get caught in the web of Political Correctness, or worse, they grab their pitch forks and torches because they fear they will be the next objects of the mob if they don’t. It happened in Salem, Massachusetts long ago and it feels like it’s happening again to undeserving individuals.
If you don’t know for sure, it’s better to go with what you do know...for sure.
Jack C. Getz
Monday, September 25, 2017
Spotting the Philosophers Among Us
Philosophers are:
Consumed by truth, realising, like few others, its magnitude and unparalleled significance.
Never satisfied with answers derived from others.
Unable to leave pregnant words/ideas alone: birth must be given; the new life cherished and shared.
Restless.
Often poets. Almost Always writers. (Except Socrates).
Avid readers of many subjects.
Contrarians, but not always contrary.
Solution seekers, not just dreamers.
Connected to nature in unusual and meaningful ways.
Social commentators and pundits.
Boundary pushers.
Usually not understood or appreciated.
Paranoid.
JG
Sunday, September 24, 2017
The Dynamics of Silence
Wasn't it Mark Twain who said, it’s better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt? As usual, this man of many words struck gold with his pungent use of them.
Despite what many may think, I am a great believer in the power of silence, though like Twain, I am not the best practitioner of the art. I am, too often, the man who tells others, When I want your opinion, I’ll give it to you. I know my active mind, and how it longs to couple up with a dark compulsion to add my two cents to any debate. It goes without saying that when the nitro glycerin of my overly active mind meets with potassium permanganate of my convictions, an explosion takes place, and my good motives and logical perceptions get me in trouble, often of late in the form of being Unfriended on Facebook.
Silence is possibly the most underrated virtue in the human arsenal. It is both powerful and gentle, depending on it’s use. It’s power is seen in the fact that it alone unlocks the power of
the mind that is commonly held captive by the dishonesty of the tongue. In other words, spending time in our secret place of silence is the only time when honesty is free to do it’s painful but necessary work of molding our character.
Silence and honesty form a tag team that never loses. One empowers the other, and between them, we will be molded into people who understand the tranquillity of order that comes from personal integrity, or we can resist their strength choosing instead to sit and sip Dr. Jekyll’s brew becoming crazed with the disorder of duplicity and the false self.
I believe that everything ultimately improves for those who unwrap the gift of silence regularly.
Amazingly, silence both rewards and punishes those who seek it. One day, the box contains gifts of affirmation depending on how well we align our values with our routine practices of life. When we treat others as we would like to be treated and follow the inklings of love, we find silence completely golden. But, when we disregard our best values in order to achieve selfish goals, spending time in silence is like being chained in a medieval dungeon awaiting the next round of torture.
Our experience with silence is either the most peaceful time of the day, or the most painful, depending on how we demonstrate, or disregard, the daily rhythms of order that grow in the fertile soil of silence.
Jack C. Getz
September 24, 2017
Sunday, August 27, 2017
A Farewell to England...Europe...America?
An open letter to our grown children...
Not looking to be freaky, but the list below is what scares me about America now, and especially into the next generation. PC culture is lulling our grandkids into apathy and convincing them that liberal revisionist history is the way things happened. You know? The USA, and our culture, is ALWAYS the problem?
Growing old is not a bad thing in the face of this kind of world, but my wonderful family will face a tough world that will be less like Happy Days and more like Hijrah Days unless someone stands strong.
Hijrah means conquest from within. Because they can have several wives, they create huge families who will eventually take over politically, in only a few decades. Europe is there now, all in the name of globalism, tolerance and "brotherhood".
It's now a social sin to honor our forefathers. Kaepernick is a hero to the new generation. We who have a problem with his actions are minimally, racists, bigots, haters of women, children, immigrants, clean air, clean water and the human race in general. Oh, we also love C02 imbalances and just adore barren forest lands as well.
Dearborn and Dearborn Heights, Michigan are now mostly controlled by Islamic culture. Churches and schools are closing, people are moving and a vacuum is created for more Islamic power brokers to expand.
I read last week about Rabbi in Spain who told his congregation to move to Israel because "Europe is lost".
I may be a fool, but to me, and millions of others, President Trump - with all his many personality warts- represents a last hope for our culture. They call him a hater because he is trying to hold on to and protect our uniquely wonderful way of life, surrounded by a sea full of well-paid truth haters and race baiters who influence our young people to hate those who lAmerica. It's not a right wing theory, we see it happening in Europe, and
Michigan as I write this.
I'm not calling for hate, but vigilance, hoping the next few generations of our kids will learn from the mistakes made in Europe, and you and their teachers will not be pressured into politically correct revisionist history.
Despite what we see every day, not everyone in the world is our brother and sister. Islam has a long history of taking over countries both quietly and militarily, then putting down the Shariah hammer. They have never been innocent bystanders or victims. They are like evangelical Christians toting nuclear weapons.
Just rambling today because I love you all so much.
Dad
Sent from Jack's iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
To: Getz Jack & Barbara <Jandbg15@comcast.net>,
Subject: Fwd: Farewell to England
FYI
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:"Farewell to England"
This is an interesting "Farewell to England" list of Islamic
accomplishments in that country that I thought might give you a better
understanding of the insidiousness of Hijrah; that's the takeover of a
nation without going to war. Don't think for a moment that America is
not a target or that there are no American cities where Islamic and
Sharia victories and takeovers have already occurred. It's time for
border control, or start planning for a very big goodbye America
party!
Here's what has already happened to England within a few years of
opening their borders without entry control:
How the British have passively succumbed to the Muslim invasion:
Mayor of London ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Birmingham ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Leeds ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Blackburn ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Sheffield ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Oxford ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Luton ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Oldham ... MUSLIM
Mayor of Rochdale ... MUSLIM
All the following achieved by just 4 million Muslims out of the 66
million population:
Over 3,000 Muslim Mosques
Over 130 Muslim Sharia Courts
Over 50 Muslim Sharia Councils
Muslims Only No-Go Areas Across The UK
Muslim Women... 78% don't work and are on FREE benefits/housing
Muslim Men... 63% don't work and are on FREE benefits/housing
Muslim Families... 6-8 children planning to go on FREE
benefits/housing and now all UK schools are ONLY serving HALAL MEAT!
..... and we (the USA) can't decide on an immigration policy?
Friday, July 28, 2017
Dreamers Causing Nightmares
A beautiful young lady spoke at her high school graduation. She spoke of courage in overcoming adversity and other noble ideals.
She's going to Yale next. I guess on scholarship but I am not sure.
Then she ruined it for me by revealing that she is an "undocumented alien" and repeatedly said "UA's are real people too". "Wow...deep", says Maynard G. Krebs. (Look him up under The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis).
In that confession she said the wall represents "hatred and prejudice", the predictable and vapid statement of the left.
I wrote the follow response to suggest that her view is both shallow, illogical and inaccurate. Clearly she was not taught the art of using logic in her valedictory journey. I doubt if they will help her with her deficiency at Yale either. Maybe life will later.
She is smart but very shallow and completely nieve.
The wall isn't about hate and prejudice, it's about law, order and a maintaining a level playing field for those who play according to the laws of our land. Her family broke our laws, no matter how smart, courageous and sweet she may be. They cut in line to get the goodies, disregarding those waiting for their opportunity to go to Yale, or get a job.
No one ever said ILLEGAL immigrants (not undocumented. Documentation requires a respect for the law and a process of acceptance by the host country.) were not people too. Most are fine people. Many are awful, however. That's really what Donald Trump meant with his early words about the illegals.
We lock our doors at home because there are some nasty people who would do us harm if we didn't. There are locks - and border rules in every country - not because we hate people, but because we understand that while most will do us no harm, some certainly will.
The same goes for our businesses. Most citizens will do nothing if there were no locks, but some would, so we have locks.
Peace is the tranquility of order, not chaos. We need order on the border. (Augustine).
Our national borders are the same. We don't hate anyone because we make them obey our laws, but we must protect ourselves against those who want to harm us. All this "hate and prejudice" talk about the President's wall comes from shallow and manipulating people who have their own selfish agendas, seeking their personal good above the collective good of our nation and our traditions.
That's the part they don't get. It's the part that endangers our nation and scares all who want and understand the purpose of a wall. Empty headed celebrities and politicians who say "let's build bridges, not walls", live behind walls themselves, with armed guards and locks on their property. Why? Don't they love everyone?
America was built by those who "more than self their country loved... and America is sustainable only when "selfish gain no longer stain the banner of the free."
It's alarming to see this kind of story celebrated as she she openly flaunts the laws of our nations. Everyone rejoices in this young girl's success in overcoming her challenges, but I for one do not celebrate the fact that her naive words disrespect those who cherish our freedom and recognize that it's because of the law that we have any form of opportunity and security to pursue our dreams, as she did.
The sing says our "liberty [is] in our law".
Screw you American law, tradition and justice. I'm going to Yale. What are you going to do about it?
Jack
She's going to Yale next. I guess on scholarship but I am not sure.
Then she ruined it for me by revealing that she is an "undocumented alien" and repeatedly said "UA's are real people too". "Wow...deep", says Maynard G. Krebs. (Look him up under The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis).
In that confession she said the wall represents "hatred and prejudice", the predictable and vapid statement of the left.
I wrote the follow response to suggest that her view is both shallow, illogical and inaccurate. Clearly she was not taught the art of using logic in her valedictory journey. I doubt if they will help her with her deficiency at Yale either. Maybe life will later.
She is smart but very shallow and completely nieve.
The wall isn't about hate and prejudice, it's about law, order and a maintaining a level playing field for those who play according to the laws of our land. Her family broke our laws, no matter how smart, courageous and sweet she may be. They cut in line to get the goodies, disregarding those waiting for their opportunity to go to Yale, or get a job.
No one ever said ILLEGAL immigrants (not undocumented. Documentation requires a respect for the law and a process of acceptance by the host country.) were not people too. Most are fine people. Many are awful, however. That's really what Donald Trump meant with his early words about the illegals.
We lock our doors at home because there are some nasty people who would do us harm if we didn't. There are locks - and border rules in every country - not because we hate people, but because we understand that while most will do us no harm, some certainly will.
The same goes for our businesses. Most citizens will do nothing if there were no locks, but some would, so we have locks.
Peace is the tranquility of order, not chaos. We need order on the border. (Augustine).
Our national borders are the same. We don't hate anyone because we make them obey our laws, but we must protect ourselves against those who want to harm us. All this "hate and prejudice" talk about the President's wall comes from shallow and manipulating people who have their own selfish agendas, seeking their personal good above the collective good of our nation and our traditions.
That's the part they don't get. It's the part that endangers our nation and scares all who want and understand the purpose of a wall. Empty headed celebrities and politicians who say "let's build bridges, not walls", live behind walls themselves, with armed guards and locks on their property. Why? Don't they love everyone?
America was built by those who "more than self their country loved... and America is sustainable only when "selfish gain no longer stain the banner of the free."
It's alarming to see this kind of story celebrated as she she openly flaunts the laws of our nations. Everyone rejoices in this young girl's success in overcoming her challenges, but I for one do not celebrate the fact that her naive words disrespect those who cherish our freedom and recognize that it's because of the law that we have any form of opportunity and security to pursue our dreams, as she did.
The sing says our "liberty [is] in our law".
Screw you American law, tradition and justice. I'm going to Yale. What are you going to do about it?
Jack
Friday, April 14, 2017
The American Healthcare Dilema
Just my opinion, but I dont think conservative voters are so committed to the REPEAL AND REPLACE mantra as the conservative cauccus is selling. It's a catchy phrase, but essentially, voters expect the party to create a healthcare system that works, costs less, covers the poor and doesn't create another huge entitlement tax or budget burden, whatever they call it.
I think if they saw R&R as a metaphor for a system that works, not a hardcore principle that must be obeyed, we might see something wonderful happen tomorrow.
I believe the first healthcare issue is a liability safety net that keeps the middle class from disaster should they experience a catastrophic accident or illness. A tragedy ought not consume a lifetime of savings or make someone indigent.
The next step needs to address primary care for those who can not afford the open market, while providing a competitive climate, not a closed governmental solution.
I have some ideas that must be tweaked, or combined, but also might work. (Think big picture here, not details).
1) Give hospitals grants to expand energency rooms and staff, creating healthcare networks for uninsurable and low income people.
2) Restructure the current Medicare system to allow the poor to pay into it, not like Social Security where we consume more than we contribute, but like a government insurance agency - not a single payer system, but one more option to the open market...like we have now.
3) Immediately eliminate state insurance lines, prohibit pre-existing condition bans, create truly open market competition, expand health saving accounts for those who can afford them, enable large groups to take advantage of their numbers to have cost effective policies for members (alumni associations, unions, churches, Moose Lodges and businesses). The working poor and disabled could be paid for by their small deductables and a universal 1%-2% state healthcare tax on some consumables, a 1% universal national healthcare tax, higher end open market health care policy costs (to mollify the left who loves to stick it to the rich, their major donor base).
KEY : Enable the states with block grants to care for thier own poor, (not Uncle Sam.) use Medicaid grants in a new way to create revenue for state run systems.
4) Encourage wellness plans like Silver Sneakers to become part of every senior citizen insurance plan. Wellness could save billions of dollars. 🏃
Nothing we do will be without sacrifice. It must be reasonable, however, so my kids and thier kids are not burdened with crippling healthcare costs. We must provide care for the poor, reward the middle class with incentives and ask the wealthy to lead the way.
We are in this together and watching both parties addressing this critical issue in a partisan way is a public shame. Leave your idelogies at home and talk to each other. We the people will have our way. We can do this, but it must be together. Fat chance!?
JG
I think if they saw R&R as a metaphor for a system that works, not a hardcore principle that must be obeyed, we might see something wonderful happen tomorrow.
I believe the first healthcare issue is a liability safety net that keeps the middle class from disaster should they experience a catastrophic accident or illness. A tragedy ought not consume a lifetime of savings or make someone indigent.
The next step needs to address primary care for those who can not afford the open market, while providing a competitive climate, not a closed governmental solution.
I have some ideas that must be tweaked, or combined, but also might work. (Think big picture here, not details).
1) Give hospitals grants to expand energency rooms and staff, creating healthcare networks for uninsurable and low income people.
2) Restructure the current Medicare system to allow the poor to pay into it, not like Social Security where we consume more than we contribute, but like a government insurance agency - not a single payer system, but one more option to the open market...like we have now.
3) Immediately eliminate state insurance lines, prohibit pre-existing condition bans, create truly open market competition, expand health saving accounts for those who can afford them, enable large groups to take advantage of their numbers to have cost effective policies for members (alumni associations, unions, churches, Moose Lodges and businesses). The working poor and disabled could be paid for by their small deductables and a universal 1%-2% state healthcare tax on some consumables, a 1% universal national healthcare tax, higher end open market health care policy costs (to mollify the left who loves to stick it to the rich, their major donor base).
KEY : Enable the states with block grants to care for thier own poor, (not Uncle Sam.) use Medicaid grants in a new way to create revenue for state run systems.
4) Encourage wellness plans like Silver Sneakers to become part of every senior citizen insurance plan. Wellness could save billions of dollars. 🏃
Nothing we do will be without sacrifice. It must be reasonable, however, so my kids and thier kids are not burdened with crippling healthcare costs. We must provide care for the poor, reward the middle class with incentives and ask the wealthy to lead the way.
We are in this together and watching both parties addressing this critical issue in a partisan way is a public shame. Leave your idelogies at home and talk to each other. We the people will have our way. We can do this, but it must be together. Fat chance!?
JG
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Facebook Political Vouyers
My note to this magnificent lady.
"I am tired of those sideline folks who think it's cool to post negative statements about those of us who choose to engage in political postings. Their effete smugness and sense of intellect superiority is far more disgusting to me than any posts I have seen. It's our right, no, it's our responsibility to post freely be often when we feel strongly about the future of our nation.
Your comments are ALWAYS enlightening and helpful, and I look forward to them. I was honored to be blocked by a super hip California media type because I sent her your one of your "takes" on women. Thank you.
I ask those elites what they will prohibit next on this wonderful forum. Maybe it ought to be all about grandkids, recipes, Jesus, our favorite time of year or what we had for lunch yesterday?
When Facebook reaches that level of insipid dialogue, I will leave it, or better, stay and clean out my friends list when they suggest those of us who are political are somehow ruining the forum.
I suggest those many Facebook voyeurs who are not willing to debate or get involved in this most critical decision of our lifetime ought to find something thing else to do with their incredibly valuable time.
I don't like either candidate but that doesn't mean I should become an ostrich when the future of my cherished values as a citizen are at stake. The populace becomes very passive and silent every time tyrants take control.
I may fail, but I will go down swinging for what I consider my duties as an informed citizen. If my posts offend you, unfollow me, block me, delete me, or ignore me, but don't try to shame me into becoming silent or passive to receive your approval.
Being blocked or unfollowed by self-proclaimed elites in this case is not a shame but an honor.
This is too important to be cool."
JG

Liz Carter
For those wanting to focus on stupid overly spun or exaggerated or taken out of context comments...can we actually look logically at the POTUS race?
Trumps first hire as the potential POTUS was a home run hit with Pence. It was smart and showed that he'll do as he said and surround himself with great people.
Hillary FAILED in her first hire as the potential POTUS with Kaine. She showed she continues to make poor choices and surrounds herself with failures.
And for those upset about the tax thing...open your eyes. You don't pay taxes when they are not due. You yourself should be taking advantage of any tax loop hole you can and most likely do with the mortgage interest or other loss write off possibilities. Hillary herself wrote off over $700k to reduce her taxes. And honestly, the jobs he has created have also created tax revenue. His companies have created thousands of jobs.
If you are hung up on the actual business loss, learn a bit more about business. Apple, GE, Microsoft and so many others have taken huge losses as well. The difference here is it's their money to lose. Hillary lost YOUR tax dollars as SOS, millions and millions of our money.
Quit getting sucked up into the Clinton campaign, aka the media, spin and realize they are doing there best to have you vote for Hillary or a third party to guarantee another Clinton Presidency....which would be disastrous.
And one last thing, what a sad day it is to realize that journalism in the USA is all but dead and is no longer an honorable career. The majority of them have lost their integrity and back bone to report simple facts or truth. Their employers have made sure that even those who want to do what is right can not in fear of losing their job.
If you are active in the political discussion and are not focused and doing all you can to defeat Hillary, shame on you. Seriously, I'm sorry if you don't like that statement, but you need to realize you are helping to elect a woman who purposely left Americans to be murdered and advocates the murder of children who can survive outside of the womb. Shame on you for taking your ball and going home or focusing on stupid statements the media has enhanced instead of fighting a proven evil woman.
Don't bother trying to argue your position or against Trump on this thread, I'm over it and won't allow you to help Hillary on my wall.
Tuesday, October 4, 2016
Courage, Values and Legacy
What would be your parting words to those you love the most at your point of death?
Values are best understood at times of departure. What did I stand for, and how do you know I was being authentic and not manipulative or driven by self interests?
What do we learn today about our motives as we abide in silence in our secret place?
2 Timothy is a battlefield or a challenge to truthfulness and courage from Paul's surrogate to Timothy, a cadet.
Colin Harris frames the discussion like this:
The general theme of this portion of the letter emphasizes courage in the face of the challenges of a world of many appeals for loyalty.
The voices of the culture of the first century biblical world were many, and they appealed to all dimensions of human experience. There was the voice of the powerful Roman Empire, which called for and enforced a kind of “law and order” society, which made possible the co-existence of many different religious practices and philosophies of life. There was the moral voice of Judaism, which provided an important part of the foundation of the gospel, which emphasized justice and a covenant relation to God. There were the many voices of an increasingly secular culture, which offered everything from prosperity to pleasure.
The choice of which voice to listen to is the challenge the writer holds up to young Timothy. “Remember who you are” – and he reminds him of his heritage through his mother and grandmother. “Rekindle the gift of God that is in you” -- and he reminds him of his “calling” and the responsibility to be a faithful steward of the “God-presence” within him to be an agent of God’s redemptive work. “ Don’t back away from the suffering that will come your way as a result of holding to your calling” – and he reminds him of the model of Christ (and of the writer) as examples of that kind of faithfulness.
Values + courage = legacy.
Values - courage = legacy. JG.
Courage
"You understand the dangers, you feel the fear, and you find the courage to do the right thing.
Strength and wisdom combine as you ward off temptation and act according to your values.
Definitions
1. Overcoming Fear
2. Grace under pressure (attributed to Ernest Hemingway)
3. Choosing self respect
4. Wise endurance (attributed to Laches)
5. Uncomplaining acceptance of unendurable conditions (attributed to Eisenhower)
6. Doing right despite the fright
7. Value-based action despite temptation.
(Doing what must be done when it isn't fun - Jack C. Getz)
A courageous person understands danger, and chooses to overcome their fear and proceed to face the danger and act according to their values. It is not fearlessness, recklessness, or rashness. It is a well considered, wise, and brave decision to behave constructively despite the fear, discomfort, or temptation. Courage is a strength drawn from a wise balance between the weaknesses of cowardice and recklessness. It is the discipline to act on wisely-chosen values rather than an impulse.
Because courage allows us to act on our values rather than our impulses, its virtue has long been recognized."
Emotionalcompetency.com
Sunday, August 21, 2016
The Real Power of Rain
I never feel more alive than during a thunderstorm. Maybe that's because I sit in safety and see unbridled power on display, sometimes acting out close enough to touch. Rain alone enables new life while sustaining the old, and only rain ends times of dryness and drought. And only rain nourishes today while quietly promising another day tomorrow for every life form on earth - and beyond.
Rain washes away dust while refilling the thirsty aquifers beneath our feet. It also creates sights, sounds and smells that nothing else replicates. Nothing comes close.
The magic of a fearful thunderstorm produces deepest awe, at the same time flashes visual perspectives of our puny weaknesses and strengths.
Are our deepest primal needs met, or challenged by a good gully washer? Rain wind, lightning and thunder reach the human soul more profoundly than prayer or organized worship. As eerie darkness produces the wind and rain that arrhythmically batters a small tent, or relentlessly drums on the metal roof of a lonely cabin in the woods, we easily sense a presence that equals - or surpasses - the greatest requiem or finest hymn. And at that moment, we intuitively and naturally commune with an eternal source that is far beyond us.
Jack C. Getz
8/21/16
Friday, August 12, 2016
The Five C's of Understanding History - works with the Bible as well.
AHA Publications & Directories Perspectives on History January 2007 What Does It Mean to Think Historically?
In This Section
Teaching
What Does It Mean to Think Historically?
Thomas Andrews and Flannery Burke, January 2007
Introduction
When we started working on Teachers for a New Era, a Carnegie-sponsored initiative designed to strengthen teacher training, we thought we knew a thing or two about our discipline. As we began reading such works as Sam Wineburg's Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts, however, we encountered an unexpected challenge.1 If our understandings of the past constituted a sort of craft knowledge, how could we distill and communicate habits of mind we and our colleagues had developed through years of apprenticeship, guild membership, and daily practice to university students so that they, in turn, could impart these habits in K–12 classrooms?
In response, we developed an approach we call the "five C's of historical thinking." The concepts of change over time, causality, context, complexity, and contingency, we believe, together describe the shared foundations of our discipline. They stand at the heart of the questions historians seek to answer, the arguments we make, and the debates in which we engage. These ideas are hardly new to professional historians. But that is precisely their value: They make our implicit ways of thought explicit to the students and teachers whom we train. The five C's do not encompass the universe of historical thinking, yet they do provide a remarkably useful tool for helping students at practically any level learn how to formulate and support arguments based on primary sources, as well as to understand and challenge historical interpretations related in secondary sources. In this article, we define the five C's, explain how each concept helps us to understand the past, and provide some brief examples of how we have employed the five C's when teaching teachers. Our approach is necessarily broad and basic, characteristics well suited for a foundation upon which we invite our colleagues from kindergartens to research universities to build.
Change over Time
The idea of change over time is perhaps the easiest of the C's to grasp. Students readily acknowledge that we employ and struggle with technologies unavailable to our forebears, that we live by different laws, and that we enjoy different cultural pursuits. Moreover, students also note that some aspects of life remain the same across time. Many Europeans celebrate many of the same holidays that they did three or four hundred years ago, for instance, often using the same rituals and words to mark a day's significance. Continuity thus comprises an integral part of the idea of change over time.
Students often find the concept of change over time elementary. Even individuals who claim to despise history can remember a few dates and explain that some preceded or followed others. At any educational level, timelines can teach change over time as well as the selective process that leads people to pay attention to some events while ignoring others. In our U.S. survey class, we often ask students to interview family and friends and write a paper explaining how their family's history has intersected with major events and trends that we are studying. By discovering their own family's past, students often see how individuals can make a difference and how personal history changes over time along with major events.
As historians of the American West and environmental historians, we often turn to maps to teach change over time. The same space represented in different ways as political power, economic structures, and cultural influences shift can often put in shocking relief the differences that time makes. The work of repeat photographers such as Mark Klett offers another compelling tool for teaching change over time. Such photographers begin with a historic landscape photograph, then take pains to re-take the shot from the same site, at the same angle, using similar equipment, and even under analogous conditions.2 While suburbs and industry have overrun many western locales, students are often surprised to see that some places have become more desolate and others have hardly changed at all. The exercise engages students with a non-written primary source, photographs, and demands that they reassess their expectations regarding how time changes.
Context
Some things change, others stay the same—not a very interesting story but reason for concern since history, as the best teachers will tell you, is about telling stories. Good story telling, we contend, builds upon an understanding of context. Given young people's fascination with narratives and their enthusiasm for imaginative play, pupils (particularly elementary school students) often find context the most engaging element of historical thinking. As students mature, of course, they recognize that the past is not just a playful alternate universe. Working with primary sources, they discover that the past makes more sense when they set it within two frameworks. In our teaching, we liken the first to the floating words that roll across the screen at the beginning of every Star Wars film. This kind of context sets the stage; the second helps us to interpret evidence concerning the action that ensues. Texts, events, individual lives, collective struggles—all develop within a tightly interwoven world.
Historians who excel at the art of storytelling often rely heavily upon context. Jonathan Spence's Death of Woman Wang, for example, skillfully recreates 17th-century China by following the trail of a sparsely documented murder. To solve the mystery, students must understand the time and place in which it occurred. Laurel Thatcher Ulrich brings colonial New England to life by concentrating on the details of textile production and basket making in Age of Homespun. College courses regularly use the work of both authors because they not only spark student interest, but also hone students' ability to describe the past and identify distinctive elements of different eras.3
Imaginative play is what makes context, arguably the easiest, yet also, paradoxically, the most difficult of the five C's to teach. Elementary school assignments that require students to research and wear medieval European clothes or build a California mission from sugar cubes both strive to teach context. The problem with such assignments is that they often blur the lines between reality and make-believe. The picturesque often trumps more banal or more disturbing truths. Young children may never be able to get all the facts straight. As one elementary school teacher once reminded us, "We teach kids who still believe in Santa Claus." Nonetheless, elementary school teachers can be cautious in their re-creations, and, most of all, they can be comfortable telling students when they don't know a given fact or when more research is necessary. That an idea might require more thought or more research is a valuable lesson at any age. The desire to recreate a world sometimes drives students to dig more deeply into their books, a reaction few teachers lament.
In our own classes, we have taught context using an assignment that we call "Fact, Fiction, or Creative Memory." In this exercise, students wrestle with a given source and determine whether it is primarily a work of history, fiction, or memory. We have asked students to bring in a present-day representation of 1950s life and explain what it teaches people today about life in 1950s America. Then, we have asked the class to discuss if the representation is a historically fair depiction of the era. We have also assigned textbook passages and Don DeLillo's Pafko at the Wall, then asked students to compare them to decide which offers stronger insights into the character of Cold War America.4 Each of these assignments addresses context, because each asks students to think about the distinctions between representations of the past and the critical thinking about the past that is history. Moreoever, each asks students to weave together a variety of sources and assess the reliability of each before incorporating them into a whole.
Causality
Historians use context, change over time, and causality to form arguments explaining past change. While scientists can devise experiments to test theories and yield data, historians cannot alter past conditions to produce new information. Rather, they must base their arguments upon the interpretation of partial primary sources that frequently offer multiple explanations for a single event. Historians have long argued over the causes of the Protestant Reformation or World War I, for example, without achieving consensus. Such uncertainty troubles some students, but history classrooms are at their most dynamic when teachers encourage pupils to evaluate the contributions of multiple factors in shaping past events, as well as to formulate arguments asserting the primacy of some causes over others.
To teach causality, we have turned to the stand-by activities of the history classroom: debates and role-playing. After arming students with primary sources, we ask them to argue whether monetary or fiscal policy played a greater role in causing the Great Depression. After giving students descriptions drawn from primary sources of immigrant families in Los Angeles, we have asked students to take on the role of various family members and explain their reasons for immigrating and their reasons for settling in particular neighborhoods. Neither exercise is especially novel, but both fulfill a central goal of studying history: to develop persuasive explanations of historical events and processes based on logical interpretations of evidence.
Contingency
Contingency may, in fact, be the most difficult of the C's. To argue that history is contingent is to claim that every historical outcome depends upon a number of prior conditions; that each of these prior conditions depends, in turn, upon still other conditions; and so on. The core insight of contingency is that the world is a magnificently interconnected place. Change a single prior condition, and any historical outcome could have turned out differently. Lee could have won at Gettysburg, Gore might have won in Florida, China might have inaugurated the world's first industrial revolution.
Contingency can be an unsettling idea—so much so that people in the past have often tried to mask it with myths of national and racial destiny. The Pilgrim William Bradford, for instance, interpreted the decimation of New England's native peoples not as a consequence of smallpox, but as a literal godsend.5 Two centuries later, American ideologues chose to rationalize their unlikely fortunes—from the purchase of Louisiana to the discovery of gold in California—as their nation's "Manifest Destiny." Historians, unlike Bradford and the apologists of westward expansion, look at the same outcomes differently. They see not divine fate, but a series of contingent results possessing other possibilities.
Contingency can be an unsettling idea—so much so that people in the past have often tried to mask it with myths of national and racial destiny. The Pilgrim William Bradford, for instance, interpreted the decimation of New England's native peoples not as a consequence of smallpox, but as a literal godsend.5 Two centuries later, American ideologues chose to rationalize their unlikely fortunes—from the purchase of Louisiana to the discovery of gold in California—as their nation's "Manifest Destiny." Historians, unlike Bradford and the apologists of westward expansion, look at the same outcomes differently. They see not divine fate, but a series of contingent results possessing other possibilities.
Contingency demands that students think deeply about past, present, and future. It offers a powerful corrective to teleology, the fallacy that events pursue a straight-arrow course to a pre-determined outcome, since people in the past had no way of anticipating our present world. Contingency also reminds us that individuals shape the course of human events. What if Karl Marx had decided to elude Prussian censors by emigrating to the United States instead of France, where he met Frederick Engels? To assert that the past is contingent is to impress upon students the notion that the future is up for grabs, and that they bear some responsibility for shaping the course of future history.
Contingency can be a difficult concept to present abstractly, but it suffuses the stories historians tend to tell about individual lives. Futurology, however, might offer an even stronger tool for imparting contingency than biography. Mechanistic views of history as the inevitable march toward the present tend to collapse once students see how different their world is from any predicted in the past.
Complexity
Moral, epistemological, and causal complexity distinguish historical thinking from the conception of "history" held by many non-historians.6 Re-enacting battles and remembering names and dates require effort but not necessarily analytical rigor. Making sense of a messy world that we cannot know directly, in contrast, is more confounding but also more rewarding.
Chronicles distill intricate historical processes into a mere catalogue, while nostalgia conjures an uncomplicated golden age that saves us the trouble of having to think about the past. Our own need for order can obscure our understanding of how past worlds functioned and blind us to the ways in which myths of rosy pasts do political and cultural work in the present. Reveling in complexity rather than shying away from it, historians seek to dispel the power of chronicle, nostalgia, and other traps that obscure our ability to understand the past on its own terms.
One of the most successful exercises we have developed for conveying complexity in all of these dimensions is a mock debate on Cherokee Removal. Two features of the exercise account for the richness and depth of understanding that it imparts on students. First, the debate involves multiple parties; the Treaty and Anti-Treaty Parties, Cherokee women, John Marshall, Andrew Jackson, northern missionaries, the State of Georgia, and white settlers each offer a different perspective on the issue. Second, students develop their understanding of their respective positions using the primary sources collected in Cherokee Removal: A Brief History with Documents by Theda Perdue and Michael Green.7 While it can be difficult to assess what students learn from such exercises, we have noted anecdotally that, following the exercise, students seem much less comfortable referring to "American" or "Indian" positions as monolithic identities.
Conclusion
Our experiments with the five C's have confronted us with several challenges. These concepts offer a fluid tool for engaging historical thought at multiple levels, but they can easily degenerate into a checklist. Students who favor memorization over analysis seem inclined to recite the C's without necessarily understanding them. Moreover, as habits of mind, the five C's develop only with practice. Though primary and secondary schools increasingly emphasize some aspects of these themes, particularly the use of primary sources as evidence, more attention to the five C's with appropriate variations over the course of K–12 education would help future citizens not only to care about history, but also to contemplate it. It is our hope that this might help students to see the past not simply as prelude to our present, nor a list of facts to memorize, a cast of heroes and villains to cheer and boo, nor as an itinerary of places to tour, but rather as an ideal field for thinking long and hard about important questions.
—Flannery Burke and Thomas Andrews are both assistant professors of history and Teachers for a New Era faculty members at California State University at Northridge. Burke is working on a book for the University Press of Kansas tentatively entitled Longing and Belonging: Mabel Dodge Luhan and Greenwich Village's Avant-Garde in Taos. Andrews is completing a manuscript for Harvard University Press, tentatively entitled Ludlow: The Nature of Industrial Struggle in the Colorado Coalfields.
Notes
1. Sam Wineburg, Historical Thinking and Other Unnatural Acts: Charting the Future of Teaching the Past (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2001).
2. Mark Klett, Kyle Bajakian, William L. Fox, Michael Marshall, Toshi Ueshina, and Byron G. Wolfe, Third Views, Second Sights: A Rephotographic Survey of the American West (Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press, 2004).
3. Jonathan D. Spence, Death of Woman Wang (New York: Viking, 1978); Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, The Age of Homespun: Objects and Stories in the Creation of an American Myth (New York: Knopf, 2001).
5. William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, ed. Samuel Eliot Morison (New York: Random House, 1952).
www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/january-2007/what-does-it-mean-to-think-historically
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