Islands of Good in a Sea of Hate
Charles Dickens, "Little Dorrit"
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I stayed away from politics for a few days last week, mostly by choice. I admit that sometimes it gets me down; the hatefulness, the misdirected energies, the signs of a meaningful recovery growing ever fainter. I give in sometimes to black moods and it takes a dose of sunshine to get me back on track. I watched funny movies, played computer games, wandered around my local countryside taking pictures of golden trees and old barns. It was great.
But yesterday morning--Sunday--the hiatus was over with a bang. I watched, at my husband's urging, a segment of "The Coral Ridge Hour", a purportedly religious program, where ObamaCare was the sermon of the day. I came into the program when a video about the dangers of government-run health care was playing. The lies were so blatant, so transparently Right Wing, and so totally against what I know of Christian beliefs, I sat there either drop-jawed or sputtering. They lied, and they took pleasure in their lies. It was Sunday morning and they lied.
They pushed the notions of government-sponsored euthanasia for the elderly ("Buried deep in the Obamacare bill is a passage that would require all Senior Citizens every five years to get counseling on end-of-life issues. A less than gentle nudge that at some point the Federal government would like you to die"), wholesale abortions paid for by the Feds, doctors being forced to perform abortions against their moral judgment, rationed life-saving operations, and a guaranteed rapid slide toward socialism if all good Christians don't oppose the Public Option.
They were aided by such notables in compassionate thinking as Star "47 million uninsured Americans is a myth" Parker, a spokesman from James Dobson's "Family Research Council", and somebody billed as "William Lederer, former congressional candidate".
The Coral Ridge Hour is the brainchild of Dr D. James Kennedy, a "minister" in name only. Dr. Kennedy has been dead for more than two years, but you wouldn't know if from his website or telecasts. The faithful are carrying on his message of hate and intolerance in a fashion that would make their founder proud. It was enough to make me sick.
So since I felt back in the game, I thought I would go over to Talking Points Memo Cafe to see what my friends were blogging about. Once again, I was drop-jawed and sputtering, but in a good way. I hate to pick out just three excellent bloggers to highlight here, since at any given time there are so many on that site, but these were the three that brought me to my knees. Their blogs are so passionate, so articulate, so full of goodness. The perfect antidote to that hateful Sunday morning sermon.
They are here:
The Genocide of the American Middle Class, by flowerchild
(with links that beg to be read)
Professional Distance, a Discussion of Health Care, by Dickday
(A necessary heartbreaker)
Hearts Gone Astray, by TheraP
(And then read "The Reason Why", including Doxy's heartbreaking "Elegy", a call for fairness in health care if ever there was one.)
I was so blown away by those four pieces I couldn't even comment. I was absolutely struck wordless, and it took me until this morning to be able to function again and write the piece I had begun yesterday.
There are good people out there by the thousands fighting the good fight. (Many of them are in my blogrolls) We need to nurture them, to celebrate them, to emulate them.So from now on, my Sundays are reserved for them.
Ramona
(Cross-posted at Ramona's Voices here.)

















Good for you Ramona. Having your ducks all lined up gives a certain peace to your mind. Even when the rest of the world is in disarray. Very nicely done blog BTW. Congratulations.
November 2, 2009 1:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks, tpc. And thank you again for sorting out my website problems. I learned a lot. Nice to talk to you by telephone, too. You're my techie hero!
November 2, 2009 2:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
I was struck by the other posts of course...
I am struck by your seeking help and receiving it from TPC. ha
I guess I am reminded that we live not in a vacuum. We can benefit from the musings as well as the advice of others.
THAT IS WHY I REMAIN ON THIS SITE, whether we are recognized as front page material or not. hahah
November 2, 2009 7:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
This site is one of a kind. I haven't seen anything like the kinds of posts I see here--anywhere. That's what keeps me here, too.
I don't always comment, and usually it's because everyone before me has said it all--and said it better.
November 2, 2009 8:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
I always check your blogs because I always learn from them. Thanks for taking the time. I had the impression from what you wrote that you were commenting on tv ministries, am I right?
I am not a believer myself, but I would be interested to know what people are hearing in their own Sunday morning pews. Do you attend church? If so, what are you hearing there?
I'm just curious.
November 2, 2009 9:30 PM | Reply | Permalink
CVille, I was commenting on Right Wing televangelists. I don't go to church, but I have many friends and family members who do. The churches I hear about here in Michigan are deeply concerned with what is happening with unemployment and the economy. They do all they can to help on a local or parish level, but about the only ones that do any activist work pressuring the gov't are the churches in the inner city.
Many of them have food and clothing banks right in the church, along with other outreach programs. Kudos to them. I hope I didn't give the impression that I'm against all church activities. Not at all. I'm only against the pseudo-churches that get by without paying taxes while attacking those who understand the need to care for those who can't help themselves.
November 2, 2009 9:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Badly worded, that last sentence. . .but I hope you get what I mean.
November 2, 2009 9:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
I do, and I also agree with you, as usual.
November 3, 2009 8:49 AM | Reply | Permalink
It does get intense at times, Ramona. Sometimes getting away from the disappointing news is necessary. Thanks.
November 2, 2009 10:23 PM | Reply | Permalink
Flowerchild, you and so many others here are keeping up the good fight, and doing it so well and with so much energy.
And I love your new avatar--peace and pitchforks. Yes, we need both.
November 3, 2009 7:54 AM | Reply | Permalink
Dickday, sorry about the misspelling of your name. I tried to fix it last night and created a duplicate blog! Finally figured out what went wrong, so I've fixed it now. Sorry.
November 3, 2009 8:31 AM | Reply | Permalink
An excellent expose, Ramona. We should be checking into the tax-free status of these parasites. Nothing irritates me more then preachers getting involved with politics. Their realm is spiritual, not political. To me, it tarnishes their image and that of the faith they purport to represent. If these people were actually to be reaching for Christ-like, they would be working to heal the sick, not abandoning them. The end-of-life panels have been retracted, so why do they continue to suggest they are part of the program, except to deceive. The abortion issue is also removed, but they continue to suggest it remains, again being deceptive. When i wonder who they are working for, there is only one answer, the Prince of Lies.
November 3, 2009 1:10 PM | Reply | Permalink