Posted on February 17, 2009 by Jason Barr
This past weekend the Common Root conference was held in Minneapolis. Tom and Christine Sine of Mustard Seed Associates led the first plenary session, and my friend Jordan Peacock wrote the following as a summary statement of one of their points:
The Pax Americana is not necessarily the strongest ‘empire’. It stands together with global capitalism, [...]
Filed under: Bush, Common Root, Iraq, Obama, democracy, economy, empire, free trade, government, neoconservatism, politics | 6 Comments »
Posted on January 27, 2009 by Jason Barr
However else it may be defined, it is generally agreed that a (if not the) major feature of modernity is the pervasiveness of the myth of progress. According to the progress myth, progress will be attained in a definite, concrete form as the continuing dialectic (and, in some forms, utopian end) of history if “we [...]
Filed under: Iraq, Obama, affluence, consumerism, corporations, creation, democracy, economy, empire, free trade, president, progress, prophetic | 1 Comment »
Posted on September 4, 2008 by Jason Barr
We all expected the cops to use excessive force and utilize the tactic of questionable mass arrests in St. Paul. That’s no surprise, that has been a tactic for squelching public dissent since time immemorial. What is perhaps even more alarming about the tactics used in St. Paul is the arrest of several journalists who [...]
Filed under: authority, convention, democracy, domination, empire, government, media, politics, resistance | Leave a Comment »
Posted on March 11, 2008 by Jason Barr
Depending on which study one considers credible either 70% or 90+% of people in Indiana are opposed to construction of a new-terrain extension of I-69 from Indianapolis through southwestern Indiana. The major pocket of support is among business interests in the Evansville area.
This project is highly problematic for numerous reasons, including but not limited to [...]
Filed under: I-69, democracy, politics, resistance | 1 Comment »
Posted on November 15, 2007 by Jason Barr
This article from today’s International Herald Tribune gives an excellent example of what Chalmers Johnson calls “blowback”, from the title of his 2000 book (revised ed. 2004) Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, in which he essentially predicted a 9/11-like attack as one of the “unintended consequences” of American policy towards so-called “developing [...]
Filed under: Iran, Iraq, Pakistan, democracy, domination, empire, free trade, government, nukes, politics, terrorism | 1 Comment »
Posted on October 12, 2007 by Jason Barr
A documentary exploration into how the Media is anti-democratic.
Filed under: consumerism, corporations, democracy, domination, government, media, politics, video | Leave a Comment »
Posted on October 11, 2007 by Jason Barr
I’m sorry for the recent lack of content, things have been pretty busy lately (surprise, surprise). I’ve been meaning to make a theological post and it just hasn’t happened yet. I have some thoughts on dominion and Genesis 1 I’d really like to flesh out.
In the meantime, enjoy filmmaker John Pilger’s masterful documentary showing how, [...]
Filed under: Latin America, democracy, domination, empire, politics, video | Leave a Comment »