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Drones, the Harlem Shake, and the Church

In these past few weeks I watched with growing fascination (and bewilderment) the phenomenon of "The Harlem Shake." I even tried my church to do one - my attempts were foiled when I got the bronchitis. In case you missed it, first someone does a weird dance in the middle of people who pretend not to notice. After a while there is a second shot, where everyone does a crazy dance and joins in. There are quite a few on the web right now - just google them.

Wednesday night I saw a little bit of a political Harlem Shake in the U.S. Senate. Rand Paul backed by 14 republican Senators and 1 democrat senator filibustered in the old fashioned way the Senate floor. What they were trying to accomplish, is twofold: one, to get the administration to clarify that drones could not be used for extrajudicial killings of US citizens on US soil. Two, to raise public awareness of the issue - and the serious legal and constitutional issues the drones raise. From a spectator it looked like the first part of the Harlem Shake - a couple of senators doing something odd. Most of their colleagues had "other business to attend to."

I am not a fan of Paul Rand most of the time. I find libertarian love of "big business" and "free market" as naive as the liberal love of "big government." I consider myself the man of the middle in politics. But what drew my attention last night was not politics but the ethical question, that hovered in the background. I wished that churches joined in - and fought for the principle of condeming any kind of execution: be it by drones, or by lethal injection or by the gas chamber. Killing someone either through war or through the death penalty is a vile rejection of God's command to choose life. And God's desire that all have life and life in abundance.

I hope and pray that churches in the US, the liberal ones like the United Church of Christ which I serve, and the conservative ones, join in and perform a great Harlem Shake for life, and the dignity of all. We might look a bit weird or naive or just uncommonly silly - but my wish is that others will join us too.

And drones, and the death penalty will go away to where they belong: the chamber of shame of human history.

ben

3:11 pm on Friday, March 8, 2013

Thank you Pastor Kaz for speaking out against drones and the death penalty. It's so important to see clergy taking a stand and opposing policies that threaten life.

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carl berke

5:30 pm on Tuesday, March 12, 2013

You have a very narrow, almost myopic, view of the political spectrum. It seems to contain only the right side of that spectrum. You have named two groups, both of which have been warring against progress since 1776. You use of terms like "liberal" as being an ultimate perspective shows a complete insulation from the rest of the world and from history, especially Western Civilization. That is disheartening. However, I agree about drones. The morality is identical to the concept of the death penalty which is government sanctioned murder, do as I say,not as I do.

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Damon Michaels

5:11 pm on Monday, March 25, 2013

Libertarians are very far removed from liking "big business". Libertarians do not want "big business" to distort and mutate our government as is currently done. A level playing field is what is required, not this mess we have presently.

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