Guest Coffee & Conversation – Can We Afford to Fix the World? Can We Afford Not To?

I’m away from the office today, so Raul Fernandez, from the Howard Thurman Center is going to handle the C&C this afternoon – Raúl show ’em what you got:

I have this week the unenviable task of filling in for Dean Elmore as the moderator of Coffee of Conversation. Well, as the great philosopher Eminem once said, “you only get one shot, do not miss your chance to blow,” so here it goes…

Let’s face it: the United States of America is a nation drowning in debt. Our credit card is maxed and our collectors have us on speed dial. And if we had enough nerve to pick up the phone, we might be surprised by the voice on the other end – our own.

After all, can a nation profess to be the model of equality while disparities based on race and class persist in its educational system, while some citizens are denied the right to be their true selves in its military, and while pay seems to be based as much on ones gender as ones job performance?

And don’t even get me started on the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans, much of which looks like Katrina hit it last week!

This week’s question isn’t whether we can financially support efforts to bring democracy, liberty and equality to the world, but rather, do we have the moral currency to make it happen? I say we discuss it over coffee & cookies this Friday, from 3 – 5 PM.

Raúl

Enjoy.  I’ll see you next week.  Peace and Go Terriers!

Power Play Thursday — Hope You Are Somewhere Watching the Team

Give me a great moment and I run to witness it.  Jaw-dropping, tickle in your spine, hair standing on your arms, scream aloud go tell your friends moments of real joy can be hard to come by (or at least to discover every day).  Even better, I love signifying about it when I run into people later on – where I was, who I was with, what I was doing, and how I might have played a part in creating the moment itself.

A moment is making its way to Comm Ave. Later this week, the Terriers will be one of four teams in Washington, D.C. competing in the finals of the NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Championship (the Frozen Four).  We can’t all get to D.C. and say that we were there, but we can’t miss an opportunity to get together – here’s an invitation to the Terrier family:

While we’re watching it on the big screens, I hope Terriers in D.C. will send us shout outs via their status updates and through tweets.  And, please take pictures that capture your experience with this great moment.

We know how to represent. Our students, as athletes, will achieve their best.  We, as a community will be at our best when we come together – beautiful.

We need you in D.C. or at Agganis.  Let’s send the team off knowing that, even if we can’t all be in D.C., a proud community stands behind them and will kick some serious vibe their way.

I’m ready to be set adrift on memories bliss.  Represent boys! Go Terriers!

The Power of A King and a Teacher

Last week marked a moment that happened forty-one years ago.  The night before his murder, Martin Luther King, Jr. gave one of his incredible sermons.  Some believe it was one of his greatest, others believe that he actually preached his eulogy.  In his final public speech, Dr. King reminded us to resist our selfish urge to sit on the sidelines while real issues – those of violence as a national problem solving tool, how we perceive each other based upon race, and poverty – continue to matter in what we value as a nation and in the lives of the people of the world.

Every time I read Reverend Kinds words, I get back to the same question: What do I stand for? How do we change the world and ourselves?

He reminds me that we are human beings.

He will not let me forget the poor.

He persuades me to find and pull out enough love to change democratic institutions.  His words dare me to remain hopeful – that we all, despite our station in life, our ethnicity, or our race, can fundamentally transform democratic institutions.

The “Mountaintop” speech tells me what I know: that the long term is just as important as tomorrow. I still struggle to smell the roses – to make sure I see the impact of the marathon Dr. King and others started (I hope I will know when the race is over).

Martin Luther King was a great teacher – he still inspires us to understand and to learn.  He tugged at us by raising hard questions about what is right and what we value in our world.  He urged us to feel the need to reconcile big questions about militaries, racism, and poverty.

The real trick for us is how we engage each other to think about these and other issues and to answer these questions through relevance.  I want to capture students’ attention and imagination about national and global human rights issues.  Don’t just take the word of commentators – we need more opportunities to experience each other’s lives (firsthand); have engaged conversations (and, sometimes arguments); persuade each other; consider that others may have a point of view; create beyond the bland and more of the same; collaborate; and, above all else, agree to address these issues

Dr. King reminded us that building and sustaining community is important.  Addressing these issues does not happen with a few of us acting alone – especially when the ideas are only in our individual heads.  The interactions found in meaningful shared experiences are important.  He taught us of the value of finding unique ways to bring us into the conversation – to build connections with each other so that we can share what we know; share our efforts; and, share our resources.

Do we have the choice not to look for answers to Martin Luther King’s questions?  How will we know we have successfully found answers?

Martin Luther King had great questions, but he lived in another time.  What does the future of human rights look like?  Can we do more than have values – can we actually value the values we hold about how we treat each other?  I know there are programs and activities on campus this week dealing with a variety of human rights topics.  Take the time to jump into the reflecting, the questions, the conversations, and the debates.  Even better, take time to get together with others to find a way to address the issues.

Peace.

(Head Study, above by John Wilson, a Professor Emeritus of Art, at Boston University's College of Fine Arts.)

A creative treat with cool artwork (just off of Comm Ave). Different take on the story of Little Red Riding Hood.  According to Tomas Nilsson, the creator, this was made in response to a class assignment.  (CAUTION -- as is the story of Little Red Riding Hood, could be a bit disturbing and distressing for some viewers.)

What’s Up with Tickets to the Frozen Four?

Talk about a hot ticket! There are a limited number of student tickets available to the Frozen Four in Washington, D.C. So, to try to be fair about it, we'll be holding a raffle -- "winners" will get a chance to purchase one ticket. (Lots of coin for the tickets -- 177 bills -- ouch!)  You can pick up a raffle ticket tomorrow, April 1, (no joke) from noon to 5 p.m., at the Agganis Ticket Office. Raffle "winners" will get a call after 5 p.m., tomorrow (April 1).  Get the complete scoop at Go Terriers!

And if you don't get a ticket, don't worry.  Mark your calendar -- next Thursday night we'll go big and do a viewing party that no one has ever seen before.

Coffee & Conversation – Yipes! Is Baseball a Sport?

I see great things in baseball. It's our game--the American game. It will take our people out of doors, fill them with oxygen, give them a larger physical stoicism. Tend to relieve us from being a nervous, dyspeptic set. Repair these losses, and be a blessing to us.

Conventional wisdom attributes that statement to Walt Whitman

In nine days we start it all over again. With a new season coming soon, let’s talk about baseball.

WARNING – CONTINUED READING MAY RAISE YOUR IRE.

Sport is important to many of our lives and the society.  I watch baseball and have played many a game. Despite my involvement with baseball, I find it uninspiring.  Maybe it’s just a marketing thing, but when I consider great athletic moments and great athletes, baseball and baseball players tend to come up short on my lists. I appreciate baseball for all its newsworthiness and drama, but I wonder if baseball should be called a sport. (That’s right I’m the dude who said it!)  I’m trying to figure out why people, especially Americans, think baseball is “all that.”

Is a contest of groups of individuals really a team sport? If baseball is the American game, what does it say about America and Americans? Stuck in the past? Boring? Chokes? Cheaters? Individualistic to a fault? Obsessive? Money for nothing? Advanced? International? Smart? Poetic? Inspired?

If sport is about skillful physical activity, organization, and lots of rules, then baseball is all about it.  If sport is about competitive activity between teams with great and inspiring individual and group champions, then baseball might, at best, be akin to a great novel.  Why is baseball the great American game, sport, or pastime?

I’ll see you this afternoon in the Howard Thurman Center to talk about baseball.  Do we really dig this game or is it time to go find a real sport? I’ll bring the coffee and cookies and I am sure you’ll bring the conversation (I might also need my umpire’s mask, too). See you at 3 p.m.

Peace.

An Alternative, Alternative Way to Spend Spring Break – Cricket!

Sumantro Das and the BU's Cricket Team got huge props in The New York Times today, including a wonderful video piece:

Can't wait to watch Cricket back on the campus -- Go Terriers!

Cool Vizualization of a Great Spit

Julian J. turned me on to another great short piece on the Web.  Taylor Mali is an old friend to many FYSOPers.  He has been to campus to check us and to inspire. Here's a wonderful visualization by Ronnie Bruce of one of Mali's poems:


Typography from Ronnie Bruce on Vimeo.

Julian, Ronnie, and Taylor reminded me that "it is not enough these days to simply question authority. You have to speak with it, too." Speak with authority out of conviction and real self-assuredness. Speak with authority to truly understand and listen. (And, speaking with the authority of love never hurts.)  Keep spittin' Taylor. Peace.

Speaking of Love

Cool video about a topic that I adore. Nice tune, too.

Thanks, Jeff, for sending this my way. Peace.

Free Flow Friday – A Few Thoughts

No Coffee and Conversation session this afternoon, but we should still chat with each other. A couple of quick discussion points.

Former Vice President Dick Cheney talking a little trash, but is he right? Compared to the previous one, as the current administration made America less safe?

Embedded video from <a href="http://www.cnn.com/video" mce_href="http://www.cnn.com/video">CNN Video</a>

 

"In America, when you owe someone money, you pay them." Are you hyped up about $165 million in bonuses at AIG?  A Washington obsession? Do the rest of really care? Should we?

 

Finally, a neat video that is making is way around again - messages worthy of our thoughts and begging for resolutions:

Did You Know? from Amybeth on Vimeo.

 

Have a great weekend. Peace