Guest guest Posted September 13, 2001 Report Share Posted September 13, 2001 Part 2 - " NHNE " <nhne " *NHNE Mailing List " <nhne > Thursday, September 13, 2001 5:01 AM [nhne] Part 2 of 2: The Attacks on NY & Washington > > > " News, > Inspiration, > & Consumer Protection > for Spiritual Seekers " > > ------------ > > NHNE: Part 2 of 2: The Attacks on NY & Washington > Thursday, September 13, 2001 > Current Members: 1569 > > ------------ > > To , send a blank email message to: > nhne- > > To , send a blank email message to: > nhne- > > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo > > CONTENTS: > > PART 2: > > 7. OTHER VOICES > > - Deepak Chopra > - Paul Von Ward > - Michael Moore > - Gary Zukav > - Sharif Abdullah > - Lama Surya Das > - Marianne Williamson > - Steve Hassan > - Doug Carmichael > - Jennifer Hadley > - Nicholas Longo > - 11 > - John Perry Barlow > - Chris Stout > - Mark Gerzon > - Halim Dunsky > - John Atlee > - Diana Morley > - Vicki Robin > - David La Chapelle > - Neale Donald Walsch > - Tom Atlee > - CarTheo > - Pennie Stasik O'Grady > > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo > > 7. OTHER VOICES: > > THE DEEPER WOUND > By Deepak Chopra > > [Thanks to John Steiner <steiner_king.] > > As fate would have it, I was leaving New York on a jet flight that took off > 45 minutes before the unthinkable happened. By the time we landed in > Detroit, chaos had broken out. When I grasped the fact that American > security had broken down so tragically, I couldn't respond at first. My wife > and son were also in the air on separate flights, one to Los Angeles, one to > San Diego. My body went absolutely rigid with fear. All I could think about > was their safety, and it took several hours before I found out that their > flights had been diverted and both were safe. > > Strangely, when the good news came, my body still felt that it had been hit > by a truck. Of its own accord it seemed to feel a far greater trauma that > reached out to the thousands who would not survive and the tens of thousands > who would survive only to live through months and years of hell. And I asked > myself, Why didn't I feel this way last week? Why didn't my body go stiff > during the bombing of Iraq or Bosnia? Around the world my horror and worry > are experienced every day. Mothers weep over horrendous loss, civilians are > bombed mercilessly, refugees are ripped from any sense of home or homeland. > Why did I not feel their anguish enough to call a halt to it? > > As we hear the calls for tightened American security and a fierce military > response to terrorism, it is obvious that none of us has any answers. > However, we feel compelled to ask some questions. > > Everything has a cause, so we have to ask, What was the root cause of this > evil? We must find out not superficially but at the deepest level. There is > no doubt that such evil is alive all around the world and is even > celebrated. > > Does this evil grow from the suffering and anguish felt by people we don't > know and therefore ignore? Have they lived in this condition for a long > time? > > One assumes that whoever did this attack feels implacable hatred for > America. Why were we selected to be the focus of suffering around the world? > > All this hatred and anguish seems to have religion at its basis. Isn't > something terribly wrong when jihads and wars develop in the name of God? > Isn't God invoked with hatred in Ireland, Sri Lanka, India, Pakistan, > Israel, Palestine, and even among the intolerant sects of America? > > Can any military response make the slightest difference in the underlying > cause? Is there not a deep wound at the heart of humanity? > > If there is a deep wound, doesn't it affect everyone? > > When generations of suffering respond with bombs, suicidal attacks, and > biological warfare, who first developed these weapons? Who sells them? Who > gave birth to the satanic technologies now being turned against us? > > If all of us are wounded, will revenge work? Will punishment in any form > toward anyone solve the wound or aggravate it? Will an eye for an eye, a > tooth for a tooth, and limb for a limb, leave us all blind, toothless and > crippled? > > Tribal warfare has been going on for two thousand years and has now been > magnified globally. Can tribal warfare be brought to an end? Is patriotism > and nationalism even relevant anymore, or is this another form of tribalism? > > What are you and I as persons going to do about what is happening? Can we > afford to let the deeper wound fester any longer? > > Everyone is calling this an attack on America, but is it not a rift in our > collective soul? Isn't this an attack on civilization from without that is > also from within? > > When we have secured our safety once more and cared for the wounded, after > the period of shock and mourning is over, it will be time for soul > searching. I only hope that these questions are confronted with the deepest > spiritual intent. None of us will feel safe again behind the shield of > military might and stockpiled arsenals. There can be no safety until the > root cause is faced. In this moment of shock I don't think anyone of us has > the answers. It is imperative that we pray and offer solace and help to each > other. But if you and I are having a single thought of violence or hatred > against anyone in the world at this moment, we are contributing to the > wounding of the world. > > ------------ > > THE DAY THE WORLD CHANGED > By Paul Von Ward > September 11, 2001 > > http:www.vonward.com > > [Thanks to Chester Hatstat.] > > Today is my birthday. When the phone began to ring, I thought it would be a > child or loved one calling with a happy birthday wish. The first calls were > from a sister, a loved one, a child and then friends. But the birthday > wishes took a far second place. I was breathlessly asked if I had heard the > World Trade Center and Pentagon had been bombed, by planes crashing into > them. Shocked, I turned on the TV as the callers, frightened and sobbing, > inquired if my son and ex-wife were safe in DC and if a former lover and > friend who worked in lower Manhattan was alright. > > I had no idea how to respond; I had been repainting a bathroom wall. Trying > to absorb the devastating news, I frantically started making calls. With no > success in New York or Washington. Circuits were jammed or the numbers were > busy. I had no idea of their fates, and was forced along with millions of > others to await the news of friends and relatives caught in the two separate > explosive and fiery maelstroms of death. > > My mind and limbs were like water. The cries and moans of the dying and > wounded reverberated throughout my cells. A part of my own being seemed to > perish with each soul's departure. While one part of me was fighting to > express its anger at the deaths and wounds of friends and former colleagues, > their names not yet known in both cities, another was feeling the anguish > and emptiness that their relatives will experience when they get the news. > > At the same time I felt a different sharpness cut through me, the source > being another form of soul pain -- the level of despair that causes one to > maim and kill a fellow human. My whole being was a microcosm of the > self-inflicted pain members of our species inflict on others. Why does the > human family live in such a way as to die the way so many of us have to do? > It was so clear to me that we were all parts of the same body, but it was > not clear to me why this body had turned on itself. > > All my adult life when I have mentioned my birthday, I have said I was born > along with World War II, as Hitler invaded Poland in September 1939 and > Britain and France had to declare war on Germany in the defense of the free > world. From that date the world changed forever. From now on my 62nd > birthday will mark another date of the world shifting directions. We have no > idea where it will end and what global society will be like when the > consequences of the principle of cause and effect work their way throughout > the human race. The direction it takes will be the legacy this generation > leaves to the next. > > We now must recognize that the world is one place, that all humans are one > family, that no country can be independent of others, and that when the > world is finally safe for one it will be safe for all. The academic > discussions of interdependence has now been made real; everyone in the world > is within two or three relationships of at least one person who lives or > works in New York City or Washington, DC. When some of us are harmed all of > us are hurt. The new direction the world takes must deal with this reality. > Conscious humans everywhere will work to keep this reality in our full > awareness. > > As we seek justice, as we seek understanding, as we seek revenge, as we seek > forgiveness, and as we seek the path to a better future, let us remember > that whatever we do consciously and energetically will come back to us > manyfold. As we do unto others, so we do unto ourselves. That which we reap > one day is the result of that which we have sown on a previous day. May we > be filled with love and compassion for all those who were wounded or died, > and for their famiiles, for giving us another opportunity to make a > different choice for our collective future than we have exercised in the > past. > > The calls are finally in; though shaken to the core by the horrors witnessed > or sensed, members of my extended family are physically safe. My heart goes > out to those whose homes tonight are left with places at the dinner table > that will never be filled again. But to the survivors are left the task to > make sure that those who did not survive did not die in vain. To honor them > we must strive to create a world in which justice and peace are the > birthright of all people, and in which the many are not left needy due to > the way some of us live. To be truly human we must rise above the emotions > that divide, accept our part of the responsibility for the whole and learn > from today how to create a better tomorrow. > > ------------ > > DEATH, DOWNTOWN > By Michael Moore <mmflint > Wednesday, September 12, 2001 > > I was supposed to fly today on the 4:30 PM American Airlines flight from LAX > to JFK. But tonight I find myself stuck in L.A. with an incredible range of > emotions over what has happened on the island where I work and live in New > York City. > > My wife and I spent the first hours of the day -- after being awakened by > phone calls from our parents at 6:40am PT -- trying to contact our daughter > at school in New York and our friend JoAnn who works near the World Trade > Center. I called JoAnn at her office. As someone picked up, the first tower > imploded, and the person answering the phone screamed and ran out, leaving > me no clue as to whether or not she or JoAnn would live. > > It was a sick, horrible, frightening day. > > On December 27, 1985 I found myself caught in the middle of a terrorist > incident at the Vienna airport -- which left 30 people dead, both there and > at the Rome airport. (The machine-gunning of passengers in each city was > timed to occur at the same moment.) > > I do not feel like discussing that event tonight because it still brings up > too much despair and confusion as to how and why I got to live. A fluke, a > mistake, a few feet on the tarmac, and I am still here -- there but for the > grace of. > > Safe. Secure. I'm an American, living in America. I like my illusions. I > walk through a metal detector, I put my carry-ons through an x-ray machine, > and I know all will be well. > > Here's a short list of my experiences lately with airport security: > > * At the Newark Airport, the plane is late at boarding everyone. The counter > can't find my seat. So I am told to just " go ahead and get on " -- without a > ticket! > > * At Detroit Metro Airport, I don't want to put the lunch I just bought at > the deli through the x-ray machine so, as I pass through the metal detector, > I hand the sack to the guard through the space between the detector and the > x-ray machine. I tell him " It's just a sandwich. " He believes me and doesn't > bother to check. The sack has gone through neither security device. > > * At LaGuardia in New York, I check a piece of luggage, but decide to catch > a later plane. The first plane leaves without me, but with my bag -- no one > knowing what is in it. > > * Back in Detroit, I take my time getting off the commuter plane. By the > time I have come down its stairs, the bus that takes the passengers to the > terminal has left -- without me. I am alone on the tarmac, free to wander > wherever I want. So I do. Eventually, I flag down a pick-up truck and an > airplane mechanic gives me a ride the rest of the way to the terminal. > > * I have brought knives, razors; and once, my traveling companion brought a > hammer and chisel. No one stopped us. > > Of course, I have gotten away with all of this because the airlines consider > my safety SO important, they pay rent-a-cops $5.75 an hour to make sure the > bad guys don't get on my plane. That is what my life is worth -- less than > the cost of an oil change. > > Too harsh, you say? Well, chew on this: a first-year pilot on American Eagle > (the commuter arm of American Airlines) receives around $15,000 a year in > annual pay. > > That's right -- $15,000 for the person who has your life in his hands. Until > recently, Continental Express paid a little over $13,000 a year. There was > one guy, an American Eagle pilot, who had four kids so he went down to the > welfare office and applied for food stamps -- and he was eligible! > > Someone on welfare is flying my plane? Is this for real? Yes, it is. > > So spare me the talk about all the precautions the airlines and the FAA is > making. They, like all businesses, are concerned about one thing -- the > bottom line and the profit margin. > > Four teams of 3-5 people were all able to penetrate airport security on the > same morning at 3 different airports and pull off this heinous act? My only > response is -- that's all? > > Well, the pundits are in full diarrhea mode, gushing on about the " terrorist > threat " and today's scariest dude on planet earth -- Osama bin Laden. Hey, > who knows, maybe he did it. But, something just doesn't add up. > > Am I being asked to believe that this guy who sleeps in a tent in a desert > has been training pilots to fly our most modern, sophisticated jumbo jets > with such pinpoint accuracy that they are able to hit these three targets > without anyone wondering why these planes were so far off path? > > Or am I being asked to believe that there were four religious/political > fanatics who JUST HAPPENED to be skilled airline pilots who JUST HAPPENED to > want to kill themselves today? > > Maybe you can find one jumbo jet pilot willing to die for the cause -- but > FOUR? Ok, maybe you can -- I don't know. > > What I do know is that all day long I have heard everything about this bin > Laden guy except this one fact -- WE created the monster known as Osama bin > Laden! > > Where did he go to terrorist school? At the CIA! > > Don't take my word for it -- I saw a piece on MSNBC last year that laid it > all out. When the Soviet Union occupied Afghanistan, the CIA trained him and > his buddies in how to commits acts of terrorism against the Soviet forces. > It worked! The Soviets turned and ran. Bin Laden was grateful for what we > taught him and thought it might be fun to use those same techniques against > us. > > We abhor terrorism -- unless we're the ones doing the terrorizing. > > We paid and trained and armed a group of terrorists in Nicaragua in the > 1980s who killed over 30,000 civilians. That was OUR work. You and me. > Thirty thousand murdered civilians and who the hell even remembers! > > We fund a lot of oppressive regimes that have killed a lot of innocent > people, and we never let the human suffering THAT causes to interrupt our > day one single bit. > > We have orphaned so many children, tens of thousands around the world, with > our taxpayer-funded terrorism (in Chile, in Vietnam, in Gaza, in Salvador) > that I suppose we shouldn't be too surprised when those orphans grow up and > are a little whacked in the head from the horror we have helped cause. > > Yet, our recent domestic terrorism bombings have not been conducted by a guy > from the desert but rather by our own citizens: a couple of ex-military guys > who hated the federal government. > > From the first minutes of today's events, I never heard that possibility > suggested. Why is that? > > Maybe it's because the A-rabs are much better foils. A key ingredient in > getting Americans whipped into a frenzy against a new enemy is the > all-important race card. It's much easier to get us to hate when the object > of our hatred doesn't look like us. > > Congressmen and Senators spent the day calling for more money for the > military; one Senator on CNN even said he didn't want to hear any more talk > about more money for education or health care -- we should have only one > priority: our self-defense. > > Will we ever get to the point that we realize we will be more secure when > the rest of the world isn't living in poverty so we can have nice running > shoes? > > In just 8 months, Bush gets the whole world back to hating us again. He > withdraws from the Kyoto agreement, walks us out of the Durban conference on > racism, insists on restarting the arms race -- you name it, and Baby Bush > has blown it all. > > The Senators and Congressmen tonight broke out in a spontaneous version of > " God Bless America. " They're not a bad group of singers! > > Yes, God, please do bless us. > > Many families have been devastated tonight. This just is not right. They did > not deserve to die. If someone did this to get back at Bush, then they did > so by killing thousands of people who DID NOT VOTE for him! Boston, New > York, DC, and the planes' destination of California -- these were places > that voted AGAINST Bush! > > Why kill them? Why kill anyone? Such insanity. > > Let's mourn, let's grieve, and when it's appropriate let's examine our > contribution to the unsafe world we live in. > > It doesn't have to be like this. > > ------------ > > COMPASSION OR REVENGE? > By Gary Zukav > > [Thanks to Diana Brock Makes <diana.] > > The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon are occasions of > great significance. They are opportunities for you to feel inside, to find > those parts of yourself that are in fear, and to make the decision to move > forward in your life without fear. That is the challenge for each individual > on this planet today. The pursuit of external power -- the ability to > manipulate and control -- creates only violence and destruction. The painful > events in New York and Washington are living examples of that reality. > > The causal chain that created this violence is one in which compassion and > wisdom are absent. Are wisdom and compassion present in you as you watch the > television, and read the papers? It is important to realize that you do not > know all that came to conclusion, or into karmic balance, as a result of > these events. Because you are not able to know all that can be known about > them, you are not in a position to judge them. > > When you are able to look at the events of the Earth School from this > perspective, you will see clearly the central importance of the role that > you play in it. That role is this: > > It is for you to decide what you will contribute to this world. Many will > be asking your opinion of these events. Each question is an opportunity for > you to contribute to the love that is in the world or to the fear that is in > the world. This is the same opportunity that presents itself to you at each > moment. > > If you hate those who hate, you become like them. You add to the violence > and the destructive energy that now fills our world. As you make the > decision to see with clarity and compassion, you will see that those who > committed these acts of violence were in extreme pain themselves, and that > they were fueled by the violent parts of ourselves -- the parts that judge > without mercy, strike in anger, and rejoice in the suffering of others. They > were our proxy representatives. If you can look with compassion upon those > who have suffered and those who have committed acts of cruelty alike, then > you will see that all are suffering. > > The remedy for suffering is not to inflict more suffering. > > This is an opportunity for a massive expression of compassion. It is also > an opportunity for a massive expression of revenge. Which world do you > intend to live in -- a world of revenge or a world of compassion? > > ------------ > > OUR WAR WITH " THE OTHER " > By Sharif Abdullah > > http://www.commonway.org > > [Thanks to John Steiner <steiner_king.] > > Prayers for the Departed; Compassion for the Injured: > First, I think all of us should take a break from the television and > radio broadcasts, light a candle and say a few prayers: > > First, for our friends, families, loved ones, business associates, > travel companions and others who have departed in these attacks -- our > prayers on the rest of their journey. > > Next, those of us who have been injured -- physically, mentally, > emotionally and spiritually -- our compassion and prayers for healing. > > For the rest of us -- hope that our compassion and understanding exceeds > our fear, our anger and our desire for revenge. > > > CHICKENS COMING HOME TO ROOST: > > There are some very, very angry people out there in the world. Part of > their anger is in not being heard. People who do not feel heard will do > ANYTHING to get one's attention. > > Some of those angry people live here in the US; some are in other parts > of the world. Some look and act just like you. > > In general, Americans have no idea that such anger exists. It's not > that people aren't screaming at you, its that you're programmed not to > see or hear them. Or, if you do hear them, you think they are saying > something other than " I am angry at you " . > > Or, you hear the anger yet ignore it -- these people can't possibly hurt > you in your middle-class, gated community, your gated lives. " We " feel > " protected " by our " security " . > > The US government has ignored these angry people, calling ANY attack > against the US or its interests " unprovoked " . > > The United States, directly and indirectly, supports violence throughout > the world. Denying it won't make this truth go away. We seem unable to > understand the anger of someone who had their village leveled by > American cruise missiles, or whose family was killed by a US-backed > government. Believe me, they are angry and they feel powerless. Anger > and powerlessness is the root of violence. > > > CULTURE AND CONSCIOUSNESS: > > A few years ago, when I was in the Sri Lanka war zone, we passed two > young men who were acting in a way that I believed was consistent with > Tamil Tiger attack spotters. I mentioned this to my Sinhalese > companion, who said, " That's impossible; those boys are Sinhalese. " I > asked him, " Is it possible for a Sinhala person to be in sympathy with > the Tigers? " He looked at me as though my head had jumped off my > shoulders and flew around the room. > > Like the Oklahoma City bombing, the first (and predominant) thought is > that the perpetrators are Islamic fundamentalists, America's favorite > " Other " . We are programmed to not hear or understand them. Americans > were in " shock " when the " foreign terrorist " turned out to be blue-eyed > Timothy McVeigh. > > Let's not rush to see " the Other " as in any way different from > yourself. The people who steered those planes aren't " crazy, cowardly > fanatics " . They are people whose spiritual emptiness and frustration > led them to commit these acts. Let's not think that their emptiness is > any different than our own. > > > FORGIVENESS AND WEAKNESS: > > We may find it difficult to forgive, because many of us equate > forgiveness with weakness. In the face of attack, we want to attack > back. We want to find the perpetrators and make them hurt, the way that > we are hurting. We believe its the only way we can relieve our pain. > > We have to find another way. > > Many of us have been talking about a change of consciousness. Many of > us think that it is THE OTHER who must change; it is THE OTHER who must > change their consciousness. They point to their favorite " Other " ; > people of different ethnicity, class or power status. > > It's not " the Other " who must change first -- its " us " . > > Beefing Security and Preventing Terrorism: > > There is no way to stop a coordinated suicide attack. I repeat: there > is NO WAY to stop a suicide attack. The suicide attackers in Sri Lanka, > in the Middle East, and now in the US have a way of making their point, > with ever increasing accuracy and deadliness. > > The ONLY way to prevent such an attack occurring in the future is to > de-fuse the attacker before the attack begins. We must work to remove > the ROOT CAUSES that drives the suicide attacker. Our intelligence must > be geared toward identification, understanding and transformation, not > technology and retribution. We clearly have the capacity to punish: so > far, that punishment has given us ever-escalating rounds of violence and > terror. We must generate a much greater capacity to transform " the > Other " . > > We cannot do this without the capacity to transform ourselves. > > ------------ > > DISARMING THE HEART > By Lama Surya Das > Wednesday, September 12, 2001 > > http://awakening.to/war.html > > [Thanks to Gary Gach.] > > Buddha said that hate is never overcome by hate; hatred is only overcome by > love. With today's tragic events we may be on the brink of an escalating war > in the Middle East. I think that we must look into our hearts and minds and > see what we -- individually, collectively, societally -- are doing to > alleviate or to perpetuate these problems, and how we might become part of > their eventual solution. I think an eye-for-an-eye retaliatory approach is > not the most measured response at this time. But do our leaders agree? > > Religion is supposed to further peace, happiness and harmony, not contribute > to hatred and prejudice, intolerance, bigotry, violence and war. Nonviolence > is the first precept of Buddhism, and a fundamental tenet of many world > religions; yet look what actually happens in the world, recently in the > Middle East and Bosnia, in Belfast and Sri Lanka, as well as throughout > history. Even here at home in America, guns in the schools and at home > continue to harm us. Violence both at home and abroad, even in our schools > and homes and neighborhoods, has come to the fore in our time as a major > focus of concern, but we have not made much progress in averting or dealing > with it. > > Martin Luther King said that we have two choices: to peacefully coexist, or > to destroy ourselves. Do you know how many countries in the world are > experiencing war right now? Dozens, literally; yet we remain for the most > part insulated from that terrible reality. Here in America we don't usually > feel as much first-hand evidence of the recent twentieth century's war death > toll, although we certainly did during the several wars of the twentieth > century. But I don't think that war begins outside somewhere, on a > battlefield, along some disputed border, or in a diplomatic conference room > or economic summit meeting; war begins with the cupidity, hatred, prejudice, > racism, ignorance and cruelty in the human heart. This is because the true > battlefield is the heart of man, as Dostoevsky says. If we want peace in the > world -- and I firmly believe that we all do -- we need to face this fact. > We must learn how to deal with anger and hatred, and to soften up and disarm > our own hearts, as well as work in larger contexts towards nuclear > disarmament and peace in our time. We need to think globally and act > locally, beginning with ourselves and each other -- at home, in the family, > as well as outside at work and in the community, reaching out more and more > in broad, all-embracing circles of collective caring and responsibility. > This is the path to a more peaceful future for all of us. > > Today is a time for prayer, reflection on what is most important in our > lives, and to think about what steps we might take towards nonviolence > within ourselves and our own lives as well as towards a more peaceful world. > I myself am thinking about what the Buddhist wisdom tells us about how to > deal with anger and hatred, grief and loss. > > What we experience today is a tragic event of monumental proportions, > comparable perhaps to Pearl Harbor. And yet, the fact that it hits us in the > heart of NY and Washington could remind us that it is the kind of thing that > happens during conflicts in other countries and their capitals, and which we > Americans have for the most part been mercifully insulated from. I'd like us > to reflect on that as we continue to pursue our national goals and policies, > realizing more and more deeply our connectedness with the peoples and > ongoing conflicts in other parts of the world. > > ------------ > > SPECIAL PRAYER REQUEST FOR THE ATTACK ON THE UNITED STATES > Marianne Williamson > Global Renaissance Alliance <Office > September 11, 2001 > > During this awful hour, we pray for those who lost their lives and the lives > of their loved ones in today's tragic attacks. May God's love and wisdom > prevail. Please, dear God, protect the people of the world. > > May the pain and sorrow that we feel today, and witness in others, be the > spiritual springboard for powerful prayers for peace. In each of us, there > lies a divine connection to a power more powerful than hate or violence. > Today is the day to attune to that power, and use it on behalf of peace on > earth. > > Join with others in your own family or community to allow the power of " two > or more gathered " to call down the miraculous elixir of a loving God. May we > not succumb to thoughts of violence and revenge today, but rather to > thoughts of mercy and compassion. Our God is a God of justice, and His > justice is rooted in love. " Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord " means that > God has His own way of righting wrongs, and they are not our ways. We are to > love our enemies, that they might be returned to their right minds. > > Dear God, > Please bring your Light > Into the darkened corners > Of our world today. > May Divine Love > Cast out all fear, > And peace prevail on earth. > Forgive us, > Oh God, > For our errors. > Forgive others for theirs, > As well. > Please help us, God. > Amen > > God bless you all. I am joined with you in prayer. > > ------------ > > TERRORISTS? CAUTION: RESIST JUMPING TO " EVIL " CONCLUSION > By Steve Hassan > Freedom of Mind Resource Center > September 11, 2001 > > http://www.freedomofmind.com/sep11_01.htm > > When trying to understand today's horrific events, it might be helpful to > understand cult psychology, " cult expert and author Steven Hassan says. > > " Members of terrorist organizations are in fact members of a destructive > mind control cult. The use of influence techniques to create a fanatic are > essentially the same. There are many similarities between the way people are > programmed in a cult which can result in an act of suicide bombing. Many > people while in a destructive cult, including myself, can tell you that we > were ready to die for the cause, if necessary. " > > How can a human being reign horrific death and destruction, as they have > today? Are they evil? > > This is a question people are likely to be asking themselves on this darkest > of days in most American people's lifetimes. > > " Thinking of the perpetrators merely as evil people may be a mistake, " says > Hassan, " as it is exactly that type of simplistic thinking that ultimately > can lead to this type of behavior. " > > " Part of the cult mentality is that people see things in terms of black and > white. Everything gets reduced to extremes belief of " good versus evil " and > " us versus them. " Cult members are indoctrinated to exercise strict blind > obedience to the charismatic figure atop the pyramid structure of their > group. They are in a form of trance. " > > " Basically it's mind control. The recruit is given a new identity (in the > diagnostic manual of the American Psychiatric Association, it is referred to > a Disassociative Disorder NOS 300.15). Destructive mind control cult members > often change names and take on a new language system; they have different > beliefs and usually different clothing. Reality is redefined: for instance > the Heaven's Gate followers didn't believe they were committing suicide, > they thought they were just leaving their vehicles behind and traveling to a > waiting spaceship. > > " Cult members believe that they are part of an elite few, that they are > chosen by God for a special purpose, that they will always be remembered as > heroes for what they have done. " > > Suicide bombers go through an intense indoctrination: they are put into a > coffin and buried, and told that they are dead already. Then they have no > choice but to follow the plan: they believe that they are already dead. > They're in a trance, confident of their redemption as they die, along with > all the victims of their actions. > > ------------ > > Doug Carmichael: > > The Mayor of New York says, " this was an unprovoked act against innocent > men women and children. " > > I write to use all means available to simply say, there is no cause > without a cause. The creation of terrorism must be understood and dealt > with at the root of what creates people whose lives are pained enough to > make this kind of move. Everything is provoked. We must understand the > deeper picture of human reality. > > ------------ > > Jennifer Hadley, Center for the Advancement of Nonviolence: > > " The price of freedom is constant alertnesss and the willingness to strike > back with Consciousness. " > > ------------ > > Nicholas Longo, CEO of CoffeeCup Software: > > This is Nicholas Longo, the CEO of CoffeeCup Software. As you may have heard > the World Trade Center and Pentagon were attacked about 45 minutes ago. > > The Team at CoffeeCup would like to send our heart felt sorrow to those that > perished in these attacks. > > We would like to also say on record that if any country is found responsible > for these attacks, we call for that country's complete destruction and > annihilation. > > Do not let terrorism which is designed to create fear and stop production, > halt your life or work. > > Stay focused and do not stop what you are doing. > > May God bless us all and the decisions we must make. > > ------------ > > 11 > Author unknown > > [Thanks to Raya.] > > The date of the attack: 9/11 - 9 + 1 + 1 = 11 > September 11th is the 254th day of the year: 2 + 5 + 4 = 11 > After September 11th there are 111 days left to the end of the year. > 119 is the area code to Iraq/Iran: 1 + 1 + 9 = 11 > Twin Towers - standing side by side, looks like the number 11 > The first plane to hit the towers was Flight 11 > State of New York: The 11 State added to the Union > New York City: 11 Letters > Afghanistan: 11 Letters > The Pentagon: 11 Letters > Ramzi Yousef: 11 Letters (convicted or orchestrating the attack on the WTC > in 1993) > Flight 11 - 92 on board: 9 + 2 = 11 > Flight 77 - 65 on board: 6 + 5 = 11 > > ------------ > > Posted on Dave Winer's Scripting News > > http://www.scripting.com/ > > [Thanks to John Steiner <steiner_king.] > > John Perry Barlow compares today's events to the burning of the Reichstag > that led to the Nazi takeover of the German government in 1933. He said in a > published email " Within a few hours, we will see beginning the most vigorous > efforts to end what remains of freedom in America. Those of who are willing > to sacrifice a little -- largely illusory -- safety in order to maintain our > faith in the original ideals of America will have to fight for those ideals > just as vigorously. " > > ------------ > > Posted on Dave Winer's Scripting News > > http://www.scripting.com/ > > Chris Stout: > > " Hate caused this disaster; more hate will not make it go away. " > > ------------ > > AN EMERGENCY CALL > By Mark Gerzon > September 11, 2001 > > [Thanks to " Halim Dunsky " <halim.] > > " After something like this, there will be a desire to strike back. What will > be hard for us, given our national psyche, is that we cannot. We don't know > who, or where, to strike. " > > -- General Norman Schwartzkopf > > How do we respond to this emergency call? Even our most renowned general > recognizes that we cannot strike back. We must find something to do with our > anger and our fear. > > We that many voices will call for increased military spending, massive new > investments in intelligence-gathering, and the creation of a domestic > security state. So it is important that of us whose work involves > alternatives to violence have an important challenge ahead of us. We must > find a way, an EFFECTIVE way, to make clear that a vital part of our > response must be to understand the sources of the rage against the > superpower we call home and to respond with wisdom. In addition to whatever > military and security measures are taken, we absolutely must reflect on why > we have become a target. > > In my view, there are three primary sources of rage. The first is because > much of the Muslim world believes that the United States is the enemy of > Islam. There are religious, geopolitical, and cultural reasons for this > hatred, all of which are intensified by the targeted assassination of > Palestinian leaders. But we can no longer afford to pretend that this > hatred results 100% from the ideological fanaticism of militant followers of > Islam. > > The second source is the widespread view of the United States as a symbol of > wealth and power, and hence the enemy of the poor and powerless. To what > degree this is true is obviously debatable, but what is beyond doubt is that > the perception runs deep and wide throughout much of the world, particularly > in the South. Yes, we are still a symbol of freedom and democracy, but we > cannot afford to let this historic role camouflage the fact that we are also > profoundly hated as a symbol of superpower arrogance and privilege. > > The third source of rage is more diffuse, but it relates directly to the > growing protests against the World Bank, IMF and WTO. As symbolized by a > series of actions in which we are the Lone Ranger (Kyoto accords, Durban > racism conference, etc), we are rapidly isolating ourselves from the world > around us. While on the one hand we are the most " international " global > nation on earth, we are on the other hand the most isolationist. Like the > World Bank, IMF and WTO, which we played a pivotal role in creating, we are > seen as orchestrating a world that suits our national interest, regardless > of the consequences on other nations. This view is increasingly common in > Europe, which is culturally closest to us. If that view can take hold there, > just imagine how much more strongly it can grip other parts of the world, > such as the Middle East, Africa and South Asia. > > Rage, of course, is no excuse for mass murder. What the terrorists did in > New York, Washington and Pennsylvania is itself an outrage. But now we, as a > people, have to choose. Just like the Serbs and Croats in the Balkans, the H > utus and Tutsies in Rwanda, and Tamils and Sinhalese in Sri Lanka, the > Indians and Pakistanis in Kashmir, and the Protestants and Catholics in > Ireland, WE HAVE TO CHOOSE WHAT KIND OF NATION WE WANT TO BE. > > Do we intensify the cycle of retaliation and revenge, or do we open > ourselves to the heart of the hatred? > > If, as the Dalai Lama has said, we have moved from a century of war to a > century of dialogue, then our choice is clear. On a scale never before > imaginable, we must know our enemy -- not forgive them; not excuse them; and > not appease them -- but KNOW them. We must know them in our hearts and > respond to them with a wisdom that passeth all understanding. > > ------------ > > Halim Dunsky: > > To Mark Gerzon's comments I would add a challenge to further our knowing > of ourselves: we must take up the painful question, How are the horrific > acts perpetrated today similar to acts -- fast and slow -- perpetrated > within recent memory and every day by the United States, other nations > with similar blindnesses, and transnational corporations? Can we come to > acknowledge our share of culpability in fostering the conditions that have > nurtured the rage and determination we saw today? > > Meeting the heart of the enemy means being willing to see ourselves. New > wisdom in response to a new understanding will demand that we change our > lives -- not in order to seek greater security, but to stand down from the > ongoing provocations for which we have been responsible. > > ------------ > > John Atlee: > > Real defense > > I'd like to see a national campaign for the US to donate a small part of > the proposed national missile defense to economic aid to the Palestinians. > > ------------ > > Diana Morley: > > I'd like to see us become independent of Middle Eastern sources of oil. > It's because of our commercial interests in the oil that we interfere > militarily. It's because of our attack on Iraq during the > Gulf War that Osama bin Laden initially turned against the U.S. (combined, > of course, with our lack of concern for Muslim victims of war, as in > Bosnia). Maybe the horrific suffering caused in yesterday's attacks will > help get our attention so that we might see conserving energy and seeking > out alternative sources, especially renewable sources, as a small price to > pay for freeing up our commercial and military interests. > > ------------ > > Vicki Robin: > > As I watched the World Trade Towers collapse this morning and as the shock > works its way through my body, I am aware that people everywhere will be > grappling with what this means. I encourage all of you to join me in > being aware in these next days and weeks of this meaning making activity, > knowing that how we understand this event governs how we will respond. > > If people recoil into fear, vengeance and scapegoating we are in for very > dark times. Our conversations right now make a big difference in whether > we as people, as a nation can grieve, search our souls, stay connected to > all that is good in us. If not, if we as people and as a nation seek to > relieve our pain through blame, then many, many people here who have > challenged the status quo will be hurt and the conviction that we must > live in a police state will not be far away. > > Please join me in compassionate conversation with as many people as > possible -- not instructing others in how to respond but in listening and > feeling together and discovering what our responses might be. May we use > the power of our words and our inquiry into the soul of " the other " to > heal. May we flood our streets with love rather than fear. > > Thank you for listening. > > ------------ > > TURNING POINT > By David La Chapelle <dlachape > September 11, 2001 > > I woke this morning after three days of increasing tension in my body... > > I woke knowing that I am not separate from the occurrences across this > planet... > > there are many lines of destiny that cross through our lives... > occasionally they join in a moment that cannot be denied. > > what I know this day > is that it is not good to be alone... > alone and dying in a street, or town, or tower, or in a town... > > violence is born of unbonded hearts > however that violence unfolds is the agony cry of loneliness... > > compassion in action is never more truly tested > than in times like these... > > understanding the whole out of which this particular has arisen > is as important as the gesture we make to those closest to us on this day, > and the gesture we make > is as important as the understanding of the whole... > > I see no easy answers > in a system that is weighted so largely by the forces of such pasts, > I have heard of a dream > > that we might know a better world... > > now would be a good time > to wake into that dream > in each action... > in each thought... > in each breath... > > attention is the sword that sharpens souls > in times when fear swirls and reaction is so easy grasp.... > > this turning point > has turned us, > who do we see now? > > this is what becomes truly interesting, > and the great affair of these times... > > who have we become? > and what is truly possible when the worst is imagined into being? > > if such fear can manifest > what of our most cherished hopes for this world and our lives? > > it is with this hope > near my heart > that I lay down to sleep tonight > I cannot repay such sacrifice with anything but a holy hope. > > ------------ > > DEAR FRIENDS AROUND THE WORLD > By Neale Donald Walsch > September 12, 2001 > > http://awakening.to/war.html > > The events of this day cause every thinking person to stop their daily > lives, whatever is going on in them, and to ponder deeply the larger > questions of life. We search again for not only the meaning of life, but the > purpose of our individual and collective experience as we have created > it-and we look earnestly for ways in which we might recreate ourselves anew > as a human species, so that we will never treat each other this way again. > > The hour has come for us to demonstrate at the highest level our most > extraordinary thought about Who We Really Are. > > There are two possible responses to what has occurred today. The first comes > from love, the second from fear. > > If we come from fear we may panic and do things-as individuals and as > nations-that could only cause further damage. If we come from love we will > find refuge and strength, even as we provide it to others. > > A central teaching of Conversations with God is: What you wish to > experience, provide for another. > > Look to see, now, what it is you wish to experience-in your own life, and in > the world. Then see if there is another for whom you may be the source of > that. > > - If you wish to experience peace, provide peace for another. > > - If you wish to know that you are safe, cause another to know that they > are safe. > > - If you wish to better understand seemingly incomprehensible things, help > another to better understand. > > - If you wish to heal your own sadness or anger, seek to heal the sadness > or anger of another. > > Those others are waiting for you now. They are looking to you for guidance, > for help, for courage, for strength, for understanding, and for assurance at > this hour. Most of all, they are looking to you for love. This is the moment > of your ministry. This is the time of teaching. What you teach at this time, > through your every word and action right now, will remain as indelible > lessons in the hearts and minds of those whose lives you touch, both now, > and for years to come. > > We will set the course for tomorrow, today. At this hour. In this moment. > > There is much we can do, but there is one thing we cannot do. We cannot > continue to co-create our lives together on this planet as we have in the > past. We cannot, except at our peril, ignore the events of this day, or > their implications. > > It is tempting at times like this to give in to rage. Anger is fear > announced, and rage is anger that is repressed, and then, when it is > released, that is often misdirected. Right now, anger is not inappropriate. > It is, in fact, natural -- and can be a blessing. If we use our anger about > this day not to pinpoint where the blame falls, but where the cause lies, we > can lead the way to healing. > > Let us seek not to pinpoint blame, but to pinpoint cause. > > Unless we take this time to look at the cause of our experience, we will > never remove ourselves from the experiences it creates. Instead, we will > forever live in fear of retribution from those within the human family who > feel aggrieved, and, likewise, seek retribution from them. So at this time > it is important for us to direct our anger toward the cause of our present > experience. And that is not necessarily individuals or groups who have > attacked others, but, rather, the reasons they have done so. Unless we look > at these reasons, we will never be able to eliminate these attacks. > > To me the reasons are clear. We have not learned the most basic human > lessons. We have not remembered the most basic human truths. We have not > understood the most basic spiritual wisdom. In short, we have not been > listening to God, and because we have not, we watch ourselves do ungodly > things. > > The message of Conversations with God is clear: we are all one. That is a > message the human race has largely ignored. Our separation mentality has > underscored all of our human creations. > > Our religions, our political structures, our economic systems, our > educational institutions, and our whole approach to life have been based on > the idea that we are separate from each other. This has caused us to inflict > all manner of injury, one upon the other. And this injury causes other > injury, for like begets like and negativity only breeds negativity. It is as > easy to understand as that. And so now let us pray that all of us in this > human family will find the courage and the strength to turn inward and to > ask a simple, soaring question: what would love do now? If we could love > even those who have attacked us, and seek to understand why they have done > so, what then would be our response? Yet if we meet negativity with > negativity, rage with rage, attack with attack, what then will be the > outcome? > > These are the questions that are placed before the human race today. They > are questions that we have failed to answer for thousands of years. Failure > to answer them now could eliminate the need to answer them at all. We should > make no mistake about this. The human race has the power to annihilate > itself. We can end life as we know it on this planet in one afternoon. > > This is the first time in human history that we have been able to say this. > > And so now we must direct our attention to the questions that such power > places before us. And we must answer these questions from a spiritual > perspective, not a political perspective, and not an economic perspective. > > We must have our own conversation with God, for only the grandest wisdom and > the grandest truth can address the greatest problems, and we are now facing > the greatest problems and the greatest challenges in the history of our > species. It is not as if we have not seen this coming. Every spiritual, > political, and philosophical writer of the past 50 years has predicted it. > So long as we continue to treat each other as we have done on this planet, > the circumstance that we face on this day will continue to present itself. > > The difference is that now our technology makes our anger much more > dangerous. In the early days of our civilization, we were able to inflict > hurt upon each other using sticks and rocks and primitive weapons. Then, as > our technology grew, it became possible for clans to war against clans and, > ultimately, for nations to war against nations. > > But even then, until most recent times, it was not possible for us to > annihilate each other completely. We could destroy a village, or a town, or > a major city, or even an entire nation, but only now is it possible for us > to destroy our whole world so fast that nothing can stop it once the process > has begun. > > That is what makes this point in our history different from any other. And > that is what makes this call for each of us to have our own conversation > with God so appropriate and so important. > > If we want the beauty of the world that we have co-created to be experienced > by our children and our children's children, we will have to become > spiritual activists right here, right now, and cause that to happen. We must > choose to be at cause in the matter. > > So, talk with God today. Ask God for help, for counsel and advice, for > insight and for strength and for inner peace and for deep wisdom. Ask God on > this day to show us how to show up in the world in a way that will cause the > world itself to change. > > That is the challenge that is placed before every thinking person today. > > Today the human soul asks the question: What can I do to preserve the beauty > and the wonder of our world and to eliminate the anger and hatred-and the > disparity that inevitably causes it -- in that part of the world which I > touch? > > Please seek to answer that question today, with all the magnificence that is > You. > > I love you, and I send you my deepest thoughts of peace. > > ------------ > > WHAT SHOULD WE DO IN THIS CRISIS? > By Tom Atlee <cii > Tuesday, September 11, 2001 > > " What should we do? " Elliot was calling from work, having just heard about > this morning's attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. We are > housemates in a 9-person collective house into which I moved a month ago. > > My partner Karen, my daughter Jennifer, Adin (another housemate) and I had > been talking about the crisis for over an hour. We wondered about Elliot's > question. One thing we could do was write to you -- my list of 800 people > -- who have so many important connections into the world. But what should > we say? > > We thought of sharing a lesson we'd all agreed on: " We can't be secure > when we are doing so many things that lead people to hate us. " We wondered > about saying more. We looked at the role of greed, and then at how greed > was just one form of power-hunger, and how power-hunger derives from > insecurity which, in turn, arises from disconnection from other people and > life. People don't exploit, neglect or terrorize things they love and > vibrantly relate to. > > But, one of us said, there's more than individual motivations at work > here. The systems we live in and use -- the social, economic, political, > and other systems -- support greed, power-hunger, insecurity and alienation > in thousands of subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Someone else commented that > the systemic and the individual dynamics feed back into each other. > Another person suggested there are many positive initiatives that could > change both the system and the individual behaviors. I suggested evidence > that -- right now -- the world has the resources and know-how to create a > just and sustainable world that works for all, but they just aren't being > used for that. > > As we explored all this, we noticed that our individual contributions were > painting an ever-fuller, richer picture of what was going on and how to > understand it. We decided that this situation has so many facets that > high-quality reflection and dialogue -- thoughtful exploration among > diverse perspectives, such as we were doing -- may be the ONLY way to > comprehend and creatively address incidents as profoundly important as > these. In the absence of dialogue and reflection, we oversimplify. All of > us do. We blame an enemy -- perhaps terrorists or " the system " -- or we > focus on one small part of the web of causation -- perhaps " greed " or > " revenge " or something else that we particularly understand. > > But the significance of this realization reaches beyond today's attack on > the World Trade Center and the Pentagon: This horrible incident is but one > in an ongoing chain of incidents of profound social significance. Each one > is an opportunity to think, to feel and to talk -- to deepen and learn -- > so that we can act more effectively and wisely, both individually and > collectively. We saw that hope lies in the kind of " learning together " > that generates engaged wisdom -- rather than in the kind of reactivity that > supports our weakest and worst responses. > > This isn't the first crisis to hit our society. And it definitely won't be > the last. We all know that crises like this can evoke the worst --or the > best -- in ordinary folks, in leaders, and in whole societies. What can we > do to help the best, the wisest and most useful responses emerge? > > Usually in crisis most people watch the news and wait like spectators to > see what various leaders and governments will do, as if the drama were a > football game. Meanwhile, those leaders and governments are caught up in > dynamics which -- to say the least -- do not enhance their wisdom. More > often than not, their actions -- and our spectatorism -- lead us all into > even worse problems. > > To change that, we need widespread, healthy conversations that generate > deeper insight and the kind of creative engagement that makes a difference > in the world. Ultimately, we need to make such conversations part of the > structure of our culture -- especially of our political and governmental > systems (see www.co-intelligence.org/CIPol_Index.html and > www.democracyinnovations.org). > > But today we can find people we trust and care about, and gather in > circles, speaking and listening from our hearts. We can listen well to > those who disagree with us, and ask questions that deepen shared > understanding. And, for the long haul, we can advocate the " infrastructure > of dialogue " that our democracy so sorely needs -- places we can go for > high quality public conversation, publicly available facilitators and > technology, and diverse citizen councils who explore important issues with > high quality dialogue in full public view, whose findings and > recommendations have a real impact on public policy and public activity. > > We find ourselves in a moment of great danger. It contains seeds of great > opportunity. Let us each do what we can to promote healthy dialogue that > motivates wise action at all levels of our society. That one change would > change everything else: With each successive crisis, we would find > ourselves moving away from ultimate Disaster towards a world that works for > all, a world that is actually a joy to live in. > > ------------ > > QUESTIONS FOR DIALOGUE ABOUT 9/11/01 > Tom Atlee <cii writes: > Wednesday, September 12, 2001 > > Dear friends, > > I offer these questions -- formulated today with my daughter Jennifer -- as > a resource for those of you wishing to organize conversations around the > current crisis. > > Use whatever conversational process and venue you are most comfortable > with. If you would like a suggestion, gather 2-20 people for a listening > circle (aka talking circle or council, ref > <http://www.co-intelligence.org/P-listeningcircles.html>). You can do it > at home, at work, at your place of worship, in a library room, wherever. > > Read over the list of questions below. Add any others that come to you, > avoiding leading questions and questions that invite simple, shallow > answers (e.g., yes or no). Pick one or more questions and have people > speak from their hearts about it. > > To choose questions, you might place your own favorite dozen questions in a > hat, then have a participant pick 1-3 questions out of the hat, which > everyone then speaks to. Or put up a list of a dozen or so and take 5-10 > minutes with the group brainstorming some other questions that interest > them. Then have each person choose their favorite half of the list (e.g., > their favorite ten out of a list of 20). Pick the question with the top > votes, and have everyone speak to that. > > Or do something else. Feel free to use these questions in any way you > wish, including for your own reflection or to ask your friends and family. > > I hope they prove useful for you. > > ........... > > INQUIRIES ARISING FROM THE CRISIS OF SEPTEMBER 11th > > - What could lead someone to do something like this? > > - What might we do differently so that fewer people hate Americans? > > - What response would move us to a world in which this kind of thing > wouldn't occur? > > - How well do revenge and punishment serve us? > > - How can the media be most helpful in these times? > > - What constitutes real safety and security? > > - What is the worst response we could have in this crisis? > > - How do we deal with personal and communal suffering? > > - What ways of dealing with our emotions serve us or make things worse? > > - What can we learn from this? What are the most important lessons? > > - What is the place of anger in this situation? > > - What are you feeling in your body right now? > > - What could have prevented this?...what else?...what else?... > > - What consequences would result from each of those actions? > > - What good could come of all this? > > - What are you most scared of right now? > > - What is most important to you right now? > > - What would be the advantages or disadvantages of waiting until all the > evidence was in before deciding who did it and how to respond? > > - How should we relate to people who applaud this act -- what difference > would it make? > > - How does our society deal with trauma? What would help our society deal > better with trauma? > > - What do we need our leaders to do? To what extent are they doing that? > > - How can we effectively communicate with our leaders? > > - What would we be feeling if it were proven that this was done by a white > US citizen? > > - What would we be feeling if this were done to another country by an ally > of ours? Has anything like that ever happened? > > - What would have to change for there to be no terrorism? > > - To what extent are we responding in automatic ways or in conscious, > creative ways? How do we feel about that? > > - What outcomes of this could make you feel it has been worth it? > > - To what extent do you trust what the government and/or media has been > saying about this? > > - Who do you know that was directly effected by this? What is your > relationship to those people? How has their story affected you? > > - What is the relationship between business as usual and crises like this? > > - If you were the ruler of the world, how would you handle this problem? > > - What does this mean for our everyday lives? > > - What can one person do about this? What can people do together? > > - What changes in the system would help us? > > - How should we talk with children about this? > > - What responses to this have you heard that upset you or inspired you? > > --Where do you think those perspectives come from? > > - What does all this mean about our future? > > - What does this mean about who we are as human beings? > > - What does this mean about who we are as a society? > > - What other questions need to be asked? > > - What would have to happen for people's responses to these questions to > make a real difference in the world? > > ------------ > > From <CarTheo: > > My fantasy is that in a speech to the nation President Bush will say, " No we > are not going to retaliate. We want all violence to stop. Let it begin with > us. I call upon all corporations to stop making weapons of war. I call upon > Congress to make their manufacture illegal, and to find ways to help weapons > industries transfer to other products. I call upon all nations to stop the > trading of weapons across their borders. I also call upon all nations to > join in a universal covenant to disarm -- not only our own national arsenals > but those of any violent groups within our borders, acknowledging, finally, > that there are better ways to settle disputes than by the killing and > maiming of innocent men, women and children -- and to now turn our attention > to saving our planet from ecological disaster. " > > ------------ > > Pennie Stasik O'Grady <pennielink: > > I see a world looking back on Sept 11, 2001 as the turning point which > transformed America and its decision making on international policy to one > of careful consideration of the needs of ALL people in the world -- and all > life on this planet. I see an America remembering with full awareness and > regret its former status as a Most Feared Nation. And I see an America > relieved and grateful for the lessons learned and wisdom gained through this > most tragic expression of unmet needs. > > ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo > > NHNE MISSION STATEMENT, CREDITS & CONTACT INFORMATION > > The mission of NewHeavenNewEarth (NHNE) is to answer humankind's oldest, > most perplexing questions: Who are we? Where are we from? What is the origin > and purpose of life? Instead of relying on ancient or contemporary wisdom, > or the knowledge of isolated experts, we are building a global network of > seekers from all walks of life, from all parts of the world, lay people and > professionals alike, that can pool talents, experience, and resources to > unravel life's great mysteries. > > We also believe that our planet is passing through a time of profound change > and are seeking to create a global community of like-minded people that can > safely pass through whatever changes may come our way and help give birth to > a new way of life on our planet. > > ------------ > > David Sunfellow, Founder & Publisher > NewHeavenNewEarth (NHNE) > a 501©3 non-profit organization > P.O. Box 2242 > Sedona, AZ USA 86339 > > eMail: nhne > NHNE Website: http://www.nhne.com/ > Phone: (928) 282-6120 > Fax: (815) 346-1492 > > Subscribe NHNE Mailing List: > send a blank message to <nhne-> > > Review Current NHNE Mailing List Posts: > nhne/messages/ > > Appreciate what we are doing? > You can say so with a tax-deductible donation: > http://www.nhne.com/main/donations.html > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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