Monthly Archives: November 2016

The Moral Dimension of The Election

The election is nearly upon us and while there are scores of policy and practical positions to influence a person’s perception of the candidates I think it is paramount to consider the moral dimension of this cycle’s choice.

 

I believe in human freedom, liberty, and equality. My application of these principles to specifics has, in the past and I am sure will continue in the future, irritated friends and strangers on both the left and the right. So be it. For my self-regard I have to apply the principles as I see them.

 

Donald Trump is not a proponent of freedom. He strikes me as a man more concerned with power than liberty, unless it is his own.

 

In 1989 students in Communist China gather in Tiananmen Square to protest for democracy and liberty. The Communists dictators sent in the military and slaughtered the peaceful protesters.

Donald Trump thinks the massacre was a sign of strength.

Donald Trump advocates for the USA to commit war crimes and torture.

 

Here is an iconic image of one brave man facing down the Communist tanks en route to Tiananmen Square. To vote for and endorse the candidacy of Donald Trump is to side with the tanks.

Photo Credit: AP Jeff Widener

Photo Credit: AP Jeff Widener

That I cannot do.

 

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Don’t Do Mix-and-Match Mythologies

1995 gave us the film The Prophecy, a rather forgettable horror film about the war of the angels coming to Earth as angels battle and search for the most evil soul born to humanity. The film had few redeeming qualities, and both of those were name Christopher Walken and the angel Gabriel and Viggo Mortensen as Lucifer. In the climax of the film the heroes turn to a Native American shaman to save the day.

This really bugs me.

I have nothing against anyone’s religious beliefs. Personally I hold that all religions look whacky from the outside. If yo want to craft a story around a religion and its mythos, go ahead. I love The Exorcist but I am in no stretch of the imagination either Catholic or Christian, doesn’t mean I can’t accept the ‘world-building’ for the lack of a better term to allow myself to submerge into the story. To me it is no different than accepting the ‘truth’ of the Force while you watch a Star Wars movie.

What bothers me is when you do a grab bag of mythologies, or ignore the clear implications of what you are putting down on paper or up on the screen.

If the Christian world-myth is true to the point where angels are moving amongst us calling humanity ‘talking monkey’ and are jealous of God particular love for us then that means the other religions are wrong, mere myth and superstition. Bringing in other magic to save the day is simply dodging the real story consequences of the choice you made in setting up the world.

Let me give you another example: Buffy The Vampire Slayer.

In the pilot episode Gliles, as exposition man, explained that ‘contrary to myth this world did not start out a paradise.’ The bible and its creation myth are false. Demons were here naturally from the start. Okay I can buy that, but why do crosses repel vampires?

Oh I see you in the back waving your hand in the air all ready to quote ‘Fright Night’ that is it about the faith of the person holding the cross. In the story Willow Rosenberg is at best an atheistic Jew and later she becomes a pagan, but hey that cross works just fine. Oh it’s the faith of the vampire now? You mean the faith of the demon that know the truth of creation, or the person corpse the demon is possessing? So a vampire sired from an Hindu would flee from a cross or not?

The fact is that vampire lore, coming from the Victorians, have them repelled by crosses and so did Joss, but the Victorians took Christianity as a given and Joss rejected it in his world-building.

I say if you are going to accept the cross’s action then you need to put on your grown up writer clothes and accept the rest of it as well. The same is true for whatever real-world myth or religion that forms the factual basis for your fiction. You need to know it and own it, but please do not treat the world’s religions as a buffet.

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NaNoWriMo and Me

For those not in the know NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writing Month and it started today November 1. It runs through the 30th and the people participating are attempting to write 50,000 during those 30 days.

Now that sounds like a lot and it is, but it is a doable goal with dedication and the willingness to chain your inner editor in the basement and let the words flow unimpeded. I have a number of writing friends taking part and I hope each and every one of them wins, hitting and exceeding their goal.

I am not taking part. I tried it once several years ago and it did not agree with my style of writing. That’s not to say it is bad, anything that gets the words on paper is generally a good thing. For me it really comes down to two things.

1) I have already gotten my self-discipline down where I can produce as needed. I have just finished my 8th novel and frankly it wasn’t hard. It has been more than 10 years since I started a novel without completing it. (That doesn’t mean the novels written in those ten years were all good. They weren’t, but they were all finished.)

2) My day-job hits it insane busy period right now. Luckily it is not retail sales who are also starting to see more and more work. (Hopefully) This is when the most applications come to my company and for me that means 10 hours a day 4 or 5 days a week and often half days on Saturday.

No tears. I get paid well and I am very happy doing it. But I am also happy that I finished my latest novel a few weeks ago and I have no writing pressure on me.

So good luck to those flying at the keyboards, I salute you.

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