Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Captain Comeback--Major Applewhite and the Holiday Bowl, ten years ago tonight!

(San Diego CA) Dec. 28, 2001: Holiday Bowl-Texas 47, Washington 43

Master magician QB, Major Lee Applewhite, then a 23 year old senior at UT, engineers a thrilling comeback, showing once again his gritty heroics in the fourth quarter, leading the Longhorns to victory with 27 points in the final period.
The game was played before 60,548 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, but one very serious and very tired fan was listening on a small alarm/clock radio in Houston TX. My family and a large moving van spent the day on Branard Street, unloading lots of “stuff;” packing it all into a tiny rental house. Moving all day from Dallas, the driver gave me his business card confidently as he jumped up into the truck saying, “For when you decide to move back.” (I think he was a solid Dallas-boy?!) Well, we stayed! We've loved it...

Even though underdog Univ. of Washington held tightly to a 36-20 lead at the start of the 4th quarter, QB Applewhite, who now coaches for the Longhorns, led his offense to 4 last-frame touchdowns, the final thrust occurring with just 0:38 left on the fancy scoreboard, forever cementing his place in NCAA bowl history. It was his last game in burnt orange & white, assuring another top-ten finish for Texas in the BCS voting.

Exhausted by the time we put our 6-month old daughter down in her crib, we collapsed on our queen-mattress amidst the piled brown boxes. But I awakened later in the night, remembering the big game! Frantically searching for a radio, because the TV was not anywhere near an electrical outlet; I found a small alarm/clock radio and sitting with it in my lap, I listened to the miracle comeback. It turned into a Longhorn keepsake.

Simms versus Applewhite dominated the discussion that fall in Austin, the future coach as disparate from the future bust as could be. Always rooting for a redhead when I can, Major Applewhite burned a place in my memory unlike any other Longhorn legend.

A lot has happened during the decade that has slipped by without realizing it. During the ten-years elapsed, the family was given a boy to raise also, the Longhorns won a national championship led by another unique QB, the most popular Houston corporation is gone, and I am beginning a new career, in another business from that which caused me to move in the first place.

Hard to believe that on the tenth anniversary of that day, the Texas team with an historic RB coach, Major Applewhite, returns to the same field he dominated a decade earlier.

Starting another life in one of the most dynamic southern cities in the US, ten years ago tonight, Major Applewhite finished his fabulous career as a Texas player with one of the best comeback victories in the annals of UT sports. It was one of the most stirring radio broadcasts I have ever heard; I went to sleep happy that dark night in Houston! #hookem Major.

[Texas plays California tonight on ESPN in the Holiday Bowl. Longhorns are favored by 3 points.]

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Introducing Timeline -- a New Kind of Profile - YouTube

Introducing Timeline -- a New Kind of Profile - YouTube:

'via Blog this'
Who the heck is Andy Sparks? 

Whereas the old #fb might have been healthy narcissism-lite, within the next few weeks, whether you have the time to review whatever you have previously put on Facebook, you will be asked to change to a new feature. Timeline is what Facebook would have you believe is a beautiful, powerful, compelling, fulfilling, innovation that appears to me as really just narcissism with a capital N!

The Timeline interface is Facebook’s most radical change thus far, and should help differentiate Facebook from other social networking programs that hope to compete with it, such as Google®


photo credit: freefoto.com


Would you like your whole personal history laid out by month-by-month, all the way back to your birth, like Andy Sparks? I am not sure the traction my life has in the marketplace, but maybe Timeline will rev-up interest in the “new” slicker, packaged, Mark Pillsbury. But when are they going to make me do it? That is the important question!

If you voluntarily decide to switch to Timeline now, you’ll have (7) seven days to make changes to your profile before Facebook pushes it live onto the worldwide platform. You can make it public yourself anytime within the one-week period. These guys from Palo Alto don't mess around.

Timeline is like a digital scrapbook with OCD, collecting every detail, no matter how trivial, in chronological order; however businesses pay Facebook to feature posts and activity mentioning their brands within your timeline with priority, amounting to “product placement” in the movie of your life. That is how Facebook will generate stacks and stacks of advertising cheddar.

Trust me, the ads that currently pop-up over on the right are getting smarter because of this feature and Facebook is very powerful even though it seems to be free.

Let me know how you like it, friends: www.facebook.com/mark.pillsbury

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

What does Christmas mean?

Photo credit: ACTA

What does Christmas mean?

In a world where weakness is pitied, morality is what works, materialism grabs our attention, and the motive power for many is gaining just enough happiness to feel good; the story of Jesus Christ astounds with unlikely messages. For believers, it turns “strength” upside down, and causes assessment of modern thinking.

God himself steps off the multi-universe throne to inhabit a virgin’s womb, borne in a middle-eastern cow stall, with only a few witnesses; quickly travelling a great distance with his poor parents to avoid doom? The eternal Son of God took on humanity — two natures, one person; such an outrageous tale seems poorly written if it were merely a story.

The Lord Jesus Christ appears as a helpless baby; his final destination is destruction on a cross? Not a powerful metaphor for a coming King, but essential in the context and purpose of his life. He lived a perfect life of obedience because we cannot; he died as a ransom for our sins. I know it is presumptuous of me to characterize the Christmas story this way, but in the minds of many this season, passing by without concern, there is no need of absolution. The national Christmas tree at the Capitol has no ornaments about Jesus or Christmas; in some circles, He is not relevant.

Nevertheless, the baby’s birth in the tiny city of Bethlehem changed the course of world history. His life of service, humility, and righteousness was a glorious example of sacrificial love. Dismissing it as myth or impossible, is to lack the fidelity to Jesus necessary for belief in the whole Bible. Christians must face the fact that a denial of the virgin birth is a denial of Jesus as the Christ.

John Sartelle says, “In the incarnation, the creating Son came to redeem and restore His creation. His miracles were designed to prove His divine identity. With each miracle He was declaring, “So that you may know I am the eternal Son.” He made the blind to see, the paralyzed to walk, and the dead to live. His miracles also demonstrated His purpose to redeem and restore His creation. Everywhere the creator Son saw the effects of the fall on His creation, and He repaired the wounds and injuries, and pushed back the darkness.”

His entry is unconventional? His life not regal? Death at the hands of Romans tragic and untimely? Jesus came as the pure Lamb of God in order to be the sacrifice prophesied in the Old Testament, in a blatantly supernatural way. Indeed, the Christmas story is at the beginning of a long theological journey through the New Testament, leading to the passion of the cross. As unlikely as it seems, what starts on Christmas leads to Easter!

Immanuel, meaning God is one of us, was the real son of a real mother. The virgin birth is the starting point of the gospel. During this time of year, when so much of Christmas is shiny, glossy, new, liberal and modern; why not take some time to look back to historic Bethlehem, to an obscure little family ordered to return home for the census?

Incarnation is a big word, but it means that God decided to become one of his enemies, salvation coming through menial condescension; in other words, God decided to lower himself and enter into the lives of sinners, posers, liars, and the fallen human race. It seems bizarre?!

A little baby, born to walk a life of obedience toward the calling set out before him; agreeing with his Father that amazing grace would take an astounding work on the cross. Christmas is the beginning. It ends on hill with a crucifixion. That is the real meaning of Christmas, Charlie Brown.
As with every birth, every gift of life, there is hope! We don’t have to rely on our own works; Jesus did the work required to stand in our place. Why must a perfect man be convicted of sin he did not commit? Why Jesus makes the exchange for our sin, becoming man in an act of love and understanding? These are mysteries as perplexing as the virgin birth in Bethlehem. These are things to ponder as you look out into the dark winter sky.


©Mark H. Pillsbury


Saturday, December 17, 2011

Gingrich Is Inspiring—and Disturbing - WSJ.com

Gingrich Is Inspiring—and Disturbing - WSJ.com:

'via Blog this'

Penetrating, sobering, incisive, thoughtful, fascinating, creative, leading-edge, stimulating, charming, and talented political prose about the rise of GOP candidate Newt Gingrich by Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan.

She continually writes opinions that make me think long and hard about a topic. Thank you Peggy!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Scale - Google®

Scale - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

'via Blog this'

The Scale of Google®

how many search queries does Google® take per day?  A billion?

how much electricity does it consume?

how much storage capacity does it own?

how many streets have been photographed on Google®Earth?

how much private data is gathered by StreetView® cars as they photograph the world's streets?


how much G-mail does it store?

can one Google® answers to these questions?

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

In Canada, Royal Couple Comfort Cancer Patient with Only Weeks to Live - Urban Christian News

In Canada, Royal Couple Comfort Cancer Patient with Only Weeks to Live - Urban Christian News:

'via Blog this'

While the royal couple, William and Kate visited Canada in July 2011, they took the time to speak to an Ottawa man with terminal cancer, 47 year old Terry Joyce.


[From Canadian news reports:  It was a touching moment that reduced Mr. Joyce, who lives in the Bruyere Hospice, to tears. He said: “This has given me a tremendous lift. It goes to show that we have a wonderful monarchy and we really need people like this. I was told a week ago I would be meeting them and I have been looking forward to it ever since. It has been one of the best days of my life.”]

As we watched the report of this tonight on NBC, we were able to share with our children what happened to Princess Diana; but more importantly we told them that she was compassionate with people with AIDS and victims of land mine explosions, recovering in hospitals. We told them that even though she was dead, she would have been proud of her son's behavior in Canada, last July.

William took the time during an amazingly busy schedule in Canada to speak over 5 minutes personally with Terry Joyce, who later said it was "the best day of his life." Observing the video of how William asked Kate to come over to speak, and the gentle way they comforted Mr. Joyce as he sat in a wheelchair was the most remarkable part of the trip in my opinion. As much as Brits criticize their royals, it was a heartwarming show of love for a common (dying) Canadian. It was the perfect example of public relations, humility, and love of people. William and Kate seem like they were born for their duties.

We explained that everyone wants to be around royal couples, but the genuine love that comes when one human recognizes the terminal condition of someone else, and treats them with dignity and respect; transcends celebrity or fame. Whether royal or common, we explained, people love to associate with others who take notice of their plight, communicate honestly, and show a true regard for our shared lives as fellow humans.

I think Princess Diana took her sons with her to all the corners of the earth, often in dirty, uncomfortable situations, to inculcate them with a regard for all human beings whatever their circumstances. Compassionate leadership comes from an internal force of character, not a position in a royal family. Love for one's fellow man, or even "subjects," as in Canada, comes from identification of one's struggles, whether cancer, or losing a dear mother at a young age. This trip was a great start for the new royal couple, and they now have a fan in Texas. I can't wait to meet them someday!

Postscript: Terry Joyce passed away from Cancer in Ottawa, 52 days after being warmly greeted by the royal couple.

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Tebow top ten list

Sunday 12.11.2011:

I saw another Tebow miracle tonight, and at our house we can’t stop talking about this remarkable young man. But what makes him different than any other professional athlete interviewed at the end of the game?
What about his "persona" seems to lift the Broncos to a higher level of performance, if not at least in the fourth quarter?

What he lacks in pure skills he more than makes up with team leadership, confidence under pressure, humility in success, fierce competitiveness, and an other-worldly ability to rally the troops to not quit.


Watching Tebow interviewed after the victory (7th in a row, 5th coming from behind) over Chicago made me think that his interviews in postgame are very different than one normally sees. (My top ten list how, below)

10.  He seems shocked that he won again. Tebow claims the other guys on the offensive side of the ball make him look better than he really is. Really?!

9.  His smile starts the interview off with a disarming glow.

8.  He acknowledges the Lord Jesus Christ first, before he answers the initial question.

7.  Tebow’s overall attitude is one of sincere thankfulness, not "expectation."  He is evidence that God can make even weak men successful if that is God's will. (other examples: David, Joseph, Moses, Peter). But does God have anything at all to do with the NFL?

6.  After the first question, about 80% of viewers are uncomfortable, but is it because this sort of attitude is so unusual?!

5.  The other players are given credit, not his performance, even though the other players are not asked the questions.

4.  Tebow assumes that teamwork is the higher calling resulting in the success of the last 8 weeks, not his own role as the most important position on the field.

3.  He uses jargon like “belief” “faith” “special” “god bless you” “encouragement” “team” (these are words that most professional athletes do not use!)

2. “Christianity is like smoking," said Larry Taunton, "You can do it, but only in the designated areas. Don't bring it into the public arena.” (see #6 above)

But the number one reason the Tebow effect is so interesting:

1. People are praying for this young man. The power of prayer is subversive, anti-worldly, and mysteriously engaging. Thinking prayer is worthwhile takes faith, and watching the secular world blanch at Tebow is almost as much fun as watching his comebacks!

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Everyone Plays a Part


An automobile is merely a platform, or chassis; rolling on two axles, connected to the wheels. Tires move by efforts of an engine, and the compartment is surrounded by parts. Thousands of parts; all bolted, screwed, or glued together at natural divisions like the hood, doors, and trunk.


More than a bucket of bolts, this progressive symphony of mechanical pieces fueled by abundant petroleum is as fragile and complex as the humans it transports. This appliance dominates the landscape of Houston and courses through its network of roads like blood through arteries.


Driving is a metaphor for living: mechanism makes movement, transportation offers independence, speed begets time, structure shows status, roads give connectivity, and gasoline is the fuel for the journey.

Auto bodies project status as a mobile dwelling just like our homes; the sheet metal and shiny chrome an extension of the clothes we wear. Cell phones give personal connectivity the way cars take us from one opportunity to the next. Ubiquitous gasoline pumps are like grocery stores for our vehicles. Automobility impacts the economy like few other engines.

Over 20 million vehicles cruise the roadways in Texas, and it is estimated that 20% aren’t registered with the state. One in every four is a pick ‘em up truck, a Texas institution considering the state’s agricultural job base.

 
The automobile made me think about machines, which don’t generally come equipped with extra parts (except maybe a spare tire, but I digress). Machines arrive with the essential pieces working perfectly. If the world can be compared to machinery, then there are no “spare parts.” You are a unique part of the world, not an auxiliary piece the world can get-by without. Each of us is made by God for an important purpose. Nobody should believe that they are essentially worthless or unimportant.

Sometimes a part must be replaced or released, allowing additional pieces to plug into their role; often, there are complicated circumstances that require special components or people. However, the world runs largely because the steady, consistent, central, measured, necessary, crucial pieces of a system function reliably, day after day, year in, year out. This interconnected world rolls-on because the sum of all the parts. Each one executes their mission every day; no matter how small the role, everyone plays a part.

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Keni Thomas From the Road: The LOONNGGG Walk

Keni Thomas From the Road: The LOONNGGG Walk: It had been a looooonnng flight. I was happy to finally make it to the hotel where I could get something to eat and go to bed. So i sat do...

I understand that over half the population of the USA will travel next week for the Thanksgiving holiday, but Sgt. Keni Thomas really pours out his heart about being a road warrior in this blog post. I love a good storyteller, and Keni Thomas can really tell a story. Whether in Washington, DC, Mogadishu, Somalia or Nashville, TN he travels down the long road. God bless you Keni!

You can follow Keni on Twitter @Keni_Thomas
You can follow me on Twitter @markpills

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Timothy Anderson | Man Knocked to Ground at CTA Station After Giving Panhandler Money

Timothy Anderson | Man Knocked to Ground at CTA Station After Giving Panhandler Money:

'via Blog this'

Acts 3: 1-10

Translated into the modern version of the Message (©NavPress Publishing Group):

Scene: Just a regular day as if we were at a traffic light waiting for it to change:

Vv. 1-5 three o'clock one afternoon, Peter and John were on their way into the Temple for a prayer meeting. At the same time there was a man crippled from birth being carried up to the gate, for this was his regular place to beg (panhandler).

Every day he was set down at the Temple gate, the one named Beautiful, to beg from those going into the Temple. When he saw Peter and John about to enter the Temple, he asked for a handout. Peter, with John at his side, looked him straight in the eye and said, "Look here." He looked up, expecting to get something from them.”

Vv. 6-8 Peter said, "I don't have a nickel to my name, but what I do have, I give you: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk!" He grabbed him by the right hand and pulled him up. In an instant his feet and ankles became firm. He jumped to his feet and walked. Wow.

Vv. 8-10 The man went into the Temple with them, walking back and forth, dancing and praising God.

(Everybody there saw him walking around and praising God). They recognized him as the one who sat begging at the Temple's Gate called Beautiful, and rubbed their eyes, astonished, scarcely believing what they were seeing! This was a miracle, and it was done in the name of Jesus. This miracle occurred naturally as an expression of unmerited love in the name of Jesus, and Jesus received the glory.

Motivation—There is nothing wrong with asking for something from God, because his plan is sovereign; if God wants to bless you with a miracle, he fully has the power make it happen. We are weak vessels, and often the motivation for change is nothing more than “pain.” If we understand the mystical, meta-physical world of God around us, nothing is as it appears to be. Spiritual warfare exists all-around but we are unaware. We are the consistent, cynical, hardened beggar illustrated in Acts 3: 1-5. But we must look to God expectantly, as did the beggar.

Miracles are strictly a blessing from God, totally outside human power. The part we play is to ask in faith and believe in Jesus, allowing him to work through us. We must know as an article of faith that miracles are possible, and this requires that we rationally become a student of history.

Optimism—why should anyone be astonished by what God can do? Is he not powerful enough? Is there any order of difficulty for the God of the universe to ordain a miracle? Is it that we just don’t typically see miracles enough to be comfortable with them? Or is God just too stingy to give us any miracles? Faith is inextricably tied to optimism, because it is the assurance of things hoped for, and sometimes it includes asking in faith for miracles. If you have never experienced or refuse to believe in miracles, it is hard to escape the pessimism or cynicism which creeps in like smoke.

Attitude—Gandhi said that the force of spiritual truth is greater than any army, weapons of destruction, or political authority; and Butterfield wrote that prayer is a “subversive activity.” It involves “more or less an open act of defiance against any claim of ultimacy by the current regime. Concealed egotism is perhaps a greater cause of conflict, a greater source of political problems, than anything else on this globe.” He wrote. Prayer drags egotism out into the open, and begins to do something about it. Our holiness is both the opposite of and the antidote to the ego, according to Marianne Williamson. God rules, not the government. The attitude we have toward power structures and evildoers can be weak, compliant, and submissive; conversely, we can have the attitude that we will not be overcome and resistance is paramount. Prayer is a means by which this attitude of faith can work itself out in practice. Prayer is a force of spiritual truth.


Aptitude—Some organizations with which I have worked either for short or long times over the past 20 years. Living examples, as organizations, of assemblies blessed by God to be “miracle” groups whose growth and impact on the world are significant and unlikely in a short period of time (in no order):


Park Cities Presbyterian Church –large church in Dallas that set a goal to plant 100 churches and over a twenty year history surpassed their goals beyond their biggest plans. Also planted RUF college ministries, overseas missions, and a seminary. www.pcpc.org


Liberty Institute—legal defender for religious liberty fighting in courts all over the US, this small institute has been a part of dozens of landmark first amendment and religious liberty cases since 1997 when its director Kelly Shackelford started filing cases and drawing in volunteer lawyers for the cause of Christ, as Christians came under attack. Often outnumbered and outgunned, Kelly and his volunteers battle to protect freedoms and strengthen families all over the US. They win cases that no legal experts predict them to win!
www.freemarket.org


Houston Christian High School—in just 14 years it has become a preeminent college preparatory high school, a pacesetter in Christian education, and a growing destination for parents in Houston who want rigorous academics, leadership training, and a Christian environment. Growing from 200 students in 2000, to approximately 500 students today, HC was recently accredited by ISAS and invited to join the SPC for athletics. www.houstonchristian.org


HOPE International—HOPE was founded in 1997 with its President Peter Greer taking leadership in 2004 concentrating on its own distinctive poverty alleviation: microfinance provides small loans to poor people, it provides an intentional witness for Christ, a commitment to stewardship, helping alleviate poverty, and has shown a dedication to the hard places around the world. HOPE International believes that church-based programs are most effective when they simultaneously meet both spiritual and physical needs in a culturally appropriate manner. www.hopeinternational.org


©Mark H. Pillsbury

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Praying for young people and Revival

Every year at HC, the faculty and staff pray that God would revive us again; that the teachers would be facilitators of joy among the students, so that they might rejoice in God, draw near to God, seek his kingdom, and his righteousness. 

With all this prayed over, there is then a peace that all the things of the coming school year would be added to them as it progresses. Everything will work out fine. In August every year the train leaves the station and picks up speed as it roars to the graduation ceremony in May. There are nice “rest” stops along the way but so much is accomplished that a fatigue builds up due to the “labor” of the school year. We started out this year well, breaking in the new principal, hosting numerous events, football and volleyball games, a capital campaign moving "Forward in Faith," new athletic conference announced [“SPC”], recruiting next year’s freshman, and many other tasks. It is a busy place, but a hopeful place!

Pray for Revival

I recently heard a Yale professor David H. Gelernter speak about the possibility of religious revivial starting with our young people:

"The next great American religious revival will start, my guess is, on (high school or) college campuses —and it will start fairly soon. The need is great, for they are the driest timber I have ever come across. In a spiritually dried-out land where “careers” alone are holy, the thirst is acute. Mostly they know little or nothing about religion; little or nothing about Americanism. Mostly no one ever speaks to them about truth and beauty, or nobility or honor or greatness. They are empty--spiritually bone dry--because no one has ever bothered to give them anything spiritual that is worth having. Platitudes about diversity and tolerance and multiculturalism are thin gruel for intellectually growing young people."

Gelernter thinks that "someone will start preaching." 

Maybe it is an ordained pastor from RUF? (www.ruf.org) or a high school chaplain like Drew Zeiler?

Audiences will be small at first, but young people want to hear this message:

‘Forget your career and think about your family.
Forget your rights and think about your duties.
Forget your bank account and think about your country.
Forget yourself and think about your God.’...

"(S)omeday soon some sympathetic disciple of the founding fathers will compose the indispensable companion to our Bill of Rights...a Bill of Duties that conveys the exact same truths in terms of responsibility, instead of entitlement." (Gelernter continues...)

"Let the right person speak to them, and they will turn back to the Bible with an excitement and exhilaration that will shake the country. In reading the Bible they will feel as if they are going home--which is just what they will be doing. Nothing would do America more good than a biblical homecoming."  (David Gelernter)

At Houston Christian ["HC"] students are exposed to a biblical world and life view. Many are "un-churched" or merely "seekers" of the ways of Jesus. But at least they get to hear from this important book, see how other Christians live out their daily walks with Him. In addition to great Bible teachers at HC, they have access to peer-to-peer discipleship groups after school, if they want to talk about their questions and walk with fellow students as they grow in spiritual maturity. It is my hope that God will send out leaders from HC who will help other college students (even the ones at Yale, prof. Gelernter) to see there is a higher calling in life than just materialism, consumption, power, money and lust. I hope that they feel responsible for the next generation of American exceptionalism, and that God will be important in their lives. If this happens then all these things will be added unto us.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Rousseau and Obama

“Barack Obama presented himself early in the 2008 campaign as the man-of-the-earth candidate; the politician able and eager to speak to — and listen to — all sides.” –Bill Bishop in “The Big Sort,” (Houghton Mifflin Co. 2011). The American electorate had not fallen for a candidate as they did for Barack Obama, in a long time.


Benjamin Storey, assistant professor of political science at Furman University, wrote recently about the psychic phenomena of “admiration,” the capacity to be awed and moved by human beings we find impressive. Prof. Storey believes admiration is central to political life. Journal of Politics Vol. 73, No. 3 July 2011 Pp. 735-747. [This is an “academic” article but useful].

However, to Rousseau there was no such thing as a rational admiration:  “Society always romanticizes something, and idolaters of wealth, enlightenment, or power are no more immune to this passion than are the fanatical followers of prophets.”

Howard Univ. professor Brian Gilmore discussed Barack Obama as the new “American Rousseau” at Thurgood Marshall School of Law in 2009 in the first year of his presidency. Prof. Gilmore’s presentation was called American Rousseau: Barack Obama and the Social Contract. I attended this speech.

The Social Contract, is complex, yet systematic; outlining how a government exists in such a way that it protects the equality and character of its citizens, keeping in mind the balance between the supreme authority of the state and the rights of individual citizens. It is a social compact that protects society against factions and gross differences in wealth and privilege among its members. I will not try to delve deeply into that document, but Gilmore discussed it in the context of the Barack Obama movement of 2008.

With the election about a year away, these professors caused me to think about questions involving the President in light of the life and philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778):

Q: Is Barack Obama the idol of a generation, a new American Rousseau?

Q:  Did the 2008 presidential election illustrate political “messianism” in the electorate?

[at this point, Rousseau would have us ask the question: In our social and political lives, it is not whether we have heroes, but what kind of heroes we have?]

Q:  What kind of hero is Barack Obama?

From reading about Rousseau, I think Barack Obama’s presidency was born out of a romantic nationalism in which the special appeal of charismatic leadership dominated over rational analysis. This can be called admiration over observation.

Republican democracy requires that people pay attention and participate in public affairs. The intention of this post about Barack Obama is to allege that the electorate was blinded by the celebrity and charisma of his candidacy, not willing to thoroughly analyze his prior experience and record. 

My thought is that “admiration” for Barack Obama as the first legitimate presidential candidate-of-color contributed greatly to campaign success. Additionally, the mantra of hope and change became almost messianic for those swept up in this movement.

Rousseau understood the power of admiration for good or for evil, in fact he paints the tension between the “natural and the civil state” as great, but also sad:

“Fanaticism, although sanguinary and cruel, is nevertheless a grand and strong passion which elevates the heart of man, makes him despise death, and gives him a prodigious energy that need only be better directed to produce the most sublime virtues.” Rousseau believed that power and strength are an essential quality of those who can arouse it in others.

As a romanticist, Rousseau’s influence was profound.

“In human terms [a Romantic] prefers the unique individual to the average person, the free creative genius to the prudent person of good sense, the particular community or nation to humanity at large. Mentally, the Romantics prefer feeling to thought, more specifically emotion to calculation; imagination to literal common sense, intuition to intellect.”(Quinton 1996). This definition reminds me of Barack Obama. 

In numerous areas (ex, Obamacare legislation, debt crisis), this president’s policies illustrate how a “romantic democracy” imbued with the ethos of power and strength, lacking transparency, can slowly evolve into a “totalitarian democracy” as the balance shifts toward the supreme authority of the state. The administration uses brute force, passive aggression, and even guilt to influence legislation, often imploring legislators to just “trust him,” and vote for a his version of a bill, despite timing or length of the legislation. I believe the president relies on the fact that because many “admire” him, few will oppose him.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s portrait hung above Karl Marx's writing desk, maybe because Rousseau said, “those not willing to free themselves from their attachments would be ‘forced to be free’.”

To answer some of the questions raised here, I would say that Barack Obama was given American Idol status without singing a note. The 2008 election was a short period of romantic democracy, even political messianism; Barack Obama was the kind of hero people were looking for: Democrat, desirable, dashing, different, diverse, detached, deft, dapper, defiant, dynamic, deep, and dedicated to hope and change. I am not sure if the love will last, however.

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Radical by David Platt

Question posed on pp. 59-60 (Do we look to our own self-reliance, or do we recognize that our own good works and good intentions are flawed in such a way as to make things worse?) "On Our Knees"
http://books.google.com/books?id=lucPmT42h8cC&lpg=PP1&dq=radical%20david%20platt%20pdf&pg=PA59#v=onepage&q&f=false

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Inbound Cargo Ship at night (time-lapse) Port of Houston

Night Run III on Vimeo:

'via Blog this'

Houston is the busiest port in the US for ship traffic:
This time-lapse sequence takes three minutes but compresses three hours. Once the Panama Canal is widened, the ship traffic will only increase here.

Thanks to Louis Vest for posting/sharing!

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Herman Cain steps up attacks on Occupy Wall Street protests - latimes.com



quoted from the article: Nancy Pelosi and I agree on something:

Herman Cain steps up attacks on Occupy Wall Street protests - latimes.com: (Nancy Pelosi)"“I support the message to the establishment, whether it's Wall Street or the political establishment and the rest, that change has to happen,” she said “We cannot continue in a way that does not — that is not relevant to their lives. People are angry.”"

'via Blog this'

Hope and change must be relevant to the voter's life. 7 out of 10 Americans believe that the President has not handled the economy correctly and now Nancy Pelosi says that change "has to happen." I agree with her. The next general election is a great place to start.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Texas/Oklahoma football game in Dallas

TX/OU Red River Rivalry:
writing ©Mark H. Pillsbury

image credit: djbfootball blog

Introduction:
One of the biggest games of the year is coming up in college football this Saturday, between the University of Texas and the University of Oklahoma. In this storied series, the Longhorns have a record of 59-41-5 against the Sooners; however since 1945 the series is very close. The game is played in a sunken bowl in the middle of one of the largest fairgrounds in the country, on the second Saturday of the Texas State Fair. The Cotton Bowl is an icon of Dallas and the historic Fair Park complex.

image credit: Wm. Lile

Every year in Dallas Texas, as summer wanes and the State Fair gains momentum; there is a happy confluence of sound, smell, weather, excitement, and football. Over a hundred thousand revelers converge on the Cotton Bowl, which is surrounded by food vendors, Midway games, and the bright sunshine of a north Texas morning. The smell of diesel fumes, horse manure, and fried food wafts through the air, mingling with the sulfur residue from OU Ruf-Nek shotguns and UT Smokey's pre-game cannon shots. Attendees stand in massive lines for overpriced staples such as corny-dogs and cold domestic draft beer, often the best medicine for the preceding night’s alumni party. The Cotton Bowl seems like the Dallas version of a Roman Coliseum on this day; some faithfully make the pilgrimage every year.

Fair Park, circa 1960

Construction began on a stadium in Fair Park in 1930 on a site once occupied by a rickety wooden football stadium. Two Dallas-area high schools fought the first game in the new stadium in October 1930. Initially it held enough seats for 45,507 spectators, and in 1936, the name officially changed to the Cotton Bowl. This Mecca has grown and been renovated numerous times since its construction, setting a new record for attendance of 96,009 fans at the 2009 Oklahoma vs. Texas football game, known as the “Red River Shootout” or the “Red River Rivalry” if you agree to use the politically correct name. This rivalry sits at the top of the list of college football “mega-matchups,” always televised, sold-out, prognosticated, and reported by the media. The Cotton Bowl is almost equidistant from home fields in Austin TX or Norman OK, and before conference realignment, it amounted to a “bowl game” placed right in the middle of the regular season.

[In addition to the Red River Shootout, the Grambling State University Tigers and the Prairie View A&M University Panthers play each other at the Cotton Bowl in the “State Fair Classic,” the weekend before the Texas-OU rivalry game. Also a neutral site for both teams, the game is played at night and the atmosphere is completely different at Fair Park.]


The Ramp:
Walking down the Cotton Bowl ramp/tunnel as a player evokes strong memories; emotions and excitement which can’t adequately be described in words. This stage is for the best young football talent in the country squaring off in a stadium equally divided between the teams, right down the 50-yd. line. Before trash talk and thuggery between players in the tunnel occurred like a prearranged gang fight, the seats on the side surrounding the tunnel were always crimson and crème, a sea of Sooner fanatics. The Texas players got as much abuse from the Sooner faithful above them in the stands as they did from the opposing team.
image credit: NewsOK

The Texas fan base on the other side of the stadium always arrived at their seats a little later than the Sooner nation, their party style a bit more sophisticated, and showing up “fashionably late.” You can count on a few things from those Okies: they’d be there early, drunk, loud, and wearing crimson. Some players endure slashing tirades, hateful haranguing, and pitiful taunts from slightly above their journey down the tunnel. Wearing your head gear seemed reasonable because you never knew what would fly down out of the sky.

Locker room jitters are part of being a football player. An old warrior who played in the game said that Head Coach Darrell Royal told the men it was their time; to focus on what they worked on that week in Austin. He doesn’t remember the words exactly but when they were given the final OK by the TV Guy to leave the locker room and head down the short flight of steps to the top of the tunnel, he recalls vividly stepping out into a frenzied, surreal, confusing world of childish taunts and inverted "Hook ‘em" signs (among other finger signs) being hurled from the walkway above. The following eyewitness account comes from an old veteran’s war story, told in my own way:

“Stadium security personnel in cheap yellow windbreakers and dark-blue cops from the Dallas P.D. loiter along the tarp-covered gate behind us. I recognized two of the motorcycle cops who led the police escort through the streets of Dallas a couple of hours ago; an officer with a large helmet and aviator glasses smiles as he gives you a quick salute and a loyal "Hook ‘em Horns!" You return the salute and mouth a quick, "Thank you" to the cycle-jock standing by his police Harley.”

The players hold at the top of the ramp, one more interminable TV break before they swell down the opening and burst out on the field of green. There's no breeze ... it's hot.


Looking around the crazy world of the State Fair of Texas, strangely, above the chaos drifts the dull din of bus engines, motorcycles, and the screaming siren from a ride on the Midway accompanied by Billy Squire’s rockn’roll. Beyond the gate clicks candy wrapping machines in the Salt-Water Taffy booth. Across the walkway, someone steps out of a black limousine just outside the gate, quickly escorted by Texas DPS troopers through the gathering and hurried down the ramp. Must be the governor or a senator; or Willie Nelson.

The warriors can hardly see over the glare of the glistening white helmets shining in the harsh October sun. Almost obscured is the long orange “horns” in the middle and stretched numbers on the rear of the white hats. The weather hardly feels like fall on this weekend. In fact, it more likely resembles August, baking the players on the small concrete landing at the top of the tunnel.

image: Earl Campbell

The ticketless, orange-clad well-wishers behind the chain-link gate, trying to get a quick look or a fingershake from a player or coach are the only friendly voices you hear at this small enclave of the Cotton Bowl. This end of the stadium holds the Big Red one, Boomer Sooner; a clan boisterous and loud like sailors on shore-leave.

image credit: J H Jackson

"Get after 'em, Darrell!"

"Go Horns!"

"Anybody got a ticket?!"

"Can I have your chinstrap?"

“Players are taught to focus, look toward the light at the bottom of the tunnel. As we moved slowly downhill, wedged so tightly together our feet barely touch the ribbed, dirty concrete, we slowly floated down the ramp suspended among fellow teammates, moving like a herd of cattle. In the shade of the tunnel, beneath the stomping, screaming Sooner fans in the south end of the stadium, the cauldron subsides slightly, but I had trouble catching my breath. I couldn’t help but steal a glance at the opponents as they also assemble to move down the ramp on the opposite side. Even during pre-game warm-ups, looks are exchanged with all the misguided former high school teammates who wandered across the Red River.”


“Suddenly, and this instant sears into my mind, I clearly recall the crimson helmets with the white interlocked "OU" really piss me off at this point, emotion surges in the back of my throat. I feel like I might lose the steak and scrambled eggs I ate four hours ago in the quiet banquet room at the Hilton Inn on Mockingbird. I might puke on my teammate's back!”

“Instead I begin to yell out an unintelligible guttural sound. I feel better and other Longhorns join in, the sound reverberates in my helmet – ringing in my ears. My dry mouth sticky, chest pounding; all of a sudden, the uniform squeezes too tight, I feel enormous, I would love some Gatorade® right now; a huge ground swell of noise begins to engulf us we move closer to the light. Louder and louder. So glad I have this helmet on, not because you think one of those sloppy, jeering Okie rednecks will lob a corn dog, but the head piece makes me feel secure and impervious. I manage to reach my hand up and snap the chin strap tightly as we move into the sunlight at the bottom of the ramp. The swirling breeze on the floor of the stadium finally gets to the back of my neck and cools me slightly.”

Selmon dives for Akins

The roar echoes and reverberates around the base of the tunnel coming to a crescendo as the TV engineer holds the screaming, snarling warriors. This is the ultimate college contest, War Between the States; one of the oldest, fiercest rivalries in the game. Almost one hundred thousand people are here to enjoy the gladiators in battle, but millions are watching on television, often focusing closely through a lens on the fearful eyes of the boys engaged in this contest. It makes for great television! Only a few college football players will ever make this journey into the arena for such a matchless game. This day is now part of the history of the Texas/OU civil war, reenacted every October.
image credit: NewsOK

“The tears welled up in my eyes, and my throat choked up as my heart pounded out the rhythm of fear. Did the young soldiers landing on the beaches in Normandy feel the same physical symptoms that I do?”

“The players started cursing at the TV Guy to let them go, but he mumbled something about a baseball playoff game running long, and just hold up a little bit longer! You should’ve heard the stuff the players hurled back at him about what he could do with the baseball, they were instructing him about physically impossible tasks.”

The combatants surge forward, frenzied and frothing. "Coach Royal appears just to my left. He looks alone in his thoughts, jaw set against the task ahead of him this afternoon.

I wonder if he hears the taunts, “Traitor!” A fat, red-clad woman waves a crimson pom-pom in his face. If I could grab her straw-blonde hair and pull the skank down into this fracas, she would not last long. Her boyfriend yells, “Darrell, you ain’t sh#*!” Perturbed as we are at the delay, Coach Royal merely nods."


image credit: djbfootball blog

“Finally, the human dam breaks; TV Guy fends for himself. He might have been trampled; we don't really care by now. Smokey blows a huge cannon blast; its perfect smoke circle rises above the sweltering grass field. I imagine a football sailing right through the center of the white smoke circle emblazoned against the clear, blue Texas sky. The band blares "Texas Fight" at what seems like an impossibly fast tempo. Running out together for the last time here, my teammates are jumping all over each other at the other end of the field encircled by a sea of screaming orange-clad fans. My eyes swell with emotion, I am not alone feeling this way. The noise carries us into battle; the day culminates as we enter the Cotton Bowl, the game awaiting is an unknown. I will never feel such a release again; this is the best moment of the season, the highlight of my career at Texas. Hook ‘em Horns!”

©Mark H. Pillsbury

image credit: SI (1959)

[Game note: since 1945, considered the post-war era, one or both of the two teams have been ranked among the top 25 teams in the nation coming into 61 out of 66 games; the series is very close with Texas holding a three-win lead, 33-30-3 since 1945. This year the game will be played Oct. 6th in Dallas at 11:00am CDT and the Sooners are favored.]

Sunday, October 2, 2011

The Reason for God - Timothy Keller - Google Books

The Reason for God - Timothy Keller - Google Books:

'via Blog this'

(from page 168-169) Tim Keller points out what Jonathan Edwards wrote in The Nature of True Virtue, where Edwards argues how sin destroys the social fabric. He argues that human society is deeply fragmented when anything but God is our highest love:

If our highest goal in life is the good of our family, then Edwards says, we will tend to care less for other families.

If our highest goal is the good of our nation, tribe, or race, then we will tend to be racist or nationalistic.

If our ultimate goal in life is our own individual happiness, then we will put our own economic and power interests ahead of those of others.

Edwards concludes that only if God is our summum bonum, our ultimate good and life center, will we find our heart drawn out not only to people of all families, races and classes, but to the whole world in general.

It is hard to find a self-identity that doesn't lead to exclusion. The real culture war is taking place inside our own disordered hearts, wracked by inordinate desires for things that control us, that lead us to feel superior and exclude those without them, and fail to satisfy us even when we get them!

The Reason for God: belief in the age of skepticism
©Tim Keller 2008
Published by Dutton

Friday, September 23, 2011

Razor E200S Electric Scooters For Kids | Best Electric Scooters For Kids

Razor E200S Electric Scooters For Kids | Best Electric Scooters For Kids: (see video)
'via Blog this'
Have you ever wanted something so bad that it just eats away at your sensibility? I just had one of those lopsided arguments one can only have with an 8-year old who wants to ride the hooligan neighbor’s motorized razor. The male side of species will jettison all rationality and become strong and invincible at a moment’s notice (even at the moment of sight—there it is, I want it).

When I was about that age I wanted to ride dirt bikes. So, I get it. But when I have to fix the damage that stupid wreaks, that is another story. He just walked off in a huff; is it because he reluctantly understands that his wise daddy is really correct, or could it be that he thinks I have a baboon brain, and he really really wants to speed up and down our busy street on a 12mph scooter with no helmet?

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Follow Your Bliss (1989)

(Rstuazon/Cover/Youtube video) Follow Your Bliss (B-52's 1989)
http://youtu.be/I0Qpe2E_oSc

Her curves were so smooth; he loved the way she moaned when he pulled her. Flushing red as he held her, she was his most treasured possession. She was tight. He spent time with her every night, strumming her heart strings, following his bliss. Truth be told, he loved her more than his girlfriend. It had all the makings of a serious relationship: he kept her clean, well maintained, spent a lot of money on her, and loved to hear her talk in that slow southern drawl. More time he spent with her, the better he was. She made him feel like a player; it was a pleasure to show her off with his arm around her neck. This love reverberated, made him feel electric.

What you see here is a story of any American young man in love with a premium Fender Stratocaster red electric guitar. You can feel the musical affection by watching this young man follow his bliss with a song by the B-52’s from the rich, late 1980s. Keith Strickland arranged a funky-pop guitar lead for this song which even made its way onto the Weather Channel.

Strickland explained his songs, "I think of my instrumentals as soundscapes--the chord progressions, rhythms, harmonics and musical direction are used to evoke various sonic atmospheres or moods."
American Fender Stratocaster (candy apple red) electric guitar

©Mark H. Pillsbury

Friday, September 16, 2011

Reflections on Hurricane Ike

written September 16, 2008
©Mark H. Pillsbury

(Houston, TX) Aftermath of Hurricane Ike:


I watched Hurricane Ike come through the neighborhood from the comfort of a wing-back chair. Even though the storm windows on the front of the house performed flawlessly under heavy fire, the long night witnessing the storm’s destructive power was in retrospect, dangerous. However, the past few months have been times of both reflection and danger for me. Spending five lonely hours watching the eye-wall continue to pound our little street in Houston, I reflected on a stay in the hospital in 2007 wondering, “Why God brings difficulties into our lives?

John 15:2 Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.

During trials, God prunes us like a tree, even though at the time pruning seems painful, it allows one to become stronger and able to produce more in the long term: to be more fruitful for His purposes. The concept of spiritual discipline is not very popular, but it is apparent to me over the last year how God’s providence in pruning can lead to better living.

The process of getting in shape is slow and painful. By gradually losing weight and eating right, God transformed my body; I not only feel better but my long-term health is improved. Daily pruning off bad habits, over the course of a year, not only increased longevity but gave me a fresh outlook on life. Even more, my family did not just witness this blessing but participated in it. During this period of change it was apparent that God is a faithful, but pruning God; constant like a rock but allowing our world to evolve. He is a God of change and hope and new beginnings (as Paul wrote to Ephesus, “You can start living an entirely new life, as a person regenerated…”). The Gospel gives us the chance at new life in Him if we believe by faith alone.

"It takes courage to push yourself to places that you have never been before....to test your limits....to break through barriers. And the day came when the risk it took to remain tight inside the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom." –Anais Nin

Thoughts on my favorite tree

There is one tree in our front yard; a majestic southern live-oak tree that my old neighbor says grew from a solitary acorn. It was just me and my tree during that dark storm. Sheltered inside my house, I watched her fight with Ike all night long. The oak tree did gyrations and swayed in the wind, slapping, twisting and contorting in extremes I thought impossible to survive. At times the branches looked like strands of spaghetti, boiling in a pot, whirling like a dervish! However, after all the swaying subsided, there was only one branch hanging loosely from her limbs. There were many trees in our neighborhood with dozens of branches littering their yard, but not ours. If any neighbor could assess this tree like God can, in geological time, they would see it leap out of the ground and turn to the sun and spread its arms and bask in the joys of being an oak tree in Texas. (thanks, Marilynne Robinson).
"A dictator sees the truth as a matter or will; anything he says or dreams is the absolute truth and soon the people are forced to go along with him.
For the so-called democrat, the truth is the will of the people. Whatever the majority says is the law and that law becomes the truth for the people.
But for men like us, the only truth is the truth of the tree. All trees. Because the truth of the tree is its roots in the ground, and the wind blowing, and the rain falling. The sun is the tree's truth, and even if it is cut down his seed will scatter and those roots will once again take hold." --Tolstoy McGill

In the five years we have lived in our house we paid expert arborists to prune our lone live-oak twice. These were expensive and painful but all the unnecessary branches were taken away and the strength of the tree grew until she was ready when the real trial came. When light finally broke the horizon and the worst of Ike moved on, the large canopy drooped all the way down so her branches almost touched the ground. I never saw a living thing so tired from fighting, yet so proud to have survived. There was quite a scattered mess in our front yard, but the branches and limbs I cleaned up were not from the tree pruned, they were from trees not so well prepared.

Thoughts on the future of Houston

The city can take two paths during the aftermath. One is outward, blame-centered, and passive. The other is an active, self-sustaining, collaborative time of healing and growth over the next year, a chance at a new beginning. My hope is the city can focus on the priorities of its citizenry and prune away the petty arguments and wasteful bureaucracy hindering the execution of the city’s daily priorities. Many neighborhoods discovered unity after they were all leveled by the storm, living two weeks without power connected to their homes. The cooperative force of political leaders working together for provision of city services inspired the citizenry, and showed us the best purpose of government.


"The flight crowd is created by a threat. Everyone fleas; everyone is drawn along. The danger which threatens is the same for all. People flee together b/c it is best to flee that way. They feel the same excitement and energy of some increases the energy of others; people push each other along in the same direction. So long as they flee together they feel the danger is distributed..." --Elias Canetti (Crowds & Power 1960) [reminded me of *Hurricane Rita* when the whole city left and nothing happened]
Unlike New Orleans, this city has already rolled up its sleeves and started the entrepreneurial work that rebuilding and re-visioning requires. Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves, Houston begins the cleanup with the mindset that it could have been a lot worse; and we will patiently work until life is back to normal and the economic engines of this great city churn again. Like live-oak trees, all of us were severely pruned during Hurricane Ike, but this trial in the end will be thought of as a good thing. One day we will tell of how we rose out of the rubble and blossomed into a better place, one more fruitful for future generations.

If peace be in the heart,
The wildest storm is full of solemn beauty,
The midnight flash but shows the path of duty,
Each living creature tells some new and joyous story,
The very trees and stones all catch a ray of glory,
If peace be in the heart.

--Charles Francis Richardson