tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post7321451816677952058..comments2008-08-02T21:14:49.684-07:00Comments on Nicaragua Joel: What about them?Nicaragua Joelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06196323906126927178noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post-324898566461686862008-07-13T04:20:00.000-07:002008-07-13T04:20:00.000-07:00Maybe here's how we respond to the injustices we s...Maybe here's how we respond to the injustices we see:<BR/><BR/>Put the time and money into getting an education and degree that allows you to fight the injustices in this world and to change them instead of just whining about them and complaining about how good we have it here in the U.S.<BR/><BR/>I have a couple more thoughts and forgive the harshness, I feel very strongly about this:<BR/>"I keep hearing feed the poor, clothe the hungry, give shelter to those who don't have it. The bozos that say this don't recognize that capitalism and technology have done more to feed and clothe and shelter and heal people than all the charity and church programs in history. So they preach about it, and we are the ones doing it. They want to rob Peter to pay Paul, but they always forget that Peter is the one that is creating the wealth in the first place." (T.J. Rodgers)<BR/><BR/>"At the end of his discussion D'Souza--himself an immigrant from a poor nation--offers one last bit of wisdom to intellectuals in the West. He counsels that their alarm over affluence seems to many people on the outside almost comical, like strangely thankless whining:<BR/>'At a time when people in poor countries are trying desperately to better their condition, you cannot lecture them about the moral and social perils of affluence; they would surely think you were joking. It's not that they would disagree with you; they simply wouldn't know what you were talking about.'<BR/>Do Western thinkers truly mean to imply that the poor are really better off in conditions of non-affluence? For those seeking liberation from poverty for themselves and for their people, that indeed seems a strange and self-defeating premise to adopt." (The Good of Affluence)<BR/><BR/>The vast majority of Americans aren't Christians in the first place. How else should they spend their money but on themselves? <BR/><BR/>Instead of calling on America to change, we should be calling on ourselves and the Christians in this nation to change. After all, we are the ones who have grown up in such a blessed society AND we know the truth of Christ's gospel which gives us the call to live for something higher than ourselves.<BR/><BR/>So, let's work with this wealth that we have to get ourselves to a place in life where we have the ability, knowledge, and experience to help the poor both here and in other countries. Instead of laying in our beds complaining to God that He has given us too much, let's invest what He's given us so that we can help others instead of just talk about it.Livyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03067325429854114656noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post-60333750746190601872008-07-12T15:01:00.000-07:002008-07-12T15:01:00.000-07:00joel,first of all, i love hearing your stories and...joel,<BR/><BR/>first of all, i love hearing your stories and reading about what is on your heart.<BR/><BR/>secondly, i am on the same page as kerry. it's so hard to live in this society and not want, but at the same time it's so hard to see the injustice. how do we deal with it? what are we supposed to do? i feel for you seeing these things every day and struggling incessantly. but i can't wait to see you again and have nice long discussions about this kind of thing. i hope we can see each other soon. miss you!!<BR/><BR/>love,<BR/>amie :)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post-19176451268503675352008-07-12T07:02:00.000-07:002008-07-12T07:02:00.000-07:00P.S. And that is terrible about the church being ...P.S. And that is terrible about the church being right next to a family that doesn't have shoes. We have terribly missed the mark and must change.Livyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03067325429854114656noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post-73108703068979330802008-07-11T15:21:00.000-07:002008-07-11T15:21:00.000-07:00Hey Joel,You know, I've struggled a lot with think...Hey Joel,<BR/><BR/>You know, I've struggled a lot with thinking about my life here in the U.S. And honestly I don't know the answer to the question of how I'm supposed to live. Yes, America's rich, but we don't know how to reconcile that with a world that's predominantly poor. If we give money, it goes into the wrong hands and is wasted by government officials and if we give a week of our time to go to a country and give food and clothing to people our actions only create more problems because it makes those people dependent on foreign aid. There are no easy answers. I get really frustrated when people blame America's wealth for the world's problems. Without America's wealth, doctors, research centers, schools, economists, and whatever else, those foreign countries would be that much shorter of help for the poor. Capitalism is not the evil here. Yes, it creates problems, but it's an economic force that can't be stopped. We just need to work on figuring out how to help those who fall through the cracks and do our best not to abuse the weak. Capitalism is what even allows us to have the ability to worry about poorer countries because if it weren't for that, we'd be in the same boat as them. Most of the time, people with money have worked hard their whole lives and often give a lot of that money to charity. I have a hard time blaming them for having a nice house. I know North America has exploited Latin America quite a bit in our history, but when have the strong not exploited the weak? Evil exists in every government, and we'll never be rid of it. I think our answer is just to love each individual we come into contact with both here in the States and abroad. Like I said, I don't know what I'll end up doing with my life, but whether I stay here in the U.S. or start an orphanage somewhere halfway across the world, I think the important this is that I just love others and do what I can to help those who are hurting around me. I'm thankful you have the chance to be where you are and that God's challenging you and your American lifestyle (even if I sounded like I defended it, I don't like it, I just don't know how to live here in it).<BR/><BR/>"Too often our motives smack of paternalism (as do the words: downtrodden, underclass). I, the educated, wealthy American, reach out in compassion to help you improve yourself. We see ourselves as on the side of Christ by giving to the needy. The New Testament makes plain, however, that Jesus is on the side of the poor, and we serve best by elevating the downtrodden to the place of Jesus.<BR/>'I see the face of Jesus in disguise,' said Mother Teresa about the dying beggars she would invite into her home in Calcutta--'sometimes a most distressing disguise.' She, like Gandhi, understood that the direction of charity is not condescending, but rather ascending: in serving the weak and the poor, we are privileged to serve God himself." (Soul Survivor)Livyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03067325429854114656noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1824512352991706768.post-12699043799293982722008-07-10T10:16:00.000-07:002008-07-10T10:16:00.000-07:00Joel,I am so glad you left this post and here is w...Joel,<BR/><BR/>I am so glad you left this post and here is why:<BR/><BR/>Lately i have been hating myself. I have been struggling so hard with the realities of my life and how it is now, and how i want it to be. I find myself drifting farther and farther away from all the promises i made for myself. On the other end i am realizing now that i am out of college how easy we ahd it when we are there and i am feeling the weight of an unjust capitalist society. Rent, gas prices, clothes..i try to be content with what money i make and what i have and what i find myself wanting more and more as i assimilate back into the American way of life. Its hard to find a balance because yes the United States is unjust towards central america, but it hurts even more that it is unjust towards its own people as well.<BR/><BR/>Does that make any sense? The other day i saw a car drive by, a new lexus. The liscence plate said KIDZ DR. Im guessing he was a pediatrician. I saw his car and then i thought about the struggles millions of people have with even affording health care and i thought, this is the society i live in. I feel like i am so torn with where i am right now. I dont know what to do, if what i have planned for my life next is even worth it. Amigo, please be safe and come back to me. Im afraid you will have had too many experiences for me to be able to relate to you, but i know that you are a true friend and i can't wait to hear more about your journey. Te amo.Kerryhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01483039522032953306noreply@blogger.com