Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Civil Rights is more than African Americans Rights

I am a native North Carolinian, the state where my roots are intrinsically linked, passed a Republican lead ballot initiative to Ban same sex marriage that will allow voters to vote on it May 6th. According to Infoplease, "civil rights, rights that a nation's inhabitants enjoy by law. The term is broader than “political rights,” which refer only to rights devolving from the franchise and are held usually only by a citizen, and unlike “natural rights,” civil rights have a legal as well as a philosophical basis. In the United States civil rights are usually thought of in terms of the specific rights guaranteed in the Constitution: freedom of religion, of speech, and of the press, and the rights to due process of law and to equal protection under the law." There have been several African American Homophobic ministers, Wooden, Fozard, Hunter, and The Fredrick Douglass Foundation's Daniels (Fredrick Douglass is probably turning in his grave, if there was such a thing as an afterlife), saying that same sex rights are not civil rights, if this isn't civil rights what is? If people sex orientation is not equally protected under the law, then how can race be protected? If they create an amendment that can ban same sex marriage and legalize discrimination against another citizen because of their sex orientation, who will be next? I plan to encourage everyone I know to vote against this anti-civil right amendment. Same-Sex Marriage is already illegal in North Carolina. State statute currently limits marriage to opposite-sex couples. N.C.G.S. § 51.1-2 prohibits marriages between individuals of the same gender. It is interesting the Republicans platform is about smaller government wants the government in our private lives, what hypocrisy. The Party of Lincoln fighting to discriminate and legislate hate in my state. I am amazed how history plays out. Think about. John D. Socrates a.k.a. The African Socrates

Friday, September 2, 2011

Fairness is not a Fallacy


I recently read an article by Thomas Sowell titled, The Fairness Fallacy. In which he believes it is a fallacy to think life is fair and that we (especially African-Americans) need to get over thinking that it is. I am amazed at people like him who benefited from the very civil rights that he so often attacks (but that is another blog). Nevertheless, I will give him credit for one thing, he made me think. As a result, I asked myself; what is the meaning of Fairness, is Nature fair, and is it a fallacy to think it is Fair? I think that Nature, which is defined as a physical power causing all material phenomena (including life) is fair. What is fair? Fair (adjective) is defined as just, unbiased, equitable, in accordance with the rules. It is synonymous with fair-minded, unprejudiced, objective, disinterested, evenhanded; honest, straightforward, above-board, and upright. If I use the definition of fair as being something unbiased, can I say Nature is fair? In other words, is Nature disinterested or indifferent to our existence? I think Nature meets this criteria for it seems to align with the definition of something that is unbiased, equitable, in accordance with the rules (i.e. the laws of Nature). However, as a subjective being I am driven by desires and needs that are selfish and self-centered. When my subjective desires meet an objective Nature it feels unfair (and Absurd) because it does not meet up to my expectations. Yet, she (Nature) has always been honest in her indifference. For example, she lets you know that everything is impermanent, because she is constantly using her forces to change and recombine atoms into new functions. To give you an analogy, the dinosaur evolved approximately 300 million years ago, and it is hypothesized that a meteor or asteroid 6 1/2 miles in diameter collided with our planet 65 millions years ago, and this is believed to have caused the majority of the dinosaur's extinction (it is hypothesized that birds are the descendents of dinosaurs, see Morphed on National Geographic Wild) and yet, nature has not stop emerging life on this planet. I think we are one of many outcomes of a chain reaction in amino acids that emerged and adapted to the conditions on earth. Our DNA somehow became alive, evolved, and is still evolving, in other words, we are neither a special creation nor made in the image of an invisible disembodied non-physical being, we're just one among many. We happen to be born on a planet with the condition that is conducive for what we call life and Nature is indifferent to our existence, its only focus is how genes are passed on and does not care whether it is a strain of bacteria or a whale, it is disinterested in who does it but it is honest in its indifference and therefore meet the test of being fair, so I think life is fair and all I can do in my subjective self-interest is know that fairness is not a fallacy and live this life the best that I can. Think about it. The African Socrates