Category: <span>Social Justice</span>

green kettleThis afternoon I mention to mum that perhaps I should do a bit of an op-shop/other-shop crawl to get a few more things for moving out. So we did. It yielded some very positive results namely (of which I am most pleased) a pyrex casserole dish thing which – when you are restricted to a very small convection oven is pretty much what you need. Did I mention it cost me $2, and the lid becomes it’s own dish?!

A little pathetic, but homewares do kind of float my boat.

After talking about getting cheap kitchen stuff a couple of nights ago. My mum chimes in with her never ending knowledge of all things shopping, that if you really need to, you can get your basic toaster/kettle/sandwich-press for about $10 at say… Aldi, The Warehouse even Big W or K-Mart. Despite the fact that I do already have such things (inheriting ancient white-goods is after all the cheapest means) the comment my Dad made regarding sweat shops directly after Mum’s low-cost bombshell has left me… I’d say sweating, but that’s too corny – a fraction disturbed.

As much as you can skimp, borrow, glean from op-shops and Grandparents there are some things you wind up buying – or even needing to buy new. I really don’t advocate spending money buying really old tea-towels.

There is an almighty problem when you start to think about environmental/social-awareness issues because it elaborates in to one almighty ball of fire, an appealing one but realistically ugly and enormous. This becomes particularly difficult thinking about it all from the experience of being on a low budget. I am a uni student, moving out of home for the first time and someone who only very recently got their job back, in fact I haven’t even started working yet- my budget is low. Quite low.

Getting home I jump back on trusty Google and attempt to yield some kind of brilliant search where I can get something that isn’t going to leave me wishing I’d waited until I were a millionaire to move out.

To be fair the results were pretty dry.

I did manage to come across Green Pages Australia, and it’s nice to know something of the kind is out there but that doesn’t do a whole lot of good for the monetary constrained student who wants a in-state means to get those practical things that’ll leave her with a cleaner conscience.

Am I overthinking this? Can I justify ignoring it? Is it something you can even easily deal with on a slightly weightier budget? Can I compromise on some things if I only worry about a few? What is a realistic way to manage ethical concerns?

As a side note I started discovering things about ‘green’ graphic design… a whole field of soon-to-be reality I need to explore.

Christianity General Life Social Justice

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Opulence
noun
1. wealth, riches, or affluence.
2. abundance, as of resources or goods; plenty.

It’s a little self accusatory to talk about the stimulation for my thinking about opulence. Because my thoughts have come from things that I really only would come across from belonging to a society and position that is one of the richest in the world.

So in relating to you, lets assume you are a computer owner (which means you’ve got some excess) I’ll also throw a few movie reviews as no doubt you have a spare $15 for a day you ‘have to go the movies to escape the heat’. In this way you not only get something to think about, but you also get something to add to your ‘eventual entertainment’ list. I also get to make my point and so as a result, we both win – regardless of whether you really care about hearing someone else rant on about affluence, western world riches etc.

Shall I go on?

I feel bad when I shop. This isn’t about looking ‘fat’ in the changing room mirrors but about being totally unsure where to draw the line as to what I buy. Ideally I buy something when I need something. I also know that I have enough – despite my bank balance not being fully recovered since Christmas (what’s that meant to mean anyway) – to occasionally if not often, buy something when I want it especially if I can justify that there is a ‘good use’ for it.

I have a lot. The more I look at it the more guilty I feel when I wind up in commercial land. I am not a splurger in fact I’m pretty stingy.

I own a computer, a cd-player, a bed, a chair, a printer, a car, a fair bit of music and quite a few dvd’s. I’ve always had enough to eat. I always had somewhere to sleep. That’s a lot.

There is a lot and there are also a lot of people with a lot. And yet we still seem to be so dissatisfied.

You probably know the story of Midas. That’s the king where everything he touched turned to gold. For the life of me I can’t remember how the story ends but I’ve been
thinking about it after listening to Faust, Midas, and Myself (Switchfoot).

” You could have your pick
Of pretty things.
You could have it all
Everything at once.
Everything you’ve seen,
Everything you’ll need”

So there’s wanting.

Along with the wanting, which as Christians we seem to condemn a fair bit with our ‘do not covet’ etceras, there is having.

What have we already got? In some ways it all ties together. We shouldn’t go for ‘extra’ because we’ve already got so much. But then often if we have it in the first place – it’s okay.

The status quo and the normal is okay. I was thinking a bit about this while I was watching The Queen. The monarchy is a traditional thing and although I (and others) really don’t agree with the system, it remains. It is okay that we esteem any well above the rest, whatever position of leadership they hold? Take this beyond the royal family – because we are all in some place to blame doing the same.

The monarchy and the country (regardless of which one) is a decent parallel of the world. The rich, the poor. You’ve read the stats, it’s nothing new.

I may have simply been further outraged by reading an Adbusters magazine (thanks Analise) but the combination of that and walking into Marie Antoinette was fairly potent. (Excellent film by the way, quite different to other period pieces – Sofia Coppola of Lost in Translation has created something quite unique. Typically it was quite slow moving but had a glorious collection of colour, costume, a weird inclusion of modern music and a depicted a profound sense of affluence and aloneness. That’s the review btw!)

As French Aristocracy she has everything and more. She spends more. She wastes more. She wants more. She spends her day discussing more.

I really struggle to understand how people can have so much excess. I don’t understand the buy-buy-buy phenomenon and at the same time I am oh-so familiar with it.

We find it so easy to point the finger. We somehow get all excited when we see people (okay, like Princess Diana) with a lot doing so much ‘good’ with their money. We (being ‘less affluent’) aren’t compelled on the same level to do the same.

“They have lots, so they can give so much more!”

Or perhaps even… I have a sponsor child so we’re least doing something and then we wash our hands of further responsibility.

I still have no good idea of how I should shop. I’d lean with the ‘doing the social justice’ thing in a way that is practical and doable (in reality, a way that is still somewhat easy) – but is that how we should be looking at it?

Geoff has been looking at ‘Dismantling The Empire’ and his current post (nice how it all ties in really) is on financial security.

The passage quoted is Matthew 6.

The theme for Junior camp also came from this passage. I struggled somewhat in leading some of the studies/quiet times in working out how I could stress just how unimportant ‘earthly treasures’ are, particularly when friends and family were listed off. Explaining something so radically different to kids is somewhat difficult when in your own mind you have to explain it theologically. I don’t think I succeeded even remotely.

None of this is easy. I don’t think it was meant to be easy. Following Jesus (which although the justice stuff all seems to tie in, is in fact of greater importance than the nuances of what you do and don’t give) isn’t easy.

Opulence reflects selfishness – be it conscious, subconscious or semi-conscious.

So now that you and I are at least ‘semi-conscious’, what can we do about it? Like it or not, we are somewhat stuck on the opulent side of the world in an culture fat on consumerism – what can we do about that? Deny ourselves of everything?

How much can we offload onto having the right ‘heart attitude’ *gag* about giving and how much should we really actually be putting into practice?

Christianity General Movies Social Justice

General Social Justice

eBecause you haven’t seen a post for OH SO LONG. I’d like to introduce you to a new word, (Well it was new for me and it doesn’t look all that common). I am enough of a word freak to actually subscribe to dictonary.com Word of the Day. Trusty Google Reader (although I’m still considering the ‘trusty’ definition) spat out this one sometime in the last 24 hours.

virtu: love of or taste for fine objects of art; also, productions of art.

Throw an ‘e’ on the end and you know what it means, remove the e and the actuality of the thing can go vastly downhill.

Let me provide an example:

This evening I had the pleasure experience of watching The Piano. The producers/directors/scriptwriters… yes it was a combined effort, successfully managed to extract the ‘e’ off of virtue. The movie is a fine piece of art but not exactly a fine piece of “moral excellence”.

The same could apply to Children of Men (Which I saw yesterday and did very much enjoy). The plot is gloriously intriguing, but some of the visuals far from peaceful and long way from right.

It is NOT a hard and fast rule, beautiful pieces of art do not have to be risque or downright crude. It is a totally exclusive variable, which really makes it not a variable at all.

Movies have ratings for a reason. I do just wonder though if over time the ratings have eased off in some kind of strange adaption to our ever desensitising hearts and minds.

Should we as Christians only take our virtu with an ‘e’? Only fill the eyes of whatever bodily and spiritual part of us with, “..whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable…excellent or praiseworthy…” – Philippians 4:8?

And then how does watching say, World News fit into that?

You cannot pretend that violence, that war, that rape, that crime, that abuse, that injustice doesn’t happen. It does.

And so clearly we cannot ignore that.
I understand that there is quite an extreme surface difference to watching something for entertainment and something that confrontly real, but honestly – how often do those lines blur?

We go mental at a group of school boys that filmed an abuse and sold it for entertainment. Rightly so. Yet don’t we see some watery alternate version of it on a daily basis?

How much of watching the news is because we actually care? How much is simply because we’re interested and intrigued and ‘need to be informed’? For what purpose? Does that make it entertainment?

I don’t have to enjoy a movie for it to be a diversion. Which is really what entertainment is.

I’m not prescribing that we turn off the television, the news, the movie… I don’t know.

Some of it comes back to motive.

Is there any clear or reasonable reason at all to watch a violent or a less than perfectly moral movie? (And that doesn’t leave you with much choice). Art? Yay? Nay? What if you sift the wheat from chaff? Does it even count? Does it even matter?

You cannot isolate yourself away from things, nor should you really intentionally fill your mind with images that you’ll regret (strongly or even passively) later on.

What is it to be in the world but not of it?

Surely it’s a fascinating pattern. How often do we drag that verse out of it’s context? What is it’s context? Offering myself as a living sacrifice? Loving. What is our emphasis?

Why do some Christians respond with more passion to ‘one of us’ swearing more than they do thousands of us hurting?

We are disfunctionally desensitised.

Art. Life. Art a reflection of what is really going on. Is art simply a manipulation? We feel. We are made to feel.

There is nothing wrong with feeling.

If art is manipulation, how can we use it in a positive way? And is that okay anyway?

more reading:

*Appologies, comments have now been closed as this post is continuously spammed and I’m getting sick of moderating them.

Christianity General Movies Photography Social Justice

A few of the crew from church have been rounded up by Jess W (who does occasional volunteer work at TEAR Australia) to get involved in their Youthy/YoungAdults blog Advoc8 on Social Justice issues.

I was a tad hesitant at first as I have other commitments like Gush to which I’ve been slack about lately. But have realised that possibly the best way to challenge myself about social justice (because I do care, but I’m often at a loss for what to do) is to start forcing myself to consistently consider these kind of issues.

It doesn’t take a lot of effort for me to write a blog post. I enjoy it. And the only drawback being that I post a lot of crap unless inspiration strikes me (and I shouldn’t fill their site up with ‘a lot of crap’ – that’s what this blog is for.)

Anyhoo, I was inspired this morning by something. So bit the bullet and wrote a post.

NB: As Paul pointed out, Dont go directly to advoc8.org – you don’t get to the right spot (great banner), it needs to be: advoc8.tear.org.au

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Blogging General Ministry Social Justice