The full moon set over Peavine as I shuffled through leaves along the sidewalk, inhaling the fresh decay of autumn. In a flower bed along the road, small red roses survived, protected from morning frost by a pile of rust-colored leaves.
Can you believe we reelected President George W. Bush about a year ago?
Thirteen months ago, I was walking a similar route when a golden oak leaf fluttered past. I caught it, twirled it by the stem. The foliage felt like a sign that all would be well. That George W. would go away. I taped the โleaf of hopeโ to my office wall.
Then came the sunny reelection day. My leaf turned brown, brittleโfragile as faith.
By the time this column runs, trains will be chugging through Renoโs new trench. Iโve been enjoying downtown Renoโbig new bookstore, coffee shops, Silver Peak, antique shops and all.
Well done, local movers and shakers.
Want to run the world?
Seriously, all hell is breaking loose out there. Graft and corruption writhing out from every overturned pebble. Americans on the take in Iraq. Americans outsourcing torture.
Public servants in the highest levels of government indicted, arrested, turning on each other like rabid wildebeests.
In the meantime, the peasants in our colonies are revolting against U.S. imperialism. Where Bush goes, from South America to Asia, huge protests follow. As I wrote this Friday, thousands of South Korean farmers armed with weapons of minor destruction (bottles, sticks and rocks) were being water cannoned into submission.
Bush was in town for a trade conference with Pacific Rim leaders and reps from the World Trade Organization, that slimy bunch of unelected global officials who really run the planet.
I wonder how Bush sleeps at night these days. Does God talk to him in dreams? Does the ghost of Cheney appear, dragging chains he forged in life? โGeorge, remember the poor. Our rich friends donโt need any more handouts. Our unjust war killed more than 30,000 innocent Iraqis.โ
Oh, yeah. Cheneyโs not dead.
Speaking of evangelical Christians, youโd think Pat Robertson, who recently accused residents of Dover, Penn., of having โvoted Godโ outta town, might attend to nose-thumbing at actual Biblical directives.
Jesus uttered no thoughts on public school curriculum, abortion or gay marriage. He did implore a rich man to โgo and sell all you possess and give it to the poor.โ No smarmy comments about social programs that donโt work. Just give and, โYou will have treasure in heaven.โ
Another New Testament bit: โWhoever has the worldโs goods and beholds his brother in need and closes his heart against him, how does the love of God abide in him?โ
Those crazy Jesus freakinโ big-hearted galoofs from 2,000 years ago. Love โem.
Thankfully, some evangelicals read the Good Book. At the Web site for the National Association of Evangelicals (45,000 churches, 30 million people), I found a letter written before this yearโs G-8 summit in London. In it, evangelical leaders call for world leaders to consider Millennium Development Goals that cancel debt for poor countries and aim to reduce poverty, hunger and disease. The evangelicals noted โstructural inequities and power imbalances in trade rules that tilt toward the rich nations at the expense of impoverished nations.โ
Huh. Imbalanced trade rules. Thereโs a topic worthy of a Sunday morning sermon or two.
โThere is no place for apathy in a world which sees 30,000 children die each day because of poverty-related conditions,โ the letter begins. โThe Bible teaches that whatever we do to the poorest we do also to Jesus. We believe God judges nations by what they do to the poorest.โ
Thereโs that judgment thing again. And itโs headed in our direction.
Then comes winter.
