Monday, June 10, 2013

DANGERS when society rejects divine assistance

"WE HAVE but too much evidence of the value and result of a morality divorced from divine faith. How is it that, in spite of all the zeal for the welfare of the masses, nations are in such straits and even distress, and that the evil is daily on the increase? We are told that society is quite able to help itself; that it can flourish without the assistance of Christianity, and attain its end by its own unaided efforts. 

"PUBLIC ADMINISTRATORS prefer a purely secular system of government. All traces of the religion of our forefathers are daily disappearing from political life and administration. What blindness! Once the idea of the authority of God as the Judge of right and wrong is forgotten, law must necessarily lose its primary authority and justice must perish: and these are the two most powerful and most necessary bonds of society.



"SIMILARLY, ONCE the hope and expectation of eternal happiness is taken away, temporal goods will be greedily sought after. Every man will strive to secure the largest share for himself. Hence arise envy, jealousy, hatred. The consequences are conspiracy, anarchy, nihilism. There is neither peace abroad nor security at home. Public life is stained with crime.

"SO GREAT is this struggle of the passions and so serious the dangers involved, that we must either anticipate ultimate ruin or seek for an efficient remedy. It is of course both right and necessary to punish malefactors, to educate the masses, and by legislation to prevent crime in every possible way: but all this is by no means sufficient. The salvation of the nations must be looked for higher."

Pope Leo XIII
Tametsi futura prospicientibus
November 1, 1900




unaided human reason is DANGEROUS

"ONCE ASCRIBED to the human reason the only authority to decide what is true and what is good, the real distinction between good and evil is destroyed; honor and dishonor differ not in their nature, but in the opinion and judgment of each one; pleasure is the measure of what is lawful; and, given a code of morality which can have little or no power to restrain or quiet the unruly propensities of man, a way is naturally opened to universal corruption.



"WITH REFERENCE also to public affairs: authority is severed from the true and natural principle whence it derives all its efficacy for the common good; and the law determining what it is right to do and avoid doing is at the mercy of a majority. Now, this is simply a road leading straight to tyranny.

"WHEN ANYTHING is commanded which is plainly at variance with the will of God, there is a wide departure from this divinely constituted order, and at the same time a direct conflict with divine authority; therefore, it is right not to obey.

"BY THE patrons of liberalism, however, who make the State absolute and omnipotent, and proclaim that man should live altogether independently of God, the liberty of which We speak, which goes hand in hand with virtue and religion, is not admitted; and whatever is done for its preservation is accounted an injury and an offense against the State. Indeed, if what they say were really true, there would be no tyranny, no matter how monstrous, which we should not be bound to endure and submit to."

Pope Leo XIII
Libertas
June 20, 1888




Wednesday, February 18, 2009

ThirdStreet Oratory /Perhaps There's Still Time


Pope St. Leo the Great who reigned for 21 years in the mid-5th century wrote: “The Lord’s passion is prolonged until the end of the world.”
As long as there exists in this world a single tear on the cheek of one of his “little ones”, our risen Lord Jesus Christ continues to bear our human grief, and by so doing, sorrows with us.
As long as there exists in this world the impoverishment of one of his “little ones”, our risen Lord Jesus Christ continues to pray for “our daily bread”, and by so doing, hungers with us.
As long as there exists in this world the injury of one of his “little ones”, our risen Lord Jesus Christ continues to heal us with the medicine of mercy, and by so doing, suffers with us.
Is any human being so well off, so insulated from ordinary experience, so estranged from his own heart that he can say truthfully, I’ve never cried, I’ve never known loss, I’ve never been hurt? In the name of heaven, then, why do so many Christians attempt to carry their sorrows, impoverishment and injuries alone and apart from the Body of Christ?
When the Church prays the Stations of the Cross, all members of the Body of Christ pray these words for Christ:
“Come, all you who pass by the way, look and see whether there is any suffering like my suffering. At this I weep, my eyes run with tears: far from me are all who could console me, far away are any who might revive me.”  [Lam 1:12,16]
Our Lord Jesus Christ suffers for you, and he suffers your holding back from him. Perhaps there is still time for you to pause, reflect and surrender your whole heart to our crucified Lord. If you sincerely desire to console Jesus, to revive him in the midst of his suffering for you, then bring him your tears, your hunger and your distress. And let him heal you! “The Spirit is the witness, because the Spirit is the truth!”  [1Jn 5:7]   
Entrust yourself to the Good Physician whose clinic is the Church, whose office is the Cross, whose license is the Gospel, and whose medicine of mercy is his Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity. The Lord himself has given you life by the blood and water which flowed from his side as he hung upon the cross:  “Beloved, let us love one another; for love is of God, and he who loves is born of God and knows God.”  [1Jn 4:7] 

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Third Street /Human Ecology /Risk & Reward

When a person is overly-protected, he or she cannot grow. Deprived of the possibilities—the opportunities—of risk and responsibility, one’s chances of maturing are slim.

I cannot discover who I am as long as who you are has me bubble-wrapped and boxed-up with strapping tape. How can I discover my own personhood in your attic? Or on the wall of your museum?

Truth brings with it the reality of risk and responsibility. If a person hides from the truth as one would flee a home-invader, his chances of growing in faith decrease as the darkness of his mind and heart increases.

Take away the tension associated with risk—the tension between rest and exertion, success and failure, solidarity and individualism, good and evil—and I cannot live. How would my heart beat? How could I breathe? How can I think? How can I freely love?

The uncivilized and obscene excess of over-protection is a tyranny which justifies its existence on the grounds that power determines personhood. Violent and degraded men put on government like a sock puppet.

The sock puppet speaks and moves as if it is a person. Men and women of good will—who really are persons but are told they are not—are made to idolize the sock puppet that covers the iron fist of decadent leaders.

Equally uncivilized and obscene is one’s denial of another’s self-determination. Rather than tolerate a community’s right to possess received Truth and to freely experience the risk and responsibility that such truth imposes, violent and spiritless men wage war.

They kill on the pretense of saving lives. They destroy communities and nations in the name of healing. The sock puppet’s trigger finger fires a missile launcher. It pushes the buttons inside a black box.  

What fails to grow and mature in human beings who are deprived of the meaningful experience of risk and responsibility in the light of Truth is precisely their humaneness.

Persons who do not grow and mature morph into the frightening—and frankly disgusting—phenomenon of children living inside grown-up bodies. By being overly-protected, these people are conditioned to shun risk and responsibility.

They fear the Truth. To escape these realities, they resort to uproar and violent provocation or by fleeing the tension and taking refuge in self-distraction. Their inhumaneness emerges as hyper-individualism. They are lazy. They rationalize failure. They perceive the good as lighter shades of evil.

And the worst evil manifests itself in persons who are ruled by an abnormal and ungoverned compulsion to keep moving, make noise and hoard things while, at the same time, feeling a toxic revulsion for other human beings.

This profound disruption of the fragile and complex human ecology of personhood and relationships is the precondition for wide-spread and pathological sickness—the profound dis-ease human societies have come to know as tyranny and war.

It is a poverty that human beings are taught to perceive each other as dispensable aggregates of human tissue and data while, at the same time, falling over themselves to award animals the status of personhood—the very thing which men and women (mostly men) seem to understand least of all.

Your blog writer suggests that the stampede to brand animals as persons ought to be deferred for a few years until human beings prove their mutual good will by eradicating tyranny and war among their own species.

After all, what animal today wants to find himself on the front lines fighting a guerilla war in Afghanistan or in Somalia? (More to the point, what happiness could any animal possibly enjoy were it truly aware that Pol Pot had embraced it, calling it friend and brother?)

Very young children often are shocked by the realization that human beings other than themselves are persons in their own right whose needs at a particular moment are equally if not more pressing than those of the precocious child.

Herein lies humanity’s hope—that the socio-scientific disciplines may come to acknowledge that faith, hope, and love are foundational to the larger periodic table of spiritual elements absolutely essential for a balanced ecology of human relationships.

Somewhere along the line, human families, neighborhoods, cities and nations must reacquaint themselves with received Truth, moving beyond mere research--which formulates so many questions it can never answer--to accepting the risk and responsibility of faith and belief.

Should the day arrive when we human beings are less enamored of doing things to, for and against each other and more disposed toward doing things through, with and in each other, then we just might discover something new.

Our respect for human personhood and our reverence of humaneness may point us precisely to that which represents the greatest of all risk, responsibility and reward—the compelling existence and personhood of the One whom God has revealed to us as his very own self. 


Third Street /Fathers, Families & the Future

Anthropologists are fond of observing, rather coldly, that a father is not essential to his child’s survival after it is conceived. Should a father be serving in the military in Iraq, to use one example, neither his presence or his life is required for the birth and survival of his child. 

No one will argue that this and other depressing scenarios are impossible, but the plain fact of the matter is that these scenarios are exceptions and not the norm of human life. The enduring and positive presence of a father is crucial for the survival and prosperity of the entire family. 

The presence of the father is the first of two absolute necessities which are the guarantors of a family’s psychological and spiritual well-being and maturity. The second guarantor is his life-long bond to the mother of his children in the Sacrament of Holy Matrimony. 

Why does a child need a father for his or her spiritual well-being? Leaving some room for mystery, we first would venture to say, “So goes the father, so goes the family”. Without doubt, a father’s example before his children is exceptionally powerful whether for good or ill. 

 A father protects his family and provides for it. He mediates his children’s gradual independence from the immediate family and self-sufficiency in the world. He provides a solid example of work moderated by leisure, love protected by respect, and inspiration governed by authority. 

With this in mind, a family’s long-term loyalty to a holy way of life and habit of faithful religious observance is entirely dependent on the father’s very personal and unfailing example. 

 A father’s refusal to lead and guide strongly in the practice of religion actually may deal a mortal blow to the stability, maturity and longevity of the core relationships of his family. A father’s laziness and indifference to God and to the Church may compromise the well-being of his children long after they have left his home. 

A father should lead and guide his family strongly in faith by the being the best example of faith. The mother of his children should not have to bear the burden of faithful witness alone. 

More than ever these days, men who are fathers are called upon to share the raising of children and share the domestic responsibilities of the home. This is a good thing and is the occasion for being schooled in the virtue of humility. 

 But remember this fathers: As your active presence in your family’s life is vital, your presence in the gathered Church—the Family of Faith—is equally as vital. 

Sunday, December 14, 2008

ThirdStreet /"We Need a Song to Sing"

“We need a song to sing, a message of hope and cheer.

We need a love which transcends time and space. 

Our hearts seek the knowledge that amidst all the clamor

and clutter of life, there is Someone who cares.

Jesus is God's message of deliverance given to us.

He is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.

He is Emmanuel, God with us. He is God's message of love.

With the angels and shepherds and all God's children we sing,

‘Jesus is born. Joy to the world!’”


Sunday, December 7, 2008

3rd Street Ecology /No Toxic Dumps

People who assume don't think. If you assume you can slipstream from this world to the next carrying a boatload of sins, expecting to offload them at the dock of heaven because someone died on a cross, you're not thinking. 

Heaven’s ecology is not going to be fouled by a toxic dump of sins--yours or anyone else’s--at the foot of God’s throne. If God shows you mercy at the moment of your personal judgement and intends you to share life with him forever, but you are carrying unreconciled sins and have done little or no penance on earth, then you’re going to have to take your sins somewhere else and deal with them before you come back. 

That somewhere else is purgatory, a cleanup site where your soul is going to have to be scoured clean of debris and become presentable before you can sit down at heaven’s banquet table. 

The saints of heaven are persons reconciled to God on earth. What are the good works of the elect? They are gold, silver and precious stones. What are sins but wood, hay and straw? And the fire (of purgatory) will test what sort of work each one has done. If any man's work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire

As surely as heaven exists for perfect souls to praise God, there is a purgatory for imperfect souls whose unreconciled sins are the lumber, hay and straw that will be used to fuel the fire that purifies them.


3rd Street Oratory /For Starters

Here’s what being a follower of Jesus Christ does not mean: It does not mean your choosing a celebrity gospelizer whose long-running engagement is so profitable that he erected his own theater of entertainment expressly so that you can sit passively in his audience and watch his show. 

It does not mean that you are regaled occasionally with Bible stories about people other than yourself doing their moral and ethical duty. It does not mean crowd therapy or buying products. 

It does not mean cohabitation, multiple marriages, abortion, dumping human remains over dirt, television glamour, absolving your own sins, and no-showing on the Lord’s Day.  

So what does being a faithful follower of Jesus Christ really mean? For starters, it means a Church whose pastor, taking the last place, leads his congregation to Christ so that Christ can lead them to the Father. 

It means your living all TEN Commandments consciously and enthusiastically. It means that you remain chaste and celibate until you exchange your marriage vows at the altar of the Church.

It means that you would rather perish than betray your spouse by adultery. It means that you reverence all who die in the peace of Christ, that you will arrange for them to receive a proper religious funeral service in the Church and burial in consecrated ground. 

It means your being humane, that you respect the lives and dignity of all human beings from the unborn to the natural end of life. It means your being reconciled with God and neighbor at all times and making this the very heart of your worship in the Church and your life in the world. 

Being a faithful follower of Jesus Christ means that your food is doing will of the Father who sent Jesus and to accomplish his work. This means then, that a faithful follower of Christ will do these things and more:  

Feed the hungry. Give a cup of cold water to the thirsty. Shelter the homeless. Clothe the naked. Visit the sick. Visit the imprisoned. Bury the dead reverently in consecrated ground. 

More? Yes, there is more. You will: Correct the sinner. Instruct those who are ignorant of Christ. Counsel those whose faith is weak. Comfort the sorrowing. Bear wrongs patiently. Forgive all injuries. Pray for the living and the dead. 

Go out into the world to do these things and live a holy way of life. Take up your own cross and follow the God-Man who carried his. Be worthy of him.


3rdStreet Present Tense /The Hero Pt III /The Hero Rises Up

The greatest enemy of the hero is intentional mediocrity. The danger of mediocrity is two-fold. It dissolves and therefore relativizes the hierarchy of truth, thereby transmogrifying truth into opinion. The process of mediocrity is completed when opinion accepts as its content fiction. 

If all human thought and activity is relative and boiled in the tin cup of mediocrity, and any admission of man’s fallen nature is blurred or altogether rejected, and contemporary human violence is merely a remnant of the primordial human food chain, there would exist no need for heroes or lives lived heroically. But this is flatly not the case. 

Critics may impugn a hero using the vocabulary of their own torpor and emptiness of spirit, but they are powerless to deny the existence of good and evil, the hierarchy of truth, that humanity is enthralled and sometimes overcome by evil, and the incontestable fact that these basic observations are proven by the sheer weight of human crime, violence and murder in the most advanced societies. 

A person may act heroically in the face of danger even when the threat is a catastrophic natural event such as a flood or an earthquake. But such a person is a hero of the hour, not of his age. In contrast, the hero of the age emerges--we may say, rises up--precisely to oppose a catastrophic evil initiated and executed not by natural forces but by human beings themselves. 

Man’s inhumanity to man is not the result of bad sociology and inadequate therapy but actually a willful participation in evil, that is to say, to remove the conscious restraint that severely governs the tendency resident in every human heart to commit wrong against another--to laugh at someone else’s tears, to crush the health and well-being of others whom he despises, or to obliterate human lives, tribes and even nations. 

A hero is not self-reliant in the sense of being a loner who defines himself by his estrangement from his community. To the contrary, a hero is dependent on the community in which he was raised and educated. It is precisely the intersection where the continuity of shared belief and values encounters the anarchic powers arrayed to destroy it that the hero emerges to secure for his community an opportunity to renew itself, reaffirm its purpose, and move forward. 

The hero’s fight is never the impulse to strike back at boredom, still less to step beyond the good. His rising up is precisely to oppose forces or enemies which threatens his community or his nation with irreversible decline or outright extinction. A hero may quickly emerge and respond to the latter as when tyranny comes suddenly and with a great shock. Far more difficult to grasp for ordinary citizen and hero alike is creeping tyranny, the kind that entrenches itself slowly over a much longer period of time. 

All these aforementioned things constitute a hero. If this description is incomplete, it is not because of an inherent or fatal flaw in the role of the hero but rather the inadequacy of the essayist.  Or perhaps, irony. We may say that irony is the abrupt and astonishing reversal of human expectations. 

We admire the hero, yes, but are we saying that the possession of the aforementioned attributes is so exceptional among men as to be rare, indeed found only within the hero? May we not expect to find the attributes of the hero to be common among ordinary decent men everywhere? Indeed, we cannot speak of the bond between the hero and his enthusiasts as shared unless we acknowledge their mutual participation in the heroic attributes.  

The transformational dynamic is this. It’s not that the hero’s extraordinary accomplishment imposes values and beliefs on those who follow his exploits attentively. Rather, the hero’s example affirms the excellence already present in their hearts. The heroic exploit stirs the mind and awakens the heroic spirit in the human heart. Yes, the man, the young man, and fathers everywhere need to cultivate a heroic approach to ordinary life such that, if all or most were renown for the courage of their convictions and an unfailing will to do good, heroes would be superfluous. Imagine, if heroes in ordinary life were superabundant, extraordinary heroes would not be needed. Would that this were true!

The ordinary man is not likely destined to be a hero, for extraordinariness implies that true heroes are few and far between. Nevertheless, we need this sort of person everywhere. You want him to be your next door neighbor, the man in every home on your block, your boss, the leaders of your community, the soldier in your military. You want your teenaged son to have someone stir his heroic imagination.

You want men of integrity everywhere, sharing the vocabulary of hard work, the common good, life-affirming values, the traditional family. You want them working, building creating and sustaining. You want them ready for any need, contingency or emergency. 

You want to know that from among decent men everywhere, ordinary heroes, that one will step up and galvanize his community, his city, and his nation in an extraordinary way--to defend the good, that is to say, the ideas that form the truth of human goodness known by men and women of good will everywhere, in every time, and in every place. 

We would like to think that every generation is worthy of providing a singular individual who possesses, by the persuasive power of ideas and courageous personal example, the leadership ability to galvanize a defeated people, weary of battle and disillusioned in spirit, to go where they would otherwise not go, and to accomplish what otherwise they felt they could do. The heroic man stands on the cusp of the supernatural. In the name of his cause, his people, and decent human beings, he opposes the overlord futility with all his might and its vassal dread of the future. 

You want to know that effecting moral and ethical leadership of a nation, an army, an alliance, has its origins in the good of the most basic unit of human society--the family. Many heroes are unknown, but those who are known have changed the course of human history. These are men who have stood against a tide of evil in their generation, a collective of vile interests which threatened the just welfare of human beings everywhere--not merely those within the reach of powerful weaponry but many others within the reach of their corrupt ideas and values. 

Admittedly, all heroes are flawed as are the people they inspire. We do not say may be flawed because it is impossible for human beings by nature to be capable of perpetual nobility, grace and perfect intentions. Were a man’s life known by others to be virtually perfect, this would refer to the historical record. Unknown would be the scope of his intentions and most private thoughts. 

Also unknown would be his response to the most trying circumstances, the extent to which he is willing to make personal sacrifice, the limit of his endurance, the extent to which he is willing and able to absorb the most withering criticism from the very persons whose interests he is defending. A hero may know personally only a relative few of the many he has pledge to defend. 

That a man’s words and deeds are heroic while his flaws are merely human is proved by his willingness to publicly name his friends, and if necessary, to lay down his life for them. Certainly, he knows them as friends because of their mutual and shared understanding of the common good. Whether this shared understanding is consciously expressed and reiterated or intuitive and presumed is not fully known or even necessarily relevant. This may seem unacceptably haphazard, even dangerous, but it must be remembered that there is no school for heroes. 

This is not to say that schools are irrelevant in the end. Actually the contrary is true. Schools should exist, not for the purpose of students discovering who they are--as if this is either the concern or the mission of seven year olds--but for communicating--and we mean instilling--core truths affirming the humaneness of human beings of good will everywhere, virtues affirming the nobility and excellence of human character, and values specific to the identity and well-being of the nation. 

If your essayist could ask a hero to speak for himself, what might he say about his great strength, courage or ability? What would he say about his achievements, great deeds and noble qualities? Or about being a role model or ideal for others? Perhaps this thought is not too far out of line. After some sort of respectful silence, the hero of his own generation would say, I am a useless servant who has only done his duty.  (Part 3 of 3.)


Tuesday, November 25, 2008

3rdStreet \School of Truth

Discovering Truth is like climbing a mountain. We do not invent either as we ascend. The ascent to Truth begins by the comforting lamplight of Natural Law. The summit of Truth is attained in the brilliant sunlight of Divine Revelation. It is the ascent to Truth that brings wisdom. It is at the summit of Truth where we encounter God. 

Saturday, November 22, 2008

3rdStreet Present Tense /The Hero Pt II /The Heroic Spirit

The person whose life is a series of promos publicizing who he is scorns the idea of God and eternity. He has no use for either; if he has to die to get to them, they're not worth having. God and eternity is an insider's joke for the self-referenced techno-modern maven of brand-identification and suspicion. Death, the ultimate redline, can be ignored like an irritating brother-in-law. 

The 21st century techno-modern colossus stands astride the portals of conspicuous entertainment and consumption. He luxuriates in his disdain and haughty contempt of objective truth or authority higher than himself. In reality, however, he is a parasite busily sucking the meaning out of good and evil. He covers himself with shiny fictions manufactured from his favorite spin factories. Pure gold is uninformed shrill opinion. Base lead is dull and boring truth.

The modern man recoils from the thought that his humanity is flawed, his nature fallen. The real offense is not my own defects (or evil), he blathers, but rather your refusal to recognize my genius. Offenses which cannot be flicked away he answers with rage and revenge. In the end, everyone is a threat to him--including his parents. Their first acts of aggression were his conception and birth. 


The anti-hero is a coward and a fraud. He deludes himself by imagining that everything beautiful in the world is a signpost pointing to him. He believes he is what the world has been waiting for. He is the master of mind over matter--the world and all things in it exist for the express purpose of validating him. The sure proof of his mastery over reality? His haughty disgust for reason, the thing that makes human experience-hence one's own humanity--intelligible.

He flatters himself with his own contempt. His disdain does not arise from measurable excellence, still less from a life's work and accomplishment. His ignorant vanity is the consequence of a soft life arrogantly lived. It is the base emotion of a patently self-absorbed person unconquerable by reason, unable to distinguish fact from perception, and convinced that predatory selfishness is a form of justice. His is the triumph of mediocrity.

Is all human thought and activity relative and meant to be stewed in a tin pot? Are we forced to admit that man’s fallen nature is irrelevant or altogether fabricated? Is contemporary human violence merely a remnant of the primordial human food chain? If one answers yes to any of these questions, then mediocrity is entrenched and no need exists for heroes or lives lived heroically.

However, if we are not destined to kowtow to a squalid and depressingly popular mediocrity, and subsisting, in the words of Theodore Roosevelt, “with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat”, then enough room remains for excellence, the heroic spirit and one more hero. 

Is it possible that men and women in this generation still possess the will and capacity to “dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure”? [Roosevelt] In short, if heroism is possible, and heroes even now are emerging in this “gray twilight”, who might they be? What constitutes a hero?

A hero is an ordinary man who undertakes to meet an extraordinary challenge. He does not exploit his unusual experiences for profit or notoriety. He is loathe to write about “heroism” as a subject for fear of self-referencing and self-indulgence.

Who is qualified to write on the subject of the hero? Certainly not this writer. Why, then, is this essayist doing precisely that? Because we all have heroes whom we admire. Quite properly, there is a personal bond between the admirer and the hero who has earned our recognition. We look for an opportunity to express our gratitude.

Apart from ordinary citizens, heroes could not exist. And the admirer will always know more about his hero than his hero ever will know about him. It would be no exagerration to say that a hero and those whose lives he changes by his personal courage form an enduring, even intimate bond.

Clearly a shared understanding, shared values and beliefs, and a shared vocabulary exist between a hero and those who look up to him. A few moments of honest reflection affirms that the admirer of a hero can have something to say about him and the subject of heroism. A hero is a man whose personal courage and intellectual integrity has a transformational effect on the people of his generation. It is a not improbable that the same heroic spirit can be shared by an extraordinary individual and the people of his nation.

The greatest enemy of the hero is intentional mediocrity. Far from being a passive place marker in the market of human behavioral transactgions, mediocrity threatens the human person's understanding of self and the faculty of reason. Mediocrity dissolves and therefore relativizes the hierarchy of truth. It presents truth as fantasy. The metastasis of mediocrity is complete when the human intellect, starved of knowledge (and wisdom), wearies of pretense and accepts as its content egregious lies. 

Critics will impugn a hero using the vocabulary of their own torpor and emptiness of spirit. Yet they are powerless to deny the existence of good and evil or the hierarchy of truth. Whatever form and intensity their stupidity takes on, they cannot alter the fact that humanity is enthralled and all too often overcome by evil. Nor can they talk away the massive evidence of human criminal conduct, corruption, violence and murder in the most advanced societies.

At the end of the day, the fact that all human communities seek out heroes affirms man's enduring conviction that good and evil exist and, moreover the good must triumph over evil. A hero is someone who fights against wrong whether it is in the realm of thought, deeds or witness. He fights for those who--in the mind of the society which embraces him--are deserving of his care and protection. “Those” in need may be few but more often are the many. The hero of the few may soon be forgotten. The hero of many will be remembered for a generation or longer. (Part 2 of 3.)




3rdStreet Zoology /Pattern of Behavior

In first days following a zebra’s birth, the baby’s mother will not allow the foal to look at another zebra in the herd, even the stallion standing guard nearby. Should any curious zebra step into view, the birth mother interposes her body between the visitor and her vulnerable youngster. 

Considering that zebra harems may number a dozen or more, this task can be exhausting for a female which has just given birth. Only in this way, however, can the young foal know for certain who its birth mother is. Most remarkable is the fact that the baby zebra desperately needs to imprint the pattern of its mother’s unique stripes in its brain and learn to recognize her voice and scent.

This window of receptivity in the baby’s consciousness is open only for a few hours. If the baby zebra and its mother are distracted from completing this urgent task, the baby will fail to recognize its mother among the herd population. The adult stallion and other females in the herd will tire of the baby zebra’s pleadings and eventually drive it away. 

Confused and disoriented, a young foal becomes a stranger to the herd, facing starvation and attack by predators. A baby zebra, if it is to flourish in the wild, must recognize the stripe pattern of its birth mother. From the moment of its birth, it will struggle. If successful in finding food and surviving predation, a young zebra will be attracted to a third imperative—procreation. The dance of the stripes will be performed once more.