It’s No Time to Be Neutral...

 


When you run after your thoughts, you are like a dog chasing a stick: every time a stick is thrown, you run after it. Instead, be like a lion who, rather than chasing after the stick, turns to face the thrower. One only throws a stick at a lion once.

Milarepa 

“Just as it is known that an image of one's face is seen depending on a mirror but does not really exist as a face, so the conception of "I" exist dependent on mind and body, but like the image of a face the "I" does not at all exist as its own reality."   Nagarjuna 
"Thanks to impermanence, everything is possible."    Nagarjuna

The time for accepting the results of an extremely troubling and possibly life changing election is here. It is also time to resist the authoritarian and fascist proclivities of DJT and the movement  he spawned. A movement built on divisiveness, xenophobia, hate, lies, and disrespect for our constitution, the rule of  law, and common decency for all sentient beings.

The following article from Lion's Roar offers four steps we need to take in resistance to DJT and his America First agenda. An agenda that diminishes America, not make it great again. It was GREAT before DJT.

Take a read and RESIST.





Bhikkhu Bodhi, one of Buddhism’s leading activists and scholars, says there are four steps we need to take to resist Trumpism.

Bhikkhu Bodhi

8 November 2024


When the Biden-Harris team won the election of 2020, it seemed that the specter of Trumpism had been completely exorcised. The country’s mood was jubilant. Trump was defeated and had to leave the White House by January 20. Though deadly waves of Covid-19 still swept across the country, we felt we were finally emerging from darkness to light. Many of us choked on our tears as we watched the president and his vice-president elect pay tribute to the thousands of people who had perished from Covid due to the ineptitude of their predecessor in the Oval Office. Now a vaccine was being developed to eradicate Covid, and, we believed, a new administration had arisen to usher in a bright enduring new era in our country’s history.

Yet just four years on, and here we are, back to square one, anxious that torrents of corruption, bluster, “alternative facts,” and violent rhetoric will pour forth once again. Yet Trump’s rise from the ashes of defeat was not inevitable. It happened because political leaders failed to act quickly enough to apply the antidotes needed to prevent his political resurrection. It happened because they treated resurgent Trumpism as if it were a normal political movement that could be blocked by a normal political process. It happened because these same leaders placed political expediency above their moral and civic responsibility. And now we, the ordinary Johns and Janes, must pay the price for their failure—and our own failure—to bring forth the moral courage that events over the past four years have repeatedly demanded. 

“We must seek out thought-leaders who can guide us to a clear understanding of our plight. These will be experts in political science, economics, cultural anthropology, and social ethics who, whether Buddhist or not, share our Buddhist aspirations.”

Am I being unreasonably judgmental? Am I rushing too quickly to view the future through a pessimistic lens? Perhaps so, but I’ll give credit to my own acumen. All the signs we’ve been witnessing suggest that, in the months and years ahead, we’ll be facing a more sinister version of the overweight guy in the dark blue suit and red tie than the one we faced eight years ago. This will be a man rankled by grievances, bent on retribution, holding in his hands an enemies list and a set of policy proposals that he can follow without constraint by Congress or the courts. If the trends we anticipate do materialize, we’ll have to deal not merely with an autocracy of the old-school type—one that invests unlimited authority in the Beloved Leader—but with an autocracy in which hate, greed, humiliation, and the blind lust for power might tear apart the country and overturn the whole global order. 

How are we, ordinary Americans pledged to Buddhist ethical and spiritual ideals, to respond to the array of interwoven crises we’re likely to face in the years ahead? How can we deal with this bizarre downward dip in the American political experience in ways that best embody the values we cherish, the qualities we discern in the exalted figure of the bodhisattva?

I here find myself compelled to dissent from a typical response I often encounter among Western Buddhists. This is the response which says that, in any conflictual situation, we must adopt a stance of detached neutrality, that we shouldn’t take sides but should try to see the good and bad hidden in both sides. That’s a style of Buddhist rhetoric I don’t want to accept. I also don’t want to accept the familiar line, “Everything is impermanent, so don’t worry.” It’s true that everything is impermanent, but by the time this regime ends, millions of lives may be lost and damaged and the entire ecosystem of the earth disrupted beyond repair. 

I’m not a moral absolutist. I don’t believe that anyone is perfect, that any position is flawless, but I do believe we have to draw clear moral distinctions, that we do have to reject the kind of limp ethical non-dualism favored by many Western Buddhists in favor of a clear ethical discernment that can grasp the moral dimensions embedded in a particular situation: the ability to see which side tends toward goodness and which side means danger.

This doesn’t mean we should demonize the Trump supporters. Certainly, not all those who voted for Trump are ready to embrace fascism or throw their liberal opponents into the flames. It’s likely that only a relatively small number of those who cheered, laughed, and danced at the MAGA rallies are prone to violence. The vast majority are probably just ordinary folk, very much like ourselves, who voted for Trump because they believed he would best represent their interests. 

But we would be deceiving ourselves if we fail to recognize that we’re up against a grave threat to the ideal of the Beloved Community, the community that affirms and embraces all. We would be naïve if we thought that, once in power, Trump will govern in line with established norms. And we’d be overly optimistic if we refused to believe that our flawed, skewed, and frail democracy may soon be undermined and replaced by an authoritarian regime that may take generations to recover from. 

The danger, I would contend, emanates not from the crowds wearing the emblematic red MAGA hat but from those in the background pulling the strings from behind them. It comes from the multi-billionaires who feed on the fears and resentments of the adulating masses they manipulate to their advantage. It comes from the Heritage Foundation, the Federalist Society, and the Christian Nationalists—the architects of Project 2025. It comes from Big Oil and Big Gas and Big Tech, and from all the other regressive coalitions, interest groups, and alliances that devour our natural and human resources as if they were dishes at a banquet. 

In facing the challenges that lie ahead, I suggest there are four crucial steps we can take if we are to move in a direction that aligns with our highest ethical aspirations as Buddhist practitioners. These aspirations, I would contend, correspond with the vision for this country expressed by our Founding Fathers in the Constitution: to create a nation in which everyone can flourish, a nation that will “promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.”

The first step is a matter of internal hygiene. It’s simply to pause, sit down, and process what we’re going through. This is where the Dharma provides the tools we need at just this precise moment, the tools that will help us metabolize the turbulent emotions that might otherwise assail our minds and rack our hearts. Instead of letting ourselves be swallowed up by an emotional whirlpool, we can sit with our emotions, turn our mindfulness to the breath and to our bodies, and observe the ripples of emotional agitation—whether fear, anger, resentment, bewilderment, or unlocalized angst—until they dissolve into bare bodily sensations and yield to the innate radiance of the tranquil mind.

Continue reading Below the Fold 

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