Friday, January 12, 2018

In case you missed it, this was Philip Mudd's response to the President's Comments as of yesterday.

CNN Analyst Philip Mudd: "I'm A Proud Shitholer"; Says Don Lemon Seen As "N*gger"




CNN counterterrorism expert Philip Mudd said Thursday night he is proud to be a "shitholer," a term he coined on the spot as someone who is a descendant of a person who has come from a historically 'shithole country.' Earlier on Thursday, Trump, in reaction to an immigration deal that would provide for and protect immigrants from Haiti and Africa, called them "shithole countries."

In an appearance on Don Lemon's show, the CNN commentator applied what he assumed was Trump's rationale for "shithole" countries to nations he believes would be considered 'shitholes' historically. For instance, Mudd declared himself a "shitholer" because he is Italian and a descendent of people who left the country when it was a "shithole."

After his several minute long rant where he used the word shithole a dozen-plus times and the n-word, Mudd proclaimed he wants a t-shirt that reads "I'm a shitholer."


"So let's be clear: a white honky from Norway can come here but a black dude from Haiti can't. What does that tell you in an America that in one generation called you a nigger? What does that tell you, Don?" Mudd would ask Lemon after his rant.

"I'm not surprised by this," Mudd said of Trump's comments. "In one way I am proud. I am a proud 'shitholer.' My family was called wops and mackerel eaters. I'm proud of that. We came when people from Ireland and Italy were seen as dirty people. Dirty Catholics who didn't belong in a Protestant country."

Mudd's rant on people from various 'shitholers' that "built this country":
Shitholers built this country 110 years ago. They were called slopers and slanteyes -- Chinese people who built this country.

Shitholers from Japanese internment camps stayed in those internment camps as American citizens. And that's a legacy we bare shame for today.

Shitholers who escaped Guatemala and El Salvador -- civil wars that we participated in -- built this country.

I've worked for shitholers who've protected this country after 9/11. [Former CIA Director] George Tenet is a first-generation Greek. I guess he is a shitholer.

Jose Rodriguez was the head of counterterrorism at CIA, he's a Puerto Rican. I guess he's not welcome.

I'm proud today. I'm proud to be a shitholer and I want a t-shirt. #IAmThem #ItsUs. I am proud, yeah. Let's stand against this and say it's not about black people, and it's not about white people from Norway. It's about the people who built America and who we denigrated until we became ashamed and we realize that's inappropriate. And we're learning the lesson again today.


"What you said brought tears to my eyes," Don Lemon reacted. "I can't see how anyone can make excuses for that. This is about pure racism. That's all it is and to say otherwise is either being in deep denial or you're being cunningly, cunningly deceiving."

At this point Mudd took the liberty to drop the n-word.

"I have seen these conversations that this is economic. So let's be clear: a white honky from Norway can come here but a black dude from Haiti can't. What does that tell you in an America that in one generation called you a nigger? What does that tell you, Don?" Mudd asked.

"I can tell you what it tells a honky like me," Mudd said. "We're no different than we were a generation ago and we're learning the same lessons that we learned when we called a Chinese man a slanteye, when we called a man from Guatemala a spic and a wetback, and we called a black man a nigger. That's what it tells me. We've got a ways to learn. But we can step back and say we're proud because I spoke this on CNN, 30-to-1 the emails I got were saying, 'You speak for us and we are not from Africa and we are not from Norway. We're from Italy. We're from Ireland. We're from Greece.' Every single one of them was from a place they would say, 'Hey, hashtag, I'm one of them.'"
January 12, 2018 

Thought for today:

“Hindsight is an exact science.” 

Guy Bellamy, The Sinner’s Congregation, Secker and Warburg, 1984
January 12, 2018



BLUE BRICKS

If streets and sidewalks could talk....

Fruit and vegetable sellers moving their
stands early Monday morning across the bricks to be set up for the day ahead ....
Grandparents picking up kids after school on Tuesday and Wednesday and then bringing them home till their parents
get home - oh the joy and the pride of
walking with one's grand kids....
Street cleaners sweeping and washing
down the bricks on Friday afternoon ....
Saturday conversations of lovers
walking arm and arm in the late night ....
Families on Sunday morning heading for
Church - with their kids - and mom and
dad - the only day they walk arm in arm ....
Wait a minute! What city, what country,
and what century are we talking about here ...?


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018

Thursday, January 11, 2018

January 11, 2018

Thought for today: 

“Work  is a powerful medicine.” 

St. John Chrysostom [c. 347-407] in a Homily.
January 11, 2018



BROKEN MUG

Sometimes I spot where the handle
of the coffee mug was glued back on.
Once more Krazy Glue did its trick.
But not  every time.... Sometimes 
I see where we broke each other’s heart -
and it took us weeks to get to the
store and find a new tube of Krazy
Glue. Once you open that stuff,
sometimes you find out - you didn’t 
close the cap right the last time -
and it doesn’t always work this time.


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2018

Wednesday, January 10, 2018


A DAY IN CAPERNAUM,  
A DAY  TO  REMEMBER   


INTRODUCTION

In January - it might even be this very day in January - but it was the year 2000 - I was in a bus with about 25 other priests and we went to Capernaum for a day.   We left our Palestinian Hotel in Tiberias - and headed to a place called Capernaum.

It was a day to remember.

In fact all the days on that 2 week tour of the Holy Land and Holy Places - 18 years ago - were days to remember.



The bus pulled into a space on the right - next to a building - in the shade - and then we went through a gate into Capernaum. The place wasn’t too big - but still the space had a grab to it.

Two buildings stood out - both of which are mentioned in today’s gospel.

One has a round roof - the other no roof.



The first was the Synagogue in Capernaum.  It wasn’t the actual one Jesus was in. That’s up for historical speculation and study. 

Architectural historians say the building there today  was built on top of  the remains of a synagogue built on top of an older synagogue.

All in all, in the time of Jesus - there was a synagogue here - somewhat like the one we walked over to - that morning.

Father Steven Doyle our retreat master and guide read today’s gospel - probably beginning with yesterday’s gospel. It tells of Jesus going into the synagogue in Capernaum with his disciples.  Then Stephen mentioned  other gospel stories that took place in this synagogue.




Then he gave us an hour to pray and reflect on the scene. So we sat down on the stone benches along the sides of the old synagogue - and prayed and reflected on the moment - where we were present. The synagogue had no roof - just some side walls, pillars and stone benches.

Then - after about spending an hour there - we walked over to Peter’s Mother-in-law home. This building was unique. There was a Christian Church here a few times. Like the synagogue, earlier buildings were here and crumbled in time.  


Peter’s mother-in-law’s house could be seen down below through a glass floor. There was an ancient building under this small church.

Once more, hearing the gospel read on the spot - after getting into that church -  we were able to picture the gospel story better.

Then we went out and walked about the whole village. It wasn’t that big, but it was a spiritual experience.



At the other end of the property, we could see the red roof of another church. Steven Doyle pointed out all the lumps and earth bumps in the big field that led the way to the  Greek Orthodox church - some 500 yards away.  Stephen Doyle said that digs in the future will show  a lot more than what we know right now.

So those two buildings and the red roofed Orthodox church in the distance were the 3 main places I can still picture to this day.

CAPERNAUM

So that place and that day in Capernaum that we visited in January of 2000 still holds some good memories for me.

Capernaum was central for Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.

Capernaum was central for Jesus as well.  The gospels tell us that Jesus centered himself here as then he started his public ministry.

The Lake was not too far away.

Nazareth was only 25 miles away.

Questions kept hitting me - and thoughts kept hitting me.

Whatever happened to Peter’s wife as well as his mother-in-law?

What house here did Jesus stay in? Do they have any markers anywhere?  

Was Joseph still around when Jesus moved from Nazareth to Capernaum?

It was here that the centurion’s servant was healed - as well as the man with the shakes. I never used the word "palsy".

CONCLUSION

I don’t know how to end this - other than saying, “Some days are different than other days."

Next I came up with a question. If every day was loaded down with all kinds of unique and specific places to visit or people to experience, could our RAM - our Random Access Memory - hold onto all these specific days - like I did for just “A Day in Capernaum” - or would our memories be like a crowded subway car in rush hour?
January 10, 2018

Thought for today: 

“When you have nothing to say, say nothing.” 

Charles Caleb Colton [1780-1832] in Lacon [1839-1822] Volume 1, no, 182