Author: Staff

  • Mattel Accused of Promoting White Supremacy using White Jesus

    White Jesus

    “Mattel also sells a more expensive, “deluxe” Fisher Price Nativity, which depicts the Magi as people of color. But rather than introducing diversity, as we hope Mattel intended, it just depicts all of the holy characters as white while only including people of color in smaller supporting roles. That introduces an explicit racial hierarchy that says white characters are superior.

    White Jesus toys harm white children and children of color alike by aligning Christianity with white supremacy. While one might be tempted to dismiss the playset as “just a toy,” it’s a formative image that impressionable young children will remember and carry with them for years to come. It’s also an incorrect version of history.

    Sadly, there’s a long and harmful history of turning Jesus white to fuel colonialism and white supremacy. Fr. James Martin, S.J., explained last year in America magazine, “Images of white Jesus have obviously been used to promote the idea that white is best.”

    Mattel executives need to hear from a grassroots movement of Christians who want them to immediately dissociate their company from that history.” 1

  • Terry Pochert on Site

    Terry Pochert
    Newspapers.com – Battle Creek Enquirer, June 19, 1994, Page 31

    Author-professional speaker Art Fettig of Growth Unlimited, Battle Creek, recently made a two-week working trip to Oahu and Maui, Hawaii, where his speaking schedule included programs for students at Sacred Heart Academy, U.S. Navy at Pearl Harbor, Hawaiian members of National Speakers Association, Association of Safety Engineers and attendees at the Governor’s Pacific Rim Safety Conference. Videographer Terry Pochert, who works at Channel 7 ABC, accompanied Fettig and they created a number of video series.

  • A Small Area of Diversity in a Hate Filled GOP State

    A Small Area of Diversity in a Hate Filled GOP State

  • Ross Reck: Let Yourself Rest

    Resting

    My wife sent me this post from The Contemplative Monk written by Jeff Foster and Titled, “Let Yourself Rest.”

    Seeing as how we are emerging from more than a year of very stressful times, I thought that it important that I share it. I think we all need some rest.

    “If you’re exhausted, rest.
    If you don’t feel like starting a new project, don’t.
    If you don’t feel the urge to make something new,
    just rest in the beauty of the old, the familiar, the known.
    If you don’t feel like talking, stay silent.
    If you’re fed up with the news, turn it off.
    If you want to postpone something until tomorrow, do it.
    If you want to do nothing, let yourself do nothing today.
    Feel the fullness of the emptiness, the vastness of the silence, the sheer life in your unproductive moments.
    Time does not always need to be filled.
    You are enough, simply in your being.”

    If you feel like eating a whole bowl of Bing cherries, do it!! What are you going to do or not do?

    References:

  • Art Fettig: Books

    Books by Art Fettig

    Originally published: November 16, 2009

    I’m in here at my computer early this morning so that I can send it off and get over to the library book sale in Chapel Hill. I had to promise my wife that for every book I brought home today I would get rid of at least one book from my office. Books are my addiction.  I don’t think I had a half a dozen books around other than school books for the first twenty years of my life. When I was twenty two I was wounded in Korea and we moved on to Hokkaido, Japan and I hurt my leg taking ski training and as my leg was healing I would stumble across  the street from my barracks and spend my time in the library across the way. Mostly I enjoyed the biography section. When I was learning to become a claim agent with the railroad I began to read books about behavior; why people bought things and how the creative mind works.  I discovered Alex Osborne and the topic of creative thinking. For many, many years I have gone through a book a week and the topics are as varied at those wet leaves that have piled up all around our home in the woods.

    I’m sure you have heard the expression “Readers are leaders.”  Well all I can say is that most of what I have learned has come from the books I bought or borrowed. I’ve done my learning my way and it has been a joyous venture.

    This week I learned that my new novel, The Old May and the CD won the NABE 2009 Pinnacle Book Achievement  Award for best book in the category of Novel for which I am most grateful. I might truly be a slow learner but I keep on striving.

    References: