Sunday, October 29, 2023

Thoughts on the War

Almost 25 years ago the failure of Clinton’s Camp David summit, followed by the 2nd intifada, killed the Israeli peace camp and pretty much rang the death knell for any kind of negotiated. two-state solution. Bibi Netanyahu has ever since governed as if the "conflict" was a war that Israel had won, and his governments have done (and allowed the settlers to do) basically anything it wants in the West Bank and Gaza with virtually no restrictions. The attack in the south on October 7 has to be seen in the context of a longstanding situation where there is neither the prospect for political advancement (or even basic citizenship rights) for the Palestinians nor international intervention to moderate Israel's behavior. Zionist claims that this attack is completely out of blue with no possible context are false. Analytically rather than morally, from the Palestinian perspective this kind of anti-colonial bloodletting is exactly the kind of thing Franz Fanon was talking about.

It has to be said that everything Hamas does helps Netanyahu politically. In the 90s It was a series of bus bombings that undermined the peace process and did a lot to get him elected in the first place. In the 2000s it was the second intifada, which allowed Israel to claim suppress the Palestinian independence movement, claim victory, and get on with the task of annexation, de facto if not de jure. And now it's this flamboyant attack in the south of the country, which allows him to complete his task of suppressing democracy within Israel and demolishing any possibility of Palestinian independence in Gaza. It’s often wondered how Hamas' actions could possibly be supposed to benefit the Palestinian people, but one can certainly see how they benefit Netanyahu: h
is domestic problems go away; he gets locked into his position; he gets Israel in a war footing and gets to cosplay Churchill; he gets hugged by Biden; he is able to complete the suppression of democracy at home. Hamas' actions and Netanyahu's interests dovetail quite well, as they always have.

There is absolutely no reason to give Netanyahu any kind of benefit of the doubt here. His is a racist and fascist government, despite the window dressing of "opposition" politicians who want to get in on the war action. He was the one who allowed the border to be unprotected, and he is the one who is framing this as a war against Amalek. A couple of hundred Israeli hostages are certainly not a hindrance to him. 

Some progressives in the US are painstakingly drawing a distinction between American Jews and Israel, and I appreciate that, but the vast majority of organized Jews (with the exception of a couple thousand people in Grand Central Station) is virtually unanimous in articulating a no-holds-barred approach such as has been explicated by Netanyahu. Another project that will be boosted by this, directly related to the suppression of the domestic peace camp in Israel, is the effort to outlaw anti-Zionist political speech in the US. There was a wave of legislation on this several years ago, mostly stymied by the courts, but the ADL is currently demanding that colleges ban SJP as supporting terrorism. Stifling anti-Zionist speech is a direct violation of the first amendment and is is a terrible idea, and cannot help but make the entire situation worse, as well as making "the Jews" directly responsible the undermining of this vital constitutional principle. 

Solidarity with the Palestinian people is absolutely legitimate, especially when they are under total assault by a reckless and maniacal Israeli government. If every expression of support for the Palestinians is going to be considered support for terrorism, and therefore suppressible/arrestable/fireable, then we’re going into a very dark place.

One more thought: I know a lot of people feel hopeless right now, and I agree that the situation is bad, as bad as it's ever been. We also have a Christian Nationalist Speaker of the House, which is its own terrible problem but will have to be dealt with another day. My feeling is that when circumstances make us feel that are losing our footing, when we are being blown back-and-forth by events with seemingly no place to hold onto, the best thing we can do is try to stay true to the values that we have espoused throughout our lives. Rather than letting the worst case make me think my values, which I consider sacred, have been superseded or made irrelevant somehow, I choose to see them as a port in the storm, something to guide my ship toward (to possibly overextend the metaphor). My operative philosophy has always been more or less “give peace a chance." It might seem naive, but I think I'll stick with that.

Ceasefire now.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

Maxine Persons' Eulogy

 The eulogy for my mother that I delivered at her funeral on Sept. 1, 2023. 

I’ve always felt that my mother was ahead of her time. She came of age when before the feminist age, when women were not yet fully in the work force. She didn’t graduate college and she didn’t work a paid job until Jon and I were teenagers. But if she had been born 20 years later she would have been an exec or an office manager or something. She had amazing organizational skills, a great memory, and attention to detail. 

Maxine was born in the Grand Concourse in the Bronx, in the last period of the huge Jewish community in that part of New York. Her mother had 5 siblings and her father had 2, and if I remember it correctly (and of course I can no longer ask) 2 of her aunts lived in the same building with her parents and her. There’s a picture with my mother as a child with something like 50 cousins at a simcha, I’ll show it tomorrow night. Within the next generation the children in that picture moved all over the country and my mother was undoubtedly the last person who could even name them all. That’s only one of the ways she passing is a loss. 

Her father, Harry, owned a service station, and to my mother he walked on water. Her mother, Sherry, smelled of Tabu and cigarettes. They lived in a one bedroom apartment, with the daughter in the bedroom and the parents in the living room. She worked at Decca records before marrying David, which when I was young and hip that was by far the most interesting part of her story to me. 

After Jonathan was born we moved to New Jersey, first to Maywood and then to Sayreville, where we both grew up. Both of my parents grew up in secular families but my mother was a builder. They – by which I mostly mean Maxine, with David in tow – helped to found a Conservative congregation in Sayreville, the Sayreville Jewish Center, which became the focus of her life for about the next 15 years. She was president twice and also ran the weekly bingo game for many years. The Temple was the center of our family life for many years. 

Mention of the bingo game allows me to go into a digression about my mother’s culinary abilities, or lack thereof. Regular Wednesday night bingo games meant that Jon and I had to fend for ourselves for dinner. Our regular self-prepared meal was a box of lipton noodle soup and a can of spaghetti’os. My mother was not, as they say, from the cooks. Her two specialties were a beef cheese and noodle casserole which we called “noodle gook,” and which I still make using veggie ground, and shrimp scampi. We always speculated that my parents adopted kashrut in large part so my mom didn’t have to cook at all anymore. 

She spent many evenings, for years and years, sitting in our family room or den, with a huge pile of papers in front of her, moving the papers from one pile to another – Temple papers, home papers, later Little Elegance papers, I’m sure still later Valencia Isles and Hadassah papers. One of my lasting sense memories is of my mother, in her robe and slippers, with a detective show on television, moving papers slowly from one pile to the other. 

Maxine could be a loyal and steadfast friend. I emphasize “could.” She remained connected to the Debs, her clique in high school, her entire life. Carol Feitelman has been friends with my mother for 70 years. They went on trips when they were older, to Ireland and Iceland all kinds of different places. 

And on the other hand Maxine was stubborn, demanding, and definitely got into beefs with people, as several people on my father’s side of the family could attest. She had two sayings that I recall: “don’t get mad, get even,” was one, and the other one was, “It’s better to ask forgiveness than permission.” I definitely tested that one when I was younger. One time I “borrowed” one of their cars to drive to Vermont to see a girlfriend. When she confronted me after I said, “It’s better to ask forgiveness than permission.” She didn’t like that too much. I also discovered as I got older that “don’t get mad, get even” is not really very good advice. It’s taken me a long time to work through that. But when Maxine was done with you, she was done, and that’s definitely something I’ve inherited from her. 

And that was what she was like her whole life. My mother had a big personality, and leadership qualities that made themselves apparent in any situation she was in. When Jon and I were teenagers she started working at a collectibles store in the Woodbridge Mall, Little Elegance. It was a family owned business but her natural leadership qualities and organizational skills were again apparent and she ended up as the assistant manager, making the schedules and placing the inventory orders and the like. She also used her employee discount to amass a truly impressive collection of collectibles. When she moved to Valencia Isles she went on committees and the board, which when Rabbi Klein heard that yesterday said, Now that’s a thankless job, and it was. 

But there was part of my mother that wanted to be thanked for her thankless jobs, and didn’t like it when she wasn’t. And I can relate to that too. When there was inevitably board politics and interpersonal tension – as there always was and always is- she ended up leaving Valencia Isles. In later years I tried to tease her by asking her who she was in a blood feud with this month, but she didn’t find it funny and I had to stop. But as the attendance here today attests, she had many friends and admirers. Like many strong people, she elicited strong reactions, on all sides. 

Just the year before last, before her health started failing, she ran a Hanukkah party for the local Hadassah chapter. She was an organizer to the last. I’ll probably get in trouble for saying this, but perhaps it’s not surprising that both Jon and I married women with definite Maxine tendencies. 

One must acknowledge the love of my mother’s life, my dad David. My parents were together for over 60 years, which is just amazing. They took turns caretaking each other – my mother caring for my father when he faltered after his retirement, my father caring for my mother when she was in Cleveland Clinic for nearly a year in 2012 and then over the last year or so as my mother’s health failed. They bickered with each other terribly but when they walked from the car to the restaurant, they held hands. When I was going through pictures the other day, nearly every picture I have of my mom has my dad in it too. They were as solidly married a couple as it’s possible to be. 

As her world got smaller Maxine’s relationship with my wife Suzy deepened, which we appreciated. She loved her grandchildren, and went to every graduation they could. The last time I saw my mother was when Jon and I visited together in May. They had been given bad news about her prognosis, but while Jon and I were here she rallied significantly, whether to put on a brave front for us, or because we were here, or both. We were able to go out to dinner, and to sit by the pool, and to play rummy, as she and I always loved to do and as we both had done with her father olev ha shalom.     

She collected owls and was an avid mahjong player and like rainbow cookies - these are the things one remembers. As I wrote the obituary I noted that she was an activist, a community organizer, it was a role that was natural to her, as it is to me. The people she loved, love her, and the people that don’t, lick their wounds. That’s the way she wanted it.

Maxine Persons nee Miller, Malkah bat Tzvi Hersh Ha’Levi ve’Sarah, May you be bound up in the bonds of life, and may your memory be a blessing to us all.  



  

Friday, August 4, 2023

On the "IHRA Definition"

hose of you who are not completely subsumed in Israel and Jewish communal politics may not be familiar with the hoohah surrounding the so-called “IHRA Definition” of antisemitism. IHRA stands for “International Holocaust Remembrance Association,” and the “IHRA definition” is a (supposedly) “nonbinding working definition of antisemitism” that includes a number of examples of antisemitic beliefs or behavior, including denying the Holocaust, making stereotypical claims about Jewish power, or blaming all Jews for the actions of individual Jews, or of non-Jews.
So far, so good, but included in the list of examples are these two:
• Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor.
• Applying double standards by requiring of it a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation.
The issue here being the inclusion of criticism of Israel, or of its policies, as evidence of “antisemitism.” It certainly can be, but it isn’t necessarily, and Israel deserves criticism. But it can be argued that the IHRA Definition weaponizes accusations of antisemitism in defense of Israel’s indefensible policies against its subject Palestinian population, and that is deeply troubling, as I’ve written about previously.
The concern is that the IHRA definition is yet another step in Israel’s most vocal supporters’ efforts to toxify or even criminalize criticism of Israel, of a piece with the anti-BDS legislation that was a previous arrow in this quiver. There are alternative definitions of antisemitism, such as the Jerusalem Definition of Antisemitism, that don’t have this baggage but the OJC has put its eggs into the IHRA definition basket – because the baggage is the point.
The quote-unquote organized Jewish community (henceforth “OJC”) in Kansas City (and I suppose elsewhere) has focused much of its advocacy efforts over the past couple of years on getting state and local governments to adopt the IHRA definition. The Kansas state legislature passed a resolution in 2022, and several municipal governments in Johnson County have been passing resolutions over the past year or so as well. Of course the idea that there is anything to criticize in the IHRA definition is taken as proof of the problem that it purports to address.
The issue has been re-introduced in the Roeland Park council, which will be considering the matter at its meeting on Monday night. One of the councilors, Michael Rebne, is opposing the resolution and is working with CAIR-KS, the Muslim communal relations organization, to oppose it as well. The KC rabbis (of which I am one) received an email from the Jewish Communal Relations Bureau (JCRB, a primary OJC institution) asking us to engage in support of the resolution, reach out to supportive clergy, attend the meeting, etc.
I’m sympathetic to Rebne’s position. I find the IHRA definition problematic and have signed statements opposing it. As I hope I’ve made clear here, I think it’s more about toxifying criticism of Israel than about addressing actual antisemitism. (The fact that actual antisemitism is more likely to come from people who are demonstrative in their “support for Israel” has apparently escaped the attention of the OJC.) On the other hand, in my humble opinion, and as I tell people who ask me, aside from the morality of it (Mrs. Lincoln) there’s zero reason for a local elected official or even state legislator to put themselves out on a limb on this – on what is, after all, a purely symbolic statement that makes you enemies in the OJC but and has no other practical effect. I mean, if Bibi Netanyahu ignores Joe Biden he’s sure not going to listen to a council member from Roeland Park, KS.
I think what will happen is that the resolution will pass with 1 or maybe 2 no votes, Michael Rebne will bolster his progressive bona fides, and life will go on as before – with the institutions of the OJC having played their chosen role in protecting Israel from criticism and making it harder to address actual antisemitism.

Sunday, June 4, 2023

Speech at KIFA Dinner 6/1/23

A mother goes to wake her son for Hebrew school one Sunday morning. When she knocked on his door, he said, “I’m not going!” “Why not?” asked his mother. “I’ll give you two good reasons,” he said. “They don’t like me, I don’t like them and I never get anything out of it. His mother replied, YOU ARE GOING. First, they’re expecting you. Second, you’re 47 years old. and third, you’re the rabbi!”

I grew up in suburban New Jersey in the 1970s. I had a very strong Jewish education for those days. I always felt kind of maladjusted in the environment I grew up in. I had a very strong sense of not wanting to be part of the corporate, workaday world, but I was only vaguely aware that there were alternatives. As a teenager I was very attracted to the politics and culture of the 60s. I was vaguely aware of the prophetic tradition in Judaism and as a teenager I learned about the socialist tradition of the Jewish immigration period.

I was politically active fairly young. I worked for the Bill Bradley for Senate campaign as a sophomore in high school. The first demonstration I ever went to was the day draft registration started, in 1978. I was involved in anti-war and anti-nuclear power campaigns. I attended some very famous rallies, like the 20th anniversary of the March on Washington and the big nuclear freeze rally in New York in 1982, which Bruce Springsteen played at.

After scraping through college I moved to New York and basically worked day jobs and hung out with rock bands. At the end of my 20s I had a religious experience and started on the path I’m on now. I lived in Israel for four years in the 90s where I taught English, I met my wife there and then we moved back and I started seminary.

As I finished seminary I went for a job interview for a congregation outside of Chicago and they noticed that my resume started in my 30s. If I was a second career rabbi, they demanded to know, what was my first career? I tried to be coy about it but they weren’t having it. On the day they were voting on me, I got a call telling me that I had to come up with a better explanation of what I had done in my 20s, which I gave them, but I should have known at that point what was gonna happen. The city was similar to where I had grown up and I thought, great, I’ll be the rabbi that I didn’t have growing up, but of course that’s not what the leadership wanted. When they didn’t renew me, it was during the recession and I couldn’t get another pulpit job and we couldn’t sell the house. After going on a pulpit visit weekend where the synagogue president’s son and one of his cronies, I kid you not, poured salad dressing on my guitar, I was hired by Jill Docking to become the director of the Jewish Federation in Wichita which is how I came to Kansas in 2007.

If you had asked me when I was a child in New Jersey what would be the last place I would ever live, Wichita KS would have been right at the top of the list. But I had decided I wanted to move into organizational work and that was an opportunity for me to learn what a budget is and how to relate to board members and all the rest. I thought three years of that and the big R in front of my name would put me in a good position to move back east for a national job and while I applied for several jobs, but I did not get them and when I came to the end of my three-year contracts I wasn’t renewed. I thought about moving back east to try to be a freelance rabbi but Suzy didn’t want to move without a job so we moved to Kansas City, which is where she’s from.

Meanwhile, in 2008, the Kansas Interfaith Power & Light chapter had been formed, by Eileen Horn, Jerry Rees, and David Owens of blessed memory. That’s where the 15 years comes from. Eileen was the coordinator of IPL which at that point was a program of Climate and Energy Project. She had been to the national IPL conference and my colleague Fred Dobb told her, oh, if you’re doing interfaith climate work in Kansas you should talk to Moti, so she called me and I went on the steering committee.

After I moved to KC, in 2011 the coordinator role for IPL came open. They knew me of course so they hired me to be the coordinator half-time. The first thing I did that got any attention was testifying at the hearing about the Keystone Pipeline at the Expo Center in Topeka in the fall of 2011. Gov Brownback and then-Senator Knox and a couple other people who were pro-Keystone testified and then I was the first opponent. John Hannah covered it and because it was the first in a series of these hearings around the country, it got national play and all my friends were very impressed. Here’s a pro tip: if John Hannah writes about you, there’s a good chance that it'll go viral, because AP is carried everywhere.

Eileen’s focus had been on doing energy efficiency updates in churches mostly but I'm more political, you may have noticed. In 2012 I took a few members of the board to the statehouse to meet some people and look around. We had a very back-of-the-envelope legislative priorities document which amounted to “do something about climate change.” After we were done we went to the Senate chamber. We just happened to be sitting there when Forrest Knox got up to the well and proposed an amendment to repeal the renewable portfolio standard that Governor Parkinson had put in as part of the sunflower coal plant compromise in 2009. We were like What the hell?! They ended up sending it back to committee but we knew after the election that year, they were gonna go after it hammer and tongs so that’s when we developed Kansans for Clean Energy and started a working relationship with Dorothy at CEP and Zack at Sierra Club which continues to this day.

In the meantime I was traveling around the state doing the same thing I do now, talking to churches and trying to get people to care about climate change. That's when I met Annie Ricker, which is a story for another time.

In 2015 the RPS issue was over and it was clear that there wasn’t going to be any legislation having to do with energy policy or climate, as in fact there hasn’t really been to this day. It was clear that without an organization to develop a faith-based voice on policy that space was going to continue to be dominated by the Hard Right. We also noted the tendency in progressive advocacy groups to silo into single issue groups, which limits the ability to draw attention to the interconnections between justice issues – such as the racial and economic implications of climate disruption. So in September we had a board retreat at the UU church in Lawrence, and what came out of that was KIFA.

We announced it at the beginning of 2016. One of the first things I testified on was a bill to ban this resettlement of Syrian refugees, which Micah was also involved with – that was an Islamaphobia fest - and another one was the second hope act bill. The Hope Act one was significant because I went to testify with my nice “care for the poor” Bible quotes and one of the legislators, who was a rightist Christian, quoted Thessalonians to the effect of if you don't work you don't eat. I didn’t really know what to do with that - later I found out it was a serious misinterpretation – but in the aftermath I decided rather that Biblical quotes, I would bring statements from the national denominational advocacy and say these are the people who are paid to put frame scripture in terms of policy. That's basically the approach I've taken since then.

And the rest, as they say, is history. Two significant steps were getting a $25,000 capacity building grant from Health Foundation in 2018, which allowed me to go full time and remains the only grant we’ve ever gotten from them, and then also in 2019 we established the relationship with both the ELCA’s Central States Synod and with national ELCA Advocacy, and for that I want to shout out to Bishop Candea, who managed that relationship for the Synod, and John Johnson, who facilitated it at the churchwide level. From that we developed relationships with the local UCC Conference, the Episcopal Diocese, and with the Mercy & Justice Team of the local United Methodist conference. I find I’m asked much less about my bona fides now.

And basically our approach has been to try to do the next right thing. I think this is good spiritual advice, as well as good political advice. We’ve tried to be useful, to put our efforts where they seem likely to do the most good. The fact that we’re funded mostly by individuals and denominational partners and not by a bunch of grants looking for deliverables means we’re able to be nimble when something comes up that we feel requires our attention, such as the CRT issue last year.

We have also been blessed in our leadership. John Martin was board chair for the last few years of IPL, and since that meeting in Lawrence we’ve had Sarah Oglesby-Dunegan who led KIFA for the first 3 years, and Rachael Pryor, who’s been the board chair for the past 3 years and has been an amazing partner. Annie Ricker has big Birkenstocks to fill.


And now I want to spend a few minutes speaking about our current moment – no wait, Robert, I’m just going to take a couple more minutes and then I’m going to sit down.


The most Jewish thing about me is my steadfast belief that the world can be a better place and we can help make it so. Traditional Judaism has a strong belief in the coming of the messiah.


Ani ma'amin, Be'emuna shelemah Beviat hamashiach Ve'af al pi sheyitmahmehya Im kol zeh, achakeh loh - I believe with perfect faith in the coming of the messiah, and though he may tarry, still I will wait for him.

Which more liberal traditions, including mine, think of as a messianic age. This is the source of the social justice tradition in modern Judaism, even if people don’t realize that they’re living one of Maimonides’ articles of faith. If we link this with the related concept that we are the hands of God, what we come our with is – We believe that the world can be a better place, and that we can help make it so. This is only one of a number of seemingly quaint and outdated concepts that I try to hold onto.


I don't know how much of this is because I'm getting older–looking back to the good old days seems to be human nature–but it seems clear to me that things are getting significantly worse. People with social justice sensibilities know that the world is a heavy burden to bear, and it’s heavier now than I can remember it.


When I was a senior in high school, Ronald Reagan was elected and John Lennon – he of “all you need is love” – was killed, and you couldn’t have had a stronger message that the halcyon days were over, hippie. A year after Lennon’s death, I went to a handgun control rally in Washington, where I was at school. We formed a big peace sign which could be seen from the air. Those were the days of Jim Brady, when we thought something could be done about gun violence – handgun violence. To me the difference between then and now is most obvious when we look at where the gun issue has gone. That’s not the only issue, but that’s the one that shows it in the starkest relief. The fact that any of us, or our children, can basically be shot anywhere and nothing will be done about it, is morally reprehensible as well as psychologically and spiritually devastating.

We are in a period when a minority of Americans, supported by the lavish funding from the 1%, and myriad sources of misinformation and hatred, have captured the mechanisms of power, including the courts. They are perfectly willing to use their position to bolster their power, and if we take them at their word, to destroy those who oppose them, whether legally or with stochastic violence. The extra-legal mechanisms that have been used historically, such as direct action and civil disobedience, are being crushed legally. And a significant part of the political system vilifies the term “woke,” which means antiracist. I look with particular horror at both what’s happening in Florida, and what’s happening with Cop City in Atlanta, where yesterday they’ve been very cavalier about using the word “terrorism” and where just yesterday they arrested people working on bail funds. The combination of red scare politics and government suppression of the left is tried and true in American politics, and it has been generally been very successful, which is why we have to keep inventing the wheel every 20 or 30 years.

Another value that gets short shrift these days is the concept of the public good. One of the reasons KIFA has been talking about public education is because it’s one of the few things that society contributes to as a whole for the broad benefit of all. Which is precisely why it’s under attack. But we dare not give up these important concepts, these important values. Such as the public good. Or our commitment to democracy. Or human liberation. Or caring for those less fortunate. Or peace.

The reason KIFA works in and through communities of faith or people of faith is because if there's any institution that even purports to care about the idea of the common good, it’s faith communities. Even if organized religion is in a period of decline – in large part because of the cruelty emanating from white supremacist-tainted religious beliefs and the inability of more moderate religious institutions to effectively stand up to it – I also believe strongly that spirituality, spiritual needs, are an intrinsic part of the human condition, and that if they’re not met with loving, life-affirming forms of religion then they will be met with fear-based ones. We meet many people who grew up in a church, and they didn't leave because they stopped believing in those values, they left because those institutions didn’t live up to those values. I could name a dozen people in this room that this applies to. They are a vital part of KIFA’s base.

I spend a great deal of my time trying to convince clergy and faith communities to be slightly more prophetic. Given the rise of white Christian nationalism I think it is vital for Christians in particular to stand up and push back. I believe that presenting a faith option that is anti-racist, open and affirming, and fully creation conscious is not only good religion, it’s good marketing. There are plenty of congregations that are fully living their mission to be on the other side of those issues – why are we so circumspect about fully living into our values, and our mission?

But when things seem to be dark or getting darker, we have God. We have each other. We are not alone. Our efforts mean something in the world, in creation - to God. We bring our burdens to God, and we take our strength from God. That’s what God is for!

And when we have that, how can we despair. I think about the 19th century, when robber barons ran the economy, Jim Crow was ascendant in north and south, and state violence was used to crush incipient labor and other social justice movements. Yet only 30 or 40 years later we had the New Deal and the heyday of industrial unionism. The long arc can move quickly, when it moves.

Our goal in any situation is to do the next right thing.

The two elections last year – the amendment election in August and the governor’s race in November - showed us that there is still a preference for moderation in Kansas. We have two things going for us right now, and they’re not insignificant: the first is Laura Kelly being in a position to protect us - to a limited but real degree – from the excesses of hard right leadership of the legislature, and the second is that relative to where we were even 5 years ago, the public policy infrastructure in Kansas is well led and relatively well resourced – I mean ACLU, Loud Light, Appleseed, KAC, Voter network, KIFA. This gives us four years – three now: the senate elections next year and the House and governor elections in 2026. If we are not able to use these relative advantages to change the political trajectory of the state then in 2027 we’ll have Gov. Kobach or Gov. Masterson and Kansas will be Confedistan just like all the rest of the red states. And if that doesn’t work, we’ll do the next right thing.

There are 3 aspects of the work we do that we must keep in mind. First is the actual political change piece: how do we make the work we do count in terms of material benefit for people in need? The second is our own self-care, that is, building for the long haul – how do we maintain our equilibrium enough to be able to continue to do this very difficult work? And third is building those social bonds, those bonds of mutual care and concern. How do we build resilience in the face of climate disruption? How do we build solidarity in the face of the genocidal suppression of trans identity? How do we defend ourselves and each other from armed MAGAs full of white resentment and self-righteousness? Grappling with these questions must be at the heart of our work moving forward.

But we have to be clear about what we believe. We believe that everyone is created in the image of God, and that everyone has the right to equal treatment under the law. We believe and work toward a multiracial, multicultural democracy where everyone has what they need to survive and thrive. We do this work not because we think it will be easy - we know it won’t be - or even that we’ll live to see the results. We do this work because we still believe that the moral arc of the universe bends toward justice, and that, God help us, All we need is love. This is not optimism and it's not hope - it's faith. The belief in things not seen. We do this work because we believe that the world can be a better place and we can make it so. We ask God to help us in this work, and we find God in the work, and in each other.

As for me I have to say that as challenging as my journey has sometimes been, I'm in a good place right now. People often ask me, and I’m sure they ask my colleagues as well – how I am able to do this work. Well, I have something that I'm good at, that people seem to want to support, I work with wonderful people both within KIFA and in our allied organizations, and I have a good marriage. I consider myself blessed.

The one thing we can’t do, is give up. This is always an option for white people with some means. But we can see who it leaves behind. Noam Chomsky says something really powerful in this regard: “We have two choices. We can be pessimistic, give up, and help ensure that the worst will happen. Or we can be optimistic, grasp the opportunities that surely exist, and maybe help make the world a better place. Not much of a choice.”

Or to revise our text: “I believe in perfect faith in the coming of a better world, and though it may tarry, we will do what I can to bring it into being.” And as the man said, and I still believe it - “Love is all you need.”