Thursday, March 13, 2014

Children of God

A friend of my brother's who has read my book has become my new best friend.  She clearly has her eyes open more than I do.  I doubt reading my book had much to do with that, but I'm glad that she has read my book and begun to direct me to certain things because I have a blog that some people read and so her passion can have a greater range.  That's how awareness works: one person's awareness can make a second person aware, and then those two people might lead to four person's being aware, and then eight, and then sixteen, and so on; soon we have an army.

Anyway, this post isn't about how awareness works (technically, all my posts are about how important simple awareness is, since I really believe that simply being aware is indeed half the battle).  This post is about the following video that Pamela, my new best friend and hero, pointed out to me:

Child Sex Tourism

Please watch the video.  The video was enough to convince me to sign up for upworthy.com's daily e-mail.  There's also a petition to sign at the end to help stop child sex tourism.

If you don't read on, that's fine, it means that you watched the video and then didn't have time for any more reading.  Good!  Watching the video and not reading more is better than not watching the video and reading more.

As I commented to Pamela, while watching the video I thought a lot about pornography in general.  I feel more strongly than ever that my emphasis on pornography and its relationship to modern slavery is justified, because more strongly than ever I see that our attitudes towards pornography are the same attitudes that will later justify propagation of slavery and child sex tourism.  One of the experts in the video talks about how men are sitting behind their computers in far-away countries virtually abusing the ten-year old Sweetie mentally and bodily, and then once they get off they also shut off the computer, go back to work and think nothing of what they've just done to a ten-year old girl.  Is pornography not the same?  We sit behind our computers or TV screens, directing the action (in the sense that we can choose and search out for whatever type of pornography we want), virtually using and abusing--a high percentage of pornography nowadays is about abuse--the bodies and minds of women and men, and then once we get off we shut off our computers and TVs and think nothing of what we've just done.  Child sex tourism is obviously a far more cruel and heart-wrenching phenomenon, but do you see how our attitudes toward pornography can quickly escalate to child sex tourism?  And then virtual child sex tourism can quickly escalate into face-to-face child sex tourism.  And then face-to-face child sex tourism can turn into local child sex abuse/slavery.

At the bottom of all of this is an inability to see everyone as a child of God.  When slavery in the thirteen colonies and the United States was at its height, slave-owners did not want their slaves to be educated in religion.  Why?  Because slave-owners, as heartless and/or ignorant as they may have been, knew that God probably didn't look kindly on enslaving fellow Christians: once someone accepted Christ as his/her savior, well, then that slave was... was... was a real person!  Oh my goodness!  We can't enslave real people!  I don't mean to say that we all need to be religious or that we need to educate slaves in religion.  Since post-modernity began its reign, I'm not sure that being religious would save a slave in the worldly sense.  I am saying that we all need to see all other people as children of God.  We don't need to be religious or even believe in God ourselves to do that.  All we need is a sense that if a person is alive, then they are just like us, a real, live person.  When we allow pornography into our lives or into our society, we acknowledge in some small way that not all people are equal.  In that case, some people are worth physically or virtually taking advantage of, worth using and abusing. 

Even if we aren't talking about pornography, there are far too many of us going around thinking that only people of the same or higher social status as ourselves are real people.  There are others of us who go around thinking that only our friends are real people.  Stop for a second and consider whether you are one of those people who don't truly believe that all persons are indeed persons.  If we think about the way we and our acquaintances talk and think, we will find that we are often or come close to being someone who doesn't view all persons as persons.  And that is our problem.  There's far too much devaluing of real, human persons going on.

Want to end child sex tourism?  Want to end slavery?  Then evangelize.  Whoa, that's a scary word.  It shouldn't be scary, though, when we are evangelizing to the radical yet not-so-radical idea that all persons are actually persons.  If we do that, then no one will be able to use and abuse another human being and then continue on with their life as if nothing happened.  We are all children of God, after all.

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