Showing posts with label On the Mark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label On the Mark. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

The Rebirth of the "On The Mark" Blog

 


Consider it a sunrise: the beginning of a new day.

I have been very little active on this blog in recent years. Perhaps it was the divorce. Perhaps it was the medical condition requiring me to get two stents in my coronary arteries. 

Whatever it was does not matter now. The United States is being thrown into a dumpster fire of chaos, multiple ways:

  • President Donald Trump is behaving more like a wannabe-Fascist dictator every day, trampling over Constitutional law and the Bill of Rights. Perhaps worse, his actions demonstrate that he is preparing to either ignore the 2020 election results, or declare them invalid, essentially making himself an actual Dictator Over America--perhaps for life.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. has resulted in 6.2 million infections and 188,000 deaths--all in a period of barely 8 months (August 31, 2020 figures). It shows no signs of stopping. To the contrary, with the opening of schools and the forthcoming Labor Day holiday festivities, and with the approaching cooler weather forcing activities indoor, we are only likely to see more infections and deaths. And yet, we still have no national plan for testing or containing the pandemic. Instead, Trump touts fake cures, encourages people to believe in a promised "miracle," and runs superspreader events as part of his presidential campaign (as he did at Tulsa, OK and the White House).
  • Despite the grim reality of the COVID catastrophe, we see vast amounts of misleading information, disinformation, and outright lies being posted in social media and elsewhere online, discouraging people from taking the pandemic seriously and taking appropriate protective measures, and encouraging risky behavior.
  • The U.S. real economy is in tatters. Tens of millions are unemployed. Double-digit percentages of small businesses have closed for good. Many of those originally "furloughed" from their jobs at the beginning of the pandemic are now being informed that their jobs are gone for good. To make it worse, millions have lost their employer-based healthcare. To make it even worse, tens of millions of Americans are in immediate danger of eviction.
  • There is widespread social unrest in the U.S., stemming from only the most recent public shootings of unarmed Black men by police, particularly in the killing of George Floyd and the shooting of Jacob Blake; the way that police let escape an illegally armed, long-rifle-carrying minor--who murdered two protesters of the Blake shooting--has not helped the situation.
I've got kids. They're all long grown up, and now they've got kids. This is not the America I want to pass on to them. What I have to change the situation are ideas expressed in logic and words. 

That's what this blog is about: addressing the threats to America, Americans, and the best version of the American way of life. 

So may it be. And may you say, "so say we all."

Please join "The On The Mark Social Issues Blog" community on Facebook here.

Copyright 2020 Mark Koltko-Rivera. All Rights Reserved.
Permission is hereby granted to re-post or quote this blog entry, if and only if Mark Koltko-Rivera, Ph.D., is credited as the author. 

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Welcome to "On the Mark": An Introduction

Welcome to “On the Mark: Social Commentary From a Reflective Perspective.” In this post, I explain the topics I plan to address, how this blog is different from other blogs of social commentary, how I am qualified to write about any of this, and some details about my personal background. Note: As of March 30, I adopted a policy of posting entries of a maximum of 800 words (not counting references and so forth); posts earlier than that date are longer, but from that point on, posts are just a bit longer than an Op-Ed piece in the typical newspaper.

Topics Addressed in This Blog

I shall address general social issues, including politics, business, and economics, civil rights issues, and happenings in the worlds of the media, literature, and the arts. In addition, I shall reflect on how events in my life relate to larger social issues. My particular take on these issues will be informed by "the reflective perspective": a grounding in spirituality and philosophy, with a commitment to social justice.

How This Blog Is Different

The distinguishing characteristic of this blog is that reflective perspective. In most blogs of social commentary, issues of spirituality are hardly if every addressed, and philosophy is deep in the background. In this blog, the philosophical underpinnings of what goes on in society are of major importance, and spiritual concerns are addressed directly. Well has it been said that 'we are spiritual beings having a human experience.' In this blog, I take that seriously.

How I Am Qualified to Write Social Commentary

Anyone can have an opinion. Why should anyone pay any special attention to mine? Different people have different criteria they use to vet a social commentator. My own credentials include the following:
  • I grew up poor, but have worked my way into a professional career. (I conduct psychological research under contract.) Thus, I am familiar with life as it is lived in different classes and levels of society. I have lived in my own $500K home--not ten years after being homeless.
  • I have worked in a great variety of positions over the years, ranging from janitor and hardware store stock clerk, to staff positions in the Fortune 500, to executive positions in small corporations, to professional and entrepreneurial positions.
  • I conducted a private practice in psychotherapy for 16 years. I have also served as treatment staff in clinical settings that have exposed me to some of the worst problems that human beings can face in American society. These settings include the Manhattan Psychiatric Center (the inpatient psychiatric hospital of last resort in Manhattan), and the outpatient mental health clinic of Lutheran Medical Center in Brooklyn (perhaps the largest such clinic in New York City).
  • My research has given me expertise regarding several important aspects of human psychology. These include: (1) worldviews, the assumptions that people hold about the world and life; (2) motivation, including the role played by the impulses, not only to fulfill one's potential, but to transcend the self through service and connection to something greater than one's own self.
  • In addition to my personal background of study in various areas of religion and spirituality, I have won awards for my scholarship in the psychology of religion.

My Personal Background

Readers may be curious about what sorts of perspectives inform my opinions. Here are some items about my background:
  • Name: Mark Edward Koltko-Rivera.

  • Demographic characteristics: 52 years old; married, with four grown children from a former marriage.

  • Home town: The Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City.

  • Where I’ve lived: New York City (Manhattan, including the Lower East Side / Greenwich Village, and the Upper East Side; Astoria, Queens; the Bronx). Florida (Winter Park, just north of Orlando). New Jersey (Newark). Pennsylvania (Haverford and Bryn Mawr). Connecticut (New Milford and West Hartford). Japan (Hiroshima, Okayama, Matsue, Matsuyama, Tokushima).

  • Ethnicity: Polish and Puerto Rican. (As they would say in the South: “Deal with it, y’all.”)

  • Religion and Spirituality: My religion is the faith of the Latter-day Saints (LDS, known popularly as ‘the Mormons’). Within this faith, I have found it comfortable to situate myself within the Sunstone and Dialogue community (named for two independent LDS publications, in which I have published several articles; I have also presented at the Sunstone Symposia in Salt Lake City, Washington, DC, and Boston).

  • Other blogs: I write regularly for "For Latter-Day Saints: Topics in Mormonism," in which I address topics that are of special interest to Latter-day Saints, and "Freemasonry: Reality, Myth, and Legend," in which I address topics that are of special interest to Freemasons. Anyone is welcome to read or comment on any of these blogs, as long as they keep the rules (see below). Items that concern the interface between general society and either the LDS faith or Freemasonry shall be addressed in this blog, "On the Mark."

The rules for those who leave comments: No personal attacks. No profanity. You are welcome to disagree with me, and quite vigorously at that, but infringements of the rules would lead to me deleting the comment and barring the commentator from future contributions.

Beyond that: Welcome.