Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

Burma News (9.26.08)

Here’s the latest on Burma:

  • According to the Associated Press, National League for Democracy member Win Htein was arrested seventeen hours after being released by the junta in a massive amnesty in advance of the 2010 elections. Win Htein had served twelve years of a fourteen-year sentence on the charge of “providing false information to the foreign press” before his release yesterday.
  • The AP reports that a bomb has been defused in Rangoon, after another exploded yesterday.
  • The International Herald Tribune reports on the junta’s continued, “iron-fisted” rule.
  • Acknowledging the one-year anniversary of the “Saffron Revolution,” the Boston Globe has an editorial today about “Burma’s unfinished revolution.”
  • BBC Radio’s World Service reports on rampant starvation in the western Chin state.
  • The Los Angeles Times reports that more than two-million Cyclone Nargis survivors are still living on food aid and other forms of assistance, and many still live in makeshift shelters.

  • Shambhala Sun Space: Announcing The Best Buddhist Writing 2008

    Over at the Shambhala Sun Space, Molly De Shong announces the publication of editor Melvin McLeod’s The Best Buddhist Writing 2008–fifth in the Shambhala Sun‘s annual series.

    The Daily Show with Jon Stewart: Clusterf#@k to the Poor House – Dive of Death

    Authors@Google: Ethan Nichtern

    Via Integral Options Cafe:

    The Washington Post: Six Chaplains Resign After Virginia State Police Orders Nondenominational Prayers

    The Washington Post is reporting that six of seventeen volunteer chaplains have resigned from their positions with the Virginia State Police since August, following the passage of a policy that bans them from “referring to Jesus Christ in public prayers.” In a statement, Col. W. Steven Flaherty, the State Police superintendent, said he asked the corps of chaplains to “offer nondenominational prayers at department-sanctioned public events but that the request does not apply to private ceremonies or individual counseling.” He attributed the decision to a recent federal appeals court ruling that a Fredericksburg City Council member may not pray “in Jesus’s name” during council meetings because the opening invocation is considered government speech. Predictably, House Republicans have begun demonizing Governor Tim Kaine (D) over this issue, despite the fact that the order was came from Flaherty.

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