Reasons to be Grateful For “t’Internet” etc.

Many of my friends and aquaintances know that I’m always complaining about the internet, computers etc. and I’m aware that my whining and wittering is often irritating.  The last piece I wrote had some damning things to say about IT and I stand by what I said in relation to drone warfare.  However, I am about to launch into a hymn of praise for how my life has been enriched by IT in general and Apple and Amazon in particular.  I realize that, as an activist, these two Leviathans should be shunned, but I have to acknowledge truthfully that they do help, if I keep them in their place!

A few years ago I was lucky enough to buy a second hand five year old Mac for £250.  This meant that as well as the usual functions such as email and the ability to write essays, journal entries, letters, articles and leaflets, I also had access to a decent DVD player and learned how to use BBC IPlayer as I don’t have a TV.

The greatest joy, however, has been the ITunes library where I can store all my favourite books in audio form and then transfer them to my IPod.  I buy audiobooks from Audible, now an Amazon company.  I have always loved to read and my failing sight has meant that I haven’t been able ro read normal print for the past few years.   It’s a pleasure to be read to, and if I have a favourite book on CD, I can use the computer to listen to that too.

After returning from Afghanistan, Beth and I gave several talks.  I decided to buy an IPad so that we could show pictures of our visit.  Beth set up a Prezi presentation and I was delighted to find that running through the pictures was a breeze, even when I gave solo talks.

The IPad has been a revelation to me.  When I bought it the man in the shop told me that they are very popular with children and the elderly!  I’d like to add the visually impaired to that.  Even though I use my hand magnifyer to look at certain icons and buttons, adaptations make it easier to read emails on the IPad and the picture on IPlayer is really clear and bright.  Despite the fact that the on screen keyboard took some gettting used to, I really like it now and whilst on retreat recently I was able to write all my retreat reflections on the IPad.  During the same retreat I used the camera to take some beautiful photos of the garden which I can look at any time and remember, and be happy!  (I’ll buy a coffee/tea for anyone who gets this reference!)

When I first got the IPad I didn’t use it much, apart from the presentations.  When the police “seized” our computers after our Waddington action, I followed my friend, Henrietta’s, advice and made friends with the IPad.  By the way, we now have our computers , thanks to Keith’s persistence.

I’ve discovered a real interest in Art History and have already completed several courses at the Oxford University Department for Continuing Education.  My methods for viewing pictures in a gallery are for another article.  However, the websites of various galleries really help in looking at pictures before visiting.  One particular website which I like is the BBC’s ‘Your Paintings’.  Nothing replaces visiting a gallery and looking at the original painting, yet the computer makes it possible to pick out detail I might otherwise miss.

In the past few days I’ve found out that I can put a Kindle app on the IPad and get ebooks from Amazon.  I’ve been able to set text size and font and use a white on black screen so that now I can read print again!  The first book I downloaded was ‘Seeking Justice’ by Keith Hebden, with whom I planted the peace garden at Waddington.  I’ve also bought two Chekov stories which we’ll be studying in the Russian Shorter Fiction course which starts in October.

Information technology is a good servant but a bad master.  Apple and Amazon give me what I need; the ability to write, access to well loved books, paintings and programmes, and the facility to discover new ones.  What I need to do is to keep a safe distance from other webs they may try to weave around me!

Reasons for Resisting Drones With the Waddington Six

On 3rd of June six of us, now known to our friends as the Waddington Six, entered RAF Waddington in Lincolnshire, from where the British drones are now being operated.  Our aim was to find out what was happening there and to give information, by leaving photos and descriptions, about the effects of drone warfare on innocent people.  We also planted a peace garden containing a vine and a fig tree, echoing the prophets, Isaiah and Micah, who spoke of these as symbols of genuine peace.

The three reasons why I acted with my friends can be summed up thus.  First, I acted because of my belief that war and preparations for war are contrary to God’s will for us.  The second and third reasons are summed up in a chant heard at a public demonstration at Waddington earlier this year;

‘EVERY AFGHAN HAS A NAME:

WAR IS NOT A VIDEO GAME’

For many years I have believed that Jesus left us a powerful message of nonviolence, summed up in the Sermon on the Mount and in the example of his own life and death.  He urges us to love one another and to love our enemies.  This is incompatible with war and warmaking.  One of the reasons I became a Quaker was because of the Peace Testimony, which, together with the Testimonies of Simplicity, Equality and Truth, form the basis of Quaker practice in daily life.  It was in the spirit of the peace of Jesus given in the Gospel and the Quaker Peace Testimony that I joined the others at Waddington on that beautiful summer’s morning.

EVERY AFGHAN HAS A NAME

Over the past five years, since joining St. Francis House, I have met and got to know many refugees from Afghanistan.  This, together with several direct actions I have taken part in, resisting the war on Afghanistan, led me to go with Voices for Creative Nonviolence to Afghanistan last year.  The people we met through the Afghan Peace Volunteers told us many stories about the effects of thirty five years of war.  The use of drones in Afghanistan is the latest in a long line of violent interventions the people of Afghanistan have had to suffer.  One young man, Raz Mohammed, spoke movingly of a drone strike which killed members of his family and uttered the heartbreaking words: ‘Drones bury beautiful lives’.

WAR IS NOT A VIDEO GAME

Drone warfare is remote control warfare.  The operators of the drones are thousands of miles away from their targets and so operating drones resembles the kind of computer war games which are so popular today.  Because of this remote control warfare, innocent people lose their lives.  The sophistication of information technology and the internet make drone wars possible.  Whenever I turn on my computer or IPad I am aware that I am part of a world which idealizes and idolizes this form of communication.  Even at this moment, as I write,  I am admitting that I accept this kind of impersonal communication, which is often no communication at all.  This can isolate and dehumanize me.  Modern warfare, of which drone wars are but a part, is possible because of the devotion we have to computers.  I am also complicit in this.

“We are called to live ‘in the virtue of that life and power which takes away the occasion of all wars’.  Do you faithfully maintain our testimony that war and the preparation for war are inconsistent with the spirit of Christ?”

Quaker Advices and Queries n. 31