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Stephen Dinan's Post

Stephen Dinan's Post

Sacred America

Stephen Dinan | 01.14.06 | 02:42 PM |
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For many who are committed to healing this world, America has developed something of a mixed reputation: innovative and bold on the one hand, but wasteful, arrogant, and self-interested on the other. Add the term “sacred� in front of “America� and many envision a kind of fundamentalism that blinds us to our shadows, inflates our sense of self-worth, and goads us into righteous battles.

In the course of 2006, I intend to write weekly about how we can reclaim a sacred vision for America, a vision in which America is truly leading the next stage of planetary evolution, not out of arrogance but out of a profoundly selfless sense of compassion, honor, and destiny. I see this as the essence of our political DNA, which was activated in such extraordinary ways 230 years ago. There is a deeper history of America that, when recognized, points to an even more glorious future, one in which we actualize our ideals and lead beyond today’s global challenges into a peaceful, sustainable, and prosperous future.

We are in an era of intensified global problems. As the sole remaining superpower, America will be required to play an important role in successfully addressing those problems. We can either become a great champion of positive change. Or we can resist, protect our “interests� and become rightfully seen as a selfish empire-builder.

If we choose rightly, we can, quite literally, become the midwife of a new planetary culture unparalleled in history. To do so, though, many shifts will be needed in how we see ourselves and our role in the world. We’ll need new approaches to public problem solving and reformed structures of government. Expanded systems of leadership training and deeper forms of community. Innovative approaches to diplomacy and integral models of healing. Sustainable businesses and lower-impact lifestyles. Fierce truthtelling and skilled bridgebuilding. The list of shifts is vast, but I believe they can be simplified by imagining a Master Plan for America – a grand vision of what we can still become, followed by specific strategies and tactics to put such a plan into action.

In my weekly writings this year, I plan to focus on how the big-picture shifts required by such a Master Plan for America will involve deep shifts in not only our social and political systems, but also in the consciousness of our citizens. Without a more enlightened, creative, and healthy citizenry, the best political and economic reforms will dissipate. The evolution of America thus cannot be separated from the evolution of consciousness of her citizens.

So, I want to begin this yearlong journey with a vision for Sacred America. Vision is the homing device we plant in our future. That homing device draws us magnetically forward, especially as we begin to trust that the universe, Spirit, God, Tao or whatever name we choose for the Great Mystery supports our success. When we imagine a potential future with vivid detail and creative commitment, we can begin to activate that vision in others and attract the resources and forces necessary to bring it into being. The suffragettes saw a future in which women were the political equals of men. Those who abolished slavery knew that a brighter future for African-Americans was possible. Those future visions helped them weather the setbacks of their day and draw our country inexorably forward.

Standing in today’s America and looking forward in a visionary mode, I vividly see a world that has evolved beyond war. At some point in the not-so-distant future, war between nation states will become unthinkable. Children will read in their history books of millions dying in vast worldwide holocausts and they will open their eyes wide, asking their parents, “Those stories can’t be true, can they? Did people REALLY use to do that to each other?�

I envision America gradually transforming itself from the greatest military power in the world into the greatest peace-making power. I see America training the peace troops of tomorrow – the healers, facilitators, social engineers, artists, psychologists, and teachers who will be on the front lines, defusing conflicts before they develop into wars and healing social wounds before they fester. I see an America in which a Department of Peace surpasses the Department of Defense in money, influence, and power. Our military infrastructure will have evolved to train powerfully disciplined torchbearers of a new culture. The wars of the past will give way to an era of global peace, sustainability and prosperity.

America can lead this transformation. Indeed, I believe it is our sacred destiny to reclaim the greatness in the American soul, shoulder the burdens that greatness requires, and offer ourselves as co-creators in the Master Plan. I invite others to join me in this yearlong exploration, either as readers, activists, leaders, change agents, or fellow writers. Together, we can begin to activate a new vision of America’s highest spiritual potential and create new pathways to its manifestation.

Stephen Dinan
January 14, 2006

p.s. If you’d like to be on the list of recipients of these articles, you can sign up on the list I’m starting up at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stephendinan/ or visit www.stephendinan.com.

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Member Comments:

Submitted by Alex Tsakiris on January 20, 2006 - 9:31am.

I like a lot of the ideas, but I’m a little uncomfortable with the “sacred America�. Isn’t the whole “manifest destiny� stuff a little dangerous?

I really like living in California, so I guess I’m glad we took it from the Mexicans, I’m just not sure it was our “manifest destiny�. Similarly, I’m not sure it’s useful to think of us as “leading� the world toward a sacred transformation.

I’m also not sure personal consciousness transformation can be extended to global political systems in any way that’s effective. It would be nice, I’m just not sure there is much evidence that goodness can work here. My read of history always leads back to the Huns. They are born and raised to ride in from the hills and bring havoc unless they get their way.

Science (the right kind like Ions supports) is the shortest path to mass individual transformation. The spreading of freedom and economic connectedness is the best way to transform world politics.

Submitted by Stephen Dinan on January 20, 2006 - 12:13pm.

I hear you on the discomfort - America's power abuses have been obvious and the concept of a destiny can certainly be taken over by the ego in a way that leads to blindness. And yet, with so much power concentrated in America today, the task of calling the country to a higher, more mature stand grows increasingly imperative. I think that speaking to a noble, selfless strand of destiny can lead to a different kind of leadership that the world sorely needs.

Science is certainly foundational for deep, systemic change and that's why IONS and sister orgs have a key role to play. But the political realm is where conscious change work gets rooted in policy and therefore affects a much wider audience.

Submitted by Alex Tsakiris on January 23, 2006 - 10:40am.

Nobel… but what makes you think it can be EFFECTIVE. I don’t think our system of liberal democracy overlaid with a free-market economy is suited for consciousness transformation (not saying I’d want to live in any other type of system).

Some of the scientific work of IONS has the potential to transform masses of people in a way that political reform can’t because it addresses a different aspect of the human condition -- the spirit. We tolerate political and economic systems as necessary intermediaries, but spiritual transformation hits us at a different level.

Regarding “leading the world�, I’m persuaded by Thomas PM Barnett (The Pentagon's New Map) who argues we make the world safer when we connect people and countries. So, places like China become less of a threat when we build a bunch of Starbuck's over there and buy a bunch of their stuff at the dollar store. I think this is more effective than trying to “lead� anyone. Of course, this is all messy business and so morally ambiguous it makes my stomach ache.

Again, I think your post was great (I also like some of your other posts where you kinda rail against the loosey-goosey misapplication of quantum physics to matters of spiritually and consciences). I also think IONS voice is strongest when it delivers rigorously tested data, and well thought-out, objective implications of the data. I think it’s less forceful when it wanders into politics and religion.

BTW I’m continuously amazed at your website and the quality content. It’s clean and easy to navigate (although the distinction between “share� and “declare� seems a little unclear). My only request would be to keep finding a way to generate more new audio content (I’m somewhat of a PodCast junkie).

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