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Tom Mikulka's avatar

I too was a pilgrim in the early 70's when we first came to Maine. Little did we know that the Maine Hunting Boot was a myth. Good old Leon ripped off the Sears Roebuck boot and claimed he had some divine inspiration after hunting in wet feet. This company now dances with Citibank the major funder of climate chaos and wants us to believe that they care about the "outside". Yet, the good people of Freeport still clings to the other myth that L.L.Bean really puts the planet over profits. Wake up and shop across the street at Patagonia.

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Cletis Boyer's avatar

As always, thank you, Kathleen, for sharing your thoughts with us. My favorite book is probably one you know, "On Caring", by Milton Mayeroff. It's a brief book, and although written by a philosopher, it is easily accessible. He looks at the phenomenon of caring and the relationships it both requires and creates. His favorite example to illustrate is the caring of a father for a child, but the phenomenon extends to caring for an idea, an ideal, such as democracy. He sees caring as helping another to grow, enabling that other to care for yet others. I like to think of our caring for democracy as doing exactly that, helping democracy to grow, enabling yet others to be cared for and to care for more others. I like how he identifies the components of caring, such as patience, honesty, courage, knowledge, cooperation, commitment. There is also a structure that seems to be needed. Our carings must be compatible with one another, there cannot be too many, and it allows us to be "in-place" in the world. I see this in social activism, the relationships required and created, the presence of the "components" Mayeroff identifies (honesty, courage, etc.), the obvious compatibility of the objects of our care (environment, democracy, justice, humanity). As you show in your writing, part of the knowledge we need and gain in our caring, is seeing the obvious "un-caring", or even anti-caring of Trump and his minions. Impatience, dishonesty, cowardice, ignorance, selfishness, inconsistency. In this context, perhaps one could say that caring is civics.

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