The hand-painted letters on the side of a van seemed to scream like an outraged shout. I was just east of Birmingham Monday afternoon — heading east on I-20 — when I saw the words.
“I AM A HUMAN BEING.”
That’s all it said. There appeared to be a young white man driving. The van had out-of-state license plates. There was no other clue about what the words meant. But, somehow, it made sense to me. I like to imagine that I know how the man inside felt.
A human being is naturally free. He doesn’t live with shackles on his hands and feet, but he also doesn’t allow shackles on his mind. He doesn’t live in a cage with bars and a lock on the outside. But neither does he allow his mind to be caged and controlled.
We don’t enslave people’s bodies anymore. The chains and shackles are mostly in museums. But we’ve done something far worse. We’ve given up control of our minds. We’ve turned over control to bullies and politicians and advertisers and carnival barkers.
And even though our bodies wander the world freely, this control of our minds leaves us doing and saying and being what someone else wants us to be. But every now and then, one of us wakes up to the reality of the culture we’ve created. And even before we fully understand what’s going on, something inside cries out.
I am a human being! I have a right to be free!

Christmas marks God’s attempt to connect us to himself and others
Going through old relics tells me I’m still same person I used to be
In the old Ginger or Mary Ann debate, I wanted a third choice
Tools don’t make you great artist, but tools can change how you feel
Arming teachers for safety likely to create gang that can’t shoot straight
Friday nights still take me back to sidelines of high school football
If authentic connection is absent, we crave love and a human touch
Trivial objects have power to be containers for strong emotions
Monkeys celebrating new donation button, hoping for more bananas