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Unblogged Bits (Thu. 16-Sep-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. General Electric Responds To Twitter Distress Call, Fixes Shattered Stove – Nice!
  2. NPR Welcomes Bryan Fischer To Discuss Tea Party Politics – I listened to the interview. While Fischer dramatically toned down his anti-gay, anti-Muslim sentiments, his basic badgering of Walker (essentially “We’re glad all the Tea Party leadership agrees with us on social conservative issues, but if they don’t, then they aren’t True Conservatives and we’ll do away with ’em”) made his basic personality and position quite clear.
  3. Clouds, Birds, Moon, Venus – Very cool.
  4. Echo Park Time Travel Mart – That’s lovely.
  5. Music, when soft voices die – RIP Edwin Newman.
  6. The Meaning of the Koran – NYTimes.com – Maybe not its “meaning,” but some interesting notes about it.
  7. U.S. Debates Response to Targeted Killing Lawsuit – NYTimes.com – Really? You can (a) declare an open hunting season on a (b) unindicted American citizen (c) anywhere in the world and (d) claim it’s all Sooper Sekrit and so not subject to review by anyone? Really? Yeah, what could possibly go wrong there?
  8. Feeling the Pain of Rejection? Try Taking a Tylenol: Scientific American – Innnnteresting.
  9. Hokey Religions and Ancient Weapons Are No Match for a Good Teddy Bear by Your Side, Kid – I have to say, the Leia one is cute …
  10. D-emocrats – While the old logos are uberpatriotic ugliness, the new one … looks like a Parking sign.
  11. An app for tough decisions. – Tempting …
  12. Tip: Just the text, please! – Good to know. Very good, in fact.

Tweets from 2010-09-15

  • Hard to believe it's already/only Wednesday. #
  • For the Dems crowing new Tea Party/dolt Delaware Senate candidate couldn't possibly win the seat, remember GOP thought same about primary. #
  • RT @hijinksensue: I wonder if Fantasy Football jocks realize they're playing DnD. #
  • RT @ArtsOrbit: Halloween week, @neilhimself will appear animated on the PBS show "Arthur." Prods say he will "pop up in unexpected places." #

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 15-Sep-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Top rates – Silly rational person … the point isn’t that what the top marginal tax rate will return to is still less than Reagan, Nixon, Eisenhower, or FDR … is that it’s TAXES ON THE RICH. And that simply will not do!
  2. O’Donnell warned of “orgy rooms” in college dorms – War Room – Salon.com – Dagnabbit — I was in college in time for coed dorms, but I missed out on the inevitable orgies. Not fair!
  3. An Ecofascist Crescent Moon Near Ground Zero – “Blending environmentalism with Islam can only serve to strengthen the totalitarian ideals of the green movement. With modern environmentalism’s fixation on ecological holism that strictly views people and their economic activities as expendable, unbalanced, unsustainable and cancerous—this will only be greatly bolstered and strengthened by the totalitarian will of Allah. If modern western man is way out of line with regard to the environmental movement, just think what it will mean when Allah enters into the equation.” Muslims! Greem! Nazis! Malcolm X! Van Jones! Islamo-Eco-Terrorism! DOOOOOOM!
  4. Glenn Beck To Fat People: ‘I Say Let Them Die’ – Because that is, of course, just what Jesus would have suggested.
  5. Christine O’Donnell’s Website Stripped Of All Information – But … but … I thought she was all about Telling the Truth No Matter What?
  6. Media Treatment of Waterboarding: Is it Torture? – Our so-called liberal press …
  7. U.S. State Prison Population Decreases for the First Time in 38 Years – For a nation so dedicated to freedom and liberty, we sure do have a crapload of folks in prison.
  8. What if the Earth had rings? – Just as the oceans proved not too big to fill with junk, so, too, with space.
  9. On the Advice of the FBI, Cartoonist Molly Norris Disappears From View – Page 1 – News – Seattle – Seattle Weekly – I try to respect people’s sensibilities. But threatening someone with death for not doing so means you’re valuing an abstract idea and your emotional attachment to it more than a human life. And that’s just plain old wrong in my book.
  10. AMERICAblog Gay: DNC drops Obama’s promise to repeal DOMA, fails to mention marriage, then gets all weasel-y on DADT repeal – There’s no question that the cause of gay rights will suffer worse under the GOP and under the Democrats. But by taking these sorts of weaselly actions to try and not be a target for right-wing criticism, the DNC palpably reduces the enthusiasm (and activist support) of an important part of their base. It’s not that progressives are going to vote GOP — they’re just not, in aggregate, going to vote, or going to harangue their friends and family and co-workers to vote, or donate to the DNC. The party whose most famous and successful president talked about the greatest thing to fear being fear itself is, far too often, acting out of fear.
  11. I hate to be shrill and all, but the tea bagging GOP nominee for NY governor is a pig. (No offense to pigs.): noreply@blogger.com (digby)
  12. More Evidence Our Memory Stinks – With clear (and, among experts, understood) implications in both science and criminology.
  13. Anthropogenic Climate Change: It’s for real. – There is a significant consensus amongst scientists in appropriate fields — thousands of them — that this is real. Whereas the vast majority of the dissent comes from (a) scientists in unassociated fields who are (b) supported by parties (businesses) with a vested interest in denying that this is real. It’s certainly supported by enough evidence to try and act upon it.
  14. Aspartame – Truth vs Fiction – It’s sometimes interesting when “skepticism” collides with “skepticism.” Which just goes to show one should never grant a “skeptic” authority, but weigh the evidence for oneself. Which a true skeptic would appreciate.
  15. Dropping Kilometers From Highway’s Signs Divides Arizona – NYTimes.com – The US adherence to English units of measurement (which the English themselves have long since abandoned) is … sadly indicative. We’re exceptional, all right — but not all exceptions are a good thing.
  16. ‘Just As Much, If Not More, Evidence’ – Makes you wonder what Senatorial committee she wants to be on.

Geek & Gamer Girls

I was lucky enough to marry one …


EMBED-Geek and Gamer Girls Song – Watch more free videos

Kids these days have it sooooooo easy …

(via Les)

Some short lessons in religion and constitutionality for Cal Thomas

I realize Cal Thomas is a big media personality who writes columns that appear in many famous newspapers.  He’s also a dolt when it comes to the Constitution. And history. And religion. And … well, pretty much everything else I can find.

Thomas appeared on Alan Colmes’ radio show for the following daft exchange, discussing mosques in the United States:

Thomas: I want them to be monitored. I want there to be listening devices in very single one of them.

Yes, Cal Thomas wants every mosque to have a listening device in it.  And, of course, he’s saying this publicly, so every radical Islamist terror cell now knows not to make plans inside of their mosque.  Nice way to drive them underground, Cal.  Maybe we need to bug the houses of every known Muslim in the US, and assign a personal monitor for every single one of them.  We certainly are going to need to hire a lot more FBI agents to monitor all the tapes of all the mosques each week.

I do strongly suspect that there are in fact certain mosques that are under surveillance, electronic and HUMINT, based on the rhetoric coming from them and other indicators (and, I trust, under a court order).  That’s a much more defensible stand — I’d expect a Christian militia church to be treated similarly.  But, then, I don’t assume that because there are Christian militias like the Huttaree planning on killing policemen, etc., that all Christian churches need to be monitored.

Colmes: Can you imagine saying that about any other religion?
Thomas: No I can’t, but no other religion…is talking about the imposing the equivalent of Sharia law…

Obviously Cal hasn’t spoken to some Dominionist Christians.  Nor to Christianist folks who very seriously and sincerely suggest the death penalty (by stoning, preferably) for homosexuality, adultery, etc.  Still more would propose criminal penalties for blasphemy, and outlaw divorce.  We still have Blue Laws that restrict commerce on Sundays and Christian holidays.  And, of course, we can see all sorts of significant teaching from conservative Christians in this country about the subservient role of women vs. men, etc.

(Let’s not even talk about Old School Mormons …)

Some of the particulars might vary, but for Thomas to single out Muslims in this country for, in his eyes, proposing a theocratic basis for a judicial system is disingenuous.  It’s just not his flavor of religion that he’s worried about.

Colmes: So you want the government to monitor what happens in mosques.
Thomas: I sure do…
Colmes: How will that ever pass a constitutional test?
Thomas: Well, I don’t know; we’ll have to see; depends who’s on the court.

Remember that, folks, next time you hear Cal Thomas or his ilk railing against “activist courts” as if it’s a liberal thing.  “Depends on who’s on the court” is his answer to how to make discriminating against a particular religion on a generic basis pass “constitutional” muster.

The conversation was based on an article that Thomas recently put out “Purging Evil” — by which, of course, he means Islam in the US.  I hadn’t been going to go through it in total, but it’s such zany hatemongering that I simply can’t resist.

Terry Jones, the Florida “minister” who threatened to burn the Koran on the anniversary of September 11, is as much a distraction from the real challenge facing America as was Senator Joseph McCarthy when it came to communism.

Gee, wasn’t it just this morning that I first commented how Islam is the New Commie Menace?

Communism was (and remains in its Chinese incarnation) a real threat.

China may be a threat.  Communism, as an ideology, though, is a-mouldering in the grave.  Heck, even Fidel is suggesting that they Cuba needs to back away from it.  The People’s Republic of China is communist any more only insofar as they pay lip service to it; in reality, it’s as much of an autocracy (and growing plutocracy) as the imperial orders it supplanted.

China is a  threat — or at least a challenge — to the US largely because of its massive population, growing industrial power, untapped resources, debt-holding over the US, and long and proud tradition of considering itself the center of the world.  That would all be true even if they were as democratic as the day is  long.

But radical Islam — rabid, advancing, intolerant, subjugating — is potentially a bigger one and must be conquered.

IT’S LIKE A WAVE OF ARMY ANTS … DEVOURING ALL THEY COME ACROSS …

Various apologists for the Nazis …

NAZIS!!!

… and communists in the media, academia and religion are now mostly forgotten and that’s the problem. Forgetting what happens when evil is accommodated leads to terrible consequences and more evil.

Accommodating evil is, in fact, rarely a constructive or long-term solution.  (Though, of course, one could consider our major financial and economic ties to “Communist China,” and the fact that we aren’t invading them or nuking them into a glass parking lot, would seem to indicate that we are “accommodating evil” in Cal’s world.)

The problem comes in accurately identifying evil, and figuring out the most productive way to confront and stymie it.

Some ancient wisdom about what must be done with evil is helpful for those who would pay attention: “You must purge the evil from among you” (Deuteronomy 22:21).

Um, Cal? Here’s a bit of context for that reading from Deuteronomy …

13 If a man takes a wife and, after lying with her, dislikes her 14 and slanders her and gives her a bad name, saying, “I married this woman, but when I approached her, I did not find proof of her virginity,” 15 then the girl’s father and mother shall bring proof that she was a virgin to the town elders at the gate. 16 The girl’s father will say to the elders, “I gave my daughter in marriage to this man, but he dislikes her. 17 Now he has slandered her and said, ‘I did not find your daughter to be a virgin.’ But here is the proof of my daughter’s virginity.” Then her parents shall display the cloth before the elders of the town, 18 and the elders shall take the man and punish him. 19 They shall fine him a hundred shekels of silver [b] and give them to the girl’s father, because this man has given an Israelite virgin a bad name. She shall continue to be his wife; he must not divorce her as long as he lives. 20 If, however, the charge is true and no proof of the girl’s virginity can be found, 21 she shall be brought to the door of her father’s house and there the men of her town shall stone her to death. She has done a disgraceful thing in Israel by being promiscuous while still in her father’s house. You must purge the evil from among you.

Um … about that whole “imposing Sharia law” thing?

Instead, we are tolerating, even welcoming evil, under the false assumption that evil can be neutered when it is in the midst of good. If that were so, the good works performed by various cultures would have long ago eradicated evil. Evil must not only be purged, it must be defeated.

I could pull up a zillion quotes from the New Testament, Cal, about answering evil with good, and how treating evil people with goodness is the right path to choose, and all that.  But, then, why bother?

The former co-chairs of the 9/11 Commission, Democrat Lee Hamilton and Republican Thomas Kean, write of the “Americanization” of al-Qaida leadership, reports the Washington Post. In a 43-page study by the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, Hamilton and Kean warn of the radicalization of Muslims inside the United States and how al-Qaida’s strategy is changing from big events, like airplane hijackings and attacks of mass destruction, to plotting for smaller actions designed to spread fear and instability across the country.

Of which we’ve seen pretty much zilch so far.

But, then, if al-Qa’eda were managing to be wildly effective in radicalizing Muslims in the US (if they’re not being radicalized by Anglo pundits calling them evil cryto-terrorists), one would expect that “smaller actions” wouldn’t be necessary.  A mass uprising would be much more effective.

In this chilling sentence from the report is the challenge for those who deny the reality of what we face: “The U.S. is arguably not little different from Europe in terms of having a domestic terrorist problem involving immigrant and indigenous Muslims, as well as converts to Islam.” The report says al-Qaida and its affiliates in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen have minimally established an “embryonic” recruitment infrastructure in the United States. It points to convictions last year of at least 43 American citizens or residents aligned with radical ideology and high-profile cases of recruits who went abroad for training.

Good Lord! There were 43 American citizens or residents  convicted.  That’s a whopping 0.00014% of the 307 million people in the US!  IT’S AN EPIDEMIC OF EVIL!!!

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano seemed to confirm the findings in the report when she spoke last week to a group of first responders in New York: “The old view that ‘if we fight the terrorists abroad, we won’t have to fight them here’ is just that — the old view. It is abundantly clear that we have to fight them abroad; we have to fight them at home. We have to fight them, period.”

Agreed.  Fight the terrorists, then. But who are the terrorists?  Cal seems to think it’s pretty much every single Muslim in America.

We are doing a poor job of fighting the terrorists at home if we continue to allow Muslim immigrants, especially from Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen, into America.

Because every Pakistani, Somalian, and Yemeni is a terrorist.  Or will be a terrorist. Or could be a terrorist.  No, let’s go with is most likely a terrorist.  After all, why would anyone want to come to this country who didn’t want to blow it up?

We won’t win this war if we permit the uncontrolled construction of mosques, as well as Islamic schools, some of which already have sown the seeds from which future terrorists will be cultivated.

Right. Because, just like every Catholic Church and Catholic School was a seed bed for future IRA terrorists, and just like every Jewish Synagogue and Yeshiva in the 30s-40s was a seed bed for Israeli terrorists against the Brits, every Mosque and Islamic School is a seed bed for jihadists.  So let’s ban ’em all!

We won’t win this war if we continue to permit the large-scale conversion to Islam of prison inmates, many of whom become radicalized and upon release enlist in al-Qaida’s army.

Really?  Really?  How many prison inmates, converting to Islam, have gone on to be radicalized al-Qa’eda terrorists, Cal?  “Many”? How about some numbers? How about some examples and trends?

Even Syria understands the threat better than our own government. The New York Times reported on Sept. 3 that the Syrian government has asked imams for recordings of their Friday sermons and has begun closely monitoring what is taught in religious schools: “(Syria), which had sought to show solidarity with Islamist groups and allow religious figures a greater role in public life, has recently reversed course, moving forcefully to curb the influence of Muslim conservatives in its mosques, public universities and charities.”

What does Syria know that we refuse to acknowledge out of fear of offending “sensibilities”?

Because, of course, we want to model our freedoms and liberties and tolerance and openness and lack of police state on … Syria?  Really, Cal?  We should take our cue from Syria?

In Nigeria, Christian gangs have assaulted and murdered Muslims.  (Muslim gangs have done the same to Christians.)  Should we follow their model, too?

We must purge the evil from among us, or else.

Fortunately for you, Cal, I’d prefer to be much more narrowly focused on actual purveyors of killing and death, rather than “purging” anyone I consider to be uncivil, un-American, hateful, and, yes, arguably evil.

Unblogged Bits (Wed. 15-Sep-10 1731)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. A Nice Story About Colliding Faiths – There are some Christian denominations that would cavil a bit at outsiders worshiping in space they consider consecrated — and some Christians who would be reluctant to reach out for help in this sort of fashion. That said, even in these circumstances, one can think of a number of ways that people of good will (and who bear in mind the question of “Who is my Neighbor?”) can reach out and help one another … and maybe learn something in the process.
  2. Look YouTube, No Hands! Looxcie Introduces Wearable Camcorder – This is actually pretty darned cool.
  3. Hobby Lobby To Couple: Only Women Can Carry Bags – Well, there’s a law suit waiting to happen.
  4. Self-Serve Wine Tanks Coming To Supermarkets – Okay, I want to see the big Sparklett’s Wine Bottle. “Glug-glug!”
  5. Google hopes to launch music service with downloads, streaming – Guardedly optimistic. If we’re going to have this kind of a digital music world, the approach Google is taking is not a bad way to do it.
  6. Primary Night: Good For Teabags, Even Better For Democrats – If I were sure that these loons wouldn’t actually end up in Congress, I’d be even happier. Even a few is too many, and there are enough of them who will actually win for my comfort. Still, I do like Les’ new Democratic slogan: “SURE WE’RE INCOMPETENT PUSSIES, BUT DO YOU REALLY WANT TO VOTE FOR THE CRAZIES???”
  7. Because everyone knows men like to have something to look at? [Pharyngula] – Christine O’Donnell – Role Model!
  8. Cocky Soccer Goalie – Oh, I expect he got an earful. Or twelve.
  9. Hyperbole and a Half: The Party – This bears a certain resemblance to when I first had wisdom teeth removed … and was first introduced to the wonders of nitrous oxide.
  10. Matt Gertz: Right-wing blogosphere discovers Fox’s Karl Rove problem – Even Karl Rove is not immune to the long knives when the mob thinks he doesn’t pass the ideological purity test.
  11. Skeptics discount science by casting doubts on scientist expertise – People hear what they want to hear, and are willing to reject experts who tell them stuff they don’t want to hear (esp. when there are other “experts” willing to tell them what they DO want to hear).
  12. Feature: Inside Internet Explorer 9: Redmond gets back in the game – Initial reaction: Chrome aesthetic, some whiz-bang features, typical irksome restrictions on customization.
  13. Republicans unveil plan to add $4 trillion to deficit – The intent is not necessarily to add to the deficit, of course; it’s to starve government and cut programs that benefit everyone except the wealthy and the businesses they own.
  14. Dems shouldn’t fear a popular position – But they will.
  15. Christine O’Donnell, The GOP Establishment, And Republican Suicide | The New Republic – “The premise of all these pleas for Castle was extremely sensible: this is politics. Sometimes you move the ball forward, sometimes the other team moves it forward. Sometimes you make compromises in order to get ahead. But the Republican base has been taught not to think this way. This isn’t just politics, remember? This is a twilight struggle for freedom. And Mike Castle didn’t just cast a couple bad votes. He acquiesced in a sinister plan to undermine capitalism. How could they ever support a candidate like that?”
  16. When a Castle gets torn down in Delaware – Key element here: “Only about 57,000 voters participated in the primary election.” When the numbers are that small, any quasi-organized fringe (especially a motivated one) can have a tremendous impact. As has just been seen.
  17. Flashback: Paladino says Obama “worships himself” – Isn’t it nice to have your own personal pocket Truth-o-Meter, so that you can look into someone’s heart and magically know what exactly he or she believes about God? Y’know, the Inquisition carried those around, too.
  18. IHOP Sues IHOP: Kyle
  19. Focus on the Family: Legally Married Couples Do Not Count As “Families” – Well, I can think of some legally married couples who aren’t really families. And vice-versa. But that’s based on their behaviors toward each other, not on fear of gay cooties.
  20. South Carolina Senate President Dresses Up Like Confederate Soldier With Black Slaves At GOP Event – Wow. That’s … um … remarkable. And noteworthy. I do hope folks are taking note.

Truths for Mature Adults

Some things to not bear too much criticism or examination, and I acknowledge that this is a humorous piece, but worth a few moments of nattering and consideration …

Truths for mature adults…..

1.  I think part of a best friend’s job should be to immediately clear your computer history if you die.

Actually, nothing there I’m at all concerned about. Especially with more recent browsers that let you surf without a history file …

2.  Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong.

Um … yup.

3.  I totally take back all those times I didn’t want to nap when I was younger.

Um … double-yup.

4.  There is great need for a sarcasm font.

Jonathan Swift and H.L. Mencken and Mark Twain somehow all managed …

5.  How the hell are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?

Use the internal seam points as your corners. Tuck in loose edges as you go. You really need two to make it work.

6.  Was learning cursive really necessary?

Well, I don’t use cursive for any of my handwriting, but I’m glad I have a cursive (ish) scrawl for my signature. Block letter the sig line on a check draws stares.

7.  Map Quest really needs to start their directions on # 5.  I’m pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

Maybe as an option. If you’re doing directions from someplace you don’t know …

8.  Obituaries would be a lot more interesting if they told you how the person died.

Most usually do, though not in any great detail.

9.  I can’t remember the last time I wasn’t at least kind of tired.

See #3.

10.  Bad decisions make good stories.

Very true. Good decisions make for dull stories, either for the teller, or the tellee.

11.  You never know when it will strike, but there comes a moment at work when you know that you just aren’t going to do anything productive for the rest of the day.

Voluntarily and involuntarily.

12.  Can we all just agree to ignore whatever comes after Blu Ray?  I don’t want to have to restart my collection…again.

I’d like to think that it will be data files that will Last Forever. But that ignores resolution and technolgical advances, let alone DRM and distribution restrictions and vendor control over what you are buying licensing.

13.  I’m always slightly terrified when I exit out of Word and it asks me if I want to save any changes to my ten-page technical report that I swear I did not make any changes to.

Heh.

14.  “Do not machine wash or tumble dry” means I will never wash this – ever.

We delicate-wash quite a few things that are “dry clean only.” On the other hand, it sure seems that women’s clothing has a large percentage of “dry flat” and “line dry” restrictions. (I intentionally only buy things that don’t have to be ironed.)

15.  I hate when I just miss a call by the last ring (Hello?  Hello? Damn it!), but when I immediately call back, it rings nine times and goes to voice mail.  What did you do after I didn’t answer?  Drop the phone and run away?

Usually it rings once, and then I know that they’ve rolled to my voice mail and are leaving me a message, so then I have to call them back again.

16.  I hate leaving my house confident and looking good and then not seeing anyone of importance the entire day. What a waste.

Pretty much my life. But do I get to wear shorts and Hawaiian shirts to the office? Nooooooo ….

17.  I keep some people’s phone numbers in my phone just so I know not to answer when they call.

Too many of my calls come from offices that don’t have a recognizable caller ID. Bastards.

18.  I think the freezer deserves a light as well.

Um … at least two of our fridges have lights in the freezer.

19.  I disagree with Kay Jewelers.  I would bet on any given Friday or Saturday night more kisses begin with Miller Lite than Kay.

Lips that touch Miller Lite will never touch mine!

20.  Sometimes I’ll look down at my watch 3 consecutive times and still not know what time it is.

Yup. That goes right along with walking into a room and suddenly not being sure why you did.

21.  Sometimes, I’ll watch a movie that I watched when I was younger and suddenly realize I had no idea what the heck was going on when I first saw it.

Yup. Frequently.

22.  I would rather try to carry 10 over-loaded plastic bags in each hand than take 2 trips to bring my groceries in.

Ah, the Litherman’s Load. I know it well. Margie says I do it because I’m self-challenging. I say I do it because I’m lazy.

23.  The only time I look forward to a red light is when I’m trying to finish a text.

HA! Yes.

24.  I have a hard time deciphering the fine line between boredom and hunger

Oh, yes.

25.  How many times is it appropriate to say “What?” before you just nod and smile because you still didn’t hear or understand a word they said?

Been there, nodded that.

26.  I love the sense of camaraderie when an entire line of cars team up to prevent a jerk from cutting in at the front.  Stay strong, brothers and sisters!

Sadly, someone always lets him/her in.

27.  Shirts get dirty.  Underwear gets dirty.  Pants? Pants never get dirty, and you can wear them forever.

They’re certainly good for multiple wearings, depending on the circumstances (wrinkles, occasion to wear them to). I try to wear work pants for at least a couple of days. Shorts over the summer may get a week or two of wear.

28.  Is it just me or do high school kids get dumber & dumber every year?

It’s not just you.

29.  There’s no worse feeling than that millisecond you’re sure you are going to die after leaning your chair back a little too far.

Related to #2.

30.  As a driver I hate pedestrians, and as a pedestrian I hate drivers, but no matter what the mode of transportation, I always hate bicyclists.

There are indeed bicyclists who ride like jerks. I’m by no means convinced they exceed in number the other two classes in their jerkiness.

31.  Even under ideal conditions people have trouble locating their car keys in a pocket, finding their cell phone, and Pinning the Tail on the Donkey – but I’d bet everyone can find and push the snooze button from 3 feet away, in about 1.7 seconds, eyes closed, first time, every time!

Actually, I’m just as likely to knock the damn thing on the floor, since I never hit snooze (That Way Lateness Lies …).

(via Doyce from Vulcan Stev)

Spineless journalism

The Portland Press Herald had the nerve, the audacity, the gall to report on events the day after they happened. Many people objected. The paper apologized.

The problem wasn’t about the time lag in reporting news, specifically.  While papers are struggling to deal with 24×7 news cycles, it’s still usual for a paper to focus on “what happened yesterday” vs. “what’s going to happen today” for most things.

What was a problem this time had to do with politics and the current xenophobia regarding Islam.

See, the PPH was reporting on the Friday end of Ramadan and the Eid holiday — something of some importance to the Muslim community in Portland.  That was their page 1 story on Saturday.  It’s possibly a little soft as a page 1 story — akin, maybe, to detailing Easter celebrations at a local cathedral — but should be equally innocuous.

Ah, but this story ran on Saturday (gasp) 9/11. And there were (gasp) no 9/11 recaps on the front page (since news about 9/11 is 9 years old and the PPH’s readers may have forgotten).

(The story does mention 9/11 in passing, in the context of local Muslims and the whole Rev. Jones story.)

This huge insult to God-Fearing, 9/11-Worshipping, White Middle America did not go unnoticed, and apparently the paper was flooded with complaints, many of which can be found in the comments:

And nine years ago, driven by their religion , members of the muslim faith killed over 3,000 peace loving citizen of the world and the USA. This was the only statement I need to know about this religion!

What’s up PPH? Look at your calender; it’s 9/11! Where is your respectful American story of the most horrific day in recent memory?! It’s been ommited.. no strike that.. TRUMPED!.. to instead show respect to the end of Ramadan…?! You Liberals have forgotten where you come from. Pathetic.

Astounding, on the anniversary of the 9-11 ATTACKS by islamic terrorists, this is what we get on the front page. Do you think that on Dec. 7th 1950 (9 years after Pearl Harbor) there were front page articles extolling how wonderful Japan was? Wake up America! We’re at war and if you’re too blind to see that some of these “peaceful” people will bury you in your politically correct graves.

When I picked up my newspaper this morning I was stunned to see this as the lead article on page one, above the fold. Today is the 9th anniversary of a cowardly, savage, barbaric attack on innocent people by a group of Islamic fanatics and our local paper chooses this to be the lead article on page one- especially on the day when they provide a separate religious section. It is nothing short of a tasteless example of irresponsible “journalism” (it’s not even close to fitting that definition). This article serves no one- Muslims, Americans, and especially those families who lost loved ones. It will only bring more resentment and divisiveness. I can’t remember seeing a more shameful article- anywhere.

what the hell were you people thinking – on 9/11 you post a pic of a bunch of moslims on there knees with there butts in our face – on 9/11 – this country is spiraling down & things like this just hurry it along – it sickins me

Now, the PPH could have argued that they were making a deliberate statement — that they were seeking to inform, not inflame. Or they could have pointed at their plans for coverage of 9/11 events on Sunday, after the events occured.  Or they could have noted that it was not a one-sided controversy (quite a few comments showed up under the article to disagree with the above sentiments). They could even have taken an heroic stand and, while acknowledging that some folks were offended, that the response of so many was laced with religious and ethnic bias not worthy of Americans.

But, instead, terrified of losing more advert revenue and fleeing from the mobs, the PPH (in the person of publisher Richard Conner) issued a lengthy apology that same day.

Many saw Saturday’s front-page story and photo regarding the local observance of the end of Ramadan as offensive, particularly on the day, September 11, when our nation and the world were paying tribute to those who died in the 9/11 terrorist attacks nine years ago.

We have acknowledged that we erred by at least not offering balance to the story and its prominent position on the front page.

What sort of “balance” was called for?  Should there have been an article about Muslim terrorists?  A column from Bryan Fischer about how Muslims are out to eat our babies? An article about Christian worshipers celebrating the Feast of Alexander Crummell?

Would the folks quoted above, or their ilk, have accepted any article about the Eid holiday and happy, peaceful, non-flag-burning Muslims on the front page of the paper on 9/11? On any day?  I suspect they would have received much of the same criticism, regardless of the date or “balancing” articles.

Quoting a response made to a complainant, Conner continued:

“We are sorry you are offended by today’s front page photo and story and certainly understand your point of view. Many feel the same way. We do not offer the stock excuses you cite. We should have balanced this story with one that showed our sensitivity to today’s historic importance. You will see tomorrow that our planned coverage of today’s 9/11 events is extensive, far more so than the coverage of this event on Friday. We apologize for what may appear to be our insensitivity to the historic significance of this day. Tomorrow’s newspaper will feature extensive coverage of the commemoration of today’s events.

“Our editors believed that 3,000 persons marking the passage of a religious observance and congregating in Portland to do so was news.I believe that decision was correct but I also believe we should have handled it in a more sensitive way.”

Right. The folks complaining about how the PPH is being overly-sensitive and PCishly truckling to the Muslim community need to be treated with more sensitivity and truckling, too.

As James Poniewozik noted in Time:

Here’s where we are in America, 2010: There is now one group of Americans whose peaceful religious observance cannot be noted by decent people, unless it is “balanced” by the mention of a vile crime committed in 2001 by people, with a perverted idea of the same religion, from the other side of the world.

This is a depressing statement about the state of dialogue in America. Nine years after 9/11, there is now a widespread belief that, for one religious group of law-abiding Americans, the boundaries of acceptable behavior are narrower than for everyone else. Yes, you have the right to worship. But it would be decent of you to do it somewhere else. Or on another day. Or in such a way that the rest of us don’t have to know about it.

Mercifully, most of the comments to the apology were ticked off about it, e.g.,

It never crossed my mind to be offended by that photo. I am so so sorry that you are apologizing for it. I think it is perfectly reasonable for the paper to print a photo about Eid on 9/11. These people and their faith had nothing whatsoever to do with the horrific attack of nine years ago. Our state needs to be more tolerant, not less. Your apology implies that it is in some way OK to connect everyday Muslims and the attackers. I abhor such thinking.

It is ridiculous to feel the need apologize for making a reasoned and sensible decision . The ONLY error was to believe that all of your readers are reasonable people. They are not. There are bigots and fools reading your paper. It is too bad you have decided that you must bow down to their ignorance.

Though there were plenty of people still swinging around their torches and pitchforks.

I for one do not accept the apology. Were these reporters living on another planet? I think it was insensative. Because of these people we now cannot celebrate the Christmas Holiday in our schools. I beleive in the free practice of your religion but it is being done at the expense of mine.

EVERY SINGLE TERRORIST on those planes nine years ago was a MUSLIM EXTREMIST. Sorry, you can’t just wipe it away by saying “they had nothing to do with the attack”. Their MUSLIM FAITH had EVERYTHING to do with their actions, and the response by moderate Muslims has NEVER been adequate since that day.

And so it goes.

“Freedom of the press is a flaming sword! Use it justly… hold it high … guard it well.” Of course, the guy who said that was a fictional character, but Mr Conner might consider it nevertheless.

(via Les)

Tweets from 2010-09-14

  • Fall is in the air. I wish it would freaking land already. #
  • Just one donut won't hurt, right? Especially as part of office sociability? Right? #
  • So #DCUO won't have crafting? No tears here. http://bit.ly/dy3izp #
  • Chris Cao xview on #DCUO crafting, cities, gear. I'm worried I haven't seen a single player costume so far that I like. http://bit.ly/cgvHsJ #
  • Disappointed that potential car accessory "tweeter kit" turns out to be only a piece of the sound system. #

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 14-Sep-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Lotta Strands to Keep in My Head, Man – “Scientific claims are now subject to ideological disputation. Rush Limbaugh is telling millions of people that they’ve taken the red pill and everything they once knew and could trust is a lie. They’ve woken up outside the Matrix and he is their corpulent, drug-addicted, thrice-divorced Morpheus. What could go wrong?”
  2. The President’s Back to School Speech: “We Not Only Reach For Our Own Dreams, We Help Others Do the Same” | The White House – Kay reported they got to watch this on video this afternoon. Her summary: “He said we could succeed if we try hard.” Which doesn’t seem to have been all that exciting, but, heck. at least there weren’t protests this year about the darned speech.
  3. Tom Tancredo to stay on ballot in Colorado governor’s race, judge rules | The Spot – Huzzah! Spoilers ‘R’ Fun!
  4. When the GOP has to choose between a 1099 fix and oil subsidies – “Given a choice between fixing the ‘1099 problem,’ and protecting oil industry subsidies, Republicans who claim to care deeply about the former, nevertheless prioritize the latter. I can’t help but wonder sometimes how many seats Republicans would lose if voters paid close attention to daily developments on Capitol Hill.” That’s why it’s so convenient that they’re all watching Fox.
  5. We Rest Our Case: Bryan Fischer Tries to Defend His Bigoted Record – … by adding to it. Crikey. “So let us ask again why conservative leaders like Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Mike Pence, Bob McDonnell, Newt Gingrich, and Michele Bachmann are so willing to share a stage with this man and attend an event being co-sponsored by the American Family Association, the group that has given Fischer a national platform?”
  6. Limbaugh Condones Sexual Harrassment Of Sports Reporter: She Has ‘Bootylicious’ ‘ASS-ets’ – Not just condones, but defends and joins in. Wow. He’s really an asshat, isn’t he?
  7. Sen. Johanns: Small Businesses Need Loans ‘Like They Need A Kick In The Pants’ – But … but … but … I thought the GOP loved small business!
  8. Industry Wants High-Fructose Corn Syrup To Be Known As ‘Corn Sugar’ – Yes, the name “confusing consumers” by being associated with stuff that is BAD FOR YOU. That’s why we want to change the name, so consumers won’t be confused, they’ll simply be misled!
  9. Koran burner Derek Fenton booted from his job at NJ Transit – It doesn’t look to me like he was wearing anything representing himself as a NJ Transit worker, and teh story doesn’t mention him doing so. In that case, I don’t see on what basis they can fire him for this kind of protest (even if I think it was a stupid protest). Expressing a dumb opinion as a private citizen on your own time should not be a firing offense. I smell a law suit coming on (and I’d hope the ACLU would be a part of it).
  10. Christine O’Donnell Wins Delaware GOP Bid For U.S. Senate – Well, I HOPE this means the GOP won’t pick up Delaware. Not that Castle was any great prize, but O’Donnell is … um … a very special kind of candidate.

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 14-Sep-10 1732)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Tea Party Float Depicts Obama Whipping A White ‘Future Tax Payer’ Pulling A Wagon – Gee … remember when conservatives used to demand knee-jerk respect for the president?
  2. Adobe issues security advisory for Flash Player, plans fix “during the week of September 27” – Boing Boing – (1) May I recommend FlashBlock for Firefox or Chrome (so you only open up Flash at trusted locations where and when you want it)? (2) Man, I am so tired of stupid Flash updates.
  3. Microsoft responds to Russian crackdown by extending software licenses to NGOs — Engadget – A bit shamed by the recent bad press on this, but at least reacting in a positive fashion.
  4. More Research Proves Vaccinations Don’t Cause Autism In Kids – But ..! But ..! I saw my favorite TV star on TV yesterday and the TV said she said that it does! Who am I supposed to believe?!
  5. Law Enforcement Group: Legalize Pot So Cops Have Time To Fight Real Crime – I mean, it’s pretty straightforward. Pot’s hardly harmless, but it’s also not significantly worse than cigarettes and booze … and the War on Pot not only enriches the violent drug cartels (“Decaptations! In the Desert!”), but sucks away law enforcement and court space (and prison space) from, y’know, crimes where people are actually HURTING other people.
  6. Damning Zuckerberg IMs confirmed – I guess it’s too late to include these IMs in the movie … (And … another reason not to get too involved in Facebook.)
  7. Where religion and evolution go hand-in-hand – But ..! But ..! That’s not evolution! That’s pagan magic Satanic influence! Just ask Pat Robertson!
  8. Moviehole. Cameron doing True Lies TV series – Hrm. On the plus side, Cameron. On the minus side … TV sequel many years after the original. I have my doubts.
  9. Appeals court guts landmark computer privacy ruling – Ugh. I’m sorry, but merely urging law enforcement officials to “greater vigilance” in balancing law enforcement vs privacy rights is almost worse than useless.
  10. The Stakes In Today’s Primaries: Go Tea Partiers! – I’m too conservative (so to speak) of a gambler. Even if the (more) whackos get the nomination, it will make me even more worried lest they actually get into office, even if the chances diminish.
  11. New Survey Reveals Why Jon Stewart is the Biggest Long Term Threat to Fox News – The compaction of Republicans into watching Fox is not surprising — it’s all about being slowly attracted to the stuff you want to hear. OTOH, I worry about the idea that Stewart and Colbert are Fox’s biggest “threat,” because, bottom line, they are entertainers. And, honestly, entertainers can end up Pied Pipering folks off in all sorts of unfortunate directions. Yes, they do a good job of poking fun in all directions, and pushing some critical thinking, and being entertaining as hell … but they’re just not what I see a long-term healthy and informed populace being able to rely upon.
  12. John Boehner Concedes That Reversing Bush Tax Cuts For Rich Affects Just 3% Of Small Businesses – So it’s the Big Small Businesses he’s most concerned with.
  13. Are Tea Partiers Proud Of This? – Wow. True American values on display here.
  14. Keira Rathbone’s Crazy Typewriter Art – Okay, I’m impressed.
  15. HFCS Rebranding As “Corn Sugar” – It’s corn! It’s sugar! It must be all-natural and healthy for you and there must be some strange mistake about how studies show it actually gets processed differently in the body than cane sugar! Gimme some!
  16. Best Buy – Boehner and Gingrich — two of the finest the GOP has to offer. God help us all.

Unblogged Bits (Tue. 14-Sep-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Fischer: Major League Baseball Has Kept America Safe From Terrorism – Does this mean we can get rid of the TSA?
  2. Paul Ryan Eagerly Signs Onto Right-Wing ‘Contract’ Created By The Fox Business Network – Wow. The barrier between Fox and the GOP becomes so gauzy as to be utterly transparent.
  3. Senate Ends Uncontroversial Judicial Nominee’s 400 Day Wait – Disgusting. More baldly political, unprincipled, obnoxious obstructionism from the GOP. It’s not about values, it’s about WINNING to them.
  4. INDIANA: 15 Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide Over Anti-Gay Bullying – But … but … if we try to keep bullies from bullying and harassing gay kids, it makes God sad! I know, because Focus on the Family told me so!
  5. Sweet Action: I scream, you scream, is there beer in your ice cream? – Amanda brought some of this over in the late hour of MargieOktoberBierFest. It was nummy. Hmmmm … and we still have leftovers …
  6. Spambots In Disguise! – More fiendish cleverness. Especially since many people do, in fact, have name@theirdomain.tld style email addies. Which, if they have already had a comment approved, will lead to many blogging systems accepting the imitations. Or enough of them to make it a worthwhile fiendish tactic.
  7. Declaring San Bruno Fire ‘Crime Scene’ Kept Media Out – San Francisco News – The Snitch
  8. Writer Fuel: Snickerdoodles – WANT!
  9. A new way to look at the Statue of Liberty – Oh, Sarah — is there nothing you can’t make amusingly doltish comments about?
  10. School suspends crying son of murdered man because his eyes were red – Yeesh.
  11. Study: Hand Sanitizer Not Terribly Good At Fighting Cold Or Flu – As a convenient substitute for customary handwashing, hand sanitizers are a fine idea. As an OCD way to KEEP YOUR CHILDREN AND YOURSELF SAFE FROM EVIL GERMS … not so much.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 13-Sep-10 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Geocentrism: Was Galileo Wrong? [Starts With A Bang] – I am sad to say that, looking up some of the names involved, this appears to be an absolutely serious conference. I fully expect the GOP to adopt this position in their next presidential platform, and for the Texas state school board to insist on geocentrism as a valid and alternative theory of how God constructed the universe. Jesus wept.
  2. Joker and Lex – Exxxxxcellent.
  3. Holding Wal-Mart Accountable | The American Prospect – Cheap-labor capitalism strikes again.

Tweets from 2010-09-13

  • Well, that weekend blew away a good week of dieting. Plus, er, we now have many leftovers. #
  • Rrg. Twitter Tools still randomly posting multiple dupes of daily Twitter digests on blog. Looking for alternatives. #
  • Green Elf needs haircut, badly! #
  • It was nice having Mary out, and will be nice having her out permanently. OTOH, sad to learn Amanda's returning to Portland. #changes #
  • RT @mental_floss: The Enola Gay was named after the pilot’s mother, Enola Gay Tibbets. #

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 13-Sep-10 1732)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. The Forever Culture War | The American Prospect – “Even as we make progress on specific issues, however, the broader culture war seems to get uglier and uglier. The underlying sentiment that has fueled this conflict from the start — that only certain Americans are ‘real Americans’ who deserve rights and respect — has not gone away.”
  2. Random Book Blogging: Abolitionism as a Threat To Family and Christianity – “In Fitzhugh’s view, abolitionists sought nothing less than the reorganization of American society. They wished ‘to abolish … or greatly modify the relations of husband and wife, parent and child, the institution of private property of all kinds, but especially separate ownership of lands, and the institution of Christian churches now existing in America.’ If they are successful, Fitzhugh warned, government, law, religion, and marriage would be among the causalities.” The more the subject changes, the more the rhetoric stays the same …
  3. ‘Young Gun’ Paul Ryan Breaks With Boehner: ‘We Do Not Want To Negotiate Down’ On Bush Tax Cuts – Careful, John — the herd is always willing to turn on the leader if he isn’t careful …
  4. chookooloonks blog > love thursday: so, about that photobomb – “Even if it doesn’t change the outcome, I know that participating at least changed me.”
  5. Republicans and Fox News – joined at the remote – “It’s hard to overstate the impact of Republicans having their own cable news network, fundamentally changing the course of contemporary American politics.”
  6. Mike Johanns and the ‘1099 problem’ – The pro-loophole, anti-vaccine wing of the cheap-labor conservative movement strikes again!
  7. The Democratic fear-based strategy – Glenn Greenwald – Never underestimate the Democrats’ ability to sink themselves.
  8. Colorado Republicans come out against tax-slashing measures – The Denver Post – Might there be some slight, brief, appearance of sanity within the state GOP? Hard to believe, but …
  9. Responding to the fires in San Bruno – The Before and After pix are awful.
  10. Surplus – Real Life Comics September / 13 / 2010 – WANT!
  11. Issue #40 – Eugene JjAR – For all those that thought Garth Ennis’ Punisher MAX series was cartoonish, the whole FrankenCastle fiasco makes it look like Dostoyevsky. It’s been a massive jumping of the shark. A robot shark. With fricken lasers. Very sad.
  12. Libertarian Doctrine And Education – Libertarianism works great when you assume that (a) everyone has a perfectly equal opportunity to succeed as a free actor, and (b) others’ success or failure are none of one’s concern. The first is as unreal as a frictionless surface in physics experiments, and the second is morally repugnant.
  13. Paranoid Palin Hunts For Media ‘Moles’ At Montana Speech: Alex Seitz-Wald
  14. Study: ‘People Who Matter’ To Sunday Talk Shows Are ‘White, Male, Senior, and Republican’ – There’s something to the argument (whether or not it belies the mission statement) that the majority of congressional newsmakers and shakers are old white men. That the vast majority are also Republican is a bit harder to rationalize away.
  15. REPORT: Grand Old Deniers — Nearly All GOP Senate Candidates Deny Global Warming – And, unfortunately, they’ll all probably be dead before things get too awful.
  16. John Fund Attacks Public Workers By Claiming ‘Very Few Teachers Have Been Laid Off’ – Don’t let the facts get in the way of your nice diatribe, John!
  17. Quran Destroyer Randall Terry Dismisses 9/11 Families’ Concerns About Politicizing Terror Anniversary – Geez — imagine if someone on the Left dismissed 9/11 victim’s concerns about politicization of the anniversary, saying he wouldn’t “let the tail wag the dog.” There would be a cacophony of protest, condemnation, accusations of insensitivity, characterizations of unfeeling liberals, and general brouhaha. About Randall Terry though … only crickets.
  18. The Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy – “When you desire meaning, when you want things to line up, you forget about stochasticity. You are lulled by the signal. You forget about noise. With meaning, you overlook randomness, but meaning is a human construction.”
  19. 703-5: Questions and Answers: Troop – As usual, I’m not thrilled by this particular linguistic evolution, but concede it will be hard to back out from.

The Eyes Have It

Has it really been three years since my last eye exam / glasses?  It appears so.  Dimly.

I’m really in serious need of an eye checkup.  My distance vision is middling-okay.  My reading vision, though, is having serious problems — if I’m just sitting reading for any length of time, I’m as likely to take the glasses off as anything else (and, yes, I have bifocals — well, graduated lenses).

Plus, after three years, I have a fine patina of scratches in the plastic.  Oh, for the days of actual glass glasses.

Anyway, I finally got an appointment scheduled in a few weeks. We’ll see what’s what then. Though it will probably be blurry.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 13-Sep-10 1130)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Hello! Students Have a Right to Keep Cell Information Private – Unfortunately, “reasonable suspicion” (let alone “probable cause”) have become less and less adhered to recent years, for students and for adults.
  2. Password Reuse
  3. O, say! Does that woman’s lamp still burn beside the golden door? – “Would Americans bother to contribute to build a Statue of Liberty today? Or would they protest against it?” I sadly suspect many would protest it.
  4. Disruption: how one webcomic welcomes the future that so many fear – Business models — and law — that don’t adapt to new technology and business conditions, simply cannot prosper for long. Adapt or die. Money will still be made by someone.
  5. US poverty rates on track to match 1960s poverty levels – With a world-class recession, obstructionist-slowed recovery, and the result of decades of class warfare from cheap-labor conservatives leading to increasing income disparity — Obama is hardly the most significant party to blame here.

Some late notes on the whole Qur’an burning thing

In no particular order:

  1. Rev. Jones got way freaking too much attention.  He was, ironically, like those crowds on “the Muslim street” who caterwaul and burn flags as soon as the cameras come out.  Hopefully he has attained his 15 minutes of fame and will now sink into deserved obscurity.
  2. I note my own measure of responsibility in the above.
  3. Just as Rev. Jones and his supporters should be aware that their actions do not serve the cause of America being a home of liberty or Christianity being a religion of love, the “Muslim street” ought to be aware that burning flags and issuing fatwas of death over Rev. Jones’ actions do not serve the cause of Islam as a religion of peace well.
  4. Sorry folks — we don’t arrest people in the US for being rude or offensive or stupid or counter-productive, per se.  I think that’s more of a feature than a bug in our system, but it’s one that a lot of people (internationally in particular, but not solely) just don’t get.
  5. People who don’t hold sacred what you hold sacred are not obliged to do so because of your claims that it is sacred.  Trying to impose your view of the sacred on all others and hold them responsible for acting in that fashion is profoundly selfish.
  6. If you claim you’re not being selfish, but that you’re doing it for God — do you really think God is lessened by the actions of any mortal?  Is Allah less great because someone burns a Qur’an or draws a cartoon of Mohammed?  Is Yahweh less the Father because someone burns a Bible or desecrates some holy item? (Christians, consider the meaning of Mark 2:27.)  No, the offense is your own, not God’s — and if God is offended, God will deal with it as God sees fit (Romans 12:19).
  7. People who assume that, just because they don’t hold something sacred they have no social responsibility to acknowledge and respect that others do, are also being selfish.  Are your emotional connections to things (or ideas) so rarefied and logical and utilitarian that you don’t get offended or peeved or insulted by anything save that which causes you physical harm or discomfort?  Really?  If someone takes a crap on your mother’s grave, are you only miffed because of the public sanitation aspects?
  8. Nobody has a right not to be offended. Trying to pass a law to that effect never ends well, because you will inevitably end up offending someone else and being hoist on your own petard.  Unfortunately, the quickest to take offense are often the least likely to realize this.
  9. Intentionally and publicly offending people to “send a message” (that you don’t care whether they are offended, that your side is smarter / holier / more powerful than theirs, whatever) doesn’t make you mighty and righteous. It makes you a dick.  And if you claim to be doing it in Jesus’ name, reread your Matthew 7:12 /Luke 6:31.
  10. Respect doesn’t mean obedience or surrender; it means considering and valuing the feelings of others, just as (to go back to the two Bible passages above) you would hope others would consider and value your own.  That isn’t an absolute moral imperative — sometimes apparent disrespect and giving offense necessary, to break someone out of their shell or as an unfortunate side effect of a more beneficial purpose.  But it’s not trivial, either.
  11. Folks, we’re all stuck here on this planet together.  Can we please figure out how to get along without spending so much of our time and energy offending and/or being offended?

Tweets from 2010-09-12

  • Enjoy getting emails with the subject "Enter your subject line here." Especially when they are not spam. #
  • MargieBierFest was fun. Many types of beer, though none had us panting for more. Reviews (very YMMV) to follow. #
  • Yummy pizzas at Big Bill's. Plus we got an added large pizza due to error in kitchen. Lunch for Margie all week. #

Unblogged Bits (Sun. 12-Sep-10 1730)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Gay Saudi Diplomat Fears For Life, Seeks U.S. Asylum – Can’t wait to hear Fox News’ take on this, given their Islamophobia, their homophobia, and the major stock holdings in News Corp by a Saudi prince …
  2. Exploring offensive symbolic expression – “Here’s my long-term prescription: we must resolve to stop killing one another over symbols. We will always have our hands full responding to actual acts of real violence or oppression; we don’t need to be blowing each other up over ideas. And if the objection is made that some cultures lag behind us in that conviction, we won’t help them catch up by becoming terrorists ourselves. Our best strategy is to demonstrate our convictions; stick by them, live them, and never back down from showing the world what freedom looks like.” Amen, Brother George.
  3. Protesting xenophobic ignorance – I picked up a copy of the Qur’an last week, and have read a bit of it. I’ll give a “review” eventually, but I like to think that trying to learn about people is a hell of a lot better than listening to talking heads on Fox News about them.
  4. It’s full of stars!
  5. On Religion – Muslim Prayer Room Was Part of Life at Twin Towers – NYTimes.com – DON’T INTERFERE WITH OUR XENOPHOBIC STEREOTYPING TALKING POINTS WITH YOUR NUANCED REALITY!!!!!!!
  6. Sarah Palin Speaks in Wasilla on 9/11 – “I know. What would we do without Fox News? I don’t know.” I suspect we’d hear a lot less from the Divine Ms. Sarah … who would probably still be serving as governor of Alaska.
  7. Oklo: Ancient African Nuclear Reactors
  8. Carolina Beach restaurant says “no” to screaming children – WECT TV6 – WECT.com – Wilmington, NC news and weather – – True, Ms. Heflin, kids will, on occasion, scream. At which point what you CAN do is take them outside where they will not bother anyone else. That is, of course, inconvenient for you. It might even cause your food to get cold. That is, alas, one of the burdens that responsible parents must bear. Deal with it.
  9. The dignity that is Cat
  10. Incoming! – Yikes!
  11. Africa is bigger than you think
  12. Beer Styles Guidelines – An interesting breakdown of different types of beer.
  13. A G.O.P. Leader Tightly Bound to Lobbyists – NYTimes.com – Remember: this is the man who will be the Speaker of the House if the GOP takes that chamber.
  14. What the Things You See When You Rub Your Eyes Are Called – Used to love generating these for myself.
  15. Give Me Inefficient Lighting or Give Me Death! | Mother Jones – Why am I not shocked? Because my opinion of the rhetoric from the Breathless Right has sunk so low. Whetehr it’s bloggers like Erick Erickson or vapid pols like Michelle Bachmann, it’s never just a matter of engaging about the facts, but going after third- or fourth-order symbolic nuttery like this, and turning it into a symbolic referendum on THE LIBERAL-SOCIAL-MUSLIM-ATHEIST-SCIENCE MENACE!