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Archive for April 8th, 2007

Religion and Poetry

      Batocchio     April 8th, 2007 - 11:59 pm    

(Cross-posted at Vagabond Scholar)

Erato.jpg

(The Greek muse Erato, painted by Simon Vouet.)

To combine the Blog Against Theocracy weekend with National Poetry Month, here’s several poems.

Dogma and great art don’t mix very well. Totalitarians generally respect and fear the power of art, and thus often seek to restrict and control it. Art can say more than one thing at once, and often deals with nuance and subtleties. Authoritarians typically cannot tolerate ambiguity. Biblical literalists cannot handle allegory, metaphor, symbolism and competing points of view in other literature, either. For them, truth is derived from, and dispensed by, authority. Authoritarian leaders like power, but for authoritarian followers the chief appeal of their movement is certainty. Certainty is a great solace, as is a sense of belonging with a group, and both diminish fear. A regulated path in life, however unpleasant, can be more appealing than a more naked, honest, unpredictable one. However, the comfort of an artificial, hierarchical order sacrifices some of the wonderful, occasionally chaotic beauty of life in the world.

Some religious organizations promote what could be called a Hobbesian view of human nature - humans are inherently bad, or prone to evil, and need some sort of external order. Control must be maintained or imposed. The Catholic Church at one point wanted to ban polyphonic music, because they feared its beauty would seduce congregations, and distract them from God (happily, they relented). It’s one thing to condemn materialism, another to condemn a selfish hedonism, yet none of that requires condemning life, joy, beauty and art. Not all art is good, or effective, or resonates with everybody. Plenty of great art has an overtly religious theme. However, great art encourages an individual and often complex reaction. And even though the words that make up a poem are seemingly much more concrete and less ambiguous than, say, an abstract painting, there’s no question that a favorite poem carries intensely personal meaning.

Dogma and the need for certainty can overwhelm the beauty of life and art:
(more…)

Monday Morning With Coffee

      Jim Swanson     April 8th, 2007 - 11:00 pm    

Grab a cup of your favorite morning beverage and take a look at some stories that may have fallen through the cracks of the weekend news cycle.

A New Record Setter

CHICO, Calif. - Elsie McLean thought she might have lost her ball on the par-3,
100-yard fourth hole at Bidwell Park. Instead, the 102-year-old Chico woman became
the oldest golfer ever to make a hole-in-one on a regulation course.

Because of the slope of the green, McLean and her partners couldn’t see where her
ball landed after she teed off. “Where’s my ball?” McLean asked.Her friends, Elizabeth Rake and Kathy Crowder, found it in the cup.
“I said, ‘Oh, my Lord. It can’t be true. It can’t be true.’ I was so excited. And the
girls were absolutely overcome,” McLean said.

It was McLean’s first ace.

McLean, who used a driver, broke the age record of 101 set by Harold Stilson in 2001
at Deerfield Country Club in Florida.

McLean, who has been featured in golf magazines before, will appear on “The Tonight
Show with Jay Leno” on April 24 to celebrate her accomplishment.

“For an old lady,” she said, “I still hit the ball pretty good.”

Hurricane Forecaster Says Gore Is A “Gross Alarmist”

NEW ORLEANS - A top hurricane forecaster called Al Gore “a gross alarmist” Friday
for making an Oscar-winning documentary about global warming.

“He’s one of these guys that preaches the end of the world type of things. I think
he’s doing a great disservice and he doesn’t know what he’s talking about,” Dr.
William Gray said in an interview with The Associated Press at the National Hurricane
Conference in New Orleans, where he delivered the closing speech.

A spokeswoman said Gore was on a flight from Washington, D.C., to Nashville Friday;
he did not immediately respond to Gray’s comments. (nor does he need to)

Gray, an emeritus professor at the atmospheric science department at Colorado State
University, has long railed against the theory that heat-trapping gases generated by
human activity are causing the world to warm.

Over the past 24 years, Gray, 77, has become known as America’s most reliable
hurricane forecaster; recently, his mentee, Philip Klotzbach, has begun doing the
bulk of the forecasting work. Gray’s statements came the same day the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change approved a report that concludes the
world will face dire consequences to food and water supplies, along with increased
flooding and other dramatic weather events, unless nations adapt to climate change.

Rather than global warming, Gray believes a recent uptick in strong hurricanes is
part of a multi-decade trend of alternating busy and slow periods related to ocean
circulation patterns. Contrary to mainstream thinking, Gray believes ocean temperatures
are going to drop in the next five to 10 years.

“This Is Your Captain Swearing”

ROMULUS, Mich. - A Northwest Airlines flight was canceled because the pilot was
yelling obscenities during a cell phone conversation while people were boarding, and
cursed one passenger, a federal official said Saturday.

The pilot of the Las Vegas-to-Detroit flight was apparently in a heated cell phone
conversation in the cockpit, then went into a lavatory, locked the door and continued
the conversation, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said Saturday.

“Passengers who were boarding the aircraft could hear his end of it,” Gregor said.

Las Vegas police were sent Friday to McCarran International Airport to investigate,
Gregor said. Authorities were told that the pilot cursed one passenger who confronted
him, Gregor said.There were 180 passengers and five crew on the flight to Detroit
Metropolitan Airport in Romulus, Northwest Airlines Corp. said in a statement.

The name of the captain, who Gregor described as a veteran pilot, wasn’t released.
Gregor said Northwest removed the pilot from the aircraft and returned him to his
home base in Detroit for an investigation. He said it was up to Northwest to
determine what would happen to the pilot.

The Stuff You Find On The Freeway

COVINGTON, La. - A boxed bathtub fell from the bed of a pickup truck and slid into a
motorcycle’s path, critically injuring the 72-year-old cyclist, state police said.

Charles S. Warren was traveling on Interstate 12 on Saturday when he was thrown from
his motorcycle after hitting the bathtub. Warren was being treated at St. Tammany Parish Hospital.

A spokesperson said the motorcycle, the box and the bathtub all ended up in the grass median.
The pickup’s driver, 32-year-old Shain Autumn Springfield, was booked with negligent
injury and driving with an unsecured load.

al-Sadr Calls For Uprising

BAGHDAD - Renegade cleric Muqtada al-Sadr urged the Iraqi army and police to stop
cooperating with the United States and told his guerrilla fighters to concentrate on
pushing American forces out of the country, according to a statement issued Sunday.

Stamped with al-Sadr’s official seal, the statement was distributed in the Shiite
holy city of Najaf on Sunday - a day before a large demonstration there, called for
by al-Sadr, to mark the fourth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad.

Al_sadr_soldiers.jpg

“You, the Iraqi army and police forces, don’t walk alongside the occupiers, because
they are your archenemy,” the statement said. Its authenticity could not be verified.

If al-Sadr’s fighters will be wearing anything close to what’s in this photo, they won’t be hard to spot.

“YO! Taxi!”

NEW YORK - Betty and Bob Matas have retired and are moving to Arizona, but like many
New Yorkers they don’t drive, and they don’t want their cats to travel all that way
in an airliner cargo hold.

Their solution: “Hey, cabbie.”

They met taxi driver Douglas Guldeniz when they hailed his cab after a shopping trip
several weeks ago. They got to talking about their upcoming move, and “we said ‘Do you want to come?’” said Bob. “And he said ‘Sure.’”It was initially a gag, Matas said, but as they talked over the ensuing weeks it became reality.

They plan to leave Tuesday on the 2,400-mile trip to Sedona, Ariz., with Guldeniz
driving his yellow SUV cab 10 hours a day for a flat fee of $3,000, plus gas, meals
and lodging.

They’re getting a break. The standard, metered fare would be about $5,000 - each way,
according to David Pollack, executive director of the Committee for Taxi Safety, a
drivers’ group. But city Taxi and Limousine Commission rules direct drivers and
passengers to negotiate a flat fare for trips outside the city and a few suburban
areas.

It’s also a good deal for Guldeniz.

“This job is not easy, and I want to do something different,” said Guldeniz.
“I want to have some good memories.”

Goodbye To “B.C.” Cartoonist

Cartoonist Johnny Hart, whose award-winning “B.C.” comic strip appeared in more
than 1,300 newspapers worldwide, died Saturday while working at his home in Endicott.
He was 76.

BC_cartoonist_Johnny_Hart.jpg

“He had a stroke,” Hart’s wife, Bobby, said Sunday. “He died at his storyboard.”
“B.C.,” populated by prehistoric cavemen and dinosaurs, was launched in 1958 and
eventually appeared in more than 1,300 newspapers with an audience of 100 million,
according to Creators Syndicate Inc., which distributes it.

“He was generally regarded as one of the best cartoonists we’ve ever had,” Hart’s
friend Mell Lazarus, creator of the “Momma” and “Miss Peach” comic strips, said from
his California home. “He was totally original. ‘B.C’ broke ground and led the way for
a number of imitators, none of which ever came close.”

New York Auto Show (from the New York Times)

Some great looking cars and interesting article about some of the new models on the way.

Personally, I still fondly remember the day’s my father and I would go to the Chicago Auto Show at the Old Merchandise Mart. We no longer attend. I’m in California and Dad, now 90 years old, lives in Arkansas.

Monday Morning Editorial
from Yesterday’s Washington Post

“Stealing From The IRS”

Have a great week!
Jim

Al GoreIraqObituaries

Club Blue

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 10:20 pm    

Gene Krupa & Buddy Rich

Meanwhile in Afghanistan…..

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 1:51 pm    

It was predicted the Taliban spring offensive would be deadly in Afghanistan……..here it comes.

KABUL, Afghanistan - Roadside bombs in southern Afghanistan on Sunday left seven NATO soldiers dead, the alliance said, as its forces continued an anti-Taliban offensive in the world’s most fertile opium-producing region.

One roadside bombing killed six NATO soldiers dead and wounded another, the alliance said. A separate roadside bomb killed one NATO soldier and wounded two, while a clash in the east left two Afghan guards and two militants dead, officials said.

NATO’s International Security Assistance force did not identify those killed and wounded or specify the locations of the explosions.

The Taliban, meanwhile, claimed to have beheaded the kidnapped translator for an Italian journalist.

More at YahooNews

My Name is Buddy

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 1:32 pm    

Any Cooder fans out there? Ry Cooder has a new CD out. “My Name is Buddy.” Following is an interview with Cooder from Harp Magazine:

By Jeff Tamarkin
When Ry Cooder received a doctored photo in the mail, of a red cat in the guise of Leadbelly, he knew he had found a fitting sequel to Chavez Ravine, his 2005 musing on an L.A. lost to time. My Name is Buddy (Nonesuch) hits the road in search of truth, justice and the long-gone American way.

HARP: You went 18 years between solo albums, working on world music projects and soundtracks, and now you-ve done two definitively American albums in a row. What brought you back home?

It seemed that it was possible to write songs from the standpoint of these invented characters, these situations that interest me. The story was there; you could refer to real people, to fictitious people.

HARP: Although it’s set in the past, there’s a contemporary political undercurrent to My Name Is Buddy.

It’s all about everything that surrounds us. Buddy’s looking around and they won-t let him vote, they won-t serve him, he can-t even get a beer. And then he ends up on Cardboard Avenue, the American worker homeless and out of a job. Then the little farm girl takes him in; in other words, people have to look after each other [because] the institutions have failed. There’s nothing left but us.

HARP: What fascinates you about these defunct and disappearing worlds?

Because the world is crumbling. I-m struck by this at age 60. Who stole the country? What are you going to do about it? Some people write books. Some people make movies. But I think that it’s somehow satisfying and consoling to write songs and make records.

HARP: You haven-t toured in many years. Think you might do some shows to promote Buddy?

In -88, I threw in the towel and said this touring and stage performing has got to stop. I couldn-t deal with it. Besides which, am I really gonna get up onstage and say, “When I was just a kitten, my daddy told me, son…”?

HARP: This year marks the 10th anniversary of Buena Vista Social Club, the traditional Cuban music project that you masterminded. What was Buena Vista’s most lasting effect?

For me personally, as far as music’s concerned, it broadened my understanding at least a thousand percent. I consider myself to be a far better musician and musical thinker.

HARP: What could an American Idol contestant learn from listening to Buena Vista?

The media has created a final dumbing down of everything we-ve come up with. It’s no accident that American Idol appeared during the clown’s administration. When you destroy culture, you destroy the expression of culture, and certainly music is a very big cultural thing. So you-re gonna have American Idol and crap like that everywhere
.
HARP: When was the last time you spoke to Captain Beefheart?

Probably the -70s. People always want to know about him. They come all the way from London just to ask me about Captain Beefheart. I mean, you flew on an airplane and got a hotel room and rented a car just for this?

The Rolling Stone Review is here.

April in Iraq

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 12:53 pm    

07-Apr-2007 4 | US: 4 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Diyala Province Hostile - hostile fire - explosion
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Diyala Province Hostile - hostile fire - explosion
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Diyala Province Hostile - hostile fire - explosion
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Diyala Province Hostile - hostile fire - explosion
06-Apr-2007 3 | US: 3 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Petty Officer 2nd Class Joseph C. Schwedler Al Anbar Province Hostile - hostile fire
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Baghdad (eastern part) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Captain Anthony Palermo JR. Baghdad (western part) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
05-Apr-2007 6 | US: 2 | UK: 4 | Other: 0
US Specialist Jason A. Shaffer Baqubah - Diyala Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Kirkuk - At-Ta’mim Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
UK 2nd Lieutenant Joanna Yorke Dyer Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
UK Private Eleanor Dlugosz Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
UK Corporal Kris O-Neill Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
UK Kingsman Adam Smith Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
04-Apr-2007 6 | US: 6 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Private 1st Class James J. Coon Balad - Salah ad Din Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Baghdad (eastern part) Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Baghdad (north of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Baghdad (north of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Baghdad (southern part) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Staff Sergeant Jerry Clark Burge Jr. Baghdad (southern part) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
03-Apr-2007 2 | US: 2 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Staff Sergeant Shane R. Becker Baghdad Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
US Private 1st Class Gabriel J. Figueroa Baghdad Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
02-Apr-2007 6 | US: 5 | UK: 1 | Other: 0
US Specialist Curtis R. Spivey San Diego - Baghdad Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Lance Corporal Daniel R. Olsen Fallujah - Anbar Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
US NAME NOT RELEASED YET Al Anbar Province Hostile - hostile fire
US Sergeant Bradley D. King Amiriyah - Anbar Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Specialist Brian E. Ritzberg Kirkuk - At-Ta’mim Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
UK Rifleman Aaron Lincoln Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
01-Apr-2007 7 | US: 6 | UK: 1 | Other: 0
US Staff Sergeant David A. Mejias Baghdad (southwest of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Staff Sergeant Eric R. Vick Baghdad (southwest of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Sergeant Robert M. McDowell Baghdad (southwest of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Specialist William G. Bowling Baghdad (southwest of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack
US Private 1st Class Miguel A. Marcial III Al Anbar Province Non-hostile
UK Kingsman (private) Danny John Wilson Basra - Basrah Hostile - hostile fire - small arms fire
US Staff Sergeant Jason R. Arnette Baghdad (southwest of) Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack

Sometimes “I’m Sorry” Just Doesn’t Cut it, Imus!

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 9:04 am    

NEW YORK - Unimpressed by his on-air apology or corporate promises of a tighter leash, angry critics of nationally syndicated radio host Don Imus called Saturday for his dismissal over his racially charged comments about the mostly black Rutgers women’s basketball team.

“I accept his apology, just as I want his bosses to accept his resignation,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton. He promised to picket Imus- New York radio home, WFAN-AM, unless the veteran of nearly 40 years of anything-goes broadcasting is gone within a week.

Sharpton was not alone in his anger over Imus- description of the Rutgers- women as “nappy headed hos” during a Wednesday morning segment of his show, which airs for millions of listeners on more than 70 stations and the MSNBC television network.

More at MSNBC

Happy Easter Open Thead

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 7:53 am    

happy_easter_transfer_300.jpg

Happy Easter to those who celebrate and Happy Sunday to those who don’t. Peace be with you!

Theocracy Round-Up

      Batocchio     April 8th, 2007 - 6:32 am    

(Cross-posted at Vagabond Scholar)

Theo_circle_with_type.jpg

America is not a theocracy - thank god.

And Happy Easter, if you celebrate it!

Those statements aren’t in the least bit contradictory, and that’s part of the point of the Blog Against Theocracy weekend, which will be (officially) concluding today. Most of all, Blog Against Theocracy celebrates our wonderful First Amendment. The website lists a bevy of participating bloggers.

As it turns out, I wrote several pieces about the authoritarian religious right and theocracy activists in the month prior to Blog Against Theocracy.

“The Social Tolerance Charts” examines the claims of intolerant people that opposing their intolerant political agenda is somehow umm, intolerant:

As the Declaration of Independence states, all men (and women) are created equal. Religious theocrats and other authoritarian conservatives wish to upend the core principles of our country’s founding to impose the rule of Animal Farm: Some are more equal than others. Let’s be honest - intolerant people can be extremely obnoxious. But tolerant people uphold the principle that A-I may hate what you say, but I will fight to the death for your right to say it.- (In contrast, intolerant people will fight for you to burn in hell.) Ironically, intolerant groups use their freedom to try to strip it from others, and seek to destroy the foundations of the very system that grants them freedom. Part of the price of a free society is that intolerant people must get their say - if they did not, their cause would win even if their individual group did not. However, the best way to oppose dangerous speech is to speak out one’s self.

“The Religion-in-Society Charts” is a long piece examining the rhetoric of religious authoritarians in greater detail:

The essential point to remember is that the religious right and other theocrats are not seeking justice, fairness, or equality. They are seeking privilege and power. Furthermore, religious right leaders already possess privilege and power over their followers. They are seeking to expand that power over those not in their group, and over the government and society itself.

[...]

On this note, the authoritarians of the Christian religious right are not merely trying to share their faith. Their approach seeks to strip others of choice, even though this contradicts their own faith’s tenets about the primacy of human choice (choosing the good, choosing God, choosing to do good works, repentance, etc.). As noted in our social tolerance discussion, they feel people cannot be trusted to choose anything for themselves, because then they might choose something the authoritarians don-t want. Part of the social contract in America is that other people are allowed to do things you may not like, just as the reverse is true. Many of the religious right believe in American exceptionalism and would consider themselves patriots. The central lie of the religious right is that anyone who opposes them is anti-religious. In truth, on a systemic level, the religious right are anti-American.

“The Case for Writing More Accurately About Religion” dissects David van Biema’s cover story for Time, “The Case for Teaching the Bible.” While van Biema’s heart seems to be in the right place, he fails to acknowledge that America is not a theocracy and also propagates false stereotypes of liberals being ignorant of the Bible while conservatives are devout.

“The Conservative Brain Trust Takes On: Freedom of Religion!” examines how three members of The Corner at the National Review Online demonstrate staggering ignorance of (or possibly disdain for) the First Amendment and the rule of law.

Highlighting positive discussions about faith and religion are “On Faith and PostGlobal,” “Bill Moyers on Faith & Reason” and “A Way to Talk About Religion.”

Finally, here’s the Blue Herald categories for the
separation of church and state, the religious right and religion.

Meanwhile, here’s the VS categories for Blog Against Theocracy, the religious right, authoritarians, religion, and faith.

Sunday Talk/TV Alerts

      QuestionGirl     April 8th, 2007 - 6:16 am    

Sunday Talk
* Meet the Press: NBC’s David Gregory, National Review’s Kate O’Beirne, NBC’s Chuck Todd and PBS’ Judy Woodruff.
* Face the Nation: ex-Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR); roundtable of Politico’s Mike Allen and Washington Post’s Colbert King.
* This Week: Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI); Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ); Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) and Teresa Heinz Kerry; roundtable of Dem strategist Donna Brazile, ABC’s Jake Tapper and George Will; Walter Isaacson on Einstein’s faith.
* Fox News Sunday: Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY); Newt Gingrich (R-GA); author Christopher Buckley.
* Late Edition: Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA); Sen. Joseph Lieberman (CFL); ex-Gov. Tommy Thompson (R-WI); Time’s Mark Thompson; ex-Sec/State Madeleine Albright; Cardinal Theodore McCarrick (Archbishop Emeritus of Washington); roundtable consists of CNN’s Bill Schneider and CNN’s Ed Henry.

TV Alerts
* Political Capital: ex-SoS Madeleine Albright on 4/7; ex-EPA admin. Christie Todd Whitman (Bloomberg, repeats throughout weekend)
* Chris Matthews Show 4/7-4/8: Dan Rather, Cynthia Tucker, Michael Duffy, Norah O’Donnell discuss “The Big Money Primary shakes up the Democratic race. Who will be the one Conservative alternative to McCain and Rudy: Fred Thompson or Mitt Romney?” Quotes here.
* BookTV: Bill Bradley (D-NJ) on 4/7
* Newsmakers (C-SPAN, 10am): NASA admin. Michael Griffin on 4/8
* Road to the White House (C-SPAN, 6:30pm): Mitt Romney (R-MA) in NH on 4/8; Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) in IA on 4/8
* 60 Minutes: Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) on Iraq & politics on 4/8; lobbyist Rick Berman on 4/8; France’s nuclear energy program on 4/8
* Q&A (C-SPAN, 8pm): ex-NSA Zbigniew Brzenzinski on 4/8
* Letterman: Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) on 4/9
* Charlie Rose 4/9: Gen. James L. Jones (ret)
* The Daily Show: Bill Bradley on 4/9; Walter Isaacson on 4/10; Halle Berry on 4/11; Richard Preston on 4/12;
* The Colbert Report: Katrina vanden Heuvel on 4/9; Colin Beavan on 4/9; Jeannette Walls on 4/10; Vali Nasr on 4/11; Dr. Richard Land on 4/12; Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) on 4/16; Elaine Pagels on 4/17; William Cohen on 4/18; ex-Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR) on 4/19
* Tavis Smiley: Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY) on 4/10; Bill Bradley (D-NJ) on 4/11
* Leno: Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) on 4/12;
* Bill Maher 4/13: Dana Carvey, ex-Sen. Bill Bradley (D-NJ), Scott McClellan (R); via satellite Sheryl Crow and Laurie David.
* The View: Bill Maher on 4/16; Don & Dierdre Imus on 4/16;
* Larry King celebrates 50 years in broadcasting: Bill Clinton on 4/19; Bill Maher on 4/20

Source: Newsie8200


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