By Contributor Archives

Things Heard: e261v4

The week progresses. Thursday already, eh? Links!

  1. Popular media gets a hold of the NSA kerfuffle. Heh.
  2. Sales hype.
  3. Apparently “global warming threatens coral” is a real meme.
  4. Myths and insurgency.
  5. Consider this … from the right.
  6. Of DNA tests, rape and Pakistani jurisprudence.
  7. Bigger … better?
  8. Gorilla’s and cars.
  9. Syria and diplomacy considered.
  10. Kneejerked journalists.
  11. Big collider.
  12. Progressivism infection.
  13. Meta-data used for network analysis and method. (HT)

Things Heard: e261v3

Good morning.

  1. Apparently there is a misconception that doing the thing you feel is ethical should indemnify you from a jail term. This is wrong.
  2. Really. And seriously, let the guy speak, typically guys like that are better advocates for the point of view they oppose than the one they putatively support.
  3. Guns and stars.
  4. A fool-for-Christ noted.
  5. The current not-warming trend may be more extensive than suspected.
  6. In the cui bono category.
  7. Well, one of them got caught.
  8. This is not unrelated.
  9. Google’s algorithmic ideology.
  10. Yikes.
  11. Fukashima an example of nuclear power safety.
  12. An shining example of White House open-ness.
  13. And … I’ll end with a note that should leave a bad taste in your mouth. Sorry.
  14. Oh … I can’t do that.

Things Heard: e261v2

Whazzup?

  1. Natural for a library, I guess.
  2. ‘Tis the month for scandals, apparently.
  3. Employment and healthcare reforms. Twas a cunning plan I suspect. (Perhaps this should be noted as a preface before the introduction of any Legislature for consideration by our August bodies of state  “Am I jumping the gun, Baldrick, or are the words ‘I have a cunning plan’ marching with ill-deserved confidence in the direction of this conversation”).
  4. Ah, if these walls could, err, blog?
  5. Why “or” and not “and”.
  6. Young atheists and what they say.

Well, not much garnered … I took daughter #1 to a baseball game last night … 1 hour fog delay? What’s up with that? Seriously, fog?

Are ID Cards Racist?

ObamaCare will require the use of an ID card. Does that make it racist? If not, would requiring an ID card to vote be racist? Or how about this; what if we used the ObamaCare card as a voter ID card? Would heads explode?

Things Heard: e261v1

Good morning.

  1. Of turbulence and wake.
  2. A topic for these guys to look at?
  3. How nice that’s settled now.
  4. Two points of view of the latest meta-data government capture update, here and here.
  5. And here is a roundup of quotes from the Congressional knuckleheads.
  6. An epic recalled.
  7. Grist for the IRS “Somebody rid me of that troublesome priest” discussion (HT).
  8. Careful carver.
  9. The fruits of dishonesty.
  10. Yah, we know what “meta-data” means … apparently it had to be explained to someone.
  11. The cold war revisited.

Can Boy Scouts Ban … Alcoholics?

Here’s a report about the controversy a private club has found itself embroiled in.

The Boy Scouts of America will get no reprieve from controversy after a contentious vote to accept alcoholic boys as Scouts.

Dismayed conservatives are already looking at alternative youth groups as they predict a mass exodus from the BSA. Alcoholics-rights supporters vowed Friday to maintain pressure on the Scouts to end the still-in-place ban on alcoholic adults serving as leaders.

"They’re not on our good list yet," said Paul Guequierre of the Human Rights Campaign, a national alcoholic -rights group. He said the HRC, in its annual rankings of corporate policies on workplace fairness, would deduct points from companies that donate to the Boy Scouts until the ban on alcoholic adults is lifted.

Now, you may be wondering why you didn’t hear about this particular scandal, and the reason is it hasn’t happened. I just took a news article and replaced every mention of the word “gay” with the word “alcoholic”. All of a sudden, it sounds absolutely nuts, doesn’t it? Should the Scouts be allowed to discriminate against alcoholics? Set aside for the moment that the drinking age is such that it would exclude boys in the Scouts age range, would the Scouts come under fire for not allowing boys who are what you might call “practicing alcoholics” into its ranks? Would any human rights group fault them for having a ban on alcoholic adults as Scout leaders?

The plain fact is, no, they wouldn’t. The official policy of the Boy Scouts of America is that alcohol is not permitted “at encampments or activities on property owned and/or operated by the Boy Scouts of America, or at any activity involving participation of youth members.” Certainly a troop leader showing up drunk wouldn’t be tolerated. They’ve made that rule, and no one (that I know of) is coming down on them for it.

And yet the Human Rights Campaign and others have been pressuring the Scouts to set aside their ban on homosexual boys in Scouting. Why? Well, because they’re born that way, as our culture keeps reminding us, so to discriminate against them is unfair and bigoted, right? And yet, there is research that shows conclusively that alcoholism is, in part, genetic as well. In fact, there is more evidence of that than there is evidence of homosexuality having a genetic component. It’s being studied, but right now, nothing is at all conclusive, unlike the way the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism describe the genetic link.

If they’re born that way, and if being born that way means no one can discriminate against that trait for any reason, well, is that a Pandora’s box you really want to open?

At its core, the ban on gay Scouts was partly a moral stance, with the Scout Oath including a phrase about being morally straight. It was also partly an issue of general sexuality. Would you want your boy sharing tent with a girl? Or, more generally, with someone who may be sexually attracted to him? Consider this.

And while the Scouts have lifted the ban on gay Scouts, they’ve kept it for Scout leaders. The HRC doesn’t like that, either. Let’s think about this. Those priests that got accused of molesting boys can now trade out their collar for a khaki shirt and become a Scoutmaster. What would the HRC think about that?

Things Heard: e260v5

Woo hoo, 5 days in a row.

  1. Of sign and symptom.
  2. Data mining has defenders … a question not asked (that I’ve seen)  is how the Feds convinced those numerous corporations to provide access … what sort of perks. IRS kid gloves or Justice Department patent war favors? Hmmm?
  3. Talking legality (more here)… 51% is “reasonably sure” … Let’s see the politically neutral IRS isn’t … why are you so sure the politically neutral NSA is?
  4. Putting that and drones in a larger context here.
  5. Strange jewelry.
  6. Exists. Hmm. Regrettable perhaps?
  7. Of Scient(ology) and cinema.
  8. “Government” here is not the feds … it’s your school board. If you don’t like it, gosh, you can actually do something about it (or if you do like it … you can support it).
  9. The “science is settled” and some plots of those settled predictions. Sounds like settled doesn’t mean what they think it means.
  10. Remember the atheist meme, “religion is the opiate of the masses” … well not so much, eh?
  11. Of games and brains.
  12. Of tech and terror.
  13. Happiness fail.

Things Heard: e260v4

G’day.

  1. The super sekret plan revealed. (someone is slightly unimpressed)
  2. candidate.
  3. A lung recipient selected. See, it is about who you know.
  4. Immigration thoughts.
  5. Of man and elephant.
  6. Evil in our time.
  7. A book noted.
  8. Some IRS spending tidbits.
  9. English history and HBO series ties.
  10. bike race.

Things Heard: e260v3

Good morning. Yadda yadda yadda, blah blah blah

  1. More IRS tricks and missteps.
  2. A 14 y/old photographer and some of his pictures.
  3. Le Tour and changes in the last century.
  4. Some of the  groups not audited by the IRS, ’cause they didn’t have “Constitution” in their tagline.
  5. Testifying in regards to IRS investigation.
  6. Zooom.
  7. Game warden and his guns.
  8. Modern healthcare … as we move into the “who you know” regime.
  9. Hitler and language.
  10. Teh race card, and an example of not getting it at all.
  11. The surprise exam.
  12. Mistaken notions on what constitutes war noted.

Is Interracial Marriage Still Controversial?

I would have thought that, by this time in history, it would be no big deal, but apparently a Cheerios ad on YouTube featuring a black father and white mother was getting so many racist comments that they disabled commenting. Watch the ad and decide for yourself. I find it utterly unobjectionable.

A family down the street from us at our previous house was black & white, and I once heard them referred to by another neighbor as "salt & pepper", which I took as derogatory rather than descriptive (knowing the guy who said it). And we met, through homeschooling channels, a black and white couple that described to us the racism they encountered when, for example, the white wife applied for an apartment and everything was going smoothly for weeks until the black husband showed up to look at the place, and suddenly nothing was available.

This is 1950s/60s stuff. I would have thought we’d have learned by now. But here’s the thing. We still have neo-Nazis, and that 1940s stuff. We still have ideologies and twisted thoughts from, frankly, the beginning of time. We will always have racists. We will always have sin surrounding us. But we can’t think that this defines our culture.

The problem I see now is that being for a public policy like voter ID is equated to hateful comments on interracial couples. Since racism still exists, it is considered the driving force behind so many issues, and stifles actual conversation.

Yes, racism still exists, but not at all like it used do. (Could we have had a black President in the 50s or 60s?) It is a fringe (but, unfortunately, vocal) element at this point. Don’t dilute the term by using it where it’s not warranted.

Things Heard: e260v2

Good morning.

  1. Why does Communist chic survive?
  2. This is not unrelated to the prior link.
  3. Feminist victory, Pyrrhic?
  4. Privacy, laws broken, and consequence.
  5. Money wasted is money wasted.
  6. You might have a drinking problem when
  7. A “disconnect between rhetoric and reality” … when it is intentional we call that lying.
  8. Food for thought (HT).
  9. Tobacco, harm, and common misconceptions amongst MDs.
  10. Military promotions.

Sermon Notes: Forgiveness

From this week’s sermon.

Forgiveness is not:

  • Minimizing or excusing an offense.
  • Subjecting yourself to continued abuse.
  • Only an emotional response.
  • Assigning blame.
  • An act of weakness.

Forgiveness is:

  • Giving up rights to retaliate.
  • Healing internal abuse.
  • A choice involving thoughts, emotions and actions.
  • Taking responsibility to remove sin, regardless of who did it.
  • An act of inner health.

Things Heard: e260v1

Another day, another ???

  1. Coming soon, to a watercooler discussion near you.
  2. “much more lavish” … another plug for small businesses, which certainly have none of that lavish crap.
  3. Syria and stop digging.
  4. A homily … and a cherished gospel story.
  5. When the proud papa is an artist.
  6. A poll in the UK.
  7. Economics and …, a quote.
  8. Rules.
  9. Your President in action … or is that inaction.
  10. Of government spending and debt.
  11. The left’s anointed spokesperson and his foot in mouth disease.
  12. Freedom of speech in Wales.
  13. That’s very funny … other funny videos by the same guy can be found as well.
  14. Witness and evidence in the Pakistan.

Things Heard: e259v5

Good morning.

  1. Averages.
  2. A interesting prototype for a toy.
  3. A quote … which is not unlike the phrase I occasionally tell my kids when the utter the “I’m bored remark” (which oddly enough rarely comes to my ears now). My reply invariably is that “your boredom is a problem with you not the universe which you inhabit.”
  4. Warming and causes … a suggestion.
  5. Nuptials to remember.
  6. Regarding visiting Mars.
  7. Frequent visitor noted.
  8. Mainstream education moving online?
  9. Experts they are not.
  10. Fishing the adage, “Give him a fish …” which brings to my mind the always humors Christopher Moore addition “turn him into a fish and his family eats for a week” from Lamb.
  11. Mad skillz.
  12. Time after time (HT).
  13. Post boomer?
  14. For the burn your money crowd.

An Ethics Question

Monday Mr Burgess-Jackson posted a short ethics question:

You are a doctor. You have five patients, each of whom is about to die due to a failing organ of some kind. You have another patient who is healthy.

The only way that you can save the lives of the first five patients is to transplant five of this young man’s organs (against his will) into the bodies of the other five patients. If you do this, the young man will die, but the other five patients will live.

Is it appropriate for you to perform this transplant in order to save five of your patients?

I’d like to propose a variant, because I don’t think the doctor (“do no harm”) should ever consider this as given. (below the fold) Read the rest of this entry

 Page 23 of 241  « First  ... « 21  22  23  24  25 » ...  Last »