By Contributor Archives

Those Chilean Miners’ Shirts

I saw the word "Jesus" on the sleeves of the shirts on the Chilean miners as they came up, one by one, in the capsule.  (Yeah, we had the streaming video going as I worked from home.  What a terrific event.)  But no news organization so much as mentioned the other writings on those shirts.

Thus the citizen investigative journalist kicks in where the major media won’t go.  The scripture verse on the back is Psalm 95:4.

In his hand are the depths of the earth,
       and the mountain peaks belong to him.

Yeah.  Wow.

And there’s more at the video below.  (Or view it on YouTube.)

Things Heard: e142v5

Good morning.

  1. A beastly comic.
  2. Talk of stiffening the Constitution, fear of runaway dismissed.
  3. Expectations and behavior.
  4. More Volt talk … I don’t believe the 127 mpg figure is anywhere near accurate.
  5. A column recommended.
  6. A contest.
  7. Fraud and foreclosure.
  8. A thorough foreclosure overview.
  9. And a Fan/Fred connection.
  10. Ignorance of the law is no excuse, but for some being above the law really helps one out.
  11. Angle/Reid.
  12. US National debt … which makes a default question sort of curious if the trend continues.

Rusty Nails (SCO v. 16)

Global Warming – a scam? (HT: Ron’s Bloviating) From Harold Lewis, Emeritus Professor of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara,

It [Global Warming] is the greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life as a physicist.

###

Yahoo! Yoga Mohler, Yoga, and Yahoo! together.

###

So… where’s Checkpoint Charlie? Rep. Loretta “The Vietnamese are trying to take away our seat!” Sanchez thinks a U.S. / Mexico border fence is the same as the Berlin Wall.

###

Hope (as in, “we can certainly hope this will happen”)

Things Heard: e142v4

Good morning. This will be brief, I have to hit the road shortly.

  1. Poverty and taxes.
  2. A gay man’s response to the Admin and DADT.
  3. Perceptions of economics.
  4. Nikita Khrushchev.
  5. A white butterfly.
  6. Nobel and consequences.
  7. Fun with logic.
  8. Mrs Thomas and liberty.
  9. Criticism of the Admin from the left … more here.
  10. Yesterday’s reports on the Volt, countered.
  11. So … supply is down, prices however, will be mandated magically by Obamacare to go down. Makes sense? Didn’t think so.
  12. Vietnam and the delusions of the left.
  13. Cancer and caution.

"Unexpected!"

The number of people filing new claims for unemployment insurance rose to a higher-than-expected 462,000 in the latest week, the Labor Department said on Thursday, while the number of people still collecting jobless benefits fell to an almost two-year low.

OK, "higher-than-expected", technically.  But if it continues the trend, and if it’s clear the stimulus hasn’t done anything to stem the tide of unemployment, why does anyone expect it to go down, or even up just a little?  Until companies are more confident that they won’t get stuck with "unexpected" costs by this administration, they’re not going to invest in expansion.

As I’ve said, the Party of No will probably solve this, just by being there.

Article V Convention: Is It A Good Idea?

As citizens struggle to figure out how to rein in a runaway federal government, some Constitutional scholars are taking a closer look at the pros and cons of an Article V Convention as a way to pass amendments that will help limit the size of government:

In August, Missouri became the latest state to rebel against the new national health care law when 71 percent of voters supported a ballot initiative rejecting the legislation’s requirement that individuals purchase government-approved insurance. Several other states will consider similar measures on the ballot this November.

However satisfying this backlash against ObamaCare may be to opponents of the law, these state-based efforts could all be for naught if the U.S. Supreme Court sides with Congress and rules that the legislation’s individual mandate is constitutional.

Such a decision would have far-reaching consequences, giving broad new power to the federal government over individuals and states. It would mean that the interstate Commerce Clause would have been interpreted so broadly as to allow the federal government to regulate the activities of people who choose not to engage in commerce, and within a health insurance market where businesses aren’t even allowed to sell their products across state lines. It would represent the culmination of decades in erosion of the concept of the separation of powers between federal and state governments, and the boldest example of congressional over-reach in the age of Obama.

In that scenario, short of repeal, the only remaining way to fight the law would be to amend the Constitution. Given how polarized the modern U.S. Senate is, it’s highly unlikely that a proposed amendment would garner the necessary 67 votes needed to amend the Constitution in the traditional manner. Yet the Founding Fathers left the states one last check on federal power.

Under Article V of the Constitution, “Congress… on the Application of the Legislatures of two thirds of the several States, shall call a Convention for proposing Amendments, which… shall be valid to all Intents and Purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by the Legislatures of three fourths of the several States.”

The Constitution has never been amended through a convention of the states, and this route remains controversial, with many conservatives fearing that the meeting would turn into a circus in the modern media age, and open the door to a wholesale rewriting of the nation’s founding document. Yet a new body of research suggests that these fears are unwarranted, and that there are enough checks built into the system to prevent what scholars refer to as a “runaway convention.” With state legislators and grassroots activists searching for ways to limit the abuses of Congress, the possibility has begun to generate more chatter.

The article is lengthy but well worth reading as it closely examines the pros and cons of executing this Constitutional option.

Hat tip: The Volokh Conspiracy

Christians practicing Yoga?: Al Mohler responds to criticisms he’s received

In Yahoo, Yoga, and Yours Truly, Albert Mohler has responded to criticisms of his original blog post questioning the contemporary practice of Christians participating in Yoga (see my post On a Christian Version of Yoga). Take the time to read his latest offering. One interesting excerpt,

I have received hundreds of emails and comments against my article from those identifying as Christians. Not one–not a single one–has addressed the theological and biblical issues. There is not even a single protest communication offering a theological argument.

Indeed.

Things Heard: e142v3

Good morning.

  1. Politics, charge and counter.
  2. A Democrat and talking points for the campaign.
  3. Bad news for the government motors new car.
  4. Guess their just following the lead of their majority owners, lie lie lie.
  5. More stupid government tricks.
  6. Concussions.
  7. Unimpressed by the (not) sharing your pain.
  8. Demographics moving.
  9. A welcome homecoming.
  10. Some Handel.
  11. Stupid scholastic tricks.

Things Heard: e142v2

Good morning.

  1. On scandal.
  2. A tragedy noted.
  3. Football and gender.
  4. The law and Mr Skinner.
  5. Life imitates, uhm, sluggy freelance?
  6. Mr Lewis and the APS.
  7. China policy and that little island.
  8. Libertarian and law.
  9. Pressure and Obamacare.
  10. Heh.
  11. A book discussed.
  12. A question for the consequentialists.
  13. Expectations of the future.

America’s “Original Sin”

Mr Schraub talks race. Before I get to the claim that slavery is America’s “Original Sin” I’d note that Mr Schraub says that the toxicity of being labeled racist makes “true dialog” about what constitutes racism impossible. ‘Cept that’s not really true. Racism is pretty a pretty simple thing to define. Racism is when one makes decisions or assessments based on race, e.g., voting for Mr Obama on account of his racial makeup. And yes, that makes most “race” activists racist themselves, which on reflection is quite obvious. Those who are conscious and likely to notice race are those more likely to make decisions based purely on that. Racism is felt quite universally to be a bad thing, yet given its prevalence, especially amongst those most vocal about the evils of racism and the neutrality of the definition given, perhaps what Mr Schraub is hinting at is that we need a better discussion of why racism is wrong. If one were to assume that the progressive/left is more racially conscious than the right … and therefore more racist is born up by the data linked last week that highlighted the finding that Black elected officials when elected from a mixed race district were more likely to be Republican than Democrat and those who were Democrat were more often from majority Black districts. In past conversations, Mr Schraub noted that race theorists indeed are aware that their work might serve to heighten and strengthen malign race consciousness that they hope to combat. Yes, but the personal imperatives of personal employment in their chosen field seems to defeat that idea quite handily. 

However, the primary point of this essay is to examine original sin in the context of American history.

St. Augustine of Hippo is perhaps the primary theologian influencing thought regarding Original Sin in the Western strand of Christian theological thought. There are a lot of parallels between that theology and strands of thought about slavery and race in America. Both notions suffer however, from the same sort of mistake. St. Augustine, in summary, taught that Adam’s primordial sin in the garden passes on to all of us. Adam as proto-human committed the sin of disobedience. All men, from birth, share in that guilt. From this viewpoint then, the importance of Penal Substitution and Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross becomes a linchpin of Western soteriology. 

This is however, a quite unnatural way to view justice. If my father steals, I and my children do not share in his guilt. The weight and import (the guilt if you will) of his crime, legal or moral, do not pass to his children. We don’t even consider that in sexual crimes, if a child results, that the child of that act is legally or morally impugned or tainted by that act (well, we don’t justifiably view the child in that way). This is the crux of Augustine’s error.

A better way of viewing Original Sin, which is the prevailing view in the Eastern/non-Augustinian strands of Christian theology, was that we do not inherit guilt or sin from Adam. What we inherit is his exile. Adam, by not being repentant, was cast from the Garden and God’s presence. The consequences of that are estrangement from God and death entering the world. He was exiled. We, as his descendants, share his exile (and to the point, not his guilt). To look at the example from a criminal point of view as was done above, if my parents were exiled as a result of my father’s crime, then I grow up in that place of exile. I inherit the consequence, that is my residence, not the guilt or blame. I and my children are not accountable for this act. From a theological perspective this means in the East, it is the Resurrection which is the dominant soteriological event, not the crucifixion. 

Take this back to the notions about American, race, and slavery. Guilt is, contra-Augustine, not heritable. The social conditions and ethnic consequences do exist. However, nobody living today is accountable for the actions begun in the 16th century by Bartolomé de las Casas and the social mechanisms that unfolded from those social/economic innovations. Perhaps it is the prevalence of St. Augustine’s error found so prevalently that allows those who consider slavery America’s “Original Sin” implies that guilt and things like reparations logically follow. They, alas, don’t. 

 

Nobel Peace Prize Awarded for Effort and Sacrifice Towards Peace

…as opposed to the many other criteria unrelated to peace that were used in the past.  Liu Xiaobo is in prison for "subversion" for trying to free the people of China from the Communists, and this is a well-deserved honor, if rather late in coming.

And why is Liu Xiaobo being given an award also given to Yassar Arafat, Al Gore and Barack Obama?  Why this very uneven standard of the pursuit of peace?  Claudia Rosett has some thoughts.

Blogrolling Shutting Down

Most of you will probably say, "Huh?" to that, but if you’re a blogger, it’s a potentially big deal.  Blogrolling, the largest site for managing links for use in blogrolls (i.e. our list of links on the left sidebar) is shutting down as of November 1st.  For those bloggers not noticing this, it’ll mean some rather empty blog lists in a few weeks unless you deal with it now.  It’s going to be a lot of link copying and pasting, as the Blogrolling service has no ‘export’ feature.

The links here will be looking different as I work on converting to another method of displaying them.  Also, the Church Directory blogroll run by Joe Carter will be gone at that time, too, and I don’t think there’ll be a replacement.  At least, there’s no discussion about that as far as I can Google.

Just an FYI from one blogger to another.

Things Heard: e142v1

Good morning, a perfect 10, eh?

  1. Voter intimidation.
  2. No warrant required.
  3. Propriety.
  4. On the food stamps -> food censorship. So … should you need a warrant to search subsidized housing?
  5. Mr Mankiw.
  6. Nazism and the left, argument from authority … and btw, the statement that “all political scientists” say its a far right movement is wrong. Chantal Delsol a prominent political philosopher disagrees, see Unlearned Lessons.
  7. Tea with a psychic.
  8. Climate and bees.
  9. Nuclear power.
  10. Branding.
  11. Che chic and the left.
  12. Of growth and government, here and here.

Secretariat

Just returned from watching the movie Secretariat.

If you’re a fan of sentimental, feel-good Capra-corn, then this is a film for you. Based on the real-life story of how a house-wife orchestrated the set of events which gave us the last Triple Crown winner, Secretariat provides a glimpse of how dreams can sometimes come true. Diane Lane does a wonderful job as Penny Tweedy, Secretariat’s owner, but John Malkovich’s performance of a quirky Lucien Laurin, the horse’s trainer, is superb. Race scenes are expertly filmed, with a few unique perspectives I don’t recall seeing in other horse racing movies (e.g., Seabiscuit, Dreamer). There is a continuity miscue, in my opinion, just after the horse’s birth, but that’s minor. Also, the personalities of several of the characters don’t seem to get a chance to develop which, I suppose, could have occurred had the movie been a bit longer.

The movie, evidently, is aimed at a Christian audience (or, at least, at a family-values audience). The opening and closing sequences, with narration from the book of Job, as well as a couple of Gospel song overdubs within the movie, works well, I think. How this will play out with moviegoers remains to be seen, but I found the film a delight, and one the entire family could enjoy.

Image – © 2009 Autumn

Cap and Trade a Career Killer

So not only will proposed cap and trade legislation dramatically hike your utility rates, it’s also becoming something of a political career killer just like Obamacare:

Even as Speaker Nancy Pelosi twisted arms for the final votes to pass her climate bill in June 2009, Democrats feared they might be “BTU’d.” Many of them recalled how Al Gore had forced the House to vote in 1993 for an energy tax, a vote Democrats later blamed for helping their 1994 defeat.

The politics isn’t the same this time around. This time, it’s much, much worse.

Ask Rick Boucher, the coal-country Democrat who for nearly 30 years has represented southwest Virginia’s ninth district. The 64-year-old is among the most powerful House Democrats, an incumbent who hasn’t been seriously challenged since the early 1980s. Mr. Boucher has nonetheless worked himself onto this year’s list of vulnerable Democrats. He managed it with one vote: support for cap and trade.

Anger over the BTU tax was spread across the country in 1994; the tax hit everything, even nuclear and hydropower. And the anger was wrapped into general unhappiness with Clinton initiatives. Some Democrats who voted for BTU but otherwise distanced themselves from the White House were spared. Mr. Boucher, for instance.

Cap and trade is different. The bill is designed to crush certain industries, namely coal. As coal-state voters have realized this, the vote has become a jobs issue, and one that is explosive. It is no accident that Democrats face particularly tough terrain in such key electoral states as Ohio and Pennsylvania, as well as Kentucky, West Virginia and Indiana. They are being laser-targeted for their votes to kill home-state industries.

As the article goes on to point out, Mr. Boucher’s position on cap and trade (including his authorship of the legislation) may prove to be his undoing:

Mr. Boucher sensed danger earlier this year and has run right: He voted against ObamaCare and has a newfound love for Bush tax cuts. But he’s in a defensive crouch on the main issue, reduced to excuses for his cap-and-trade vote. A top one is the old chestnut that he got involved to make the bill better. He points to money he had inserted for “clean coal,” and has somehow spun his work into an ad claiming he “took on his own party” to “protect coal jobs” in the, ahem, “energy” bill.

Yet as the race has tightened, the Boucher campaign has looked more desperate. It nitpicked the Americans for Job Security ad and demanded TV stations pull it. The union bosses for United Mine Workers of America had to step up, inviting Mr. Boucher to keynote a picnic to try to shore up coal workers. He’s newly passionate about reining in an anti-coal EPA.

Mr. Boucher appears to still lead, but with a GOP wave building, no Democrat with an anti-job vote against his own constituents is safe. Virginia’s ninth has already delivered one of the lessons of 2010: Cap-and-trade policy is terrible. Cap-and-trade politics is deadly.

Hat tip: Powerline

 Page 96 of 241  « First  ... « 94  95  96  97  98 » ...  Last »