Things Heard: e194v1

Good morning.

  1. A question for the Occupiers. (HT)
  2. Finally the answers about the Jimmy Carter Rabbit incident.
  3. Horses giving backrubs?
  4. Presidential intervention noted.
  5. For what reason? Strategic interest is out.
  6. Becoming holy and fighting evil.
  7. Heh.
  8. Iran their latest move.
  9. LOL.
  10. Some notes on Mr Cain.
  11. And life (or Mr Cain?) imitates … Sim City?
  12. Is the recent spike all related to oil/energy?
  13. So, agree or disagree with the headline?
  14. Questioning a legal charge.
  15. The other 1%.

Secular vs Religion and the Public Square

On and off again I refer to the little book published that consists of the debate between Jurgen Habermas (eminent German philosopher) and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict). The title of this book is Dialectics of Secularization. Mr Habermas opens, sets the stage and gives a brief argument (streching 30 pages of a small format book) … and Cardinal Ratzinger replies in like length. This book is published by Ignatius Press (2006) and is quite inexpensive (and available on Amazon). It was, of course, originally published in German.

The Question:

Does the free, secularized state exist on the basis of normative presuppositions that it itself cannot guarantee? This question expresses a doubt about whetherthe democratic constitutional state can renew from its own resources the normative presuppositions of its existence; it also expresses the assumption that such a state is depenedent on the ethical traditions of a local nature.

Mr Habermas takes the affirmative, and of course Mr Ratzinger the negative. Read the rest of this entry

Things Heard: e193v5

Good morning.

  1. Oil and water separation, a prize given.
  2. It’s the damn media “professionals”, or not.
  3. Thaaat’s right, and consequentialism is for scoundrels.
  4. A car and a test.
  5. Jimmy Johnson for President?
  6. Or not … and Mr Borepatch might be forgetting the high court appointments.
  7. Heresy!
  8. And the heretic responds.
  9. Fantasy football put in context.
  10. Faith and science or at least the scientist.
  11. Going gonzo with infographics.

Thou Shalt Not Covet the 1%’s House

One of God’s top 10.

“You shall not covet your neighbor’s house. You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or his manservant or maidservant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor.”

Contrary to what some think, coveting is not just wanting something. Coveting is wanting something that belongs to someone else. God made it pretty clear about not coveting that which is your neighbor’s. (And of course, Jesus explained to us that our neighbor is essentially anyone else.)

But right now, in cities and countries all over, there are protests going on, getting rave reviews from liberals and the media, where the key ingredient is precisely this; covetousness. Much of what you hear from videos and their own website, even the whole 99% thing, is out of a want, not for money, but for the money of the "1%". (But, because these things would be paid for by taxes, they’re really aiming for the wealth of the 53%.)

"You, cancel my loans!"

"You, pay me even when I’m not working!"

"You, finance my healthcare!"

And the target of their protests must pony up the cash. No, not "the 1%", but the 53%, and their children. These protestors want their money; no their own. That is not at all to say that cancelling loans, unemployment benefits or subsidized healthcare are, in and of themselves, a bad thing in moderation, and when circumstances may warrant. But the method these "99%" suggest — more power to a government that got us into this situation in the first place — is both ironic and sad at the same time because they propose we keep digging the hole we’re in rather than get out of it.

(And, by the way, the folks who say they are 99% of the country? Not so much.)

We have some modicum of socialism in this country already — Social Security, Medicare, for examples — but these programs are going bankrupt. Social Security is now paying out more than it is taking in, and has been for a year now, because the socialized method used to pay for it couldn’t handle a Baby Boom. And yet these folks want the 1%/53% to finance yet another iteration of this.

The blame is misplaced, and the solution follows the direction of failed policies. So what’s a country to do?

Brett McCracken writing at his blog The Search sums things up well, both the issues and the solution.

As a “movement,” Occupy Wall Street doesn’t reveal an organized grassroots agenda as much as it represents a general climate of anger, frustration, and antagonism against the “haves”–a suspiciously narrow (1%), heartless, no good very bad group whose entrepreneurial success and capitalistic success apparently oppress the 99% of us have-nots who are being unfairly kept from sharing in the 1 percent’s riches.

Mostly, though, Occupy Wall Street represents the natural discontent of an entitled generation raised on the notion that we deserve things, that the government owes us something, that everything we want should be accessible, and that somehow we are not responsible if we don’t end up quite as successful in life as we’d hoped. It’s a blame-shifting problem. It’s an inability to delay gratification or go without that which we believe is our right or destiny. And it’s a problem both on the micro/individual and macro/government level.

McCracken suggests that the blame is one that we all share, not just some tiny slice of us, from whom we need to extract our pound of flesh.

The thing is, “sharing blame” is hard for us humans to do. We’re infinitely averse to admitting our own culpability. In almost anything. Whether it be our own financial hardships, or those of our communities, or the high taxes under which we suffer… We have to lash out against someone. We have to go occupy something.

As Christians, though, I think we must first and foremost look within for the blame. We must own our share in the mess. Beyond institutions and hegemonies and Wall Street tycoons, how are we responsible for the trouble we’re in? True revolution begins here. True change begins with what we can actually control: our own lives, an awareness of our weaknesses and potentials, and a commitment to working to improve.

If we have to occupy something, let it be the dominion of our own culpable Self, the guiltiest of all institutions and the one we are likeliest to spur toward positive change.

I dare say that should this particular philosophy suddenly grip the Occupy Wall Street crowd, things might disperse rather quickly. Is there injustice in America? Yes, there is. But Jesus didn’t storm the house of Zacchaeus, among the "1%" of his day. Jesus didn’t complain that the government in Rome was unfair and make demands of it. He spoke truths to individuals, even the 1%ers. He changed hearts, which then changed the culture. Let’s follow that example instead.

Things Heard: e193v3n4

Good morning.

  1. Well, Illinois is not the most regressive state. This is not unrelated.
  2. Pride and the terrorist.
  3. In the context of my (about to be much abused) noted about the rationale of liberals, this doesn’t to get that point.
  4. Being a dissident, a family affair. (being human –> also a family affair)
  5. petition.
  6. Blood money.
  7. Egypt and violence.
  8. How is this an “unintended” consequence when it was frequently and easily anticipated?
  9. Up up and away.
  10. In which “for nothing” means trillions of dollars of other peoples money.
  11. The response to the 99%/1% rhetoric.
  12. The NYTimes contorted(?) response to the targeting and killing of an American citizen.
  13. Why pose that rhetorical question in a campaign speech?
  14. school session.

Christianity Under Fire in the Middle East

According to the US State Dept., there is not a single Christian church left in Afghanistan.

The last public Christian church in Afghanistan was razed in March 2010, according to the State Department’s latest International Religious Freedom Report. The report, which was released last month and covers the period of July 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010, also states that “there were no Christian schools in the country.”

“There is no longer a public Christian church; the courts have not upheld the church’s claim to its 99-year lease, and the landowner destroyed the building in March [2010],” reads the State Department report on religious freedom. “[Private] chapels and churches for the international community of various faiths are located on several military bases, PRTs [Provincial Reconstruction Teams], and at the Italian embassy. Some citizens who converted to Christianity as refugees have returned.”

In recent times, freedom of religion has declined in Afghanistan, according to the State Department.

“The government’s level of respect for religious freedom in law and in practice declined during the reporting period, particularly for Christian groups and individuals,” reads the State Department report.

“Negative societal opinions and suspicion of Christian activities led to targeting of Christian groups and individuals, including Muslim converts to Christianity," said the report. "The lack of government responsiveness and protection for these groups and individuals contributed to the deterioration of religious freedom.”

And in Egypt, with the power vacuum left after the exit of Mubarak, the lid is coming off anti-Christian hatred there, too.

Now many fear that the power vacuum left after the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak is giving Muslim extremists free rein to torch churches and attack Coptic homes in the worst violence against the community in decades.

An assault Sunday night on Christians protesting over a church attack set off riots that drew in Muslims, Christians and the police. Among the 26 people left killed in the melee, most were Copts. For Coptic scholar Wassem el-Sissi, it was evidence that the Christian community in Egypt is vulnerable as never before.

"In the absence of law, you can understand how demolishing a church goes unpunished," he said. "I have not heard of anyone who got arrested or prosecuted."

Once a majority in Egypt, Copts now make up about 10 percent of the country’s 85 million people. They are the largest Christian community in the Middle East. Their history dates back 19 centuries and the language used in their liturgy can be traced to the speech of Egypt’s pharaohs. Proud of their history and faith, many Copts are identifiable by tattoos of crosses or Jesus Christ on their right wrists, and Coptic women do not wear the veil as the vast majority of Muslim women in Egypt do.

But then, it wasn’t all that wonderful under Muarak, either.

Under Mubarak, the problems of Copts festered even if they faced less violence than they do now. Their demands for a law to regulate construction of churches went unanswered and attacks on churches went unpunished.

There was some hope at the start of the Arab Spring, but it didn’t last long.

Copts shared in the euphoria of the 18-day revolution that ousted Mubarak and like so many other Egyptians their hopes for change were high. Mainly, they wanted to be on equal footing with Muslims.

At Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the revolution against Mubarak, there were glimpses of a fleeting utopia where coexistence and mutual respect between Muslims and Christians was the rule. The iconic image of Christians forming a human shield around Muslim worshippers during Friday prayers to protect them from thugs and pro-Mubarak loyalists spoke volumes to the dream.

But shortly after Mubarak’s ouster, a series of assaults on Christians brought home a stark reality: The fading of authoritarian rule empowered Islamist fundamentalists, known here as Salafis, who have special resentment for Christians.

Pray for the persecuted church. It really still does exist, and in more places than you may think.

Things Heard: e193v2

Good morning.

  1. In the land of no-vouchers for education. Felony?
  2. Coptic Christians, women, and now gays … Arab Spring or something less attractive?
  3. Meanwhile in Korea
  4. Some historical amazons.
  5. Keynesian and neo-Keynesians need not fear … policy makers are addicted to y’all. After all, what other theory recommends increased spending in recession and boom?
  6. Some European economic indicators.
  7. Coir composites coming to a car near you?
  8. Putting Mr Jobs in perspective.
  9. Deer (actually a hartbeest) crossing.
  10. A qualification on Obama’s liberal label.
  11. The Sitters and their motives … best left as unstated shared assumptions, ’cause when they go out and state them, gosh that’s not helping.
  12. The high court and a question.
  13. A quote for the day.

Shining the Light on Oppression

As they say, sometime light is the best disinfectant. The Iranian pastor who wouldn’t renounce Christianity and was being sentence to death has has his case moved to the top.

The case of an Iranian pastor facing a possible death sentence for apostasy has reportedly been referred to Iran’s supreme leader, a move some say shows the Islamic republic is feeling pressure in the face of growing international support.

Attorney Mohammad Ali Dadkhah told AFP on Monday that an Iranian court has decided to seek the opinion of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — the Islamic republic’s spiritual leader and highest authority — in the case of Youcef Nadarkhani, a 32-year-old pastor who was arrested in October 2009 and later sentenced to death for converting to Christianity.

Messages seeking comment from Dadkhah were not immediately returned early Monday.

Jordan Sekulow, executive director of the American Center for Law and Justice, a Washington-based organization that is monitoring Nadarkhani’s case, told FoxNews.com that the move was unusual and is part of the "secretive process" within the Iranian judicial system.

"Based on these reports, Pastor Youcef is alive and we have reached the highest level of Iranian government," Sekulow said on Monday. "I don’t believe this would’ve ever reached the level of Khamenei without the media attention and outpouring of support we’ve seen."

Sekulow said the move to involve Khamenei in a case before a regional court is uncommon and indicates that "Iran is feeling the pressure" of the growing international community in support of Nadarkhani.

Pray that he will be spared, and that the world will see this for what it is; Christian persecution.

The Latest "Believers Are Stupid" Study

Not being as good at math proves religious people don’t think. No, really, that’s what a Harvard study is saying it proves. Lisa Mill tears it down for us.

Things Heard: e193v1

Good morning.

  1. More on “Occupy Wall Street.” here more related stuff (with pictures) here.
  2. Solar UAVs and their uses.
  3. Golummmm (and his Precious).
  4. Religious freedom.
  5. So, communism? (living wage regardless of employment status?)
  6. Things to be nervous about.
  7. Windows based? Yikes.
  8. The next performance enhancing drugs?
  9. Uhm, you don’t need “four dimensions” … spinors (that is SU(2)) requires 4 pi rotation (not 2) to return to the original state. Yer keys are spin 1/2 (fermions) that’s all. 😀
  10. Wait wait wait … coffee is the elixir!

Friday Link Wrap-up

Let me get this straight: The government tells banks who they must lend to. Banks comply, and in doing so, very nearly go under. (Oversimplification, I know.) Obama propped up his friends in the banking industry by bailing them out. And the "Occupy Wall Street" folks are upset at the bankers? No, not just them; they’re upset at capitalism in general. Here’s a list of proposed demands that should make you squirm. Yes, it’s just a proposal from a forum post, but the promoted it to the front page of the site. And it gets general approval from the liberal commenters. "Universal single payer healthcare", "Guaranteed living wage regardless of employment" (emphasis mine), "Free college education", etc. The taxes required for all of this make the current unsustainable spending look like chump change. This certainly does not represent "the other 99%", as they claim.

Democrats insist that the Tea Party is run by the Koch brothers, on the idea that since the Kochs support it and give money to it, that they therefore control it. Wrong, but let’s go with that. How, then, to explain the big Soros, union, and other astroturfing money coming in to support OWS? (Additionally, if the Tea Party is racist for not having some requisite number of minorities among them, will those same people level that charge against OWS? Yeah, right. It’s not applied in the same way, depending on your political persuasion, so, in truth, it’s just a political bludgeon.)

And let me ask you this; if hundreds of Tea Partiers were being arrested around America, don’t you think the liberal pundits would be all over it? But when it happens at OWS, little if anything. In fact, the differences in how the media cover these two movements is and will be a very instructive lesson in media bias.

Getting away from OWS, when  you quote Ronald Reagan, you don’t think a little context might be in order?

Crony capitalism for Republicans? Bad. Crony capitalism for Democrats? Oh look, a squirrel!

And finally, if you’re going to protest, place the blame where it really belongs. (Click for a larger image.)

Things Heard: e192v5

Good morning.

  1. I’ve never understood the tacit assumption that “salvation-based theologies” would necessarily struggle with intelligence on other planets.
  2. Harnessing the sneeze (and other exhalations).
  3. Oooh, more lies and yes, of course he knew it “entailed risk” after most of the advisers were against it.
  4. Chains and the Internet age.
  5. Clarifying why the modern liberal movement is to be resisted on all fronts, when its stated goal is to dilute the individual.
  6. Those colors hurt.
  7. FEMA now under Mr Obama, change? … not so much.
  8. “Occupy Wall Street” a movement expands, noted here and here.
  9. More seriously.
  10. A contrast shown between Occupy movement and the Tea Party.
  11. Development and design.
  12. Oooh, Mr Krugman notes  DeLong vote in the Brown/Warren race. More here.
  13. Praise for the Romney list.

Things Heard: e192v4

Good morning.

  1. Well, that’s a recurring theme. Mr Obama makes a statement, soon it is noted, “The problem is, it’s just not true.”
  2. Very very cute.
  3. Looking at things the Wall Street protesters are saying.
  4. How not to do global public relations.
  5. Innovation, and consider, for example, auto and health care regulations and ask yourself about risk.
  6. Uhm, he’s lost his bully pulpit (FOX) … who/where/how are all those conservatives allegedly listening to him.
  7. Millionares? at $125k per year.
  8. A Cliff note for Christians.
  9. Climate averages shaping up for 2011.
  10. Mr Jobs has passed, two notable notes, here and here.

Do You Value Human Life?

Starting with the Holocaust, the narrator interviews folks on the street and, within seconds, changes their view 180 degrees on abortion. It’s a fascinating look at how just asking the right questions can make such a difference.

It’s called "180" and it’s a half-hour movie, not your typical amateurish, 4-minute YouTube clip.

Do you value human life? It’s a simple question.

Follow them on Twitter and "Like" them on Facebook.

Things Heard: e192v3

Good morning.

  1. Some thoughts on sexual identity and the history of the notion.
  2. Of Toledo and (?) Bulgaria?
  3. A neighbor notices unrest.
  4. Another take on the Ms Knox case.
  5. Of price and access and accessibility.
  6. disagree with David here, saying rapists are not “particularly different than any man on the street” is actually saying that the converse is also the case (that every man in the street is like the rapist).  It’s also wrong, people who turn to in-your-face violence to achieve any of their goals are very different than the “any man” on the street.
  7. So liberals, here’s a question … what amount is “reasonable.” By what criteria?
  8. An apt response indeed “Lord, have mercy.”
  9. So, will strong Tea Party support for Mr Cain silence the “Tea Party = racists meme?”
  10. Nope.
  11. The root cause of our current difficulties.
  12. A book noted.
  13. The Democrat party and their hatred of women?

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