Friday, June 02, 2006

Naughty, naughty Sooty!

Tsk, tsk. I go to Cute Overload to find a nice, wholesome puppy picture to post for an overnight thread, and I see *this*. The attack on family values is everywhere, dagnabbit! ;-)


A guinea pig called Sooty had a night to remember after escaping from his pen and tunnelling into a cage of 24 females.

He romanced each of them in turn and was yesterday the proud father of 43 offspring.
...
"We knew he had gone missing after wriggling through the bars of his cage. We looked everywhere but never thought of checking the pen where we keep 24 females. We did a head count and found 25 guinea pigs--Sooty was fast asleep in the corner.

He was absolutely shattered. We put him back in his cage and he slept for two days."


There's something delightfully absurd about using the word "romanced" to describe Sooty's little adventure.

Tell you what, here's a puppy picture too, for good measure.



Good night, blog friends.

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June is Bloggers Against Torture Month

You may have noticed a new graphic link in the left sidebar of this blog--one that reads "This Blog is Anti Torture". I first spotted the button at My Left Wing, and realized that I definitely wanted a button like that for this blog. When I clicked to learn more, I found out that June is Torture Awareness Month. I went to this link to sign up Howard-Empowered People to take part in Torture Awareness Month...

All you need to do to join is (1) promise to do a blog post about torture in the month of June, (2) link to Torture Awareness Month somewhere your blog. Do both of these things, and we will link to you from our blogrolls.
Well, as you can see, I've done the "add a link" part, and it seems plausible that before this month is over I will find the time and inspiration to write up a suitable blog post on the subject. But while my own muse is either napping or otherwise occupied, I welcome and encourage the submission of guest blogs on the topic. If you write something up and would like it posted here, you can e-mail it to howardempowered at gmail.com.

As shared in the comments by Cyberotter, there are posts for Day 1 and Day 2 up at Donkephant. Please feel free to pass along other good commentary you've seen in the comments below.

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Thursday, June 01, 2006

A moment of science

Cool post from Jill at Writes Like She Talks about science songs available online--including a nice backstory about her evolving relationship with her brother.

This also seems like a good place to repost some links Cat posted in last night's thread:

What's The Link Between Astronauts and Osteoporosis?


Interiors of extrasolar planets: A first step

On the lighter side (some of you have seen this already), Molecules with Silly Names.

The Annals of Improbable Research

The Straight Dope with Cecil Adams (*some* of the questions he answers are science-related)

Dihydrogen Monoxide Research Division

I wanted to wrap up this post with a screen capture from a fun science video clip. My first thought was something from the Chemistry Comes Alive! site. Very cool--worth checking out--but I couldn't find anything that made for a good screen-capture. For that, I think I'll go with the old, reliable, Diet Coke and Mentos soda bottle eruption...



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Articles about blogs/blogging

Figured I should put a new post up since I don't know if anyone else has something in the works, and this is one of my long days as far as work is concerned. I'll use it to repost a few link that I shared in the comments yesterday.

The Blogfather (in Salon.com)

But then Armstrong, 42, bills himself as a different kind of consultant, an online insurgent who, with Markos Moulitsas Zuniga, aka Kos, is leading "a bloodless coup" in national politics. "We are at the beginning of a comprehensive reformation of the Democratic Party -- driven by committed progressive outsiders," Armstrong and Moulitsas write in their recent book, "Crashing the Gate," which sold 5,000 copies online before it was even published. Something is certainly happening. Guest blogging at DailyKos, which gets about 4.5 million page views a week, has become a rite of passage for Democratic bigwigs, people like John Kerry, Russ Feingold, Elizabeth Edwards (under a pseudonym) and Nancy Pelosi. Many of Armstrong's former blogging pupils, who are known by critics as the "Blog Mafia," have been recruited to work for 2006 House and Senate campaigns as varied as those of Connecticut's Ned Lamont, New Jersey's Bob Menendez and Ohio's Sherrod Brown. And next week, roughly 1,000 blog faithful are set to descend on Las Vegas for a four-day conference with the Democratic leaders of the House and Senate, party chairman Howard Dean, and at least three presidential hopefuls.
And the part about Ohio...

The online unity was shattered, however, in October when Sherrod Brown, an outspokenly liberal seven-term congressman from Ohio, announced that he would run for the seat. Armstrong, who had been working as a consultant for Brown, encouraged an online rebellion against Hackett. Before long, Moulitsas and other bloggers had abandoned their once-favorite son, arguing, along with Democratic Party leaders, that Brown was more electable. In one post,, on Oct. 6, Moulitsas wrote, "It might be a good idea for Hackett to stand down." This shocked many readers who had cheered another Kos post just two days earlier, in which Moulitsas seemed to endorse Hackett in a race against Brown. "Give me an Iraq vet over a career politician," he wrote.

"It looked like Jerome and Markos were using their big-box blogs to steamroll into Ohio," said Russell Hughlock, aka Pounder, an electrical engineer who runs the BuckeyeStateBlog. "A lot of people left Kos ... because they got pissed."

Moulitsas told me that both of his posts were, in fact, consistent, and that he had never changed his mind. "One of them spoke from the heart. The other spoke from the brain," he said, explaining that he, reluctantly, concluded Hackett couldn't win the Senate seat. "I would rather have Paul Hackett in the Senate."


The article is duscussed here and here.

On a related note, Plunderbund discusses the ODP's Blog Problem.

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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Alachua Republican party draws "line in the sand", sets up attack blog

From Renee...I have crossposted this at Daily Kos, My Left Wing, and Booman Tribune. Recommendations would be appreciated. Also, Charlie asks that we share this story, so please post the link anywhere it would be of interest to people.

There is a significant new development in the Alachua saga. For years there have been anonymous attack blogs spreading rumors about those addressing corruption in the City of Alachua.

When they discovered we had created a registration based information site - that cannot be used for anonymous attacks - this Sunday they put up their own new site (registration based).

The difference is - this time they have "outed" themselves rather than hiding behind anonymity.

And it is the Alachua County Republican Party! At first I thought this was a rogue Republican or actor - who was falsely representing their views as the official views of the Republican party.

But I spoke with the Chairman of the Party this morning and he confirmed it to me - the Alachua County Republican Party is responsible for that site and the Republican Executive Committee is sponsoring and financing it.

You can see it at http://thetruthabouttheala.blogspot.com

Also see the new posts at the Alachua Project site:

http://freealachua.org
http://freealachua.org/blog/

What the chairman of the Republican Party, Stafford Jones, stated to me was that the Republican Party has decided to "draw a line in the sand" on the issue of the City of Alachua. They claim that it is a model of "pro-job, pro-family" government that should be followed everywhere - in contrast to our claims that it is the epitome of corrupt practices and deference over democracy.

So the Republican Party has laid out the line in the sand - which side will people take - the Republican Party, officially, has staked out one side of that line and demanded people take sides. I wonder how many registered Republicans agree with the officials leading their party?

Charlie

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The courage to say "yes"

In yesterday's open thread at My Left Wing, I learned that May 30 was the anniversary of the date that Jeanne D'Arc (aka Joan of Arc) was martyred. That caught my attention primarily because Son in Ohio, in spite of being what I could describe optimistically as an agnostic, was fascinated with Joan of Arc for several years. And every now and then the interest is rekindled.


Incidentally, the painting seen above is by Leon Benouville. I never learned much French, but as near as I can gather, it depicts Jeanne listening to her "voices". I am not interested, at this moment, in speculating as to the origins of those voices--whether they be medical, psychiatric, or supernatural. At the moment, I am just intrigued by her certainty that she indeed heard them.

In the open thead I mentioned earlier, Mirrim posted these words from George Bernard Shaw's St. Joan:

"O God who madest this beautiful earth, when will it be ready to receive thy saints? How long, O Lord, how long?"

Shortly before reading those words I had read at Crooks and Liars about Ava Lowery, a 15 year old girl who has received death threats for making a haunting anti-war animation entitled "Peace Takes Courage". I don't know much about her--other than the fact that she is quite talented and courageous. I am struck by the fact that she and Jeanne D'Arc, living centuries apart, are "uppity young women" who feel compelled to step outside of their comfort zones to do something risky.

I think most of us here feel like this to some extent--although most of us have not experienced death threats because of our activism. But we certainly have other things we could be doing with our free time, except that we can't bring ourselves to turn away having seen what needs to be done. We feel compelled to press forward. "Called", even, but without the certainty that we have heard a voice giving us instructions.


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Tuesday, May 30, 2006

DemocracyFest Update

Did you know there is on-campus lodging available for the Third Annual DemocracyFest?

Single Room (sleeps 1) - Only $60/night!

Double Room (sleeps 2) - Only $110/night!

Suite (sleep 8) - Not available on the website, please inquire at democracyfest@yahoo.com

These rooms are an incredible deal for San Diego and you will be conveniently located on-campus, within a 5 minute walk of all DemocracyFest activities throughout the weekend. All rooms are available Thursday through Sunday nights (7/13-7/17), are non-smoking, and include a fridge and microwave.

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Monday, May 29, 2006

Memorial Day Weekend Roundup

I'm meeeeelting!

Seriously, we've got to get an air conditioner in here soon. I'm going to sign off for the night, but we've had so many great threads--and heard from people who haven't had time to post for a while--that I don't want to let them scroll off the page. So I'm going to use this post as a weekend wrap-up with links to those posts.

Saturday Comics by Oscar in Louisville
Zack Space on the Rachel Maddow Show (Transcript) by Renee in Ohio
Fred Rogers testifying in Senate hearings, 1969 by Renee in Ohio
Messianic Musings by Oscar in Louisville
Coffee Drinkers, Wake Up! by Catreona
"Rich man's" media and "death by ridicule" in the press....still going strong. by floridagal
Remembering the four-legged friends who have shared our lives by Renee in Ohio
Charlie, Alachua, and exhaustion by Patricia Camburn Behnke
In Memoriam by Oscar in Louisville
Epilogue to a Love Story by Subway Serenade

Before signing off, I decided to head over to Cute Overload to find an animal pic that is both cute and *cool*. How about this?

The folks at Cute Overload inform us that "this and many, many more melt-inducing pictures can be found in LiveJournal-Baby Animals.

You can also check out pandafix, for pics like this...


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Epilogue to a Love Story

Note from Renee...I am having an *awful* time trying to post any comments today. Halsocan issue, I guess--I keep getting this "Bad colon separator" message. Don't know if anyone else if having similar troubles, but be assured that I'm aware of the problem.

Crossposted at The End of Civilization as We Know It

Ascension Sunday, 2006.

The Earthly story of John and Mickey Oehlmann came to an end this week, when the maintanance crew came to clear their apartment. I was fortunate to have gotten the word that their family had abandoned the contents of the place, save for an air conditioner, two TVs and a couple of electric reclining chairs.

I arrived about half an hour after the crew, and asked if they'd mind if took a few rememberances, and they said whatever I took was something less for them to carry, and knowing how close we were they were glad to help.

From the moment I stepped inside the apartment, I realized that a rich history was left behind. Things that should have been held for future generations of their family lay in bags waiting to be discarded to the compactor. First I found their wedding album, and many books of family pictures. Then I found all of John's scrapbooks and trophies. Sadly his military medals seem to have been lost to the trashbin before I arrived.

But the real treasure that I've found in the garbage bags was every letter they exchanged during WWII. She had only mentioned them to me once but they were clearly one of her prized possessions. Yet my favorite item so far, even though I'm not a Catholic, was her Rosary beads from her First Communion.

Mickey passed away just before Easter, and I resolved to light a candle for them on the Catholic holiday of the Ascension. When I got on the bus to go to work on Sunday morning, I had a feeling that she was on the bus with me, holding my hand, as if we were going to meet someone. I put the thought out of my mind while I got my coffee and went downstairs to set up.

About 20 minutes later as I was singing, I suddenly found myself holding back some very deep tears, and realized that Mickey and John had been there listening to my performance. They had never heard me before and I felt them dancing just a few feet away from where I was standing.

I got all choked up and had to stop singing while resisting the urge to burst out crying, Then I felt John ask me to play "Their Song."

I took a deep breath and the words came out.

When somebody loves you
It's no good unless he loves you
All the way

I felt them looking into each other's hearts and they slowly began to dance again on the subway platform. I was trembling. The other people on the platform saw me falling apart.

Deeper than the deep blue sea is
That's how deep it goes
When it's real

Then that Love that knows no Comprehension that I always talk about
swept over me, and I could almost see them.

Who knows where the road will lead us
Only a fool would say

The song ended and I felt them watching as I played "Mail Order Annie." I could sense they realized that if they stayed longer I'd never get any work done, and would probably end up a shapeless mass in a pool of my own tears. As the train arrived, I felt their love draw near to me as if in farewell. When the train stopped I felt them move toward one of the doors. It opened and they both stepped on, turned to me and waved, and went off with a smile to continue their amazing love story.

Have a wonderful Memorial Day. I am.

David Teller, The Subway Serenade

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In Memoriam

Why did Willie Edward Carter have to die?

Willie Edward Carter was the oldest of the six Carter boys from the Eastside Projects in Patterson, New Jersey. After he graduated from Eastside High School - several years before Joe Clark got there - he was drafted into the Army and sent to the front lines of the Korean War. Willie survived the ravages of war for several months, but as the North Koreans pushed south during the Battle of Chipyong-ni in 1951, the eldest brother of my father was reported missing and presumed dead.

Why did Willie Edward Carter have to die?

My uncle Willie was barely out of high school when he was shipped off to fight a people that posed no threat to the United States of America. My uncle Willie was just a youth when he was sent to fight and kill people who couldn't find Patterson, NJ on a map if their life depended on it. My uncle Willie was just a boy when he died.

Why?

There is no Willie Edward Carter Jr. There is no Mrs. Willie Edward Carter. There is nothing left of Uncle Willie except the faint memories carried by his surviving brothers and the tales that they've told to us, his nephews and nieces. On this Memorial Day I honor Uncle Willie, Willie Edward Carter, and I ask, "Why did Willie Edward Carter have to die?" How many more generations will be forced to ask why their uncles and fathers and mothers and aunts had to die? Will they reminisce over you?

Peace.


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Charlie, Alachua, and exhaustion

I covered Alachua politics for several years as a journalist. I wrote the novel Tortoise Stew as a way to deal with the drama and traumas of covering the official business of this city. Charlie writes in one of his messages that he is "exhausted" by all that has been happening. That struck a nerve with me because I too felt exhausted every time I had to fight a battle for public records or play the game to get an interview.

Charlie attended a book talk about Tortoise Stew recently with several community members and the mayor of the neighboring community of Newberry. This mayor does not necessarily agree with Charlie's methods, but at this talk both agreed that government becomes dysfunctional when the side in power refuses to listen to opposing opinions. This has been happening in Alachua probably since Reconstruction. When the ruling party refuses to listen, disenfranchisement occurs and democracy has gone underground.

The best thing about the discussion of Tortoise Stew occurred when Charlie and the mayor exchanged ideas and communicated ways to enfranchise citizens in order to make local government functional once again.

Alachua's dysfunction needs to be used as an example in this country for how to destroy democracy.

Please feel free to post this email.

Patricia Camburn Behnke
www.authorsden.com/patriciacbehnke

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Sunday, May 28, 2006

Remembering the four-legged friends who have shared our lives

Today I received an e-mail from my friend, Jeff He was sharing the sad news that he recently had to have his cat, Christine, put to sleep. In the letter, he reminded me that he'd adopted her as a stray in California, and she moved with him up to Washington state. She was truly part of the family. As I was writing back, I was trying to think of what to say after, "Wow, that's rough!" As I thought some more, I remembered that Demetrius and I had actually met Christine once, when we visited Jeff in Washington.

This was the year before Son in Ohio was born. It was before Jeff got married and had two daughters. So, on the one hand, she had a long life, but on the other hand, that doesn't really make it easier, does it? In fact, it got me to thinking about how, at least for me, the more chapters of my life I've shared with a pet, the more ground we've covered together geographically or otherwise, the sharper those pangs of loss will be. Because, no matter how much I can tell myself intellectually that "it was for the best", it still feels like a gaping hole has been ripped in my life. Because I've lost one of my traveling companions.

So, today I'm thinking a lot about our cat Socrates. Now, I feel like I would be remiss not to mention my dog Peggy--in case anyone in my family is lurking, I wouldn't want them to think I was dissing the Best Dog in the World. Peggy was my companion all through my teen years, and there's a picture in our photo album of me posing with her on my wedding day. When she died it was quite a blow. But Socrates crossed state lines with us, which is why Jeff's letter reminded me of him.

He remains The Best Cat in the World to me. When Demetrius and I would sit together on the couch watching television, Socrates habitually positioned himself so that he was on both of our laps. We figured he was making a point of not playing favorites.

When our alarm clock would go off in the morning, he would run out into the hallway--knowing that we would be passing that way soon--and roll onto his back, presenting his tummy to be rubbed. And that boy enjoyed a *vigorous* tummy rubbing. Only cat we've had like that. The cats who have shared our home since then have been affectionate enough, but those other cat tummies have been strictly off limits.

We don't have any digital pictures of Socrates, or even any regular pictures of him in his signature "present tummy" pose. Nor could I find a picture of any black cat doing "the pose", so this will have to do...

Feel free to share memories of your special furry friends in the comments. And if you've got a picture you'd like me to add to this post, you can send it to me at howardempowered at gmail.com.

Update from puddle, who informs us that there is a "eulogy, short form, for Digger" here.

Also, there is an abbreviated version of this post diaried at My Left Wing, Booman Tribune, Daily Kos, and Democratic Underground. Some sweet stories and pictures can be found in the comments.

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"Rich man's" media and "death by ridicule" in the press....still going strong.

Watching the television news, cable or network, this week was a painful experience. It was like a switch was turned in some corporate boardroom, and all the media outlets began spouting the nonsense again.

This was a powerful article from 2004, and I thought of it this week. The attacks on the Clintons have begun again, they are gearing up for Gore. They are up to their old tricks just like in 04. Watching Hardball today was a sad experience. Chris Matthews has a sick fascination with the Clintons still.

Here is that article from 2004...
The Awesome Destructive Power of the Corporate Media

The article first refers to the media's attacks on Howard Dean during the campaign, but that is only a small part of their major points.

This commentary, however, is not about the merits of Howard Dean. If a mildly progressive, Internet-driven, young white middle class-centered, movement-like campaign such as Dean's - flush with money derived from unconventional sources, backed by significant sections of labor, reinforced by big name endorsements and surging with upward momentum - can be derailed in a matter of weeks at the whim of corporate media, then all of us are in deep trouble. The Dean beat-down should signal an intense reassessment of media's role in the American power structure.
In these two paragraphs, they say the Democrats are not much of a part of the corporate power, corporate media equation. My opinion is, though, that we have many Democrats equally beholden to the corporations. They come off pretty easy in the press because they seldom take stands and seldom have any opinions dissenting from the corporate views. They have it easy.

Clinton's Republican predecessors were not subjected to anything approaching such scrutiny and abuse. It is self-evident that George Bush, who should have been buried under a glacier of scandal and criminality within months of entering the White House, enjoys the full-time protection of the corporate press. Their institutional intention is to elect him again. Media apologists offer fictions about press vs. power, when in reality corporate media equals corporate power, just as Bush equals corporate power. The Democrats are not part of this equation.

Thus, the rich men's media descended on the Democratic Party primary process in order to mangle and denigrate it, while propping up the corporate champion in the White House. The New York Times, through its chief political reporter, Adam Nagourney, set the parameters of coverage by eliminating any mention of the three "bottom tier" candidates - starting with his "analysis" of the May televised debate in South Carolina, a state in which Al Sharpton is a key player! Nagourney systematically erased Sharpton, Kucinich and Carol Moseley-Braun from his weekly coverage of the contest - a professionally suicidal routine were it not consistent with the objectives of corporate management. The Times proudly sets the standard for national reporting, but its leadership was not necessary to ensure that the bottom tier would remain at the bottom. The organs of corporate speech all march to the same tune because there is not a dime's worth of difference between their owners.
The article mentions the way Ted Koppel in New Hampshire attacked the 3 candidates who had not raised much money in their races. He was ridiculing them in public. The article points out they had more class than he did.

Kucinich, Sharpton and Moseley-Braun acquitted themselves well in the exchange. The real story here is that Koppel felt empowered to all but demand that the three most progressive candidates and both Blacks vacate the Democratic presidential arena. Koppel had fumed to the New York Times about the uppity intruders, the month before. The day after the debate, ABC withdrew its reporters from all three campaigns.
The article concludes with the fact that Dean knew what had been been done to him, and I am most sure the others are still painfully aware. I see it all over again this week and the last few weeks.

Speaking of Dean after the race was over:
In an interview with CNN's repugnant Wolf Blitzer, the candidate said: "You report the news and you create the news... You chose to play it 673 times."
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Coffee Drinkers, Wake Up!

The exorbitant prices you pay for your designer cappuccino, or even your jar of Nescafe do not benefit our sisters and brothers in Guatemala, Nicaragua, and the other forty-seven coffee producing countries of the world. Though coffee usually sells on the world markets for some $1.00 per pound, small coffee farmers usually receive between $0.30 and $0.50 per pound. This amounts to neither a fair price nor a living wage. Fair Trade Coffee symbol - not clickableAsk for Fair Trade Certified Coffee at your favorite cafe, restaurant, and grocery store. (Safeway brand and Chock Full O Nuts use Fair Trade beans, as do many smaller brands and distributors.)

By purchasing Fair Trade Certified coffee, you ensure that participating co-ops of small coffee farmers in twenty countries world wide receive $1.26 per pound. This higher income allows them access to health care, education, electricity and sometimes even consumer goods, luxuries previously far beyond their grasp.

My friends, here's an opportunity for you, in your everyday lives, to affect an enormous, a transforming change in the lives of many thousands of your fellow men. Join me and concerned citizens across the U.S., Canada, and Europe in supporting The Fair Trade Coffee Campaign.

For more information, contact:

Fair Trade Certified Coffee Campaign

2017 Mission St , Rm 303

San Francisco, CA 94110

(415) 255-7296

deborah@globalexchange.org

http://www.globalexchange.org/economy/coffee/

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Messianic Musings

John 4:21-26

Jesus declared, "Believe me, woman, a time is coming when you will worship the Father neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem. You Samaritans worship what you do not know; we worship what we do know, for salvation is from the Jews. Yet a time is coming and has now come when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are the kind of worshipers the Father seeks. God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth."

The woman said, "I know that Messiah" (called Christ) "is coming. When He comes, He will explain everything to us."

Then Jesus declared, "I who speak to you am He."
One thing that I have discovered in my time offline is the universal need for a savior. So many people are in distress and looking for the hope of their salvation, yet they neglect the very hope that is freely offered them in the person of Jesus Christ. It has been this way since Jesus first offered Himself to the world - 1st century Jews were looking for a conquerer who would break the Roman occupation of Israel and who would then rule over Israel as David's son. Even His disciples held this mindset until the Day of Pentecost, but we can not superimpose our wants, our wishes, and our desires over the will of God, and God sent His Son into the world to save the world from its sins - not to give us the hook-up like Christine Agulera's genie in a bottle.

Nonetheless, people want what people want, and if they can't get the material hookup from God then they'll take their wants elsewhere - after all, it's all about them from their perspective, they are the measure of all things. It's their world and all things must cater to their needs, their wants, and their desires, so they will find their salvation elsewhere - in self improvement seminars, in transcendental meditation, in sexual relationship after relationship after relationship, always looking for the hope of their salvation, never finding it. Some will give up on finding their salvation, succumbing to depression or alcoholism or drugs (illicit or prescription) while others will unconvincingly deny their need for salvation. There are many ways that people deal with their need, but I have found the need for salvation to be fairly universal.

The Samaritan woman at the well told Jesus about her expectation of the advent of the Savior, the Christ, the Messiah, and Jesus told her plainly, "I who speak to you am He." Not only did the woman accept that Jesus was the Messiah, she went back to her hometown and told everyone she knew - the same people that ostracized her for being a two-bit whore - that she had met the savior of the world, the Messiah, the Christ, such that they all confessed, "We no longer believe just because of what you said; now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this man really is the Savior of the world."

Who do you believe in?

As I've had time to reflect on the past several years I've recognized an interesting phenomenon that I hadn't really examined closely before - many of Howard Dean's supporters treat him the same way that Christians treat Jesus. Nobody (as far as I know) posits deity in Howard Dean, but the language of salvation is there and the messianic expectation is there as well, likely stemming from the credo of taking our party back, taking our country back, and taking back our rightful place of respect in the world. People don't merely like Howard Dean or believe Howard Dean, they believe in Howard Dean, they place their hope in Howard Dean. Howard himself tried to discourage this mentality when he posted on Kimmy's old site, telling her not to get frustrated since all politicians are human beings and all politicians will disappoint you, sooner or later, even Howard Dean.

My own journey may be illustrative. Coming out of college I realized just how screwed-up the real world really is, so the question that I asked myself is what I could do about it. I looked to politics and got involved with John Conyers' 1992 campaign and eventually worked for the Congressman, serving as a field director for his '94 campaign. One thing that I learned is that you cannot legislate morality. This is true with regards to issues like homosexuality and abortion, but it is also true with matters of economics and foreign policy - without a changed heart depraved men (and women) will always find ways around laws that limit their ability to fulfill their hearts' desires, be that having sex with someone of the same gender, aborting their baby, paying slave wages to workers, filtering criminal activity to only certain neighborhoods, raping the environment, cooking corporate books, or invading foreign countries that pose no threat to the United States. All of these are issues of morality, and none of these can be corrected by creating more laws. As the old cliche goes, the heart of the matter is a matter of the heart, so the million-dollar question is this: how do you change someone's heart from a depraved state of mind to a mindset of righteousness?

Jesus.

"I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."

I wrestled with the implications of this for a number of years, maintaining some involvement with politics while I was in Florida, but in 1998 I submitted to my calling to vocational ministry, to full-time ministry, and I applied and was accepted to the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. As I was trying to get away from politics and focus on Christ I found myself in the middle of the Clinton impeachment madness in large part because the Southern Baptists were more than a little bit involved in politics. I came to seminary to focus on the Bible and these people were babbling on about a blue-stained dress. Like Michael Corleone said, "Just when I though I was out they pull me back in." Then there was the fiasco of the 2000 election, and then there was September 11th, 2001.

The Bush presidency has necessitated my involvement in politics, especially with people accusing Bush of being an example of what Christianity is about, but politics absolutely can not solve the problems that face this world - politics can not change hearts, only policies. We indeed need to change policies - desperately - but that will not solve the problem because the root problem is people - we have to fix people themselves, and the only transforming agent that can redeem the depraved mind and heal the broken heart is Jesus Christ, who said, "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full. I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep." Under-shepherds must follow the example of the Good Shepherd - I could be making a lot of money if I simply focused on it, but I am trying to focus on making people all that God would have them to be. The pay is relatively meager in dollars, but the crown jewels are worth it.

I believe that I can make a difference in this world. I believe that from everyone who has been given much, much should be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more should be asked. I believe that the only way to address the human condition is to transform the human heart, and the only hope for our salvation comes from accepting Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Jesus, when asked about the Messiah, told the woman at the well, "I who speak to you am He." Do you believe Him? Will you believe in Him?

May the LORD bless you and keep you;
May the LORD make His face shine upon you and be gracious to you;
And may the LORD,
Who wants you to believe in Him,
May He turn His face toward you and give you peace.

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Fred Rogers testifying in Senate hearings, 1969


Although Catreona already has a post in draft, hopefully she doesn't mind my saving it for tomorrow. I really feel like I need to post this tonight. I think of it as "bad wolf" antidote. (She's been pacing in her den and plotting mischief lately.) I saw this video yesterday, I think, and it was just linked again at Firedoglake.

Crooks and Liars has a great clip up from the Senate hearings in 1971 when Nixon wanted to cut the funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in half and Fred Rogers made an impassioned plea that won over his listeners.
The hearings were chaired by Senator John Pastore.

Pastore: All right, Rogers, you've got the floor.

Rogers: Senator Pastore, this is a philosophical statement and would take about ten minutes to read, so I'll not do that. One of the first things that a child learns in a healthy family is trust, and I trust what you have said that you will read this. It's very important to me. I care deeply about children.

Pastore: Will it make you happy if you read it?

Rogers: I'd just like to talk about it, if it's all right. My first children's program was on WQED fifteen years ago, and its budget was $30. Now, with the help of the Sears-Roebuck Foundation and National Educational Television, as well as all of the affiliated stations--each station pays to show our program. It's a unique kind of funding in educational television. Now our program has a budget of $6000.

It may sound like quite a difference, but $6000 pays for less than two minutes of cartoons. Two minutes of animated, what I sometimes say, bombardment. I'm very much concerned, as I know you are, about what's being delivered to our children in this country. And I've worked in the field of child development for six years now, trying to understand the inner needs of children. We deal with such things as the inner drama of childhood. We don't have to bop somebody over the head to make drama on the screen. We deal with such things as getting a haircut, or the feelings about brothers and sisters, and the kind of anger that arises in simple family situations. And we speak to it constructively.

Pastore: How long of a program is it?

Rogers: It's a half hour every day. Most channels schedule it in the noontime as well as in the evening. WETA here has scheduled it in the late afternoon.

Pastore: Could we get a copy of this so that we can see it? Maybe not today, but I'd like to see the program.

Rogers: I'd like very much for you to see it.

Pastore: I'd like to see the program itself, or any one of them.

Rogers: We made a hundred programs for EEN, the Eastern Eduational Network, and then when the money ran out, people in Boston and Pittsburgh and Chicago all came to the fore and said that we've *got* to have more of this neighborhood expression of care.

And this is what I give. I give an expression of care every day to each child, to help him realize that he *is* unique. I end the program by saying, "You've made this day a special day, by just your being you. There's no person in the whole world like you, and *I* like you, just the way you are." And I feel that if we in public television can only make it clear that feelings are mentionable *and* managable, we will have done a great service for mental health.

I think that it's much more dramatic that two men could be working out their feelings of anger--*much* more dramatic than showing something of gunfire. I'm *constantly* concerned about what our children are seeing, and for 15 years I have tried in this country and Canada, to present what I think is a *meaningful* expression of care.

Pastore: Do you narrate it?

Rogers: I'm the host, yes. And I do all the puppets and I write all the music, and I write all the scripts--

Pastore: Well, I'm supposed to be a pretty tough guy, and this is the first time I've had goosebumps for the last two days.

Rogers: Well, I'm grateful, not only for your goosebumps, but for your interest in our kind of communication. Could I tell you the words of one of the songs, which I feel is very important?

Pastore: Yes.

Rogers: This has to do with that good feeling of control which I feel that children need to know it's there. And it stars out,

What do you do with the mad that you feel--and that first line came straight from a child. I work with children with puppets in very personal communication in small groups


What do you do with the mad that you feel
When you feel so mad you could bite?
When the whole wide world seems oh, so wrong...
And nothing you do seems very right?

What do you do? Do you punch a bag?
Do you pound some clay or some dough?
Do you round up friends for a game of tag?
Or see how fast you go?

It's great to be able to stop
When you've planned a thing that's wrong,
And be able to do something else instead
And think this song:

I can stop when I want to
Can stop when I wish
I can stop, stop, stop any time.
And what a good feeling to feel like this
And know that the feeling is really mine.
Know that there's something deep inside
That helps us become what we can.
For a girl can be someday a lady
And a boy can be someday a man.

Pastore: I think it's wonderful. I think it's wonderful! (looking to his side) I think he's just earned the 20 million dollars! (Applause)

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Saturday, May 27, 2006

Zack Space on the Rachel Maddow Show (Transcript)

Crossposted at My Left Wing, Daily Kos, ePluribus Media, and Booman Tribune

I first heard about scandal-ridden Bob Ney's bigoted robocall against opponent Zack Space in this post at Buckeye State Blog. It seems Bob Ney, who is constantly in the news due to investigations into his possible ethics violations and ties to lobbyist Jack Abramoff, is falling back on the standard tactic of the truly desperate Republican--appealing to people's fears and prejudices. (Side note: see editorial Nervous GOP focuses on hot buttons) Rachel Maddow has a rough transcript of the robocall, as well as her own commentary on the matter posted here.

"Hello, my name is Juanita (?) and I am very concerned about what I've heard recently about Congressional Candidate Zack Space. Zack claims to care about Ohio Values. He has been spending a lot of time lately with national liberal and gay rights leaders to raise money for his campaign. Just last week Zack was on an ultra-liberal radio show from New York City hosted by a cross dressing lesbian when he told me that social values are no longer that important. Zack Space claims the 18th District wants a progressive leader. But we all know that progressive is nothing more than a code word for higher taxes, more gun control, more abortions, and more gay marriages. Tell Zack Space that social values do matter to those of us in Ohio. Even if they don't matter to his ultra-liberal friends in the rest of the country. Paid for by Bob Ney for Congress"
Read the transcript of Zack Space's interview with Rachel Maddow on Air America below to see how the call is (duh) a gross misrepresentation of what was actually said. Also--something that was news to me since I'm not in his district--it was heartening to hear of a case in Ohio where a candidate won the primary in spite of not being the one supported by the national Democratic poobahs.

Maddow: Zack Space is the man tasked with removing Bob Ney from Congress in the midterm elections this November. You may know Bob Ney. "Representative Number One"--that's how he's described in *five separate* criminal corruption plea agreements. He's a man who the House Ethics Committee yesterday said they were launching an investigation into, the Justice Department has already launched an investigation into him. Zack Space is the nominee in Ohio's 18th Congressional District, running as an underdog against Bob Ney. Zack Space joins us on the phone from Ohio this morning. Thank you very much for joining us!

Space: Thank you for having me! Good morning.

Maddow: I'm cognizant of the fact that my introduction may have made you a little bit uncomfortable. Your campaign has not been about Bob Ney being a corrupt guy. You really haven't made that the centerpiece of your campaign.

Space: Well, we really haven't had to. (Laughs) When we pick up our newspaper it's the front page story, even here in the district which, incidentally was the last media network to pick up on it. But people here at home are finally getting what kind of guy Bob Ney really is.

Maddow: Now, he has argued--Mr. Ney himself has argued--that people *in* the 18th District are *not* concerned about those ethics question, that's not the kind of thing that's going to be driving their vote this November. He says people are more concerned about Iraq and gas prices, and he's confident that he's going to be re-elected. What's your response to that?

Space: Well, he's also argued he's done nothing wrong. People are talking about the corruption. And there's a sense--this is a good thing--there's a sense that the high gas prices, or high health care costs, even unfair trade policies...these are all a product of a system that's corrupt. Bob Ney's corruption is bad enough in and of itself, and that alone may end up bringing him down. But it's the cost of that corruption, Rachel, that people are beginning to get a sense of.

Maddow: So you think people are beginning to make a connection between Bob Ney being investigated for taking bribes from lobbyists like Jack Abramoff, and then the lobbyists, in turn, pushing bills that aren't good for the American people.

Space: I don't think there's any question about it.

Maddow: Yeah, it's not a very big leap to make. And my personal take on the way the unfolding corruption stuff has been covered in the last couple years is that the Republican take in it has been "You know what? All of these scandals are complicated, and the rules that people are breaking are hard to understand, and if we can just muddy the waters enough, people won't be able to connect the dots and come up with a moral, values message here. I don't think that's true. I think people think "bribery" and that's why we're not getting the right thing out of our government.

Space: Well, I agree. Things are bad here in southeastern Ohio. Our economy is down, jobs...the manufacturing base has left, and people are having a hard time making house payments, certainly sending their kids to college. You know, there may be a higher tolerance for that sort of activity when the trains are running on time and people are satisfied with their situations, but that's just simply not the case.

Maddow: Tell me a little more about the 18th District. I know geographically where you're at, I know a *little* bit about the economics there. It's considered a district that leans Republican. Why do you think that is?

Space: Well, kind of on a related note, in the past, social issues have been hot buttons that often times, people in this area have based their votes upon. But they're more willing to do that when, again, things are going well for them. But when they can't balance their checkbooks, and the banks are foreclosing on our homes, those social issues are no longer so important.

People in this area have every reason to be Democrats, every reason to be progressive, and I think now that, I just sense a change in direction.

Maddow: I want to ask you about how you got here, because you were not the favorite, from the way national polls were talking about your election in the primary. The Democratic "powers that be" had thrown their money and some support to a guy who came in third in the primary, not to you. You were kind of the surprise winner there. Do you feel like you've got an uphill battle to fight in terms of getting Democratic support and getting your name out there?

Space: At this point, no. We've been assured by those important people in Washington that they're on board. And they're good people, they're smart people, and I think one of the reasons that they took the position they did early on is that it's difficult to understand this district unless you live here. It wasn't a surprise to us that we won. We won because of a very strong, broad-based, grassroots effort. We spent less money, certainly didn't have the national recognition or support that one of my opponents did, but we did it the right way. We touched people, we communicated our message, we invested people in the process--

Maddow: Did you go door to door? How did you beat them with the money disadvantage.

Space: We did that. We did a lot of door to door. I knocked on a lot of doors myself personally. We worked the phone banks with our volunteers, we did lit drops, we just went out and communicated with the people. And we understood that there was a need to do that, we did it very aggressively, and it paid off.

Maddow: When you're looking ahead at November, the prospects for someone in a race like yours, as best as I can tell, really have a lot to do with what the overall tide is in the country. Obviously every election is local, and every voter makes a decision based on local issues, but if there's a tidal wave of Democratic sentiment in November, obviously that's going to be good for you. And I wonder, given that you're running from a pretty conservative district that's been represented by a Republican who's in trouble now, I wonder if you could give some advice to the national Democratic party for how to run the elections in November--what the message should be. What kind of national Democratic message would help you out in your district?

Space: Well, it goes back to that corruption, and not just the corruption but the cost of that corruption. Ohio has been plagued by corruption from all different segments. We've got a governor who's been convicted, we've got people in his administration have been tied to the--I'm sure you've heard about the Tom Noe Coingate scandal--

Maddow: Oh yes! I've done a lot of ill-informed ranting about that, because it's so scandalous!

Space: And we've been barraged with that stuff here. I really think the message is that special interests, big business, large corporations have been calling the shots for far too long, and there's a price that's being payed for it now, and it's a matter of priority. And the corruption is a manifestation of a larger, more insidious problem. And I think that's the message--that this government is supposed to be here for us!

Maddow: Yeah. And if you're not getting out of your government what you want to be getting out of your government, maybe it's because your government isn't working for you. The government is working for the people that have gamed the system.

Space: That's exactly right, Rachel.

Maddow: Zack Space--good luck!

Space: Hey Rachel, can I give myself a plug?

Maddow: Please!

Space: I've got a web site your listeners might be interested in. We've got a chance of capturing a seat. We need 15. This is one we can get, and I need help. We're raising money but we need help. We're up against some big institutions, and if we're going to win it's going to be because people recognize the importance of putting a progressive candidate in office, not just in my district but around the country.

Maddow: Yeah.

Space: My web site-- www.zackspace.org

Maddow: And, of course, you're helped *immeasurably*, at least in the web world, by having *the* single most memorable congressional candidate name in a generation!

Space: And you know, that's a real name--it's not a stage name.

Maddow: (Laughing) Well, you know, if you ever wanted a career in, like, New York cabaret after this is all over, you don't have to change your name to do that either. Zack Space, thanks a lot!

Space: Appreciate it, Rachel.

You can donate to Zack Space's campaign through the Howard-Empowered Act Blue page by clicking the link below.

Howard-Empowered Act Blue Page

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Saturday Comics

Here's this week's comics:


And my favorite for today: It Takes A Village Idiot Box


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Friday, May 26, 2006

Smile, the CryptoKids (TM) are our friends

Have you seen the NSA kids' page?

I'd like to take this opportunity to say to any little tykes who are spying on me at the moment that I'm really glad you're on the case. It makes me feel all safe and cozy. And that saluting eagle does not look disturbing at all. Really.

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Friday night linkage

Just some links I wanted to frontpage...

Transcript and video of Howard Dean on Hardball

Also, the folks at Media Matters take note of Chris Matthew's obsession with the Clintons' marriage.

This morning, I felt the need to do a good old fashioned rant, and I did so over at Buckeye State Blog: That "D" next to your name gets you my vote...period

And, in case you missed it, George Bush has admitted that it was a mistake saying "Bring 'em on" back in 2003. See the response at the DNC site: Our Troops and the American People Deserve More Than Bush's Regrets

Remember that State of Belief show I transcribed earlier, about the right-wing war on mainline denominations? There's a related story on the front page of Street Prophets:

Waging War On Behalf Of Republicans By Misusing The Gospels

The Republican Party-aligned Institute on Religion and Democracy sent out a press release today attacking Jim Winkler, general secretary of the United Methodist Board of Church and Society, for a speech he gave in March of this year critical of President Bush.

Click here for the rest.

Remember the game Frogger? I know I wasted many hours on that game as an undergrad. There's a version of it available online. I just tried it.

Yep, I still suck at it.

By the way, I just discovered that jc has posted some new designs over at her blog.

And, as long as I'm here, a few links to news stories here and there:

Scientists ponder invisibility cloak
Bizarre Wash Post suck-up story on Bill Frist
Spirited Barbaro Revels in VIP Visits
Update 1: Recovering Barbaro Shows Usual Feistiness

Just found out about this book over at Cute Overload while looking for a new picture to post.


Awww!

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Comments from Dean at the Mayor's press conference on C-Span.

Since the other post I put up and then deleted, came back to life and still had all the weird figures and errors which are not there in the DailyKos post just like it...well, I am just posting another post to move it down and make it not so obvious.

Couple of things from the Mayor's press conference on C-Span last night. It was excellent, and it showed how the local people including mayors are getting a chance to talk to the party leaders in DC.

Dean criticized Frist for being divisive

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Democratic Party leader Howard Dean criticized the top Republican in the Senate on Wednesday, complaining that Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has put socially divisive issues ahead of more pressing matters such as rising gas prices.

"The majority leader of the United States Senate wants to spend time on flag burning and gay marriage attacks, we want to spend time on what to do about Iraq, how to reduce gas prices for people, what to do about health care," Dean said at a news conference.

The Democratic National Committee chairman hosted a daylong session with
Democratic mayors.


More on the conference from First Read at MSNBC:

First Read at MSNBC

Dueling political scandals
DNC chairman Howard Dean refused to comment today on House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's call for Rep. William Jefferson to give up his seat on the Ways and Means Committee, but said that if he is indicted, the Democratic party will "condemn" his actions. Dean hastened to note that Jefferson has not been indicted and that the actions (if they are indeed illegal) of one person within the party do not compare to what Democrats charge is a track record of unethical behavior within the GOP. Echoing what Pelosi told NBC News yesterday, Dean said if Democrats take over the House and/or the Senate in the midterm elections, they will quickly enact "real ethics legislation."

Democrats have been using legally-challenged Republicans Tom DeLay and Randy "Duke" Cunningham as the poster boys for a "culture of corruption" campaign alleging that the GOP is infected with morally and ethically inept members who need to be swept out of office in November. DeLay is quitting Congress on June 9 and Cunningham gave up his seat before going to jail a few months ago. When asked by First Read if the Jefferson probe affects that strategy, Dean quickly sought to distinguish Jefferson from the other. "There really is no comparison between one errant congressperson who may have done something wrong and again has yet to be indicted. But certainly, if he is, we would condemn that," Dean said. "There is a Republican culture of corruption and we will stand for honesty and openness in government," he later added.

Dean was speaking at a press conference with six Democratic mayors from around the country who were there to talk about the local challenges -- increased violence, high gas prices, health care problems -- they say they're facing as a result of the Bush Administration's "misplaced priorities."

A spokeswoman for Frist dismissed Dean's criticism.
Update from Renee: As long as I'm here adding the alternate comment link, I thought I should also post a link to the latest comment from Charlie. He needs help finding a campaign manager. Please help him out if you can.

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Thursday, May 25, 2006

In Memoriam: Douglas Adams

From Renee: I've got Towel Day diaries at My Left Wing and Daily Kos.

Douglas AdamsOn this day, two weeks after the date of his death, we mourn the loss of Douglas Adams. He died five years ago, an unexpected and untimely departure.

towelIn memory of this brilliant writer, this passionate environmentalist, this gentle, enigmatic, visionary and much beloved man, we carry a towel with us today. And we say:

Thanks for all the fish, Douglas. You're one hoopy frood. We miss you.


Alt Comment Link

Happy Towel Day!


Thank you to listener for sending me some links and images in honor of Towel Day. Since I have a long work day tomorrow, I figure my best chance of *not* forgetting about this is to do a quick post tonight.

From The HHG Project:

Just about the most massively useful thing any interstellar Hitchhiker can carry. For one thing it has great practical value - you can wrap it around you for warmth on the cold moons of Jaglan Beta, sunbathe on it on the marble beaches of Santraginus Five, huddle beneath it for protection from the Arcturan Megagnats as you sleep beneath the stars of Kakrafoon, use it to sail a miniraft down the slpow heavy river Moth, wet it for use in hand to hand combat, wrap it round your head to avoid the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal, and even dry yourself off with it if it still seems clean enough.

More importantly, a towel has immense psychological value. For some reason, if a strag (strag: non-hitch hiker) discovers that a hitch hiker has his towel with him, he will automatically assume that he is also in possession of a toothbrush, face flannel, soap, tin of biscuits, flask, compass, map, ball of string, gnat spray, wet weather gear, space suit etc., etc. Furthermore, the strag will then happily lend the hitch hiker any of these or a dozen other items that the hitch hiker might accidentally have "lost". What the strag will think is that any man who can hitch the length and breadth of the galaxy, rough it, slum it, struggle against terrible odds, win through, and still knows where his towel is is clearly a man to be reckoned with.

Towel Day :: A tribute to Douglas Adams (1952-2001)


Update: Check out Another Chance to See for more about Douglas Adams and conservation. And here's an in-depth obituary that appeared in the Guardian (includes a great towel reference).


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Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Howard Dean at the Mayors' Conference

Update: If you'd like to donate to Ned Lamont's campaign, just a quick reminder that he's one of the candidates on our Howard-Empowered Act Blue page.

Democrats.org has a post called "6000 Words" including some pictures with Howard Dean...


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Tuesday, May 23, 2006

Open Thread (with blog babies)

Update: when I was posting, I was unaware that Caterona was putting up a diary at the same time. Don't forget to check out her post Fast for Peace.

Found this link via Cute Overload--animal sounds in foreign languages. For example, the Japanese way of making the sound a cow makes is "mau mau"--which is my segue into letting you know that Demetrius has updated the page where he's posted Phil*from*Iowa's blog babies. It now includes pics from Thankful and Donna's visit to Phil's farm.


Entirely different topic, but could use some recommends: Right-wing attack on mainline churches. (That link was to the Kos diary. Here are the links for My Left Wing and Booman Tribune.)

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Fast For Peace

Crosspposted at Disabled Americans for Democracy

Code Pink has proposed a new fast for peace, starting on Independence Day.

On July 4, we will launch an historic hunger strike called TROOPS HOME FAST. While many Americans will be expressing their patriotism via barbeques and fireworks, we'll be fasting in memory of the dead and wounded, and calling for our nation to be the democracy it was created to be, not an empire. We're inviting people around the world to show their support for this open-ended fast by committing to fast for one day -- July 4 -- plus as many more days as you can handle. Please sign here to join us and encourage your friends to do the same. Together, we can bring our troops home.
I have signed up for the one-day fast. When the time comes, I may be able to do more; but, certainly, I can do that. I encourage everyone reading this to sign up for at least the one-day fast. Since Independence Day is now chiefly known as a mighty pig-out day, fasting for peace on that day sends a particularly strong message to our friends and families. Please join me and our friends at Code Pink in making this powerful gesture, this sacrifice for peace.

Alt Comment Link

DemocracyFest Update

The Third Annual DemocracyFest will be held on July 14-16 in San Diego CA.

The Saturday Evening BBQ - "DEMSTOCK, featuring The Flying Other Brothers":

After a great day of education and enlightenment, it's time to unwind and get the party started with a blast from the past. We are excited about offering more than a dinner... we're offering "DEMSTOCK", our own version of Woodstock, only with no mud, much better food and bar service. Coming all the way down from San Francisco, DEMSTOCK will feature the music and experience of The Flying Other Brothers, a band sure to remind you of the Summer of Love and the music of Haight Ashbury. With a mixture of humor, some classic cover tunes and tasty originals, The Flying Other Brothers are back by popular demand to rock us again like they did at the very first DemocracyFest. DEMSTOCK will be held on the women's softball field at SDSU, with plenty of grass to picnic on while listening to the band, as well as some seating and tables in the back and sides.

Tickets for DEMSTOCK are sold separately and based upon your choice of food. There will be 2 levels of very tasty all-you-can-eat treats for dinner, featuring our Barn Buster BBQ dinner for $30 (includes Tri Tip Steak, Grilled Chicken Breasts, Portobello Mushrooms, Corn on the cob, etc.) or the Mexican Fiesta for $20 (includes Carne Asada, Pollo Asada, Cheese Enchiladas, etc.) There will also be several Bar Stations, where you can purchase any sodas or adult beverages if you wish for something other than the provided coffee, water or iced tea to wash down dinner or to get you "primed for the party".

DEMSTOCK promises to get you pumped up for the evening, with great music, food & libations, the introduction of the Backbone Campaign's eye- popping "60 foot spine" and some other surprises to get you ready for the days' Grand Finale...

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Dixie Chicks CD Goes On Sale Today


The best-selling female band of all time marks the release of their new CD today.

As we all know, Natalie Maines, lead singer for the group got in a little trouble for expressing her true feelings about the imposter in Washington, but that didn't stop her from writing a very blunt and unapologetic song "Not Ready To Make Nice" to him and all the people who support him to a thoroughly ridiculous end.

I, for one, always thought that if Bush were a real President he would have admonished radio when stations took the Chicks music off after Maines' comments. A real President would have said "No one should be punished or have their music banned because they disagree with me.

But alas,that's not the person we have sleeping at 1600 Penn.

More info: http://www.dixiechicks.com

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Monday, May 22, 2006

MViMV Guest Blog

Tonight's MViMV Guest Blogger will be Kety Esquivel from CrossLeft. Kety will answer questions from 8-9pm EDT.

The post is up now if you'd like to comment early: http://blog.myvoteismyvoice.com/

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Behavior Modification

This is a Public Service Announcement...

The Contrarian Troll

A sophisticated breed, Contrarian Trolls frequent boards whose predominant opinions are contrary to their own. A forum dominated by those who support firearms and knife rights, for example, will invariably be visited by Contrarian Trolls espousing their beliefs in the benefits of gun control. It is important to distinguish between dissenters and actual Contrarian Trolls, however; the Contrarian is not categorized as a troll because of his or her dissenting opinions, but due to the manner in which he or she behaves:

-Contrarian Warning Sign Number One: The most important indicator of a poster's Contrarian Troll status is his constant use of subtle and not-so-subtle insults, a technique intended to make people angry. Contrarians will resist the urge to be insulting at first, but as their post count increases, they become more and more abusive of those with whom they disagree. Most often they initiate the insults in the course of what has been a civil, if heated, debate to that point.

-Contrarian Warning Sign Number Two: Constant references to the forum membership as monolithic. "You guys are all just [descriptor]." "You're a lynch mob." "You all just want to ridicule anyone who disagrees with you."

-Contrarian Warning Sign Number Three: Intellectual dishonesty. This is only a mild indicator that is not limited to trolls, but Contrarians display it to a high degree. They will lie about things they've said, pull posts out of context in a manner that changes their meanings significantly, and generally ignore any points for which they have no ready answers.

- Contrarian Warning Sign Number Four: Accusing the accusers. When confronted with their trolling, trolls immediately respond that it is the accusers who are trolls (see Natural Predators below). Often the Contrarian will single out his most vocal opponent and claim that while he can respect his other opponents, this one in particular is beneath his notice.

-Contrarian Warning Sign Number Five: Attempts to condescend. Pursued by Troll Bashers (see Natural Predators below), the Contrarian will seek refuge in condescending remarks that repeatedly scorn his or her critics as beneath notice - all the while continuing to respond to them.

-Contrarian Warning Sign Number Six: One distinctive mark of Contrarian Trolls is that every thread in which they dissent quickly devolves into a debate about who is trolling whom. In the course of such a debate the Contrarian will display many of the other Warning Signs mentioned above.

Contrarian warning sign behaviors may be shared by other breeds.
Click for more--scroll down to read about the Honorable Nitwit and the Old Warrior.

Here's a piece from the Wikipedia article (emphasis mine)...
In general, conventional wisdom advises users to avoid feeding trolls, and to ignore temptations to respond. Responding to a troll inevitably drives discussion off-topic, to the dismay of bystanders, and supplies the troll with the craved attention. When trollhunters pounce on the trolls, ignorers reply with: "YHBT. YHL. HAND.", or "You have been trolled. You have lost. Have a nice day." However, since trollbaiters (like trolls) are often conflict-seekers themselves, the loss usually is not on the part of the trollhunter; rather, the losers are the other forum-users who would have preferred that the conflict does not emerge at all.
You know, I don't like "labels" either, but I wanted to find something written about the phenomenon. There's plenty of stuff out there. I could also go into basic behavior modification stuff, like positive reinforcement and extinction...the way that even negative attention is reinforcing (or rewarding) and actually maintains the behavior one seeks to eliminate. Extinction is when you ignore the behavior you don't like (you are also supposed to reward appropriate, desirable behavior whenever it occurs--"catch them being good").

I'll "cut to the chase", as I need to leave for work. I fully understand people not wanting to let certain factions "win" at BFA. But it's kind of a bummer when that plays out by people mainly posting *there* and only "lurking" here. Whatever else this blog has become, I created it because I wanted to keep the community I had found at BFA and the dialog, without having to endure constant, nasty potshots. There's enough, pardon my French, crap to deal with in day to day life without subjecting myself to bonus crap.

But, yes, it is disheartening, when day after day I come here hoping for the opportunity to have some dialog, and find, instead, hours of dead air. I then peek at my old digs and find that an intentionally disruptive element is being given the nonstop attention he craves.

I'm sure that this sounds like whining to some of you. And "some" will absolutely delight in my admitting to being bummed about this, and will take the opporunity to crow about it. Whatever.

But I need to say one thing--the last thing I am asking for is for anyone to tell me how valuable this blog is. That's nice to hear, but it doesn't help much when it feels like I'm back at square one--not having a place to go (most of the day) for lively, back-and-forth discussion.

Okay, I've said my piece. Off to the salt mines.

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Sunday, May 21, 2006

National Dog Bite Prevention Week, May 21-27

Crosposted at Disabled Americans for Democracy

The ASPCA offers the following guidelines for helping to prevent dog bites:

* Children should not approach, touch or play with any dog who is sleeping, eating or caring for puppies.

* Children should not pet unfamiliar dogs without asking permission from the dog's guardian first. If the guardian says it is okay, the child should first let the dog sniff his closed hand.

* If a child sees a dog off-leash outside, he should tell an adult immediately.

* If a loose dog comes near a child, she should not run or scream. Instead, she should avoid eye contact with the animal and stand very still, like a tree, until the animal moves away.

Read the article in this week's ASPCA Alert.

Update from Renee, who has a web site all about dogs (it even says that right there in the title). I can't bear to pass up such an opportunity to plug the site.



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Dubya's Dashboard

I just discovered this on the Ohio 2006 Elections blog. Sort of a fancier, more in-depth version of the countdown clock. You can get your own here.

I'll have to find a home for it in the sidebar a little later, as I need to leave for church in a few minutes. But I wanted to at least post about it so that the rest of you could share and enjoy.

Update--I have now discovered that this does not display properly when viewed in Firefox, due to some sort of competition from the code for the Cafe Press ads. I can see it fine in Explorer, though. If I can't figure out how to get it to work properly, I may end up not using it on this blog, but I thought the rest of you might like to know about it anyway.

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