Saturday, September 17, 2005

Bring Out The Big Guns...

The Wittenburg Door:



Featuring interviews of Ginger Geyer, Christopher Moore (author of The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal) and Diana Butler Bass (part of Projects on Congregations of Intentional Practice).

Also includes stuff on Christianity Yesterday, why Hermie from Max Lucado is more than a cute nickname, Official U.S. Government Sin Pyramids, and The Hitchhicker's Guide to the Abyss, amongst other things.

The Last Word: Rendering unto Caesar by Ole Anthony

Friday, September 16, 2005

Spun Construction
"Strict construction" and avoiding "legislating from the bench" are two common phrases to suggest the propriety of a narrow reading of the constitution, deferring to the presumptive wishes and intentions of the framers themselves. "Judicial activism" – an epithet commonly associated with liberal jurisprudence, cues concerns about liberal judges creating rights where none ought to exist, in the context of an overly permissive culture. From the conservative point of view, notorious in this regard is the right to privacy, the foundation for the Roe decision, a product of "penumbras formed by emanations…" rather than an explicit mention in the constitution itself. We have no comparable epithet for judges who show hostility to congressional regulatory authority. But, isn't that judicial activism – an assertion of judicial supremacy over our democratically elected congress, the most directly democratic federal institution we have? And, what strictly construed rights is the court protecting when it overturns Congress' regulatory authority? The rights of large private interests? If the word "privacy" doesn't appear in the constitution, where does the language supporting the rights of corporations, which didn't even exist in the legal form that we now apprehend them? What right is being violated by enforcement of the Endangered Species act, legislation whose legal foundations Roberts has gone farther in challenging than even the conservative administrations for which he has worked? Is that not an aggressive form of judicial activism?

...Whether we're talking about literal interpretation of the bible, a strict phonics approach to reading or a strict constructionist view of the constitution, the same thread runs through our national policy debates. The Conservative movement (which is not to say all conservatives) has launched a full scale war against any independence of thought, any effort to consider traditional ways of seeing the world in the light of a complex and ever-changing reality and has created the false impression that, in doing so, it has shown a fealty to things "as they really are" in order to obscure its own aggressive agenda for transforming reality. Rather than taking this nominee at his word, or suspending disbelief about the intentions of an administration whose every calculation is political in nature, it would pay to probe whether a coherent judicial philosophy, whether understood as a restrained judiciary or a strict constructionist view of the constitution, exists at all for Roberts.
[via The Gadflyer: Flytrap]
Don't confuse me with the faith, my facts are made up.
Since Government Fails...
The government’s botched response to hurricane Katrina is (take your pick):

1) A sign of the dangers of shrinking government so small that it can fit in a bathtub.

2) A sign of the dangers of big government bureaucracy, which not only fails to respond effectively to disaster itself, but blocks others from giving assistance.

3) A sign that our government is big in the wrong places, and therefore not able to respond well enough to the things that are really part of its core functions.

People on both sides of the “big government” debate have read the Katrina aftermath in their favor, and with reason, because, on the face of it, government seems to have screwed up in both directions, from the leave everyone to drive themselves out evacuation plan to the guns that police in neighboring suburbs are said to have aimed at people fleeing New Orleans....

While it’s foolish to believe that government can do no right, it’s wise to remember that government can’t do everything well. Second, the reminder that government should have limits. We may not all agree on what those limits should be, but that there are some boundaries that should be maintained on government’s powers, we should agree. And, third, a tendency to see government as performing particular practical functions, rather than as a moral teacher for everyone. As I’ve said many times, I don’t think it’s government’s business to make us all moral; that’s a matter for culture, not government. It is government’s business to establish justice, protect the weak, and provide such public goods as can be better handled by government.
[via Noli Irritare Leones]
Respect the Facts...
I would argue that policymakers who do not respect expertise, statistics, and empirical data are bound to create failure in any large endeavor, not just obviously technological ones.

Chris [Mooney]pointed out that there is no dedicated public interest research group that goes around rating politicians for the integrity of their use of science and general science-friendliness. It's certainly not a task the AAAS can take up. Now might be the time to start one. At Cody's I met a young astrophysics student who has just started the DefendScience project at DefendScience.com. Take a look.

Finally, there are example of causes "on the left" which similarly abuse science. Opponents of genetically engineered food (who have a good case when they stick to ecological diversity and economics of seed hording) often stoop to making wishy washy arguments based on weak or nonexistent evidence of the harm to humans. Animal-rights activists often make atrocious arguments--blatantly misinforming the public by touting a nonexistent ability to model complex systems (instead of testing), minimizing role that experiments on animals have in all fields of medicine, or falsely trumpetting the ability of lab-rats to survive in the wild. The difference between the Republican and Democratic party is that on the left these groups are marginalized and hardly courted by the party, while their conservative equivalents (religious fundamentalists and industrial corporations) form the solid base of the Republican party and are strongly courted by them. Reporters and debaters too often fall into the cognitive trap created by years of compare and contrast essays, giving equal time to both sides of the coin. Sometimes the coin just isn't fair, and it's a sign of intelligence to recognize that and acknowledge it.
[via Saheli*: Musings and Observations, emphasis mine]
9-1-1

What are emergencies?
To some, they are life itself, bleeding time.
What are wounds?
To some, they expose us to weakness, hurting pride.
What is pain?
To some, it ends their pleasure, creating outrage.
What is vengeance?
To some, it is justice for all, stopping
  • our pain,
  • our wounds,
  • our emergencies
Does it help?

Saturday, September 10, 2005

from the poem That Which Runs Away by Mr. Gobley:

Time --
Will, in the end,
Gently move us
To the
Far shore
Of being.

Each day,
You are carried closer
To that shore.

The view of
Time's vast ocean --
A circle of being --
Is the same,
Until one day,
Perhaps all
In one moment,
The shore appears.

Others remain behind
While you are ferried
On
Alone.
Personal Survival
The lake formerly known as New Orleans turns out to be an equal opportunity finger pointer. As near as I can tell, New Orleans’ demise represents a tragic, catastrophic failure of not only governmental institutions — be them Federal, state or city — but in some cases, communal failures as well. And we shouldn’t be smug and think communal failure is limited to New Orleans. It could happen anywhere.

We can all be as dissatisfied as we like with the institutions that fail us. But if the buck stops at the President’s desk on one end of the accountability scale, surely it must start in our own homes and communities on the other end. We’re accountable too. We’re in charge of our immediate safety and not leaving it entirely to institutions. All of us are responsible.

Ask yourself if you are prepared for a disaster right now. Do you have enough water or calories stored in your basement to survive a calamity? Most of us don’t. We figure that we’ll get rescued by one of those institutions we feel so bitter towards. I’ve been guilty of this, until a few weeks ago, when all the nuclear terror stories motivated me to take some basic precautions.

Both political parties have spent years and billions of dollars on institutional solutions for citizen survival in catastrophic circumstances. Surely, things can be vastly improved on that scale, and responsibility lies at the feet of our public institutions. But we should also assume some accountability, too. Our basic instinct for survival is not an institutional matter. It’s personal. And it’s communal. In that respect, we’re in charge. It’s up to us, whether we believe it or not.
[via Donklephant]
Soak It In...
There are four schools of thought on the question of whether the theology of Spongebob is an accurate and helpful account of our lives.

The first school argues that all we really need to know is the broad outline of Spongebob’s story. According to this school, the truth of its claims, that is, that our lives are like the lives of Spongebob, Pat, and Squidward, and develop at the discretion of a great cartoonist, is confirmed at every moment we see our lives develop as a great cartoonist would develop them. Based on the credibility of Spongebob’s story to explain people’s lives, there is reason to believe the claims made that Spongebob himself actually bought burger fixings, and what’s more, when he was erased by unscrupulous computer animators, he was redrawn by the great free-hand cartoonist and walked among us again.

The second school argues that we do have confirmation of the story of Spongebob. For example, there are reliable reports that Spongebob Squarepants was seen buying hamburger buns and pickles at the Hollywood Fred Meyer store in Portland, Oregon, sometime in 2003. According to this school, it’s lucky that they have such evidence available, evidence that confirms the Spongebob story in the face of claims that our lives are like what happens in competing and equally plausible children’s television programming. So, for example, there was a serious challenge by several people who made the argument that our lives were like those in the cartoon of Jimmy Neutron and his friends and family. The basis for their argument was the greater realism afforded by computer graphics.

The third school proposes a skeptical argument that the whole theology of Spongebob rests on there being evidence that Spongebob and his buddies exist. According to this school, the evidence offered in support of the claims made about Spongebob’s appearance is not sufficient because it is second or third hand, and possibly created with a more sinister agenda in mind. Without evidence, according to this view, the story of Spongebob is no different than any other entertaining fiction. Without evidence, the story of Spongebob cannot give meaning to our lives or provide an account of salvation. In brief, if there is no historical Spongebob, there can be no Spongebob of faith.

The fourth school questions the account offered that Spongebob Squarepants actually bought burger buns and other picnic fixings at a supermarket in Portland Oregon, sometime a few years ago. Their argument is a matter of first questioning the idea that our lives could be anything like the seemingly fulfilling lives of cartoon characters in a make believe community at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. The suggestion depends on first adopting a view of reason as a matter of logic that makes life a matter of suffering. When there would be no reason to think life was suffering because we would reject the Socratic principles that made it so, it would then be unnecessary to grasp at the straws provided by a theology of Spongebob promising to make life worthwhile again. Again in brief, if there isn't a Spongebob of faith, there can't be an historical Spongebob either.

The four schools provide arguments for and against the theology of Spongebob as an account of our reality.
[via Touchy Subjects]
Not Holy, A-holy

Rev. Fred Phelps, the Anti-Barney the Dinosaur:
"God hates you. God hates us.
We just make a major fuss.
With a big website and a church to yell and spew.
Won't you say you hate them too?"
From A Distance...
My mom participates in online discussion groups all the time. She's particularly attracted to the ones that discuss issues of poverty and race. Over the Labor Day weekend, she witnessed the first tide of backlash against the victims of the New Orleans flood.

I didn't think I'd see this kind of backlash in the context of the worst natural disaster in U.S. History. The current death toll estimates are 10,000. That's 10,000 souls. That's five 9/11's. 10,000 brothers and sisters, mom's and dads, students, workers and professionals. 10,000 Whites, Blacks, Native Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans and tourists from overseas. 10,000 dreams... gone... forever.

In my work over the past 6 years as an ethnic & racial reconciler, I've come to expect the spirits of self-actualization and rugged independence to rear their heads in discussions of race and racism. The comments usually come from those who have benefitted from affirmative action on behalf of America's ethnic majority and they sound something like this:

"Well, they just need to get off welfare and get a job."

or

"My grandfather pulled himself up by his own bootstraps. He was poor and didn't have a dime to his name during the depression. He started his own business. He taught us that we could do anything we put our minds to."

or

"They have such a victim mentality. When are they going to take personal responsibility for their position in the world."

When discussing poverty and class, these comments seem logical and even wise at first glance. I mean, shouldn't everyone be responsibile for his or her own fortune and future? Isn't it degrading to have to depend on the government for one's livelihood. This seems like good sense. Yet, this line of thinking reveals something else far more insidious and pervasive in our country today.

It reveals a view of the world as seen through eyes of privilege. These privileged eyes usually have no idea they are privileged. They have all but forgotten their own the privileged majority's dependence on the government sponsored "welfare" programs of yesteryear designed specifically to benefit White Americans.
[via Peace Prayers]

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Since "government doesn't work" has been the conservative mantra for the past 30 years -- at least -- it wasn't all that surprising when initial reactions to the Hurricane Katrina disaster from the Bush camp had a distinct undertone of "Hey, waddya expect us to do?" After all, government isn't the solution -- it's the problem! So let the New Orleans underclass roast in the Superdome and fry on the rooftops while they wait for the magic of the marketplace to start kicking in. There's golf to be played, guitars to be strummed and shoes to be bought. This is the Bush administration we're talking about, and sooner or later we're all going to learn what every Crescent City resident now knows -- if you haven't written a fat check to the GOP in the past year, then you'd best keep those water wings handy....

Meanwhile, I'm afraid I have to say that Mother Nature's disastrous refutation of everything conservatives hold dear -- chiefly the cult of small government and the notion that a 21st century technological civilization can be run like an 18th century farming village -- will have zero long-term effect on voting patterns. The GOP strategy of holding the base and confusing the issues with Swift-Boat tactics is still effective, and the typically ineffectual Democratic response guarantees that there will be no electoral consequences from this catastrophe in the mid-term races. FEMA director Michael Brown may get sent back to the stables, but that's about it.

I'd love to be wrong on this. But the national Democrats seem to have grown comfortable with the way Republican bootheels feel on the back of their necks. Time to start investing in lifeboats.
[via The Opinion Mill]

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

The impersonal is not the immortal.
The personal is not the powerful.
Aborting abortion is like the futility of trying to kill death. It truly takes something bigger than life itself, like immortality.
Simple Answers

[via catholicnews.org]

BATON ROUGE, LA. -- The horrific hurricane-force winds, rain, flooding and storm surges the U.S. Gulf Coast region experienced Monday night were caused by a hurricane, according to The National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA.)

"People have been trying to figure out what caused this devastation," said Dr. Phil Mixon, chief meterologist at NOAA. "Some believe it was caused by all the partying done at Mardi Gras, others blamed the huge Catholic population in New Orleans, and some attributed it to President Bush's decision to invade Iraq, but after careful research, we figured out that what actually caused the damage was just a really big hurricane."

Some were not convinced, however. In a new TIME Magazine/CNN poll, the overwhelming majority of conservatives and liberals believe that somebody on the Gulf Coast probably angered God. Responses given for the destruction ranged from "gambling sinners" to "too many gas-guzzling SUVs on the roads" to presidential policies gone awry.

"So you mean to tell me they are saying a hurricane caused that destruction?" asked Cindy Marshall, a buyer for Marshall Fields in Chicago. "Even so, somebody must have done something to provoke the hurricane, right?"

The Rev. Warren Martin, of Friendship Baptist Church in Nashville, Tenn.,also has doubts the destruction was caused by a hurricane. "If you are truly one of God's children, He will bless you," said Martin. "They weren't blessed, so what does that tell you." Martin and a team of lay missionaries will minister to refugees at some of the shelters in Louisiana and Texas. Martin and his parishoners will distribute food, clothing and diapers once refugees agree to ask Jesus "into their hearts," and commit to Christ. "Spiritual hunger is what we are really fighting here, and we have the answer," he said.

Monday, September 05, 2005

Grief is when a valley seems like a mountain.
Hope is when the valley turns into the mountain.
Better Late Than Never?

[via Deccan Herald]
Neither the political friends of Mr Bush nor his political foes have commended the official response to the tragedy about which there were several advance warnings.

No one says that the Bush administration caused the hurricane but many critics have traced the problem of flooding to the Bush administration’s policies related to environment, cost-cutting for flood-control schemes and emergency services, and diversion of resources to the Iraq war and tax relief to the rich.

The fact that the hurricane struck while Mr Bush was having his long and controversial holiday did not help. When he visited the storm-stricken area, it had witnessed a chaotic exodus. A vast lake of flood water, human waste, snakes and toxic chemicals had drowned an urban settlement....

President Bush had responded a few hours late even to the September 11 tragedy. However, he more than made up by providing what was seen as a resolute leadership in what he turned into a “war” against terrorism.

Experts doubt whether his delayed response to this natural disaster will have such a transformational impact.

In the case of September 11, there was a foreign demon to be fought and to be united against. Nature can not be cast in the mould of Osama bin Laden. That tragedy united the nation. The hurricane and the disproportionate suffering of black Americans and the conduct of the poor have only divided the nation.

This crisis is expected to take a toll of thousands of lives. Losses are estimated at 100 billion dollars. The city of New Orleans can not be drained for weeks. It will be easier to build a new skyscraper on the site in New York where the World Trade Centre stood till very early morning on September 11.

The future of New Orleans remains to be debated. Some say it should be abandoned. For months the after-effects of the storm will be felt by the victims who remain without homes or fall prey to infectious diseases.

As if all that was not bad enough, President Bush is having to confront this crisis at a time when his popularity ratings are falling, the Iraq war is not going well, violence is resurfacing in Afghanistan,and the domestic economic scene and the surge in petrol prices are fuelling anxiety.
from Katrina takes a toll on Bush by L K Sharma

Sunday, September 04, 2005

From ReligionLink:
"The initial shock of Katrina's devastation inspired talk of its "biblical" proportions. But as recovery efforts continue in the weeks and months ahead, religion, faith and ethics will play bigger roles in the stories of how lives and cities are rebuilt. ReligionLink offers a roundup of ideas, with links to background and sources."
{more here}

HT: Get Religion
Natural Disasters Theology
Rather, the God invoked most often now is the distant, inscrutable deity responsible for other no-fault acts such as earthquakes and tornadoes. The "acts" of this God are not willful so much as "natural" -- hence the rise of the term "natural disaster" in the late 19th century. "The concept of an act of God implied that something was wrong," writes scholar Ted Steinberg in an important book called Acts of God: An Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America, "that people had sinned and must now pay for their errors. But the idea of natural disaster may have implicitly suggested the reverse, that something was right, that the prevailing system of social and economic relations was functioning just fine."....

But if this is a religion story, it's not about an act of God or the banal use and abuse of the Bible as substitute aid for people dying of literal thirst; it's about sin. And no vague, blustery "pride of man" stories about ill-preparedness or mistakes by the Army Corps of Engineers will address the original sin of this event.
We need theologically-charged, morally outraged, investigative historical reporting to tell us why and how the dead of New Orleans died, and when their killers -- not Katrina, but the developers and politicians and patricians who are now far from the city -- began the killing. It wasn't Monday, and it wasn't last week. We need journalists, not just historians, to look deeper into the American mythologies of race and money, "personal responsibility" and real responsibility.
[via The Revealer, emphasis mine]
Technical Difficulties
It seems 'nature' has a lot to answer for in these troubled times. 'The Forces of Nature' were riled against by interviewees on the news in New Orleans - the raw power of wind and water turning all to rubble and splinter. Man's best efforts at order facing the inevitable entropy of muddy chaos. And in Baghdad it seems humane natural panic swept like a hurricane through crowds fed for years on a diet of fear and violence.

The end result of both? The technology that seemed to offer progress cracked and buckled: bridge railings sending hundreds down to drown, and levees collapsing to send water gushing up. And as the luxuries dissolve, the SUVs float away, the access to clean water and convenience food disappears in the mud, our very fragile societies - the very democracy that has marched out to bring an end to terror - are exposed to the awful truth that when a family is thirsty and the shop keepers are absent then windows are going to get broken and supplies are going to go.

They dramatized it as looting on the reports. And I'm sure there's some. But they could only back it up with evidence of hungry folk desperate to stay alive when the authorities were days away from meeting their needs.

I hope that we will all see just how delicate our situations are. It's too easy to look on with disgust as people in far flung places appear to act like animals and loot and smash and fight and protest. But in a matter of days we have seen how the urban poor of a place much more familiar have had to act to survive - and taken in action in conditions that look more like Addis or Dhaka than down USA.
[via The Complex Christ, HT: Jordon Cooper]

Saturday, September 03, 2005

Excuse = [disaster]+[pet peeve/concern]

Theodicy = Excuse + [God/Intelligent Designer]
I just discovered today that Thinking Christian (.net, not .com) has linked to me. The link to him is on the list to the right with the rest. Welcome!
Life, affirmed badly, is death.
Death, considered wisely, is renewal.
Convictions are like addictions.
They can't repair the damage they cause.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Everyone by Themselves

Thanks The Eagle and Child for the reference! :
In much poorer societies, such as Indonesia and Sri Lanka after the Boxing Day tsunami, or in more polarized societies like Montreal during the 1998 ice storm, scenes of looting, violence and selfish desperation did not occur. But the large U.S. cities of the South have a very different sort of group psychology, in which faith in individual fortune replaces the fixed social roles that keep other places aloft during crises.

In U.S. cities like New Orleans, in the analysis of the American-British organizational psychologist Cary Cooper, social cohesion depends on a shared belief that individual hard work, good luck and God's grace will bring a person out of poverty and into prosperity. But those very qualities can destroy the safety net of mutual support that might otherwise help people in an emergency.

... historians point to a constant threat of self-destructive breakdowns that seem to dot U.S. history, belying the thin veneer of civility that sits between entrepreneurial prosperity and mass chaos. The individualistic, egalitarian, anti-authoritarian values that have made the United States succeed have always been accompanied by an every-man-for-himself ethos that can destroy the system itself.
--from Nasty, brutish -- society's net snaps by Doug Sanders at The Globe and Mail

Up dating journal from New Orleans:
http://www.livejournal.com/users/interdictor/
click below to go there:

the interdictor

from the site:

This journal has become the Survival of New Orleans blog. In less perilous times it was simply a blog for me to talk smack and chat with friends. Now this journal exists to share firsthand experience of the disaster and its aftermath with anyone interested.
Thanks to Al at The Wittenburg Door Chat Closet for the link!

Thursday, September 01, 2005

"And who would I turn them towards?"

[in the comments to this post at GetReligion]

Larry: Welcome. With the Gulf Coast regions Louisiana and Mississippi reeling from the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina, our guest tonight has been very busy. He’s been a household name for many years, is the author of several best selling books, and is an expert in theology. Jesus Christ, welcome to the program.

Jesus: Thanks, Larry, good to be here.

Larry: Jesus, let’s get right to the hardest question of all. Did you send this hurricane to create death and destruction? Some on the American Left seem to think this is retribution for the war in Iraq. The Right is claiming it’s a condemnation of Hollywood values.

Jesus: Larry, thanks for giving me the chance to answer that question. No, I had nothing to do with it. I’m still working straight out trying to deal with last year’s tsunami, and I’m spending a lot of time in Africa these days too, and frankly, I just don’t do those kind of things.

Larry: Send hurricanes, you mean.

Jesus: Yeah. I’m never physically *in* the hurricane, moving it around like it’s some kind of airplane. I’m in the face of the rescue workers, and in the hearts of those who pray to me for guidance as they face homelessness and loss. Out of the south may cometh the whirlwind (Job 37:9), but it wasn’t my doing. I’m the still, small voice after the wind, not the wind itself. (1 Kings 19:11)

Larry: But could you have turned this around if you had wanted to?

Jesus: No, it doesn’t work that way.

Larry: So Pat Robertson’s claim that he turned a hurricane around with prayer a few years back wasn’t a true statement?

Jesus: I don’t want to get into Pat Robertson’s statements right now, Larry. That whole assassination thing has kind of got me worked up.

Larry: So you condemn his comments about wanting the U.S. government to assassinate Hugo Chavez?

Jesus: Unreservedly. But back to the whole “turning around the storm thing,” it didn’t happen. I don’t know where he gets this stuff. I’d be turning around storms all the time. And who would I turn them towards? What if two folks in different directions are praying and I have to decide which one to turn it on? No, I’m not getting into that whole mess.

Larry: Okay. We’ll be right back with more with Jesus. And later in the program, and update on the search for Natalee Holloway. You know anything about that, Jesus?

Jesus: I’m not going there, Larry.

[by Stephen A.]
Artificial good is often truly evil.
One part words + One part space + One part punctuation = One part comprehension.