Wednesday, April 30, 2008

This Dance Is Not Over

Barack Obama cannot win this fight. Let's recap what's happened so far: First, the videos of Rev. Wright surface, causing nearly everyone, regardless of their politics, to ask what Obama has to say on the subject. Then we hear everyone speak their piece, argue for awhile, and do it all over again.

Then the speech. Sen. Obama gives a speech on race in America, a speech that either heightened suspicion, or made people remember why they like Barack Obama in the first place. The enemies claimed political posturing, bad comparisons, and dodging the bullet. The friends claimed it was a great American speech, and would go down in history. What we know for sure is that it did not fix the problem.

After that, there were debates, press conferences, blogs, editorials, and columns. And when you pare it down, nothing new was said. But then Rev. Wright comes back, after accepting his highly questionable retirement package, and saves (bad word choice?) us from the monotony. And yesterday, Obama gave what I'm guessing was supposed to be the nail-in-the-coffin speech.

That brings us up to date, but nothing has been fixed. I'm not sure what Sen. Obama can do to get rid of this, but I know the only satisfactory solution would have been avoiding that church altogether, and spending the last 20 years somewhere else. No matter what he chose today, though, his judgment looks very sketchy.

Of course everyone realizes that ignoring this and pushing ahead wasn't an option. When most of the country takes a day or a week to denounce Mr. Wright, it's hard to accept a candidate who puts apparently blind faith into him. Obama tried to convince America that Mr. Wright wasn't that guy, that the whole picture wasn't available, that he didn't preach hate and division, and so on. But the Reverend just couldn't let that happen.

The dumb, hateful remarks just kept coming, and finally Obama said enough. I foolishly thought at first that people would be satisfied seeing Sen. Obama finally agree with them and end this relationship. But I was wrong. There still remains a 20-year friendship that hasn't been explained, and let's face it: nothing Barack Obama can ever say or do will make the criticism go away, short of going back in time and fixing this before it started.

And in addition to that, we have a new negative spin: Sen. Obama's remarks disowning Wright were "political posturing." Six weeks ago he defended and still cared for Wright, now he suddenly doesn't. It obviously couldn't have had anything to do with Wright acting a fool lately. But you see where this is headed. The complaining won't stop because nothing is going to fix this, and every response is wrong.

Personally, this whole thing never really bothered me, for a few reasons. (1) I don't expect my president to be perfect, or to have kept his bid for office in mind since he was ten years old. (2) I don't subscribe to the idiotic belief that everyone you know must agree with civil Christian values, and that if you do, you're obviously unfit to lead others. In fact, to survive in Washington, isn't it good to have experience dealing with zealous fools who can't think rationally? And (3) even if this can be called bad judgment, I'd say Obama's got an impressive record. He has a relationship with Rev. Wright, and loose ties to William Ayers and Louis Farrakhan. This is absolutely unremarkable compared to the Clinton legacy of overt lies and and their record of doing anything at all at the expense of others simply to save face.

Hillary Clinton actually used her shameless history as a badge of honor in the Pennsylvania debates. She admitted she had a lot of baggage, and claimed she's better off for it, since it's all out in the open. That we know about it is true enough, but that doesn't excuse anything, least of all her most recent fabrication about her Bosnia trip. Never mind that her wealth of foreign policy experience consists of flying around on taxpayer money to have grip-and-grins with foreign dignitaries.

Realizing my very biased position, I offer this take: Obama's mistake was the same as the other two candidates: spending the last 20 years in any church at all. You're not going to tell me Billy Graham is any better than Wright. Or that Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson don't prey and profit on racism. Obama's handful of mistakes tell me that he's human. I give him credit for doing so well. Hell, he deserves a medal, if we're to accept the idea that this guy has no experience whatsoever. He's done far better than Hilary Clinton in every measurable way, and with far less shame.

Friday, April 11, 2008

There are no words..

I just read another story about the worst parents in the country (see previous post) - They apparently still believe, according to police, that she could be resurrected. These people really should be in a padded room. Yes, according to them, the two people in history: Jesus Christ and the little girl from Wausau who was tragically killed by her parents asinine excuse for a religion.

More lives fall to religion, more Americans fall to idiocy.

First of all, let me just say that I can't believe that I'm writing about this. It seemed from the get-go like a simple matter of complete lack of common sense. A couple of parents who should've been stripped of their right to bear children. But in what I can only describe as a real asshole move, the country just can't seem to tip back from the point of insanity we're dangerously close to reaching.

If you haven't heard of the story by now, here it is: In Wausau, Wisconsin, an 11-year-old girl had diabetes, and it killed her. A similar thing recently happened in Oregon, this time it was pneumonia. The reason this is such an outrage is because no one realized she had it. For "religious reasons," her parents had not given her any medical attention since she was 3 years old, deciding instead that a divine course of action would be more suitable: praying.

At this point, I thought that everyone would have the tiny bit of intelligence it would take to realize that her parents are horrible human beings, and that the tragedy here was that some illness had not claimed them before this happened. They are, after all, the ones who made this choice, paying for it in other lives, not their own.

I was wrong, however, and I heard on a conservative christian radio show the host casually brush this off, proclaiming that "of course the parents shouldn't be charged" with anything. He then went on to try to find a way to show that the police should not have intervened in a religious compound in Texas, where a 16-year-old girl was allegedly sexually abused and impregnated by a man more than 3 times her age.

To illustrate what the reaction has been from the moron point of view, here are some comments I have heard or read:

from an anonymous dope,
"In this context and based on the parents beliefs, neglect could only be attributed IF the parents were NOT praying for their child. Under their expression of faith they were perfectly caring and supportive of their child's health. YOU don't have the right to call them neglectful. I think it is wrong what they did and that this is a tragedy, but I am not about to assume that what they have been through was easy. Imagine their pain and sense of loss, imagine how their faith is being tried right now. Imagine how they must feel isolated and persecuted in their own country?"


from a reverend,
"it's easy to judge a family for doing this or not doing that, but the bottom line is, they did what's best in their heart, and the result turned out to be bad."

from the POLICE who investigated this!
"There is no reason to remove [the other children]. There is no abuse or signs of abuse that we can see."

It seems to me that DEATH is abuse enough to make an effort to protect the older children. There's no reason why the parents would single this girl out to fend for herself, is there?

Anyway, a forum where this was posted at www.indymoms.com (make your judgments before proceeding), left me flabbergasted. Many of the responses said that although personally, the reader was appalled at what happened and thought the parents were stupid, we should not charge them, and we should respect their beliefs. I don't care if God lived down the block from me, when you're beliefs start killing people, fuck respect.

And to top off the night, getting back to the radio show I was angry at, a caller (who I will define as a practicing atheist) said, "You know, uh, I'm not a practicing christian or anything, but uh, that thing about praying to make people better... you know, there might be something to that."

I trust that you'll be able to generate your own outrage based on those half-wits' comments, and move on. Keep in mind that two of these have recently made national headlines. I'm sure many more go on unreported. Then we had the sexual abuse in Texas, which was handled properly by police, thankfully. No charges have been filed in this Wisconsin case, but I sure hope they are soon. If you know of a murder, but don't try to stop it or inform police, you're an accessory. If you find out even after it's done, and don't inform police, you're an accessory. But there's a chance that it's possible to stop every force that could save your daughter's life, and instead watch her wither away in your own home without telling anyone, and be completely innocent? I don't think so.

I wonder what people would say if I took a relative off life support without telling anyone, and prayed for them to survive anyway? There is discussion of what kinds of constitutional issues are involved, but I don't think it's that complicated. I had this crazy idea in my head that I had rights, and I was the only one who could wave them. What was that one right? The inalienable one? Oh yeah: LIFE. If we've decided as a country that our rights can be taken away by other people who aren't punished for it - people who are forgiven purely because they're ignorant rubes without the slightest capability for logical thinking left in their bodies, then I swear...

I'm going to go live with the socialist, Godless, Euro-weasels.

I'll plagiarize now a Christopher Hitchens line, that he used when speaking about the late buffoon Jerry Falwell: "I'm sorry there's no hell for her parents to go to."

Friday, April 4, 2008

A Friendly Reminder From The Chicago Tribune...

Factor military duty into criticism


In 1961, a young African-American man, after hearing President John F. Kennedy's challenge to, "Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country," gave up his student deferment, left college in Virginia and voluntarily joined the Marines.

In 1963, this man, having completed his two years of service in the Marines, volunteered again to become a Navy corpsman. (They provide medical assistance to the Marines as well as to Navy personnel.)

The man did so well in corpsman school that he was the valedictorian and became a cardiopulmonary technician. Not surprisingly, he was assigned to the Navy's premier medical facility, Bethesda Naval Hospital, as a member of the commander in chief's medical team, and helped care for President Lyndon B. Johnson after his 1966 surgery. For his service on the team, which he left in 1967, the White House awarded him three letters of commendation.

What is even more remarkable is that this man entered the Marines and Navy not many years after the two branches began to become integrated.

While this young man was serving six years on active duty, Vice President Dick Cheney, who was born the same year as the Marine/sailor, received five deferments, four for being an undergraduate and graduate student and one for being a prospective father. Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, both five years younger than the African-American youth, used their student deferments to stay in college until 1968. Both then avoided going on active duty through family connections.

Who is the real patriot? The young man who interrupted his studies to serve his country for six years or our three political leaders who beat the system? Are the patriots the people who actually sacrifice something or those who merely talk about their love of the country?

After leaving the service of his country, the young African-American finished his final year of college, entered the seminary, was ordained as a minister, and eventually became pastor of a large church in one of America's biggest cities.

This man is Rev. Jeremiah Wright, the retiring pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ, who has been in the news for comments he made over the last three decades.

Since these comments became public we have heard criticisms, condemnations, denouncements and rejections of his comments and him.

We've seen on television, in a seemingly endless loop, sound bites of a select few of Rev. Wright's many sermons.

Some of the Wright's comments are inexcusable and inappropriate and should be condemned, but in calling him "unpatriotic," let us not forget that this is a man who gave up six of the most productive years of his life to serve his country.

How many of Wright's detractors, Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly to name but a few, volunteered for service, and did so under the often tumultuous circumstances of a newly integrated armed forces and a society in the midst of a civil rights struggle? Not many.

While words do count, so do actions.

Let us not forget that, for whatever Rev. Wright may have said over the last 30 years, he has demonstrated his patriotism.

Lawrence Korb and Ian Moss are, respectively, Navy and Marine Corps veterans. They work at The Center For American Progress. Korb served as assistant secretary of Defense in the Reagan administration.


(And a note from me: I was reminded by someone recently that Dr. Martin Luther King, for all the praise we give him today, also had a lot to say criticizing America towards the end of his life, and those comments got him dis-invited to the White House, and possibly contributed to his murder. You'd think we'd have grown up.)

The Failing of Christopher Hitchens

In a past radio interview of Christopher Hitchens conducted on Dennis Prueger's radio show, a question came up which I feel that Hitchens did not answer to his full ability. Throughout the show, Prueger used a series of theoretical questions imposed on Hitchens designed to force him into admitting a preference toward the religious. They were heavily tilted questions like, "If you were in an unfamiliar American city, lost, late at night, and ten men were approaching you, would you be comforted by the knowledge that they had just come from a bible class?" Also, "If you could either rid the world of religion, or of evil secular dictatorships, which would you choose?" Notice the choice is always between a wide-spanning influence on the world and a distinctly negative one.

At any rate, during a brief touch on the subject of evolution, Prueger posed the question to Hitchens, "If you had a choice, would you rather be created by an intelligent designer, or a process of random mutations that were then selected for survival?"

Hitchens gave a long answer, not directly addressing the question, and though what he said had merit, it was not a satisfactory answer one way or another. He discussed the tendency toward wish-thinking that is, as he called it, "a mammalian failing." I will go on record here and say that of course, given the choice, I would choose a designer, as I suppose would any intelligent person, whether you've studied evolution or not. There's no reason not to choose certainty in this case.

And this is what I wish Hitch (if I may impose the informal appellation) had addressed. Though most anyone would wish for such a thing, that is not our failing. The failing of the human species is the ability to be completely and utterly swayed by emotion. Dennis Prueger's emotions have convinced him that if we are uncertain about the answer to a question, the wisest choice is the one you would hope for. Emotion can manipulate us to throw away any semblance of logic we may have had. It can change our vote, change our philosophy, change our tolerance, and change our morality. And it can be used most efficiently for creating irrational evil in people. That's arguably the most effective way to reduce a decent person to an immoral machine.

The other point of contention that is often missed, and conceded by the secularist without even knowing it in many cases, is that no amount of Utopian dreams or theoretical preferences makes anything a fact. The obvious fact, that many people want, or hope, that their religion is true does not convey any credibility to the belief. I wish that I could produce money by means of mental concentration, and of course no one would think that's possible even if the whole world wished it so. But more absurd than that would be for me to base my life, morals, and philosophy on that wish. And when my point is taken to this level, so rarely done by non-believers in arguments or debate, it shows an inherent weakness in the case of the pious.

There may very well be better arguments out there for belief, or hypothetical proof that such beliefs are true, but if the person being challenged doesn't know them, they should seriously doubt their own convictions. Hope or trust, or some variation on those feelings is not a reliable or useful center of life and world view. As Dawkins said, to presume God because you think it to be the best possible answer, "is to presume the truth of every conclusion we seek to prove."