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13 August 2004

Al Qaeda’s Gay Bomb!

Watch out America!  They have a new weapon!

AL
QAEDA PLANS TO DROP GAY BOMBS
{pictureRef (, align:”right”)}
Men within 30 miles of the blast will instantly turn
queer!

By Nick
Jefferies

EXTREMIST Muslim
scientists are developing
a bomb that turns
anyone within a 30-mile
radius of its blast into a
homosexual, say U.S.
Intelligence insiders.

It’s all a part of the Al Qaeda
master plan to pull our country
apart and kill the patriotism that
makes us strong.

“They believe that making more
Americans gay will start civil war
between gays and ultraconservatives,”
says one highly placed intelligence
officer. “They also figure it
will lead to a
decrease in the U.S.
population.”

And it goes on from there….

Posted in OnTheWeb on 13 August 2004 at 11:52 am by Nate

Today’s google botox

Google‘s always fun for big events, as they change the title
graphic.  Since the Olympics start today, we get


There are a couple of others that I’ve enjoyed:


Piet Mondrian — 7 March 2002


Monet — 14 November 2001


James Joyce and 100th Bloomsday (16 June 2004)

And just because cycling is cool and the Olympics start today, here’s the 2000 Olympics cycling logo:

They’ve archived all of this stuff.  Here’s an alien tale.  Here are the holiday logos from 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2004. And they have archived a bunch of different stories in pictures.

Posted in OnTheWeb on 13 August 2004 at 11:03 am by Nate
12 August 2004

And now they want your books…

The security people in the NY-NJ ferries want your books because they are inappropriate.

I’m going to carry around the ACLU’s number, too.  I’m reading the
Iliad, and that’s all about war and rage at the authorities. 
Might make me do “something.”

Books are like the Gospels: they comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.

Posted in Books on 12 August 2004 at 11:52 am by Nate
11 August 2004

Shoe on other foot for pro-life Catholics

From the Catholic News Agency.  Apparently, a number of people are
unhappy that the US Bishops do not focus solely on abortion but on
other “traditionally Democratic” issues.

Bishops questionnaire criticized for seemingly supporting Democratic positions

WASHINGTON, USA, August 11 (CNA) – A political questionnaire,
issued by the U.S. Conference of Catholics Bishops and distributed to
both major-party presidential candidates, has been criticized for
presenting questions that are traditionally associated with Democratic
Party policy positions, says a report by the Culture of Life
Foundation.

The questionnaire contains 41 questions, asking the
candidates to answer “support” or “oppose” to statements on a range of
issues.

The report, published in Culture and Cosmos, indicates that the
questionnaire had seven questions on immigration and refugees. Abortion
and school choice were each given three questions. Capital punishment,
gun control, agriculture and rural development, aid for low-income
families, housing, federal education programs, and marriage each
received two. Fourteen other topics received one question each,
including health care, decreasing nuclear weapons, cloning,
physician-assisted suicide, and embryonic stem-cell research.

Patrick
F. Fagan, a research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, says that many
of the questions involve policies over which Catholics may properly
disagree, but that this official questionnaire gives the impression
that these are the only acceptable Catholic positions. *

Robert Royal,
president of the Faith and Reason Institute, said that many of the
questions, such as those calling for more gun control and public
funding of health care, are written in such a way as to endorse the
Democratic Party approach. He says this gives the appearance of bias
and therefore undermines the usefulness of the questionnaire.

Frank
Monahan, director of the Office of Government Liaison at the USCCB,
told Culture and Cosmos that the questionnaire “reflects the Bishops’
public policy agenda.”

(*Why can he pick and choose without being called a “cafeteria”
Catholic?  Does all of this — from both sides of the debate —
strike anyone else as a bit hypocritical?)

What’s more, when the chairs of both the Rep.
party and the Dem. party were at the Catholic University of America
(they are both alums), RNC Chair Ed Gllespie could only point to the
Republican Party’s abortion stance as being in line with Catholic
social and moral teaching.  DNC Chair Terry McAuliffe pointed to
multiple teachings of the Church that the Democratic party is more in
line with.  According to my source, who was there, all Gillespie could
mention was abortion and gay marriage.  McAuliffe mentioned poverty,
education, the war, income inequality, and racial inequality, to name a
few.

Ah, isn’t it wonderful how God’s on everyone’s side, ready to smite and
destroy His enemies, who, if you listen to most political operatives
right now, is often Himself?

Posted in Rayleejun on 11 August 2004 at 4:28 pm by Nate
10 August 2004

“Religious men”

The Revealer has had some excellent essays of late on religion in political life.  Amy Sullivan pens one, and ponders the following:

Throughout the spring and early summer, photos of a church-going,
communion-receiving John Kerry were still plentiful every Monday
morning. While the “Wafer Watch” continued unabated, there was
virtually no coverage of the worship habits of President George W.
Bush, perhaps the most vocally religious president in our history.

 
The distinction highlights one of the most pervasive double standards
in political journalism – the treatment of Democratic and Republican
politicians’ personal faith.

 
Broadly speaking, most political reporters regard Democrats as not
genuinely religious. When it comes to the question of a Democratic
candidate’s faith, therefore, reporters typically retreat to the
comfortable political game of “Gotcha,” trying to trip him up and
expose his insincerity. Time
magazine’s Karen Tumulty has presented as evidence of Kerry’s lack of
faith the fact that he didn’t want to discuss papal infallibility with
her. The fact that it really isn’t a issue on which voters should judge
his qualification for the Oval Office did not seem to faze her. In the
same vein, when Kerry attended Protestant churches during a springtime
swing through the Midwest, campaign reporters feverishly speculated
that it was because he was “afraid” to go to a Catholic church for fear
of being denied communion. When, upon his return to the Northeast,
Kerry resumed his attendance at Mass, these same reporters wondered if
he was trying to make a show of defying Church leaders.

 
Perhaps Kerry should have taken a page from Bush’s playbook. What
Republicans have learned is that if a candidate asserts his religiosity
vigorously enough, political writers will label him a “religious man”
without asking what that really means or why voters should care. This
hands-off approach usually favors Republicans, who get a pass from
reporters reluctant to engage in Scripture-quoting contests, but it can
also be seen in the treatment of African-American politicians, who are
assumed to be more sincere about their faith, and in the way the press
approached Joseph Lieberman’s religiosity.

You can find the whole series of article from the Revealer here.

Here’s a hypothesis as to why one is religious-labeled and the other not.

Republicans and Democrats who are religious take very different
approaches to the religious lives that they lead, largely. Reps (where
Reps are religious)tend to be conservative evangelical Christians (of
various denominations), a group that places a high premium on
expressive, public announcement of religious beliefs and affiliation
and individual conversion. Dems tend to be Roman Catholic, “moderate to
liberal” Episcopalian, or mainline Protestant, groups that currently
and generally place more emphasis on communal redemption. You see this
perfectly represented in religious groups doing work in the Third
World: evangelical groups tend to focus on how many people have been
“saved” and the latter grouping above focuses more on service
provision, speaking about religious belief as the motivating factor
behind that provision.

The communal approach sits at odds with much of American political
ideology, and it’s still somewhat foreign to our idea of radical
individual achievement. It’s also quieter (no judgment is meant by
that, just that the communalists tend not to talk so much about their
religion as the individualists do).

I think the answer to the partisan divide over religious labelling
has two answers. I think that part of the explanation lies in a simple
volume issue. Evangelicals, who have allied with Republicans largely,
speak much more “loudly” in the public sphere about their religious
belief and affiliation. The press, like any of us, hears that nrrative
over and over and makes the (faulty) conclusion that people who have
faith talk about it all the time and that people who don’t, don’t. But
you can see the logical fallacy there. The conclusion they make is
faulty (just because a phenomenon is a marker of an identity does not
mean that it is definitive of an identity) and the evidentiary leap is
faulty, too (a lack of a particualr type of evidence for religiousness
does not mean that the people involved are irreligious).

The second reason seems to lie in the coalition that is the
Democratic party. Both religious and secularists exist in the
Democratic party, and their co-existence has been an uneasy one. But
combined with the general character of Democratic Christians, the
secularists have become the more vocal group in the Democrats, in
something of a mirror image of the Republicans. Again, however, this is
neither an entire nor entirely accurate vision of the Democratic
coalition.

In both cases, I think that the answer lies largely in volume, not
in any real differences between the “true” religiosity of the party
members.

Posted in Rayleejun on 10 August 2004 at 12:14 pm by Nate

Kurt Vonnegut on librarians

Kurt Vonnegut’s article here includes a small paean to librarians.

And on the subject of burning books: I want to congratulate
librarians, not famous for their physical strength or their powerful
political connections or their great wealth, who, all over this
country, have staunchly resisted anti-democratic bullies who have tried
to remove certain books from their shelves, and have refused to reveal
to thought police the names of persons who have checked out those
titles.

So the America I loved still exists, if not in the White House or
the Supreme Court or the Senate or the House of Representatives or the
media. The America I love still exists at the front desks of our public
libraries.

From the librarian.

Posted in OnTheWeb on 10 August 2004 at 10:24 am by Nate

Brief TdF detour

Stumbled across this photo of Lance Armstrong winning the TdF.  Look at his legs, and you’ll see how he won the race six times….

Posted in OnTheWeb on 10 August 2004 at 9:49 am by Nate
7 August 2004

What were we doing there?

American Street thinks over the role of the bloggers at the convention
Not a piece about blog v. traditional media, in the sense we’ve been
seeing, but about what niche blogs fit into and why we were there, and
so forth.

Posted in DeeEnCee on 7 August 2004 at 10:25 pm by Nate

Finally someone gets it accurate

Brad de Long, Berkeley economist extraordinaire posts today to explain why a NYT story on different sets of unemployment numbers proves itself worthless.

And, of course, what is missing is the context. A lot of smart
people have been looking at the difference between the household and
the payroll surveys, and have come to firm conclusions. Let me turn
over the microphone to Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan to tell us
what those conclusions are:

Greenspan Testimony February 11, 2004:
‘I wish I could say the household survey were the more accurate,’ Alan
Greenspan, the Fed chairman, said in congressional testimony on Feb.
11. ‘Everything we’ve looked at suggests that it’s the payroll data
which are the series which you have to follow.’… The Fed’s conclusion
was that the household survey’s results had been inflated by
overestimates of population growth…. If the population estimate is
too high, the estimated number of jobs will also be too high. The
bureau bases its population estimate on the 2000 census, but it then
updates that estimate yearly with data on births, deaths and
immigration. But immigration numbers are largely guesswork, because so
much immigration is illegal. Fed officials suspect the immigration
estimate is inflated because it fails to reflect tighter immigration
controls since Sept. 11, 2001, as well as declines caused by the
economic slowdown.

Why can’t we have a real civic discource in this country?  Part of
it, I think, is that we lack a contextualized understanding of the
issues and facts before us.  Sure we might have some unemployment
number out there.  But is it the best one?  Why? 
Without such information, we can’t even really begin to make an
intelligent decision about Bush or Kerry’s policies (whatever they are,
because neither candidate has offered any real specifics on what he
will do in the years 2004-08).  And so we’re left with trying to
decide who we’d rather have a beer with.

I don’t know.  But I’m not sure that the friends I’d have a few
beers with are people whose hands I’d want on the nuclear arsenal or
appointing officials.  Not because they’re righties, but because
some of them are very lefty.  But beer just shouldn’t be a
presidential selection criterion.

UPDATE — 9.39 PM: Dan Drezner discusses incivility in the blogosphere, and I’m gonna incoporate this into a longer piece on the current incivility sooner or later.

Posted in Politicks on 7 August 2004 at 7:59 pm by Nate
6 August 2004

Bad news and terror alerts

Aren’t statistics fun?  What trends do we see here? Any?

And an excellent “complication
by Winston Smith, at philosoraptor.  “Complication” because it shows
that the story that you think you see may or may not be there, and in
the social world, it’s always quite complicated.  As he notes:

Remember: as terrible as this administration is, and as important as it
is to get them out of office, there are bigger things at stake here.
The issue of what methods of inquiry and persuasion we allow into our
political discourse is bigger even than this election, for decisions
about this will have repercussions far into the future, affecting not
only this election, but unknown numbers of future elections.

Oh, and the truth. That’s at stake too. Let’s not forget about that.

Posted in Politicks on 6 August 2004 at 4:13 pm by Nate