Brownie-Eating Grin

World O’ Crap’s s.z. points us to a charming tale of parental guidance, as shared by the daughter of Focus on the Family führer extraordinaire, Dr. James Dobson. Danae Dobson, who is now in her 30s and evidently has yet to seek the psychological counseling she must desperately need, recounts how her dear old dad taught her that avoiding certain films (like Shark Tale, I guess) is so important:

Not long ago I became interested in foreign films. I began renting various titles, selecting those that had been applauded by the critics. Not surprisingly, I found some of the videos pretty trashy. The Lord brought one word to my mind: discretion. I was not exercising good judgment when renting these foreign films; I needed to be more discerning.

You might be asking, "What's the big deal, anyway? It's only entertainment-why does it matter what we expose ourselves to?" Let me try to explain with a story.

A father of three teenagers set a rule that the family could not watch R-rated movies. This created a problem when a certain popular movie opened in local theaters. All the teens were bent on seeing the film, despite its "R" rating.

The teens interviewed friends and even members of their church to compile a list of pros and cons about the movie. They hoped that the list would convince their dad that they should be allowed to attend.

The cons were that it contained only a few swear words that misused God's name, only one act of violence ("which you can see on TV all the time," they said), and only one sex scene (and it was mostly implied sex, off camera).

The pros were that it was a popular movie-a blockbuster. If the teens saw the movie, then they would not feel left out when their friends discussed it. The movie contained a good plot and two hours of nonstop action and suspense. There were fantastic special effects! The movie also featured some of the most talented actors in Hollywood. The teens were certain that the film would be nominated for several awards. And Christian friends at their church who had seen the movie said it wasn't "that bad." Therefore, since there were more pros than cons, the teens asked their father to reconsider his position just this once.

The father looked at the list and asked if he could have a day to think about it before making his decision. The teens were thrilled. Now we've got him! they thought. Our argument is too good! Dad can't turn us down! So they agreed to give him a day to think about their request.

The next day the father called his three teenagers, who were smiling smugly, into the living room. They were puzzled to see a plate of brownies on the coffee table. The father said he had decided that if they would eat a brownie, then he would let them go to the movie. But just like the movie, the brownies had pros and cons.

The pros were that they had been made with fresh walnuts and the finest chocolate. These moist frosted brownies had been created with an award-winning recipe. Best of all, they had been made with care by the hands of the teens' own father.

The brownies had only one con. They had a little bit of dog poop in them. But the dough had been mixed well-the teens probably would not even be able to taste it. And their father had baked the brownies at 350 degrees, so any bacteria or germs had probably been destroyed. Therefore, if any of his children could stand to eat a brownie that included "just a little bit of poop," then they also would be permitted to see the movie with "just a little bit of smut." By now the teens had lost their smug expressions. They turned down the tainted brownies, and only Dad was smiling smugly as they left the room.

Now when his teenagers ask permission to do something he is opposed to, the father just asks, "Would you like me to whip up a batch of my special brownies?"
Oh, ha ha. Danae, you kook. How lucky you are to have a father who would rather you eat dog excrement than see an R-rated film. Heaven sounds like fun.

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Reason #1,382,967 Why I Hate Bill O’Reilly with a Red Hot Fiery Passion the Likes of Which Have Never Before Been Seen This Side of Hades

Media Matters has the scoop:

CALLER: […]When I was growing up -- I'm Jewish, but I was not in a very Jewish area. There were some Jews there but, I was kind of -- grew up with a resentment because I felt that people were trying to convert me to Christianity --

[…]

O'REILLY: All right. Well, what I'm tellin' you, [caller], is I think you're takin' it too seriously. You have a predominantly Christian nation. You have a federal holiday based on the philosopher Jesus. And you don't wanna hear about it? Come on, [caller] -- if you are really offended, you gotta go to Israel then. I mean because we live in a country founded on Judeo -- and that's your guys' -- Christian, that's my guys' philosophy. But overwhelmingly, America is Christian. And the holiday is a federal holiday honoring the philosopher Jesus. So, you don't wanna hear about it? Impossible.

And that is an affront to the majority. You know, the majority can be insulted, too. And that's what this anti-Christmas thing is all about.
There is so much wrong with that, I don’t even know where to begin. So instead I’ll just end with this: America was not founded on Judeo-Christian principals, but on the Rule of Law. If you don’t like that, Bill, you can go to Israel, Islamabad, Istanbul, Iceland, or back to whatever putrescent rock it was you crawled out from under. I don’t care where—just fucking go, you sanctimonious, obnoxious, bloviating prick.

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This Land is Jesus's Land?

If you haven't already, you should read this powerful post on Democratic Underground. Essentially taking the Christian right to task on its hypocritical treatment of gays and other oppressed people, the author balks at their use of Christ as a mascot. Read it - my words don't do it justice.

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From the Spitzer Files

It’s official:

New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, whose investigations of white-collar crime have shaken the nation's financial institutions, said Tuesday he will run for governor in 2006.

[…]

"The state is at a point of crisis," the Democrat told The Associated Press. "We are bleeding jobs. We need reform in the process of government."

In his two terms, Spitzer has won national and international attention with groundbreaking investigations of Wall Street investment houses, mutual fund managers and, most recently, the insurance industry.
Awesome.

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Quick Note

The last post was really long, I know, but if you're at all concerned about the Bush administration using the Civil Rights Commission to advance a conservative agenda in schools, it's worth your time to read it all. I believe this is a huge issue, and I'm not sure why there isn't more being written about it.

Comments and thoughts on the topic are very welcome, as always.

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Dark Agenda

This morning, I noticed an AP press release with the headline, “Bush replaces outspoken civil rights chair.” A Carter appointee, the outgoing chair, Mary Frances Berry, and the vice chair, Cruz Reynoso, are engaged in a dispute with the administration over when they began their sex-year terms, and hence, when their terms officially end.

Berry balked at leaving now, arguing through a spokesman that she and vice chairman Cruz Reynoso, who also is being replaced, have terms that run until midnight Jan. 21, 2005. The White House maintained that their six-year terms expired Sunday and that Berry and Reynoso had been replaced.
This seemed just another incident of the rude and arrogant behavior of the Bush administration, which is, sadly, hardly newsworthy. I was curious, however, about their successors:

Bush intends to designate [Gerald A. Reynolds, former assistant secretary for the office of civil rights in the Education Department] the commission chairman, succeeding Berry, and to name Abigail Thernstrom, already a commission member, as vice chairperson. […] Bush also replaced the commission's staff director, Les Jin, with Kenneth Marcus of Virginia.
One of the most troubling commonalities among these three is found on their resumes: Reynolds has served as the Assistant Secretary of Education for the Office of Civil Rights, Thernstrom sits on the Massachusetts State Board of Education, a “predominantly white group opposed to heroic efforts to overcome de facto public school segregation,” and Marcus has served as head of the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education. If the Bush administration has recognized that the greatest impediment to their social conservatism is an increasingly liberal youth, their decision to combat this momentum seems to be to attack the growth at its roots. Clearly, trying to reintroduce religion to the classroom is the most obvious part of this strategy. It may very well yet turn out to be nothing more than a red herring, serving to distract from a more subversive element of their plan. This otherwise covert tactic, however, is neatly exposed when the shared interests and histories of these appointees are examined; we face the systematic unraveling of civil liberties throughout our educational system.

The Department of Education has its own Office of Civil Rights; though upon review of some of the recent activities at the DOE (see the profile of Marcus, below), it becomes evident that the DOE’s scope may not be as quickly or as easily expanded, as the administration might have hoped, to enact the civil rights rollbacks they seek. Instead, they have brought to the Civil Rights Commission members whose backgrounds in education will keep the focus where they need it most: on the future, in our schools. The Civil Rights Commission will soon become a tool of the administration used to infiltrate the very institutions where progressive initiatives have ensured the steady march of progress toward equality. Much like the administration’s environmental policies bearing euphemistic names like the Clear Skies Initiative, the resumes of the presumed appointees to the Civil Rights Commission read like a collective screed on how best to undermine civil rights.


Gerald A Reynolds

Gerald A. Reynolds is “a staunch opponent of affirmative action and has worked for organizations that have criticized government-mandated advantages for minorities and women.” In 2001, his appointment as Assistant Secretary of Education for the Office of Civil Rights was vehemently opposed by Ted Kennedy, who cited “serious concerns about Gerald Reynolds as the nominee.”

''Many civil rights groups and education groups have raised questions about his serious lack of education policy experience, as well as his views on affirmative action,'' Kennedy said.
Kennedy was not alone in his objections to Reynolds’ appointment. Marcia Greenberger, founder and co-president of the National Women's Law Center, a non-profit advocacy organization, sent a letter outlining her concerns to Kennedy, and cited Reynolds’ “very dogged opposition to affirmative action” as “problematic for women and girls in education.” The ADA Watch Action Fund also issued a press release documenting their consternation with Reynolds’ history:

"Putting Gerald Reynolds in charge of civil rights enforcement would be like having the fox guard the chicken coop," said Jim Ward, director of ADA Watch Action Fund. […] Ward said that many in the disability community are concerned that Reynolds' hostility towards federal civil rights laws will weaken enforcement of several federal laws that apply directly to students with disabilities.
The Institute for Democracy Studies’ press release outlined Reynolds’ dubious credentials, with their own concerns:
Reynolds first earned his ultraconservative credentials as a legal analyst for the Center for Equal Opportunity, a think tank that opposes affirmative action and diversity policies. He has been active in the Civil Rights Practice Group of the Federalist Society, and in 1997-98 he served as president and legal counsel to the Center for New Black Leadership, where he continued to serve as a member of the board. Three of the Center's leaders--Gerald Reynolds, Brian Jones, and Peter Kirsanow--have all been selected by the Bush administration for high-level posts dealing with civil rights and diversity issues.

Writing in the Washington Times in 1997, Reynolds criticized the "civil rights industry" and called affirmative action "a corrupt system of preferences, set-asides and quotas."

"With this latest appointment," warned [IDS President Alfred F. Ross], "every woman, every person of color, and every concerned citizen has been put on notice that this administration is looking to turn back the clock on civil rights--an agenda that IDS has meticulously documented in its newest study."

Abigail Thernstrom

The disturbing trend of partisan hackery continues with potential vice chair appointee Abigail Thernstrom. Thernstrom, whose book authored with her husband can be found glowingly reviewed at conservative think void Townhall.com, was profiled in a detailed and disturbing article by The Prospect’s Adam Shatz. The picture drawn of Thernstrom by the piece evokes a brutal truth about the kind of person and the kind of politics favored by this administration—ideological, incompetent, and convinced they are right.
[W]hen the Thernstroms' publisher asked [economist Glenn Loury] to blurb America in Black and White, he agreed, even though he hadn't read it. Shortly thereafter, however, The Atlantic Monthly asked him to review the book. Loury called Abigail to ask whether she'd mind if he did the review instead of the blurb. After speaking with her publisher, who told her that "it's much better to have Glenn's review in the Atlantic," she encouraged him to take the assignment.

Loury's review was quietly devastating. […] “A great many adherents of the civil rights vision remain at large among us, and the authors seem determined to ferret them out and prove them wrong."

Loury cited econometric studies showing there was almost no evidence for the Thernstroms' assertion that "black crime" was a cause of black poverty. Loury also assailed the Thernstroms' argument that Afrocentrism and underqualified black teachers were to blame for the low performance of K-12 black students. Afrocentrism, he noted, remains a fringe phenomenon in education, while three-quarters of public school teachers are white.

Most damaging of all, Loury showed that the Thernstroms carelessly misread their own data in places. Attempting to expose as a liberal shibboleth the idea that the war on drugs had increased the incarceration rate among African-American males, the Thernstroms wrote: "African Americans are a bit less likely to be arrested for drug offenses than they are for most other crimes." But the table they referred to, Loury pointed out, "shows no such thing. It provides the per capita arrest rates of blacks relative to the population as a whole, for various offenses, allowing one to see, for example, that in 1995 a randomly chosen black person was 2.9 times as likely to be arrested for a drug offense and 4.3 times as likely to be arrested for murder as a randomly chosen person from the general population. But this does not mean that in absolute terms fewer blacks were arrested for drug offenses than for murder. Indeed, just the opposite is true."

As a matter of courtesy, Loury e-mailed the review to the Thernstroms before it went to press. "Their response was pure vitriol. They said it was morally reprehensible and intellectually dishonest, and they refused to speak to me," Loury says. "I had no sense I was going to end our friendship by writing this review." A few months later, William F. Buckley, Jr., and John Newhouse hosted a dinner in New York and invited Loury. When the Thernstroms learned that Loury would be among the guests, they boycotted the event. "The Thernstroms' reaction to Glenn's review showed that they have become as politically correct in their responses as the left is," Orlando Patterson says. "They brook no criticism."
Discredited research, reflecting a revolting racism and a desire to demonize those most in need of protection against civil rights abuses, is, however, not reason enough for the Bush administration to question the viability of making this woman second-in-command at the Civil Rights Commission. Surely this sends a particular chill down the spines of every black American. It should give goosebumps to each of us who cares about continuing the forward momentum of every equal rights movement in the nation.


Kenneth Marcus

Like his fellow proposed appointees, Kenneth Marcus, seems to have found himself at the receiving end of questions and criticisms regarding his civil rights-related positions. When the Bush administration proposed regulations giving public school districts the freedom to create same-sex classes and schools, a move that was challenged by women’s and civil rights groups,
[s]upporters and critics alike said the proposed changes represented a major reinterpretation of antidiscrimination laws, some 50 years after the Supreme Court discredited racial segregation in "separate but equal" schools as inherently unequal, and 30 years after Title IX extended the concept to sex.

[…]

"We are not advocating single-sex schools and we are not advocating single-sex classrooms," said Kenneth Marcus, who oversees the Office for Civil Rights in the federal Education Department. "We understand that co-ed remains the norm. We are simply trying to ensure that educators have flexibility to provide more options."

The new regulations drew immediate fire from some women's and civil liberties groups, who said they were in violation of Title IX, the landmark law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in schools.
Marcus has also aligned himself with Bush and Education Secretary Ron Paige on the issue of finding “race-neutral ways to achieve diversity” in college and university admissions:
Kenneth L. Marcus, the Education Department's acting civil rights chief, said the report is intended to help schools achieve diversity in constructive ways "without falling back upon illegal quotas," following the Supreme Court's decision last year in the University of Michigan affirmative action case.
He has, however, made special assurances regarding the protection of white, male Christian students. In a letter to his associates at the Department of Education Office for Civil Rights, dated September 13, 2004, he wrote:
The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) of the U.S. Department of Education (the Department) ensures compliance by recipients of the Department’s financial assistance with federal laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, national origin, sex, disability, or age, or in the access of certain patriotic organizations to school facilities. Other agencies, including the United States Department of Justice, ensure compliance with federal laws prohibiting discrimination on the basis of religion. The Department of Justice recently reaffirmed its commitment to enforce civil rights laws protecting students perceived to be of Middle Eastern or South Asian descent from religious and national origin discrimination in a letter to state boards of education. This Department issued Guidance on Constitutionally Protected Prayer in Public Elementary and Secondary Schools on February 7, 2003 (http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/religionandschools/ prayer_guidance.html). Although OCR’s jurisdiction does not extend to religious discrimination, OCR does aggressively enforce Title VI, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race or national origin, and Title IX, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex. In OCR’s experience, some cases of religious discrimination may also involve racial, ethnic or sex discrimination.
If it sounds suspiciously like Marcus is seeking to find a way to incorporate religion-in-school issues under the umbrella of responsibility of the Department of Education, that’s because he is.
OCR has also recently investigated allegations of race and sex discrimination against white, male Christian students. In one unfortunate incident, a white male undergraduate student was harassed by a professor for expressing conservative Christian views in a classroom discussion regarding homosexuality. […] No OCR policy should be construed to permit, much less to require, any form of religious discrimination or any encroachment upon the free exercise of religion. While OCR lacks jurisdiction to prohibit discrimination against students based on religion per se, OCR will aggressively prosecute harassment of religious students who are targeted on the basis of race or gender, as well as racial or gender harassment of students who are targeted on the basis of religion.
Marcus’ has also seen fit to ensure the ideological interests of the Bush administration are extended in favor of the Boy Scouts. In a Christian Science Monitor article (rather oddly) titled Wider Opening for Boy Scouts, the Bush administration was reported as ordering public schools, some of which were attempting to abolish their ties to the anti-gay and anti-atheist organization, to “keep their doors open to the Boy Scouts of America.”
In response to the threat of campus lockouts, Congress in 2001 voted to cut federal funding from any school that banned the Boy Scouts or any similar group from "open forum" access.

[…]

[O]nly a "handful" of cases have come up under the existing regulations, says Kenneth Marcus, head of civil rights at the Department of Education.

Schools can still choose to close their properties to the Boy Scouts - or the Little League, Girl Scouts, or other designated "patriotic youth" organizations - as long as they treat other groups the same way. Mr. Marcus says schools can still choose to not sponsor scout troops.

So why add more regulations to the books three years after the initial rule went into effect? "What we're doing now is proposing to the public the specific details of how we intend to enforce it," says Marcus.

[…]

Considering the timing of the announcement about the policy change - including a press conference at an Arkansas elementary school featuring the state's governor - some critics see political considerations at work.

"Politics is politics, and it probably has something to do with the campaign and all that," says Scott Cozza, president of the Scouting for All organization, which supports opening the Boy Scouts to gays. "It's a disgrace that our public schools are forced by our current administration and the federal government to support an organization that discriminates against its own citizens."
So these, then, are the new faces of the Civil Rights Commission. I have little confidence that the assault on the pluralism in our schools for which liberals have worked so long to achieve will cede with the office under control of these zealots. Combined with the insistence on abstinence-only sex education programs and the constant attacks on science in the classroom, I truly fear for America’s youth. And I wonder: are we liberals paying enough attention to what our children are learning subconsciously about civil rights as we are to what they are being taught about evolution?

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The World Evolves Around Me

Digby’s got a great post on Evolutionary Theology here. As per usual, he’s right on the money.

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WWJD?

In another example of spectacularly unchristian behavior from Christians, the Pacifica Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has rescinded its recognition of a ministry that aids the poor and the homeless because their associate pastor is an out lesbian.

The decision by the Pacifica Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, which oversees congregations in parts of Southern California, marks the most severe punishment of a Lutheran congregation over the issue of homosexual clergy in more than a decade.

[…]

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America allows gay clergy only if they are celibate. Thirteen other congregations that have installed openly gay and lesbian pastors have received milder punishments.

Pacifica Synod Bishop Murray Finck said the Central City mission violated the church's constitution when it installed Pastor Jenny Mason in April because Mason is not on the church's official roster of recognized pastors. He said the Oct. 29 decision has nothing to do with Mason's sexual orientation but also said Mason is not on the roster because she is gay and not celibate.

[…]

Since 1990, no congregations have been stripped of recognition for installing gay clergy. National church leaders are studying the issue ahead of an August meeting of the church's National Assembly.

[…]

Mason previously served 10 years as an officially recognized Lutheran pastor and missionary in Chile, but the church learned of her long-term relationship with another woman and forced her to resign in 2001.
This story hits particularly close to home for me, as I was raised Lutheran, and my parents are still active in the Lutheran church. I have several quarrels with organized religion in general, into which I won’t delve here, but before I turned away from organized religion wholly, I fell away from the Lutheran church, and their stances on gender- and sexuality-related issues were the primary reasons.

The church I attended in my youth was a Missouri Synod Lutheran church, which is even stricter. It will not allow gay or lesbian ministers, and in fact says
homophile behavior is intrinsically sinful, expressly condemned as immoral by the Scriptures.
Because of this position, open homosexuals cannot serve in any other position in the church, either.

Although I understand that many would argue the church’s right to refuse to employ those whose sexual lives they deem sinful, it’s ultimately little more than gussied-up selective discrimination. Each of us is a sinner, they say; such is the very reason for the church’s existence. There is no reason, no justification, to bar one group of “sinners” when your doors are meant to be open to all.

The Missouri Synod is equally as radical in its (mis)treatment of women. Women are not only not allowed to become ministers in the Missouri Synod, they are also not allowed to help serve communion. The basis for these decisions is as follows:
The LCMS believes that those Scripture passages which say that women should not "teach" or "have authority" in the church (see, for example, 1 Cor. 11 and 14; 1 Timothy 2) mean that women ought not hold the authoritative teaching office in the church--that is, the office of pastor. Women are allowed to hold other offices in the church, as long as these offices do not involve the one holding them in carrying out the distinctive functions of the pastoral office.
What this position fails to acknowledge is that if you walk into any church on any Sunday, the vast majority of Sunday School teachers are women. Having attended Sunday School, and having been a Sunday School teacher as a teenager, I cannot imagine how such as role could be described as anything but “carrying out the distinctive functions of the pastoral office.” Indeed, the women who teach Sunday School minister to the children of the church, teaching them the stories of the Bible, which inevitably involves interpretation, praying with the children, providing counsel to them, etc. These are the distinctive functions of the pastoral office, and they are being provided to the most impressionable members of the congregation. So why doesn’t the Missouri Synod prohibit women from serving as Sunday School teachers? Simple: because if they didn’t do it, there would be no Sunday School.

Indeed, their website acknowledges:
Nearly half--over 9,000--of the Synod's professional, full-time church workers are women (serving in such offices as teacher, deaconess, director of Christian education, etc.).
And yet women remain somehow unfit to hold the office of minister.

Selective discrimination is not of the law of this land, nor was it a part of Jesus’ message, giving the church no basis for its application against homosexuals and/or women. It is as distasteful and foolish as cherry-picking parts of the Bible to suit one’s needs, disregarding others that make life inconvenient. Both undermine the message the church purports to convey to its parishioners, both reinforce judgment and prejudice, and both have made the church an unappealing place for one who believes that we are all equal, in God’s eyes or anywhere else, warts and all.

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When Harry Met Scalia....

Matt Stoller at MyDD has a good summary of Harry Reid’s appearance on Meet the Press this weekend. Reid, the newly appointed Senate Minority Leader, effectively took the President to task on some key issues, and additionally reassured we Lefties who were concerned about his pro-life position that he would not support the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

But just as I started to think that perhaps I had too hastily dismissed his appointment as further evidence of the Dems’ poor showing as an opposition party, he goes and proves me right:

[T]he Nevada Democrat said that he could support Thomas' fellow conservative, Justice Antonin Scalia, if he were nominated [as a possible replacement for Chief Justice William Rehnquist].

"I cannot dispute the fact, as I have said, that this is one smart guy," Reid said of Scalia. "And I disagree with many of the results that he arrives at, but his reasons for arriving at those results are very hard to dispute."

Citing a hunting trip Scalia took with Dick Cheney before hearing a case involving the commission the vice president set up to work on an energy bill, Reid said the justice has some ethics problems.

"So we have to get over this," he said.
It boggles the mind. He says he could support Scalia’s appointment as Chief Justice, but then goes on to list the very reasons why, as a representative of the Left, he shouldn’t—disagreeing with his interpretation of the law and finding his ethics wanting. Why on earth should the Left support an ethically-challenged Justice who disagrees with us on almost every position? Simply because he’s “one smart guy,” isn’t good enough. I can think of a few men of history who may have been deemed smart, but bad for their countries.

This is unacceptable. And the Democrats wonder why they need to worry about losing their base to third parties like the Greens. Stop wondering, idiots. This is why.

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More Holiday Cheer

Okay, this totally cracked me up:

Pepsi Holiday Spice

Out of curiousity, I bought some of this. I tried a couple of swigs and wasn't impressed. It tasted a little funny, but I couldn't really describe it. Well, tonight I saw it in the fridge and tried another shot of it, and I realized that it tastes like Pepsi, but with the teensiest little bit of dirt in it.
It's nice to see Pepsi take the lead as the first major corporation to court the pica demographic. And just in time for Christmas!

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World O' Christmas

The season's first post of delectably snarky holiday cheer, care of s.z. from World O' Crap.

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Man of Honor

Thank you to Daily Kos diarist Lawnorder for alerting us to the following:



Former U.S. presidential candidate, Senator John Kerry (D-MA), lays flowers on the casket of U.S. Marine Lance Cpl. Dimitrios Gavriel during his military funeral at Arlington National Cemetery near Washington DC, December 2, 2004. Gavriel, from Haverhill, Massachusetts, died November 19 while fighting in Al Anbar Province in Iraq and his funeral is the 99th 'Operation Iraqi Freedom' funeral at Arlington National Cemetery. REUTERS/Jason Reed

President Bush has yet to attend a soldier's funeral.

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Vote Early and Often

Jesus' General points us to the 2004 Weblog Awards. Some of our favorites have been nominated in various categories, including Jesus' General, Hullabaloo (Digby), AMERICAblog, Atrios, DailyKos, Talking Points Memo, Keith Olbermann, Altercation, and Baghdad Burning. Unfortunately, sometimes you have to choose between a few of them. Congrats, everyone!


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Let's Talk About Sex II

In a continued analysis of the report on the Content of Federally Funded Abstinence-Only Education Programs commissioned by Rep. Waxman, I wanted to take a look at how the curricula of these programs are particularly damaging to the girls who are subjected to them, as promised.

Just to be clear, there are inherent problems specific to boys, too, and I don’t want to make light of those by not delving into as much detail on those issues. The girls who go through these programs, however, are not only at the mercy of the emotional upheaval that can be caused by the ridiculous notions proffered by these curricula, but their long-term health may be even more greatly compromised.

While both sexes are equally at risk from the misinformation about protection and sexually transmitted diseases purveyed by abstinence-only educators, girls are also at increased risk from cervical cancer:

A critical fact for girls and women to know about cervical cancer is that routine Pap smears can prevent most occurrences of the disease. Women should have Pap smears annually once they are sexually active or, at the latest, starting at age 18. Yet few of the curricula reviewed mention the importance of this intervention.
By itself, such an omission would be unconscionable. Early detection of cervical cancer is critical, and the recommendation for annual Pap smears should be an integral part of any sex education program. However, that is not the only information undermining girls’ understanding of cervical cancer prevention. Additionally, they are told that cervical cancer can be a consequence of premarital sex:
[T]he teaching manual of one curriculum explicitly states: “It is critical that students understand that if they choose to be sexually active, they are at risk” for cervical cancer. Another curriculum asks, “What is the leading medical complication from HPV? Cervical cancer.” Neither of these curricula mentions that human papilloma virus (HPV), though associated with most cases of cervical cancer, rarely leads to the disease, nor that cervical cancer is highly preventable when women get regular Pap smears.
Additionally, the use of condoms has been shown to reduce to risk of cervical cancer, which is, of course, excluded from the curricula.

When I went through sex ed in junior high school, and then the reprise in high school health class, I remember very distinctly learning about the necessity of Pap smears. I also remember being shown how to do a proper breast exam, and it was during a routine breast exam that I recently found a lump in my breast. It turned out to be nothing more than a benign tumor, but had it been worse, my early detection of it could very well have meant the difference between life and death. This was the gift given to me by my sex education classes. Are the girls going through abstinence-only programs being given the same?

The President and his supporters like to talk about a “culture of life,” but these programs are structured in favor of the lives of the unborn rather than the lives of the already-living. Reducing teenage pregnancies and abortions is a worthy goal, but undermining the health and well-being of teenagers by instilling intimidation about sex is absolutely not the way to accomplish it. Kids who are armed with knowledge about sex and are well-prepared for the practicalities (e.g. access to birth control) will reduce teenage pregnancies and abortions by virtue of putting good information into practice.

On the other hand, those who are left with bad information are just as likely to engage in sexuality activity. When they do it, however, they are at increased risk. And they will do it. Fostering ignorance does not delay a loss of innocence. Instead, it ensures that when students who pass through these programs eventually do have sex, their naïveté about the realities of human sexuality will leave them more vulnerable to the very things these curricula are trying to avoid.

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Let's Talk About Sex

The truly awesome Rep. Henry Waxman has done it again. At his request, the Special Investigations Division of the House Committee on Government Reform—Minority Staff, has prepared a report on the Content of Federally Funded Abstinence-Only Education Programs. The report:

evaluates the content of the most popular abstinence-only curricula used by grantees of the largest federal abstinence initiative, SPRANS (Special Programs of Regional and National Significance Community-Based Abstinence Education). Through SPRANS, the Department of Health and Human Services provides grants to community organizations that teach abstinence-only curricula to youth.
By definition, abstinence-only programs
promote abstinence from all sexual activity, usually until marriage, as the only way to reduce the risks of pregnancy, disease, and other potential consequences of sex. The programs define sexual activity broadly and do not teach basic facts about contraception. […] They are allowed to mention contraceptives only to describe their failure rates. […] None of the curricula provides information on how to select a birth control method and use it effectively.
This report is significant for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is that the analyzed materials were used by over two-thirds of SPRANS grantees last year. Perhaps the most important part of this endeavor, however, is its uniqueness. As it happens,
The curricula used in SPRANS and other federally funded programs are not reviewed for accuracy by the federal government.
So we owe a debt to Rep Waxman for commissioning this report, since no one else apparently bothers to look into it. Their findings are, to say the least, disturbing. Over 80% of the curricula reviewed was found to contain “false, misleading, or distorted information about reproductive health.” Such findings beg the question, then, as to why the Bush administration has expanded federal funding for these abstinence-only programs:
The federal government will spend approximately $170 million on abstinence-only education programs in fiscal year 2005, more than twice the amount spent in fiscal year 2001. As a result, abstinence-only education, which promotes abstinence from sexual activity without teaching basic facts about contraception, now reaches millions of children and adolescents each year.
Some of the most damning findings of the report were:
· Abstinence-Only Curricula Contain False Information about the Effectiveness of Contraceptives. Many of the curricula misrepresent the effectiveness of condoms in preventing sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy. One curriculum says that “the popular claim that ‘condoms help prevent the spread of STDs,’ is not supported by the data”; another states that “[i]n heterosexual sex, condoms fail to prevent HIV approximately 31% of the time”; and another teaches that a pregnancy occurs one out of every seven times that couples use condoms. These erroneous statements are presented as proven scientific facts.

· Abstinence-Only Curricula Contain False Information about the Risks of Abortion. One curriculum states that 5% to 10% of women who have legal abortions will become sterile; that “[p]remature birth, a major cause of mental retardation, is increased following the abortion of a first pregnancy”; and that “[t]ubal and cervical pregnancies are increased following abortions.” In fact, these risks do not rise after the procedure used in most abortions in the United States.

· Abstinence-Only Curricula Blur Religion and Science. Many of the curricula present as scientific fact the religious view that life begins at conception. For example, one lesson states: “Conception, also known as fertilization, occurs when one sperm unites with one egg in the upper third of the fallopian tube. This is when life begins.” Another curriculum calls a 43-day-old fetus a “thinking person.”

· Abstinence-Only Curricula Treat Stereotypes about Girls and Boys as Scientific Fact. One curriculum teaches that women need “financial support,” while men need “admiration.” Another instructs: “Women gauge their happiness and judge their success on their relationships. Men’s happiness and success hinge on their accomplishments.”

· Abstinence-Only Curricula Contain Scientific Errors. In numerous instances, the abstinence-only curricula teach erroneous scientific information. One curriculum incorrectly lists exposure to sweat and tears as risk factors for HIV transmission. Another curriculum states that “twenty-four chromosomes from the mother and twenty-four chromosomes from the father join to create this new individual”; the correct number is 23.
Aside from problematic misstatements of fact throughout the curricula, the report also identified an unsettling tendency to substitute religion for science. Although no one who is familiar with the ongoing Evolution vs Creationism debates, or the categorical insistence on replacing scientific theory with Biblical supposition, will be surprised by this finding, it is truly offensive to even have to entertain the notion that our children are being indoctrinated into such narrowly drawn beliefs about human sexuality:
By their nature, abstinence-only curricula teach moral judgments alongside scientific facts. The SPRANS program mandates, for example, that programs teach that having sex only within marriage “is the expected standard of human sexual activity.” In some of the curricula, the moral judgments are explicitly religious. For example, in a newsletter accompanying one popular curriculum, the author laments that as a result of societal change, “No longer were we valued as spiritual beings made by a loving Creator.” The curriculum’s author closes the section by signing, “In His Service.”

[…]

Several curricula offer as scientific fact moral or religious definitions of early fetuses as babies or people, in the process supplying inaccurate descriptions of their developmental state. One curriculum that describes fetuses as “babies” describes the blastocyst, technically a ball of 107 to 256 cells at the beginning of uterine implantation, as “snuggling” into the uterus: After conception, the tiny baby moves down the fallopian tube toward the mother’s uterus. About the sixth to tenth day after conception, when the baby is no bigger than this dot (.), baby snuggles into the soft nest in the lining of the mother’s uterus. Another teaches: “At 43 days, electrical brain wave patterns can be recorded, evidence that mental activity is taking place. This new life may be thought of as a thinking person.”
Ultimately, however, whether one agrees or disagrees with the agenda behind abstinence-only education, or the means by which children should be taught about their sexuality, surely all can agree that the intent of any sex education program is to protect the children to whom it is directed. Even on that most basic issue, abstinence-only education fails the test:
There have been several studies of the effectiveness of abstinence-only education. These studies have found that abstinence-only education does not appear to decrease teen pregnancy or the risk of sexually transmitted diseases. In the most comprehensive analysis of teen pregnancy prevention programs, researchers found that “the few rigorous studies of abstinence-only curricula that have been completed to date do not show any overall effect on sexual behavior or contraceptive use.”

One recent study of abstinence-only programs found that they may actually increase participants’ risk. Columbia University researchers found that while virginity “pledge” programs helped some participants to delay sex, 88% still had premarital sex, and their rates of sexually transmitted diseases showed no statistically significant difference from those of nonpledgers. Virginity pledgers were also less likely to use contraception when they did have sex and were less likely to seek STD testing despite comparable infection rates.

In contrast, comprehensive sex education that both encourages abstinence and teaches about effective contraceptive use has been shown in many studies to delay sex, reduce the frequency of sex, and increase the use of condoms and other contraceptives.
The failure rate of these programs alone should doom the reviewed curricula to the dustbin, but instead, this administration has decided to increase funding and thereby reach out to more and more American kids with this dangerous drivel.

The report sums it up thusly:
Serious and pervasive problems with the accuracy of abstinence-only curricula may help explain why these programs have not been shown to protect adolescents from sexually transmitted diseases and why youth who pledge abstinence are significantly less likely to make informed choices about precautions when they do have sex.
No child left behind.

Later, I will take a further look at this topic and how the curricula hold special danger for the girls exposed to them.

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Jesus’ General, AMERICAblog, and Atrios have all examined the same report. Check them out, too.

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Canucks Go Wild

Oh, Canada!

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The More You Know

John Aravosis is taking NBC to task for its decision to reject the UCC ad. Bravo to John (even though he didn’t give me any credit, the stinker).

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New Link

Just added to the Links section: Looking at the Stars. Strong analysis; great writing; highly recommended. Check it out.

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Wait a Minute, Mr. Postman

This morning on Good Morning America, some bim was interviewing Laura Bush about the White House Christmas tree and other inane blather. During the course of the interview, it was revealed the Bushes have a Christmas card list of over two million.

Cut back to Charlie Gibson, who points out that the postage for two million cards is over $700,000, which, he added, is more than the President makes.

Now, of course I realize that the vast majority of people on this list are probably not personal contacts of the Bushes; I imagine it's pretty much entirely a list of foreign leaders and diplomats (although I suspect Jerry Falwell, Karl Rove, James Dobson, and some other people who I'd prefer my tax dollars not be used to acknowledge are on there, too).

But here's the thing...which do you think better conveys America's respect for the rest of the world? The President's massive two million strong Christmas card list, or his recent behavior in Chile, at the Clinton Library opening, and in Canada, where he reportedly ignored former Prime Minister Jean Chretien? I suspect ditching the rude, arrogant asshole act and acting like a statesman will stand us in better stead with our international friends than all the Christmas cards in the world.

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Honoring Rosa

Forty nine years ago, Rosa Parks refused to sit at the back of the bus. Today, it is liberals and progressives of all colors and creeds that are riding in the rear, and it's time for us to follow Rosa's example. So let's make sure are voices are heard over the next four years, and help chart a new route for America.

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"Intelligent Design" Makes Me Think of Mies van der Rohe

Michael at AMERICAblog, countering the fundies’ demands that Intelligent Design (see: Creationism) be taught in science classes, writes:

Here's one thought: the next time someone tries to shove their religious beliefs into your local public school's science class, make a counter proposal. Demand that the school teach that the pyramids in Egypt were built by aliens. You could quickly print out lists of hundreds -- if not thousands -- of books, movies and TV specials that bolster this claim and prove it's a valid "scientific theory" that your kids should not be denied hearing in the interest of fairness.

Also propose that your kids be taught humans were put on earth by aliens, the truth about UFO abductions, time travel, how we didn't really travel to the moon (it was faked, you know) and you name it. There are plenty of quack "scientists" with actual degrees who will argue for this bunk. Once your school board has to deal with a whole bunch of junk "science," they might be more willing to dismiss it ALL in favor of accepted scientific fact. Point out that not ONE public university teaches Creationism as a valid scientific fact and ask why you want to teach your children something that every reputable college in the country will tell them is idiotic and wrong.

Next week: how to defend your geography class from fundamentalists who insist the world is flat.
Ha. Buried in the amusingly expressed contempt is a fair point, but it’s getting more and more apparent by the day that these people (and those who are cowed by them) cannot be reasoned with. In a belief system that depends on the willful ignorance of its adherents, rational discourse on any given topic is unlikely.

On the origins of this phenomenon, Frank Zappa once said:
The essence of Christianity is told us in the Garden of Eden history. The fruit that was forbidden was on the tree of KNOWLEDGE. The subtext is, all the suffering you have is because you wanted to find out what was going on. You could be in the Garden of Eden if you had just keep your fucking mouth shut and hadn't asked any questions.
This is why so many fundamentalist Christians (Biblical literalists) refuse to even engage those who present ideas that are contrary to their own. Their beliefs are a delicate house of cards, and anything that undermines its tenuous foundation petrifies them. It seems to me that a faith that cannot be challenged is not much of a faith at all, but that is a contention, I have found, that is met with little enthusiasm by the people to whom it has been directed.

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Karma's a Bitch

Check this out. It’s about the Third Circuit Court’s decision that educational institutions have the right to keep military recruiters off their campuses to protest the Defense Department policy of excluding gays from military service. I’ve been mulling over this story, trying to sort out the pros and cons of the whole thing (while also appreciating the delicious irony of it all), but Kos does such a good job, I’ll just refer you to him on this one.

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No Will, and Certainly No Grace

AMERICAblog reports on the rejection of an ad by NBC and CBS, put together by the United Church of Christ. The ad, which you can view here, carries the message that the UCC is one of inclusion. Their press release states:

The CBS and NBC television networks are refusing to run a 30-second television ad from the United Church of Christ because its all-inclusive welcome has been deemed "too controversial." The ad, part of the denomination's new, broad identity campaign set to begin airing nationwide on Dec. 1, states that -- like Jesus -- the United Church of Christ (UCC) seeks to welcome all people, regardless of ability, age, race, economic circumstance or sexual orientation.
As for the so-called liberal media, their rejection of the ad is rather curious:

According to a written explanation from CBS, the United Church of Christ is being denied network access because its ad implies acceptance of gay and lesbian couples -- among other minority constituencies -- and is, therefore, too "controversial."

[…]

Similarly, a rejection by NBC declared the spot "too controversial."
The spot, the content of which is about as benign as it gets (I had to watch several times before spotting the people who were supposed to be gay), is too controversial for NBC, a network that airs Will & Grace, and owns Bravo, which airs Boy Meets Boy and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy. I find it—ahem—interesting that a network is willing to line their pockets with the profits from popular gay programming, but deems a commercial advocating inclusion too controversial. Apparently, the UCC finds this—ahem—interesting, too:

"We find it disturbing that the networks in question seem to have no problem exploiting gay persons through mindless comedies or titillating dramas, but when it comes to a church's loving welcome of committed gay couples, that's where they draw the line," says the Rev. Robert Chase, director of the UCC's communication ministry.
Of course, the reality is that the executives at NBC and CBS don’t really believe the spot is too controversial. The true motivation behind their decision is not-so-subtly hidden in the remarks offered by CBS:

"Because this commercial touches on the exclusion of gay couples and other minority groups by other individuals and organizations," reads an explanation from CBS, "and the fact the Executive Branch has recently proposed a Constitutional Amendment to define marriage as a union between a man and a woman, this spot is unacceptable for broadcast on the [CBS and UPN] networks."
In other words, we’re still pretty keen on that whole media deregulation thing.

Nonetheless, as long as the guise of “controversy” stands as the official explanation for the rejection of this ad, it’s just another setback for the equality of gays and lesbians in this country, and another frustrating blow to those of us who support equal rights for everyone. John at AMERICAblog summed it up thusly:
Yes, it's come to the point where an ad for pro-tolerance is now too controversial in America.
A sad day indeed.

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