CDC Statistics
I’ve been looking for site with this data for a while.
It turns out that the Center for Disease Control has a searchable database for all injury-related statistics in the United States. Just to be fair–so that no one can object to my tailoring the data–I compared ALL gun-related deaths with ALL automobile-related deaths. That means murders, accidents, suicides, everything, for both categories.
2005 is the latest year currently available; that year, there were 30,694 gun related deaths. That’s terrible, of course… but there were also 45,520 automobile-related deaths. That’s 50% more automobile-related deaths than gun-related deaths. Given that gun ownership is protected by the U. S. Constitution, but car ownership isn’t, that makes anti-gun lobbyists fairly hypocritical. If they were really interested in saving lives, they would be lobbying against the unprotected CARS first.
Always remember: gun control isn’t about guns. It’s about control.
01 August 2008
Shopping Around…
Well, I’ll be at drill this weekend… but, given last weeks’ Church fiasco, I’ve decided to start shopping around for congregations again. I suppose, should worst come to worst, I could attend the local Southern Baptist Church; although, truth be told, I see little advantage in doing so. They have as little relationship to the Apostolic, sacramental tradition of Christianity as the Unity Church, and would be wholly intolerant of my esoteric studies.
More interestingly, the Archbishop of Canterbury apologized to Freemasons in 2003–which should open up the Episcopal Church to me. I’ll have to check them out again next week.
Not that I have a terrible problem with Unity as such–but last week’s service was really embarrasing–both during and after. And if I’m going to Church, I’d prefer an apostolic, sacramental service over the evangelical service of Unity–even if Unity supports my other spiritual activities.
Then again, I still have to consider that, all things considered, Unity may constitute a true vocation for me.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Oh, my…
Last Sunday’s service at Unity Church of Peace was… not memorable. Apparently, the several people who are all responsible for putting the service together ALL decided to “wing it.” What was memorable, however, was the workshop I was invited to after.
These sorts of activities were why I had decided to settle down into the Unity congregation in the first place… I thought. The workshop, as originally described to me, was titled “Have You Had a Spiritual Experience?” Since it’s fairly difficult to imagine someone having the sorts of experiences they gave as examples–OOBE’s, for example–and not realize it, I assumed that it would be a sharing group.
It was actually a workshop on “ECKANKAR,” the self-described “religion of the light and sound of God.”
It was RIDICULOUS.
It is organizations like this that really give esoteric studies a bad name. The group–consisting of myself and about a dozen middle-aged women–sat around chanting “HU” (pronounced “hyoo”) and talking about dreams we’d had (well, I didn’t participate much…). “HU” was described as, I kid you not, “a love song to God,” which had been “used in ancient civilizations from Africa to South America.”
RIIIGHHHT.
First of all, esoteric religions is my second-biggest hobby, just behind martial arts; and my best friend has a master’s degree from Oxford in Early Christian History and is working on his D.Phil. on the Roman occupation of sub-Saharan Africa. If “HU” was really this universal sound, ONE OF US would have heard of it.
Second, I haven’t bought God dinner. I’m certainly not going to meet His parents. As close as I may feel to God, we’re really not in the sort of relationship where I sing love songs to Him. Had Dr. Klemp–the founder of ECKANKAR–put forward the statement that he had worked with yogic mantras (or some other form of sacred vibration) and found “HU” to be particularly useful… I might have been interested. But I’m not going to work with any group that lies to its members.
There was also a Tarot exercise… except it wasn’t described as a Tarot exercise, and we didn’t use Tarot cards. Instead of universal symbolism developed over centuries of refinement, we used index cards with pictures the coordinators had clipped from magazines the night before. I was somewhat less than surprised when the exercise turned out to be useless to me.
Anyway, I certainly don’t recommend ECKANKAR, and I hope that I am exposed to something more substantive in the near future.
Chaos and Anarchy
The Associated Press has actually run an article stating that America is winning the Iraqi front of the Global War on Terror.
Sunday, 27 July 2008
On Piety and Patriotism
Professor Emeritus Charles W. Hendrick of Missouri State University has posted an opinion piece at the Springfield News-Leader in which he describes his views on the relationship of religion and government. Mr. Hendrick makes several errors in his opinion, the primary of which–the idea that U. S. Constitution explicitly provides for a policy of “separation of Church and State,” has been discussed at some length in the comments.
Of course, the First Amendment actually prohibits the Congress from favoring any specific religion, but the perennially-liberal Supreme Court has consistently legislated in favor of a policy which prohibits all contact between religion and government–particularly if that religion is Christianity. Mr. Hendrick cites the case of a circuit clerk in Springfield, MO who displayed a religious poster in his office. Mr. Hendrick takes great exception to this–despite the fact that the text of the First Amendment not only does not forbid the executive branch from engaging in religion, but that by calling the display of personal religious belief illegal, we would, in fact, have affected a law (the function of Congress) regarding the establishment of a specific religion.
Mr. Hendrick further goes on to state that posing religious emblems in a government office–or patriotic emblems in a religious setting–“confuses the loyalties” of religion and patriotism, leading to idea that “religious people are patriotic and patriotic people are religious,” and further, that “nothing is further from the truth.” In fact, most (although not all) people who are strongly religious are patriotic, and most people who are strongly patriotic are religious. In the case of state-established religions–which Mr. Hendrick himself references–patriotism and piety are completely identical. Attempting to buttress his argument for the difference between patriotism and piety, Mr. Hendrick further states, “There are times when the institutional church must protest particular governmental policies, like certain of the Hebrew prophets who pronounced destruction on their nation in God’s name.” You will note first the distinction between “protesting policy” and “calling for the destruction of (a) nation.” You will notice also that religious bodies protesting government policy is NOT unpatriotic, as provided by the actual text and intent of the First Amendment, without legislating anti-religious policy.
Next, Mr. Hendrick states that the Ten Commandments have been made into a “religious icon” by “some Christians,” but that it does not fit well with our “constitutionally (sic) pluralistic society.” Note that there is a difference between a religious icon and a legal code–the Crucifix is the accepted religious icon of all of Christianity, but nowhere are Christians lobbying for a return of crucifixion as a punishment for criminal behavior. Note also that we are a Constitutionally free society, not a Constitutionally plural society. If anything, reference to other symbols of the Founders indicate an opposition to pluralism–“E Pluribus Unum,” not “E Pluribus Plurum.”
Finally, Mr. Hendrick goes on to state that “The Christian dedication is clearly a sectarian sentiment, one that is not even shared by all Christians, either in the present or the past.” This sentence itself is nonsense. If it refers to a general sense of dedication to Christianity, then obviously anyone self-identifying as Christian shares it. If it refers to a specific dedication, then it would have to refer not to the Jewish Decalogue to which Mr. Hendrick’s previous paragraph was dedicated, but to the Nicene Creed, which is the official statement of faith of the Church. Note also that this more specific definition limits the population of Christianity–one may self-identify as Christian but in fact be a heretic.
In the final analysis, Mr. Hendrick displays not only an ignorance of religion deplorable for a man described as a “distinguished professor emeritus of religious studies,” he also displays the typical liberal disdain for the founding principles of our nation. His objection to religious reference in the U. S. government is both fallacious and completely foolish, given the existence of religious reference in various Oaths of Office , in the National Anthem, in the custom of opening Congressional sessions with prayer and in Federal icons down to the very currency of the state.
The Dark Knight
I saw The Dark Knight yesterday. I’m not going to write any spoilers–I try only to do that for movies I don’t like (which still leaves me with a LOT of movie spoilers to write…).
I will say that movie was wrong on one point. The Joker was not a terrorist. Terrorists create terror among the civilian population in order to pressure a governmment to change its policies. The Joker created mayhem for the sake of mayhem alone.