March 2005

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God’s Judgment?

Two days after terrorists flew hijacked airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Jerry Falwell said God allowed the attacks “to give us probably what we deserve.” He said, “The ACLU’s got to take a lot of blame for this,” and went on to assign blame to People for the American Way, federal courts, feminists, gays and abortion rights supporters, “all of them who tried to secularize America.” (Listen to him here.)

Today, Falwell is in serious condition at Lynchburg General Hospital. The Washington Post reports that doctors have upgraded him from critical to “serious but stable.” We must hope that he recovers, so he can tell us why God is punishing him.

That, religious right, is what a low blow feels like.

Politics

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No Tools of Understanding

Saudi columnist Dr. Sulaiman Al Hattlan, on the PBS program Frontline:

I think the whole culture of education in Saudi Arabia gave people dangerous tools—tools to teach people how to hate, tools of hatreds, tools of anger—not tools of understanding the reality of the world.

That sounds a lot like Fox News.

Politics

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Vampires

Soon, we will read or hear that Terri Schiavo is dead.

When the news does come, I think I will shed a few tears. I’ll feel a sense of loss, even though I never met Mrs. Schiavo, and the sad news will not be sudden or surprising. I don’t think I will be alone in shedding tears. We humans—most of us, anyway—are just wired that way. We can’t be aware of the suffering of another person without suffering a little bit, ourselves.

I think that’s why I’ve been half-blind with rage this week, when politicians, like vampires, thought there might be some profit to be gained from this family’s misery—“a great political issue,” in the words of a memo for Republican senators.

President Bush, who presided over the executions of 152 prisoners as governor of Texas, suddenly declared that “it is always wise to err on the side of life.”

House Majority Leader Tom DeLay publicly vilified Schiavo’s husband, told the Family Research Council that the real issue was “more than just Terri Schiavo,” and complained about “attacks against the conservative moment, against me and against many others.”

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a cardiologist before he became a politician with presidential ambitions, looked at a videotape of Mrs. Schiavo recorded several years ago and declared that the neurologists who were actually treating her had mis-diagnosed the case. Either Frist is one hell of a doctor, or he’s a very poor excuse for a man.

There will be many tears when Terri Schiavo dies. The vampires will move on to their next target. Sadly, tears alone won’t be enough to wash away this stain.

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Coming Crackdown on Blogging

(From cNet’s news.com.com🙂

[Federal Elections Commissioner] Bradley Smith says that the freewheeling days of political blogging and online punditry are over.

In just a few months, he warns, bloggers and news organizations could risk the wrath of the federal government if they improperly link to a campaign’s Web site. Even forwarding a political candidate’s press release to a mailing list, depending on the details, could be punished by fines.

So I guess I’d better just keep my big mouth shut.