Dave doesn't know it yet, but I've found a place for us to go on a field trip: the Koshland Science Museum of the National Academy of Sciences, which is located in downtown Washington DC. Check out the museum's web site, which features some really cool exhibits. For example, here's a photo array from the global warming exhibit:
How's that for visual evidence that global warming is not a hoax? You could easily spend an hour or more browsing through the online global warming exhibit alone. But, there's much more fun to be had at the center's site. The DNA exhibit explains how DNA technology can be used to fight disease, improve crops and improve the criminal justice system:
Unlike many of the museums in the DC area, admission to the Koshland Museum is not free. Still, it's very inexpensive:
GENERAL ADMISSION
Adults: $5
Seniors (65+): $3
Active Duty Military (w/ ID): $3
Students (w/ ID): $3
Children** (ages 5 – 18): $3
Here's the deal. Dave and I will make a visit for reconnaissance purposes. After we've done that, we'll decide whether to put it on the list of places to take visitors. However, even if it doesn't make our cut (as if!), visitors can put it on their lists and go with or without us. So start planning your next trip to DC and pencil in a day at the Koshland.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
Monday, November 23, 2009
You Do Not Want This Guy to Pray for You
A few days ago, I wrote a post about what I consider an extremely tacky right-wing slogan. In that piece, I mentioned that highly visible, media-mad right-wing Christian leaders often don't seem to take visible leadership in correcting their flocks. This is ironic, because it seems that they're often first in line to keep the rest of America firmly grounded on what they view as the straight and narrow path.
Well, I don't think Pastor Wiley Drake is one of the USA's leading Christian leaders, but he manages to draw a fair bit of media attention for his, I'll say this politely (since this is a family blog), forthright views. And, unlike many others, he has spoken on both the topic of President Obama's death and the murder of Dr. Paul Tiller. His position: he prays regularly for President Obama's death, and he rejoiced in Dr. Paul Tiller's murder, which he believes was a positive answer to his imprecatory prayers.
Right about now, you're probably hoping your name won't appear on his prayer list. As for me, don't waste time looking for me in any venue where this jerk will be.
Well, I don't think Pastor Wiley Drake is one of the USA's leading Christian leaders, but he manages to draw a fair bit of media attention for his, I'll say this politely (since this is a family blog), forthright views. And, unlike many others, he has spoken on both the topic of President Obama's death and the murder of Dr. Paul Tiller. His position: he prays regularly for President Obama's death, and he rejoiced in Dr. Paul Tiller's murder, which he believes was a positive answer to his imprecatory prayers.
Right about now, you're probably hoping your name won't appear on his prayer list. As for me, don't waste time looking for me in any venue where this jerk will be.
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Walmart People
I came across a new (to me) web site last night that had tears streaming down my face and my sides splitting in laughter. It's called People of Walmart and it features photos of people shopping at Walmart. If nothing else, repeated visits to that site may inspire me to diet and exercise more regularly. Here's a small sample of what you'll find over there.
First, we have the lady who put on her boots and forgot to finish dressing before going outside:
Next is a fellow who desperately needs a new outfit from top to bottom:
Next we have a lady wearing an outfit that Walmart executives hope she bought at Target:
As for this guy, I can't begin to guess what his getup was about. Does anyone have any idea what he's wearing on his head?
This lady epitomizes sophistication:
Last but not least, is someone wearing - I kid you not - a garbage bag as a skirt.
I'm debating whether, on my next trip to Walmart, I should take a camera or a blindfold. What do you think?
First, we have the lady who put on her boots and forgot to finish dressing before going outside:
Next is a fellow who desperately needs a new outfit from top to bottom:
Next we have a lady wearing an outfit that Walmart executives hope she bought at Target:
As for this guy, I can't begin to guess what his getup was about. Does anyone have any idea what he's wearing on his head?
This lady epitomizes sophistication:
Last but not least, is someone wearing - I kid you not - a garbage bag as a skirt.
I'm debating whether, on my next trip to Walmart, I should take a camera or a blindfold. What do you think?
Friday, November 20, 2009
This Crazy Stuff Has to Stop
I suppose you've all heard or read about the new anti-Obama slogan that's making the rounds in conservative circles.This little gem is available on t-shirts and bumper stickers - Pray for Obama: Psalm 109:8.
For those of you who may not recall that verse offhand, it says:
Standing alone, the verse may not seem too sinister. Maybe it means "may his days in office be few...." Anyone who is inclined to accept that interpretation, however, is gonna have a whole lotta 'splainin' to do when that verse is put in its context:
Now, I know that anti-W rhetoric got heated. And, it was often less than kind. But, the right-wing hatred of Obama has gone beyond differences of opinions and grown disgustingly toxic. Then again, there are some who contend that this is simply a joke, a funny meme. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who thinks this slogan is funny is seriously humor-impaired.
A slogan like this would be bad enough if it were merely vicious. What bothers me nearly as much as the malice is the seemingly seamless blending of religion and politics. What kinds of people are drawn toward this slogan?
Jews? After all, the passage comes from the Old Testament. But, somehow, I don't think many Jews are plastering their Chevys with these bumper stickers.
Muslims? I doubt it.
Buddhists? Yeah, right.
No, the people that seem most likely to be attracted to this slogan are the ones who currently infest the Republican party: rabid, uber-rightwing conservative Christians. Some of them are the kind of people who organize Tea Bagging events to protest taxes and health care reform. And some of them are the kind who insist that the United States is, or ought to be, a "Christian Nation" - with the understanding, of course, that their particular, peculiar flavor of Christianity is the one that should prevail. If this kind of vile, violent, virulent hatred and intolerance for people with whom one disagrees is part of what living in a "Christian Nation" entails, I want no part of it. Furthermore, I will not stand by quietly while they try to wreck my country. I'm all for freedom of religion. And freedom of conscience. And freedom of speech. I am all against theocracy. And oligarchy. And fascism. And I will oppose all of those forces with every breath in my body.
As much as the malice of this simple-minded slogan bothers me, and as much as the narrow-mindedness of the sloganeers bothers me, the thing that bothers me the most about this situation, by far, is the silence of a) Republicans and b) Christians. The Republican party is going to hell in a roller coaster; the Republicans aren't playing a role in the governance of our country, they're playing count-the-votes in next year's mid-term election. Listen up, Republicans: get your act together and do the right thing. Either get some control over the radicals in your ranks or cut them loose. They are a drag on your party and they do not advance the cause of conservative politics. You may think you're using them, but, be aware, they're also using you. There's no guarantee that the civil wing of the party will win the battle for party control. From where I sit, it looks an awful lot like the radicals have taken over and are well into the process of marginalizing the thoughtful among you. Grow some spines and take back your party, lest you lose not only your party, but your country too.
As for Christian leaders, I'm sick and tired of the deafening silence that accompanies Christian extremism. I commented on this before, shortly after the murder of Dr. Paul Tiller. Ever since 9/11 (perhaps even before then), Christians have urged moderate and liberal Muslims to police the rogues within their camp. Has Tony Perkins spoken out against this ostensibly Christian rhetorical nonsense, this oh-so-clever "joke?" Or Don Wildmon? Or Rick Warren? Or Gary Bauer? To my knowledge, not one of them (nor anyone like them) has uttered a word. If I'm wrong, please provide links in the comments. Listen up, Christian activists: now's the time to put your money where your mouths are. Tell the violent, theocratic thugs and teabaggers in your ranks to get over themselves and put an end to the reckless rhetoric before someone - like, maybe, President Obama - gets hurt. Or worse.
If Christians want people to take seriously the notion that they possess the secrets to God's Kingdom, that they bear Good News for all people, they'd better start policing themselves and cleaning up their own wretchedly soiled house. Until they do so, they have no business telling Muslims, or anyone else, what to do. From where I sit, most Republican officeholders and many Christian political activists look like nothing more than power-hungry opportunists and control freaks. I want nothing to do with people like them and I certainly don't want themrunning
ruining my country. This crazy extremist stuff has to stop before we all get so deeply into it that we'll need bucket loaders to dig us out. The crazy stuff has to stop, and it has to stop now.
UPDATE I: Here's a video of Rachel Maddow and Frankie Schaeffer discussing the issue:
UPDATE II: It appears that a number of Internet vendors have removed this merchandise from their product lines. Given that death threats against President Obama are 400% higher than they were for President Bush, this is, IMO, a good thing.
For those of you who may not recall that verse offhand, it says:
May his days be few;
may another take his place of leadership.
Standing alone, the verse may not seem too sinister. Maybe it means "may his days in office be few...." Anyone who is inclined to accept that interpretation, however, is gonna have a whole lotta 'splainin' to do when that verse is put in its context:
8 May his days be few;
may another take his place of leadership.
9 May his children be fatherless
and his wife a widow.
10 May his children be wandering beggars;
may they be driven from their ruined homes.
11 May a creditor seize all he has;
may strangers plunder the fruits of his labor.
12 May no one extend kindness to him
or take pity on his fatherless children.
13 May his descendants be cut off,
their names blotted out from the next generation.
Now, I know that anti-W rhetoric got heated. And, it was often less than kind. But, the right-wing hatred of Obama has gone beyond differences of opinions and grown disgustingly toxic. Then again, there are some who contend that this is simply a joke, a funny meme. As far as I'm concerned, anyone who thinks this slogan is funny is seriously humor-impaired.
A slogan like this would be bad enough if it were merely vicious. What bothers me nearly as much as the malice is the seemingly seamless blending of religion and politics. What kinds of people are drawn toward this slogan?
Jews? After all, the passage comes from the Old Testament. But, somehow, I don't think many Jews are plastering their Chevys with these bumper stickers.
Muslims? I doubt it.
Buddhists? Yeah, right.
No, the people that seem most likely to be attracted to this slogan are the ones who currently infest the Republican party: rabid, uber-rightwing conservative Christians. Some of them are the kind of people who organize Tea Bagging events to protest taxes and health care reform. And some of them are the kind who insist that the United States is, or ought to be, a "Christian Nation" - with the understanding, of course, that their particular, peculiar flavor of Christianity is the one that should prevail. If this kind of vile, violent, virulent hatred and intolerance for people with whom one disagrees is part of what living in a "Christian Nation" entails, I want no part of it. Furthermore, I will not stand by quietly while they try to wreck my country. I'm all for freedom of religion. And freedom of conscience. And freedom of speech. I am all against theocracy. And oligarchy. And fascism. And I will oppose all of those forces with every breath in my body.
As much as the malice of this simple-minded slogan bothers me, and as much as the narrow-mindedness of the sloganeers bothers me, the thing that bothers me the most about this situation, by far, is the silence of a) Republicans and b) Christians. The Republican party is going to hell in a roller coaster; the Republicans aren't playing a role in the governance of our country, they're playing count-the-votes in next year's mid-term election. Listen up, Republicans: get your act together and do the right thing. Either get some control over the radicals in your ranks or cut them loose. They are a drag on your party and they do not advance the cause of conservative politics. You may think you're using them, but, be aware, they're also using you. There's no guarantee that the civil wing of the party will win the battle for party control. From where I sit, it looks an awful lot like the radicals have taken over and are well into the process of marginalizing the thoughtful among you. Grow some spines and take back your party, lest you lose not only your party, but your country too.
As for Christian leaders, I'm sick and tired of the deafening silence that accompanies Christian extremism. I commented on this before, shortly after the murder of Dr. Paul Tiller. Ever since 9/11 (perhaps even before then), Christians have urged moderate and liberal Muslims to police the rogues within their camp. Has Tony Perkins spoken out against this ostensibly Christian rhetorical nonsense, this oh-so-clever "joke?" Or Don Wildmon? Or Rick Warren? Or Gary Bauer? To my knowledge, not one of them (nor anyone like them) has uttered a word. If I'm wrong, please provide links in the comments. Listen up, Christian activists: now's the time to put your money where your mouths are. Tell the violent, theocratic thugs and teabaggers in your ranks to get over themselves and put an end to the reckless rhetoric before someone - like, maybe, President Obama - gets hurt. Or worse.
If Christians want people to take seriously the notion that they possess the secrets to God's Kingdom, that they bear Good News for all people, they'd better start policing themselves and cleaning up their own wretchedly soiled house. Until they do so, they have no business telling Muslims, or anyone else, what to do. From where I sit, most Republican officeholders and many Christian political activists look like nothing more than power-hungry opportunists and control freaks. I want nothing to do with people like them and I certainly don't want them
UPDATE I: Here's a video of Rachel Maddow and Frankie Schaeffer discussing the issue:
UPDATE II: It appears that a number of Internet vendors have removed this merchandise from their product lines. Given that death threats against President Obama are 400% higher than they were for President Bush, this is, IMO, a good thing.
Monday, November 16, 2009
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Creations & Conflicts
When I was a teen, I spent a number of Saturday evenings watching campy Frankenstein movies on TV. Strangely enough, I’d never actually read Mary Shelley’s classic book. I can now report that I’ve corrected that oversight and, in addition to having seen many (but certainly not all) of the Frankenstein movies, I've read the book that spawned the films. As I read Frankenstein, I was struck by some parallels and contrasts I saw between that story and the Genesis account of creation. As I sat down to write this post, I was also struck by a connection I perceived between Frankenstein, Genesis and the Conflict Model of family relationships (also often specified as a model of parent-child relationships), as elucidated by Steven Pinker.I’ll begin by considering Frankenstein and Genesis. Obviously, Victor Frankenstein, the fictitious creator, is analogous to God, and the monster, the created being is analogous to humankind. Another analog exists between the relative appeal of Frankenstein/God and the created beings. Frankenstein is brilliant and well-loved, and God, of course, is perfect and lacks nothing. In contrast, Adam, Eve and the monster are all flawed beings who unwittingly offend their creators. As the Genesis story goes, Adam and Eve offend their creator when they disobey him; up to that point, the threesome got along just swell. Unfortunately, Adam and Eve learned, after the fact, that the only way to retain their creator’s favor was to obey him without fail. Victor Frankenstein’s monster offends his maker the moment his eyes blink open. The poor sod never had a chance to win his creator’s favor – Frankenstein was repelled by his creation at the instant he gave it life, a revulsion that he nursed and carried with him for the rest of his life. Yet another analog exists between the responses of the creators to their creations: God banishes Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, cursing them to fend for themselves in a world that suddenly has been rendered harsh, and Frankenstein abandons the being he created to fend for himself in a strange world populated by people who treat him harshly.
There are, of course, some points at which the similarities break down. For example, Frankenstein never felt any affection for his creation; from the moment the monster opened his eyes and drew breath, Frankenstein sought to destroy him. At several points in the story, the monster begs Frankenstein to make some provisions for him. Finally, he begs for a mate, so that he will not have to spend his entire life alone. Having learned from his brutal experiences that no human being will ever accept him, the monster seeks a companion like himself with whom he can spend his life (similarly, after Adam fails to find a suitable companion in the animal kingdom, God creates Eve to be his companion). Frankenstein breaks down and promises to provide a female companion for the creature. Shortly afterwards, partway through the completion of the task he finds deeply repulsive, he reneges on his promise and destroys the female creature. Consequently, the monster is doomed to live in isolation until the day he dies. In the Frankenstein story, creator and creature will never be reconciled. In contrast, the Genesis story holds that God and humankind can be reconciled, but only at tremendous costs. The humans have to offer repeated animal sacrifices to atone for their wrongdoing and/or appease God’s wrath. (Jumping ahead several centuries - God eventually takes the pressure off the humans and offers the ultimate perfect sacrifice to himself.)If you google “Frankenstein as cautionary tale,” you’ll find some interesting applications of Shelley’s tale. Some say that humans are cautioned not to “play God” by delving too deeply into scientific inquiries. Others say that it cautions people against judging others on the basis of appearances. Still others say that it’s a cautionary tale against bad parenting. On this view, Victor Frankenstein is, to say the least, a dead-beat dad. This last caution brings me to my final point of discussion, the Conflict Model of family relationships. Steven Pinker has popularized this view in some of his books. One writer summarizes this view thus:
Pinker points out that since a parent shares 50% of his or her genes with each offspring, in evolutionary terms the investment in each should be equal (all other things being equal). But if I am one of those offspring, I share only 50% of my genes with each sibling, but 100% of my genes with myself, so it is in my best interest to suppress parental investment in my siblings and to promote parental investment in myself. Pinker hypothesizes that this may lead to a child’s behavior that, indirectly, helps prevent or delay the parents having another child.
According to Pinker, this behavior is unconscious; it’s just something that’s built into animals’ genetic makeup. Thus, parents and children, and siblings, are always in conflict over the distribution of finite family resources. That being the case, they don’t always share the same goals. In fact, their goals often conflict.
It’s intriguing to look at the Frankenstein and Genesis stories in light of this theory. Victor Frankenstein’s goal was to avoid, then later destroy, his creature. He pursued his goals of glory and scientific accomplishment without giving any thought to the responsibilities that his success in creating a new life, indeed, a new form of life - a species - would entail. When confronted with his responsibility, he fled from it. The creature’s interest, initially, was to get Frankenstein to care for him, or to at least make some minimal provision for his comfort. When Frankenstein failed to do even that much, the creature then shifted his goal toward revenge. It goes without saying that when both parties in a conflict are hell-bent on destroying each other, there is little to no possibility that the parties will live happily ever after. (Spoiler alert: Frankenstein does not have a happy ending). Similarly, the Genesis story tells us that God created human beings for his glory, but humans are inclined to pursue interests of their own devising. Assuming that the creator/creature relationship is analogous to the parent/child relationship (the process by which parents create children is one of nature's wonders), Pinker's Conflict Model fits both the Frankenstein and the Genesis stories. Frankenstein and his monster pursue obvious cross-purposes throughout Shelley's book. Similarly, God and humans aim at contradictory ends in Genesis: God wants humans to be obedient; humans want to be independent. I'll push the theory's application a step farther and note that Cain's murder of Abel (recorded in Genesis) is sibling rivalry writ large, a tendency that is often seen in nature when stronger offspring kill their weaker siblings. All of this is in keeping with a scientific model positing that living beings, even humans in close relationships genetically and affectionately, act in their own self-interests far more often than not.Genesis, one of the best-known pieces of religious literature in the world, has been around for millennia. Frankenstein, one of the best-known pieces of English literature in the world, has been around for a couple of centuries (it was published in 1818). The Conflict Model of family relationships is the literary and theoretical newcomer; its existence can be measured in decades. I find it fascinating that a contemporary scientific theory can be used to examine the interpersonal complexities portrayed in two pieces of literature rooted in vastly different cultures. I also find it interesting that longstanding literary insights into human nature comport well with contemporary scientific theories. Such reciprocity speaks well for the utility of both science and literature as methods of exploring our humanity and our world.
Monday, November 02, 2009
Quick Photo Post
Dave and I got back from our trip to Louisiana late last night. I've barely had time to look at the photos I took. In fact, I haven't looked at most of them yet, but I'll share three tonight.
First, this is one I took of Joshua on Saturday morning, at the pre-game rehearsal. This was held at the Indoor Practice Facility (aka Indoor Football Field).
Next, these are two photos I took of Mike, the school mascot, on Sunday morning.
We had a great time and I know I'll have more photos to share soon. Stay tuned.
First, this is one I took of Joshua on Saturday morning, at the pre-game rehearsal. This was held at the Indoor Practice Facility (aka Indoor Football Field).
Next, these are two photos I took of Mike, the school mascot, on Sunday morning.
We had a great time and I know I'll have more photos to share soon. Stay tuned.
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