An Atheist Defends Intelligent Design
At the link is an interesting podcast.
Sep 05 2009
An Atheist Defends Intelligent Design
At the link is an interesting podcast.
Sep 04 2009
The AP has decided to print the photo of a young marine as he is dying, despite the expressed wishes of his family and the Secretary of Defense that the soldiers privacy be respected and the photo not be released. The AP is doing this in the name of “journalistic realism” and “telling the real story of the Afghan war.”
The AP reported that the Marine’s father had asked, in an interview and in a follow-up phone call, that the image, taken by an embedded photographer, not be published.
The AP reported in a story that it decided to make the image public anyway because it “conveys the grimness of war and the sacrifice of young men and women fighting it.”
The photo shows Lance Cpl. Joshua M. Bernard of New Portland, Maine, who was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade in a Taliban ambush Aug. 14 in Helmand province of southern Afghanistan, according to The AP.
Gates wrote to Thomas Curley, AP’s president and chief executive officer. “Out of respect for his family’s wishes, I ask you in the strongest of terms to reconsider your decision. I do not make this request lightly. In one of my first public statements as Secretary of Defense, I stated that the media should not be treated as the enemy, and made it a point to thank journalists for revealing problems that need to be fixed, as was the case with Walter Reed.”
“I cannot imagine the pain and suffering Lance Corporal Bernard’s death has caused his family. Why your organization would purposefully defy the family’s wishes knowing full well that it will lead to yet more anguish is beyond me. Your lack of compassion and common sense in choosing to put this image of their maimed and stricken child on the front page of multiple American newspapers is appalling. The issue here is not law, policy or constitutional right, but judgment and common decency.”
……………Morrell said Gates wanted the information about his conversations released “so everyone would know how strongly he felt about the issue.”
The Associated Press reported in a story about deliberations about that photo that “after a period of reflection,” the news service decided “to make public an image that conveys the grimness of war and the sacrifice of young men and women fighting it.
“The image shows fellow Marines helping Bernard after he suffered severe leg injuries. He was evacuated to a field hospital where he died on the operating table,” AP said. “The picture was taken by Associated Press photographer Julie Jacobson, who accompanied Marines on the patrol and was in the midst of the ambush during which Bernard was wounded. … ‘AP journalists document world events every day. Afghanistan is no exception. We feel it is our journalistic duty to show the reality of the war there, however unpleasant and brutal that sometimes is,’ said Santiago Lyon, the director of photography for AP.
It is the policy of essentially every mainstream news organization, including the AP, NOT to print photos that show the reality of abortion, and what aborted unborn human beings look like. They won’t show what aborted human beings look like after being aborted at 9 weeks, or 15 weeks, or 24 weeks, or 30 weeks. It would be “too disturbing,” it seems. But they will show other, equally or even more distubing photos without apparent restraint, whenever it fits the news agenda of the day.
Some newspapers won’t even run print ads paid by pro-life organizations if they tell the truth too accurately about abortion, and they may even object to accurate descriptions of abortion, let alone photos of the killed human being that results from it. I would go further with this… but you already know it’s true, don’t you? Because you have just about never seen a picture of an aborted baby in any major newspaper, newsmagazine or network TV broadcast, have you? But you have routinely seen bodies piled high in Holocaust photos, people being shot in the back of the head in executions by totalitarian regimes, and many other horrible, but true, events.
The cognitive dissoance is stunning, because on the one hand the mainstream media buys into the lie that aborted babies aren’t really people, just some kind of thing that could have developed into one… and on the other hand, it is apparently more disturbing to them to show a photo of an aborted fetus than to show the murder of someone they DO accept as a full human being. I guess it’s just too disturbing to show a photo of the death of a non-person.
It seems that photographically telling the truth about abortion is NOT on the news agenda…. but showing the last moments on earth of a mortally wounded soldier IS.
Pray for the family of the deceased soldier, as their pain is increased by this barbarous decision.
Sep 04 2009
Why the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets are Not Collapsing
Global warming alarmists have suggested that the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica may collapse, causing disastrous sea level rise. This idea is based on the concept of an ice sheet sliding down an inclined plane on a base lubricated by meltwater, which is itself increasing because of global warming.
In reality the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets occupy deep basins, and cannot slide down a plane. Furthermore glacial flow depends on stress (including the important yield stress) as well as temperature, and much of the ice sheets are well below melting point.
The accumulation of kilometres of undisturbed ice in cores in Greenland and Antarctica (the same ones that are sometimes used to fuel ideas of global warming) show hundreds of thousands of years of accumulation with no melting or flow. Except around the edges, ice sheets flow at the base, and depend on geothermal heat, not the climate at the surface. It is impossible for the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to ‘collapse’.
Much more at the link. But don’t worry… the ice is going to be here for quite some time.
Sep 03 2009
Once it was said that the sun never set on the British Empire, because it was worldwide. Soon, perhaps, the sun will never rise on it, either.
Britain Succumbing to Islamic Supremacism
Britain is sinking fast, and in too many ways its government is its people’s worst enemy.
Read it all.
The next post in this series is here.
Sep 02 2009
Hugh Hewitt reports on the Ten for Tark campaign, that may get Senator Reid’s attention that he is in great political peril if he allows Obamacare to pass through the Senate.
the campaign [is] to send a message [to] the Senate Majority Leader that Obamacare has got to be shelved. I hope some of my colleagues on the radio dial pick up on the effort to send a very loud message to Senator Reid. Nothing gets an incumbent’s attention like a check to his opponent, and thousands and thousands of checks to Tark should hopefully see Senator Reid talking with his colleagues about the political peril that Obamacare creates for all of them, even those who can look forward to excellent funding support from unions and teachers.
Go to the link above. It has a link where you can donate $10 to Danny Tarkanian (thus, Ten for Tark), who is the challenger to Harry Reid in the 2010 election.
Anyone can afford this. And the message to Reid is simple: there’s lots more where this came from, and if you let this Obamacare mess pass through the Senate (and he DOES have the power to stop it), then you can expect to lose your seat in the Senate. Period.
BTW: this is not unrealistic. Polls are showing that Reid is already trailing in the 2010 election, by quite a lot for an incumbent with a relatively unknown challenger. So this is a time when the judicious application of pressure may actually produce a result. Reid is vulnerable, and he knows he is, and that may be enough to get him to see reason in the matter, however he chooses to present it to the press and his Democrat friends. This wouldn’t work against a politician in a secure seat, but this time, Reid is vulnerable, just like Daschle and Foley when they were in leadership roles in Congress.
After you make your $10 donation on Tarkanian’s site, send the receipt, along with a polite note, to Senator Reid, explaining your position briefly and clearly. Be nice. But be clear that you plan to give more to Tarkanian if Reid doesn’t kill the Obamacare legislation.
Time to stand up.
h/t: hugh hewitt
UPDATE: It looks like Danny Tarkanian’s campaign has spent some of the money they got in the Ten for Tark promotion. Here’s the video:
Sep 02 2009
So I am scanning the Drudge report this morning, as I do most days, and this headline catches my eye:
BOOZE, HOOKERS: Clinton orders probe into guards at U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan...
So naturally I think to myself, “yeah, so…?”
It was only after a more careful examination of the headline that I realized it was NOT about Clinton using hookers and booze….
Imagine my surprise.
Sep 02 2009
It has become common for Muslim apologists, responding to the criticism that Muslims don’t condemn terrorism, to quote this imam or that, saying something that seems like a criticism. Most of us in the west have little ability to determine the worth of these “criticisms.” Is this something being said one way to the west, when the media are listening, and another way to the Muslim audience? Is it a carefully worded “sympathy for the families of the dead” or is it a full-throated condemnation of the terrorist act as unIslamic and immoral, without equivocation or ambivalence? After all, we give sympathy to the families of justly executed murderers. Such sympathy hardly constitutes condemnation of the judge, the jury, the law or the executioners.
Another response is to say that the west is just as morally ambivalent about its own failings. This article compares Muslim reluctance to condemn clear moral failure on the part of other Muslims to the tendency by modern Americans (including in the North) to whitewash the Confederate role in the Civil War, to call great generals of the South “heroes,” etc., when in fact they were fighting for a “state’s right” to protect the chattel ownership of human beings. Of course, that war ended 145 years ago… there was less tendency in the North to be ambivalent about it at the time. And this highlights another tendency of Muslim apologists, to point at western history, because there isn’t much they can point to now that compares to bombing African embassies, 9/11, the London Tube bombings, the Spanish train bombings, the incredible carnage wrought in Iraq by Al Qaeda, the BATH killers, the Shia killers, the Indonesian Islamist killers, the Pakistani killers in Mumbai, etc., etc., etc., ad endless nauseam.
Occasionally something like this appears: Indian Muslims under pressure in Mumbai aftermath
“We strongly believe terrorists have no religion and they do not deserve a burial,” said Maulana Zaheer Abbas Rizvi of the All India Shia Personal Law Board, a body for framing Muslim laws.
This is good, but it’s in the same league as the pastor of a large church in Oklahoma condemning Timothy McVeigh, with perhaps tepid support from his denomination, but not much from a national umbrella church organization like the National Council of Churches or the National Association of Evangelicals, let alone wider Christendom. The Shia are a distinct minority in India at about 10% of the approximately 100 million Muslims.
It’s tempting to put all Muslim denunciations of terrorism in the same category, but it’s a mistake. It is not unusual for (especially) moderate Muslims to denounce the murder of other Muslims by Islamists. How many of those same people say anything about rocketing Israeli civilians?
Even CAIR “denounces” terrorism, all the while it supports it via the Holy Land Foundation’s funneling of cash to Hamas. Denunciations of terrorism, lacking specifics of who did what to whom, are cheap. Ask CAIR to condemn a specific jihadi’s murder of innocents and all you usually get is, “We condemn all terrorism.” And that’s code for, “We’re not going to name names. And Israel is a terrorist nation.” A ringing moral condemnation does not begin with, “Yes, but…”
So regarding Muslim denunciations of bad behavior by Muslims, some discernment is required. Yes, you can find the occasional scholar or Imam who denounces it (though it often lacks those specifics). But is it a scholar who is important in the Muslim world, or merely one who is popular with western elites as a “moderate spokesperson”? It is well documented that many Muslim spokespeople say one thing in English to western media, and something else entirely to their own people, in their own language. When a “Christian” murders an abortionist (which happens about once every ten years in the USA), virtually EVERY Christian leader speaks out against it instantly, in practical terms, including very conservative anti-abortion activists, both Protestant and Catholic. You don’t need to look for “moderate Christians,” or “Christian scholars,” or something. The Jerry Falwells, James Dobsons, Bishop Chaputs, the Popes, Pat Robertsons, Christian leaders of every stripe, Christian academics, the National Council of Churches, the National Association of Evangelicals, virtually every pro-life group and conservative talk-show host will condemn in unison the murder of the abortionist “in the name of Christ.” And this is the response to only ONE person’s murder “in the name of Christ,” about every ten years.
Is it possible to contend that there is anything even remotely close to this in the Muslim world? Instead, we see people dancing in the street at the murder of thousands. We see a “compassionately released” terrorist, reponsible for the deaths of hundreds, greeted as a conquering hero by national leaders and clerics (most recently in Lybia, but it’s a common pattern, isn’t it?). Imagine if Timothy McVeigh had driven his diesel-laced fertilizer truck up to the Al-Hussein Mosque in Cairo, instead of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City, and said God told him to do it. When the Egyptians released him on “compassionate parole” in 30 years (you’re laughing hysterically, right?), do you think his return would be celebrated by the President of the USA, national religious leaders, an adoring press, and public acclaim?
One “out” that is sometimes taken is to say that there is “no recognized single leader” in Islam. But there isn’t in Christianity, either. If you consulted with the Pope, the Archibishop of Canterbury, the National Council of Churches, the National Association of Evangelicals, maybe some worldwide Protestant denominations and a few national Orthodox churches, and they all agreed, you could reasonably say “Christianity has spoken.” And they all condemn the murder of abortionists, even though most are pro-life (with the notable exception of the National Council of Churches organizations, of course, which mostly represent dying denominations).
As I understand it, there are four “schools” of Islamic jurisprudence in Sunni Islam, and two in Shia Islam. Those schools have well-known leaders, perhaps two or three important ones in each case. It would be most persuasive if THOSE leaders spoke in unison that the murder of non-Muslims by jihadis is immoral and unIslamic. But people in the west don’t listen clearly. Some of these guys have “expressed sympathy” for the families of the killed on 9/11. That is not the same thing as a ringing condemnation of the acts of the terrorists, and the public assurance to their own people, in their own people’s native languages, that the acts were sin, were unIslamic, would have been condemned by Muhammed, and did not earn the perpetrators a place in paradise. Has THAT happened? Or should we accept the PR statements of “moderates” who know that they’re talking to the western media in English or French? Does Islam even teach that it is a sin to lie to non-Muslims for the sake of protecting the reputation of Islam? Google “Al-taqiyya.” (Qur’an 3:28: “Let not the believers take for friends or helpers unbelievers rather than believers. If any do that, in nothing will there be help from Allah; except by way of precaution, that ye may guard yourselves from them”. This verse has been used, it seems, to justify lying to infidels in the defense of Islam.)
Let’s be really clear. Imagine that 20 “Christians” hijacked four airliners filled with people from Jordan, Lebanon, Egypt and Iran, and flew them into, say,
1) the Masjid al-Haram mosque in Mecca at full occupancy,
2) the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina during the hadj, and maybe
3) the Haghia Sophia in Istanbul during Friday prayers, along with aiming one at
4) the palace of the Saudi family in Riyadh.
The entire Christian world would rise up in breathless horror. Can you imagine the SCOPE of the reaction, the revulsion, the utter shame, and the rejection by the Christian world that this had anything to do with Christ or Christianity? Can you imagine the thousands of recriminations that Christians would direct at each other, the self-examination, the zillions of study sessions to reinforce traditional Christian teaching on murder that would result in churches, christian schools and colleges, etc.?
Would we be willing to settle for a nice statement from the pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dayton and an obscure professor of “Christian studies” somewhere that “we’re sorry for the victims’ families”? Would we immediately put out PR statements hoping that this wouldn’t lead to “Christophobia” and “hate crimes” against innocent Christians? Would we have to look for cherry picked Christian spokesmen to say “moderate” sounding things to the media? And let’s be clear: would Christians in ANY Muslim plurality nation be anywhere near as safe as Muslims have been in the USA after 9/11?
And would even the most conservative Bible Belt town in the South have a spontaneous dance of joy in the public square over the murder of those godless infidels, by right-thinking American boys with scout knives who hijacked airliners full of unbelievers?
I am waiting for an Islamic cleric in a prominent position in one of those six schools of Islamic jurisprudence to say that the killers of 9/11 are most likely in Hell, and belong there under Islamic teaching, as do those who are now emulating them.
And the notion that all six schools’ major representatives will make such a statement? I suspect the Lord will return first.
Sep 02 2009
In Afghanistan, Knowing When to Stop
forces should be substantially reduced to serve a comprehensively revised policy: America should do only what can be done from offshore, using intelligence, drones, cruise missiles, airstrikes and small, potent special forces units, concentrating on the porous 1,500-mile border with Pakistan, a nation that actually matters.
Genius, said de Gaulle, recalling Bismarck’s decision to halt German forces short of Paris in 1870, sometimes consists of knowing when to stop. Genius is not required to recognize that in Afghanistan, when means now, before more American valor, such as Allen’s, is squandered.
Read the whole thing. I’m not sure what American military leaders would say about Will’s perspective… but it is interesting that it comes from the “center right.”
UPDATE: The riposte was not long in coming.
Sep 01 2009
IN the Jerusalem Post, there is a review of Jimmy Carter’s latest screed unveiling his “peace plan” for the region, and the ignorance or duplicity that underlies it. Jimmy Carter: we can have peace (without you) in the Holy Land
COULD IT be that Jimmy Carter’s ideals are formulated by the number of zeros before the decimal on the contributions to the Carter Center by oil-rich Gulf States? These same states do not now, nor will they ever, allow Jews to worship freely within their borders no matter how much land Israel relinquishes. It is then surprising and hypocritical to call Israel an “apartheid state” and to infer that the region’s only democratic country is an obstacle to peace – thus the only solution to the Middle East conflict is through intervention.Carter’s final plea is for President Barack Obama to “shape a comprehensive peace effort between Israel and the Palestinians…then use persuasion and enticements to reach these reasonable goals with the full backing of other members of the International Quartet and the Arab nations.”
It is likely he would call on The Elders for their expertise. The best thing President Obama could do is completely ignore Jimmy Carter and his plan.
Read the whole thing. It details Carter’s falsehoods in describing the facts on the ground and his relationship with the players. The man is a buffoon and a liar, and a useful idiot for the Saudis, who bankroll him.
I wonder if Obama will condemn Carter for “bearing false witness.”
NAH.