Grim

From Salon's War Room:

Twenty-one months after the invasion of Iraq, the U.S. military is on track to post its highest monthly death toll of the war. According to the Associated Press, as of Tuesday, at least 134 soldiers had been killed in November, one shy of the watershed mark set in April this year. As has been the pattern in Iraq for months, U.S. troops are taking roughly 95 percent of the coalition casualties. Since president Bush appeared on the USS Abraham Lincoln in May, 2003, standing beneath a "Mission Accomplished" banner, approximately 1,100 U.S. troops have been killed in Iraq. Nearly 400 have died since June 28, when sovereignty was officially handed over to Iraq.

Of course the fighting in the insurgence outpost of Fallujah -- a battle put off by U.S. commanders until after the U.S. elections -- is driving the spike in causalities. The AP notes, "On Nov. 8, U.S. forces launched an offensive to retake Fallujah, and they have engaged in tough fighting in other cities since then. More than 50 U.S. troops have been killed in Fallujah since then, although the Pentagon has not provided a casualty count for Fallujah for more than a week."

When the final tally for November is calculated sometime in December, the official death toll will likely top 140, a rate of U.S. soldiers killed not seen by the Pentagon since the Vietnam War.

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Ridge Resigns

What a shocker.

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Onward

The newest installment of The Progressive’s McCarthyism Watch focuses on the plight of eighth-grader Stephen Truszkowski from Middletown, Delaware, whose choice of attire has evoked threats of suspension. The t-shirt, made by Stephen’s stepbrother, had two handwritten messages on it:


On the front it said, "The Real Terrorist Is in the White House."

On the back, "End the Tyranny."

Claude McAllister is the principal at Everett Meredith Middle School in Middletown, Delaware, and he didn't take kindly to Truszkowski's shirt. The 13-year-old had worn it to school two times before, according to the News Journal, which broke the story. Both times he had complied with the school's demand that he take the shirt off or put something over it. But this time he wanted to challenge the school's policy.

[…]

"I wore the shirt to school, and they told me to cover it up, and I just refused," he
says. "The school counselor came to my homeroom and he took me to the principal's office, and I spent all first period arguing with the principal about whether the shirt was appropriate or not."

Truszkowski says the principal admitted to having a personal stake in the issue. "He said he was angry because he had a son and a nephew over there," Truszkowski says. "I said I respected them 100 percent, but I didn't respect the reason why they were over there."

According to Truszkowski, Principal McAllister said he was being disruptive and told him that "some of our rights stop right there when we walk through the school door."

McAllister also called Truszkowski a terrorist and taunted him by saying that he should wear a shirt that says, "I'm a terrorist," Truszkowski recalls.

"Why would I do that?" he says he asked the principal.

"Because you're pretty much just splitting the school in half," McAllister said, according to the student.
So, let me get this straight. Stephen should wear a shirt that says, “I’m a terrorist,” because he is splitting the school in half by wearing a shirt that says, “The Real Terrorist is in the White House.” If politically splitting a school in half makes someone a terrorist, then what, pray tell, would Mr. McAllister call someone who splits an entire country? If, by chance, it’s a terrorist, then I believe that makes Stephen’s shirt rather accurate by Mr. McAllister’s own definition. I suppose the only bone he might have to pick with the sentiment is that Bush should be wearing the shirt, instead of Stephen.

McAllister did not return my phone call. Nor did the superintendent of the Appoquinimink School District. It has a policy that says students can't wear clothes that are distracting or that hinder the educational process, the News Journal noted. Lillian Miles, a district spokeswoman, told the paper that Truszkowski's shirt "has now become a distraction."
I don’t suppose that has anything to do with the kid being called down to the principal’s office each time he wears it.
Truszkowski himself is eager to challenge the school's policies-in court, if he has to.

"I'm not fighting it just for me or anything," he says. " I want students in fourth or fifth grade and students in the future to be able to express themselves on issues without being suspended."
Stephen’s story is just the latest in a string of stories about heavy-handed tactics being used against proponents of this administration. It starts from the top down. When torture tactics are used without hesitation, when our intelligence agencies are purged of those who refuse to march in lockstep, when groups of dissenters are infiltrated by government operatives, we can expect nothing less of those who share the administration’s views when they find themselves in a position of authority over anyone who disagrees.

Children will be punished, people will be fired, and families will be harassed; this cannot let us dampen our determination. Indeed, these continued assaults on the demonstrations of our sensibilities should serve to motivate us as we persist in our efforts to hold back this tide of subjugation. It waits to wash over this great land at the first sign of a flagging vigilance against its current.

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Ed Paschke

I read last night that the artist Ed Paschke died over Thanksgiving. If you’re not familiar with his work, a gallery can be viewed at his website.

His art was bold and unique, and people tend to have a visceral reaction to it—they either loved it or hated it. I fall into the former category, having originally fallen in love with Matinee (below), and later attending a Paschke exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago, where I became enamored with the rest of his work. It’s atypical of the art I tend to appreciate, but for some reason it moved me. At the exhibition, I bought a small reprint of Matinee, which now, almost half my life later, I still hold onto—tucked into a box of mementos from an age where life was nothing but art and books and films and wonder, set to a soundtrack of The Smiths.

This doesn’t really have anything to do with politics. Ed Paschke just happened to be a man whose art fascinated and thrilled me. Thanks for sharing your vision with us, Ed.


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Al Rules

BlondeSense heavily excerpts the transcript from this Sunday’s Meet the Press, which featured Dr. Jerry Falwell, The Faith and Values Coalition; Dr. Richard Land, President, Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, Southern Baptist Convention; Reverend Al Sharpton, National Action Network; and Reverend Jim Wallis, Convener, Call to Renewal, Editor, Sojourners Magazine. Check out the MSN transcript to see the full exchange between the right- and left-leaning men of faith.

My favorite quote, however, comes from the Rev. Al Sharpton on the question of trying to legislate a Christian morality:

We're talking about whether we have the right to impose what we believe on people that may disagree with us. Even God gives you a choice of heaven and hell. We don't have a right to tell people we're going to force them to live in a way that we want them to live…
Even God gives you a choice of heaven and hell. Absolutely brilliant.

Say what you like about the Rev. Al (and yes, I know he has baggage), but he has been on fire recently. He was awesome in the primary debates, and even better at the Democratic Convention. I don’t think he’s Oval Office material (having never held an elected office, for a start), but I don’t believe he thinks he is, really, either. His unique voice comes from the fact that he will likely never be a viable candidate, which allows him to say things that someone like Senator Kerry cannot.

I’m glad to have Rev. Al on our side. He says it like it is, and I like that about him immensely.

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Matthew Shepard News

20/20 recently aired a special that sought to undermine the hate crime definition of Matthew Shepard’s murder. I see no intrinsic value to their decision to air this appalling revisionist history, but nonetheless, they did. Pam’s House Blend has a good synopsis of what aired, and also reprints Matthew’s parents’ response to the show.

And I will, of course, have to revoke Andrew Sullivan’s Tentative Conservative Hero Award, since he saw fit to take part in the whole sordid debacle. One step forward, two steps back, Sully.

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Talk about an Evolution, well….

Majikthise has an interesting post addressing the evolution vs. creationism issue. (How and why this is even still an issue is a topic for another day.) It lays out a very reasoned argument as to why those who advocate evolution cannot be accused of forcing a secular worldview on creationists, which I suspect is an argument many of us would be wise to have at hand in the foreseeable future.

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Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes

It was nice to take a little break from the news, I have to admit. To get us all back into the swing of things, I’ll start with some good news. Mr. Furious directed me to an article by Leonard Steinhorn at Salon (you may need to watch an ad to read it) that takes a look at the hope for progressiveness’ future. Apparently, when all the old fogies die, things will start looking up:

How little the "moral values" voter represents the future is evident in surveys of today's youth, who may be the most inclusive, tolerant and socially liberal generation in our nation's history. From the media we hear all about the controversies of the so-called culture war, such as the occasional school superintendent who shuts down all school clubs to keep gay and straight high school students from forming "gay-straight" clubs. But what we don't hear is that these clubs have quietly formed in about 2,800 schools nationwide. In fact, research on young people confirms that they have little patience for intolerance, that they have no problem accepting homosexuality, that most even support the right of gay people to marry.

Indeed, today's youth reject many of the social rigidities, prejudices and orthodoxies of old. As many as half of all teens say they've dated across racial or ethnic lines, including more than a third of white teens, and most of these are "serious" relationships. On race, homosexuality, premarital sex, gender roles, the environment and issues involving personal choice and freedom, younger Americans consistently fall on the liberal and more tolerant side of the spectrum.

If younger voters were the only ones with these attitudes, social conservatives might be able to lay claim to a "moral values" mandate for a very long time. But younger voters represent the mainstream much more than the initial exit polling would indicate. The illusion of a predominant "moral values" voting bloc has much to do with the fact that the most traditional and socially conservative Americans, pre-baby boomers, are living much longer lives and voting in very large numbers -- skewing exit polls and thus our image of the mainstream. Once younger voters begin to replace them, the socially conservative vote will return to the margins of American life.
I would have liked to see Steinhorn address in some way the tendency for people to trend conservative as they age, although perhaps that’s simply not quantifiable.

And, although Churchill famously said (to paraphrase) if you’re not a liberal at 20 then you don’t have a heart, and if you’re not a conservative at 40 then you don’t have a brain, I wonder is it really that people’s views change, or is it that the world changes, and someone who seems a liberal by 2004 standards will seem a conservative by 2024 standards? Hopefully, it’s a combination of the two, as neither option seems very attractive. I’d like to think that my views will change to reflect a world that is changing.

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Leisure Reading

Interesting diary at DailyKos that's worth a read, including the comments thread. Written by a former conservative, the author and the commenters make some really great points about individualism, empathy, change of hearts, and other issues that have some real relevance to those on the Left who might seek to change hearts and minds. Check it out.

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Happy Thanksgiving

I'm thankful for Mr. Shakespeare's Sister. (I guess that would make him Shakespeare's Brother-in-Law.) I'm thankful for my family. I'm thankful for Mr. Furious and his partner, Mr. Curious, for Ben Grimm, for the Evil Herbivore, for (Fuck-off-I'm) The Queen, for the World's Biggest Alice Cooper Fan, and all my other friends, even the conservative ones.

Happy Thanksgiving, everybody.


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Mr. Furious and Shakes

Highly illogical.

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Oh Shit

Salon's War Room Quote of the Day:

"My fellow conservatives, we have waited our entire lives for the chance the American people have given us in the next two years. I pledge to each and every one of you, we will seize it."

-- House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Tx., regarding the outcome of election '04 in a recent speech.

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Identity Crisis

After signing up on the DraftHoward site, which is dedicated to generating support for Howard Dean as DNC chair, I received an email from the site’s proprietor, Kevin Thurman, which included some thoughts about the future of the party. One passage in particular struck me:

This is a contest about who we are. Are we a party that says, "We're for everything the president says, except for the truly horrible things"?
What a great question. It’s one our party is really struggling to answer at the moment.

On the one hand, we have Harry Reid, our new Democratic leader, wheeling and dealing with the administration to secure a position for his personal nuclear advisor on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in exchange for letting 175 of Bush’s appointees take office without contestation. As part of the deal, Reid’s choice, Gregory Jaczko, will be granted a 2-year term.

A Reid spokeswoman, Tessa Hafen, said that the agreement "in no way prohibits (Jaczko) from being renominated."
However:

Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., who opposed Jaczko's nomination, said he was comfortable with the arrangement after, he said, the White House assured him Jaczko would not be renominated by the president after his two years.
Huh. And although Reid was keen to secure Jaczko’s appointment because of their shared opposition to the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste project 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas,
[u]nder the compromise reached on the NRC nominations, Jaczko agreed not to participate in any Yucca Mountain related matters for the first year of his two-year term.
So, somebody explain to me how this was a good deal.

On the other hand, we have House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi still fighting the good fight against the outrageous IRS provision in the omnibus spending bill that still has yet to be official axed.
"The assault on taxpayer privacy was not a simple mistake, and Democrats will not let Republicans sweep it under the rug," Pelosi said.
Pelosi seems to be answering Thurman’s question in a manner befitting a Democratic leader. Reid, however, seems to be exemplifying more of the capitulation tactics that have plagued our party for the last four years. So which is it, Dems? Are we really going to oppose this administration’s incompetent and dangerous policies with everything we’ve got, or are we only going to take exception to the truly horrible things?

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Post Waste

AMERICAblog has a follow-up to the WaPo’s anti-gay advertising insert here. (If you still haven’t seen it, RawStory.com is now hosting the zipped file—click here to download.) I honestly don’t have the time to dedicate to writing the rant and rave the Post’s response truly deserves. Check out John’s post to see some of the other disgusting myths about gay men perpetrated by one of the insert’s authors. Briefly, however:

"We will not allow something hateful to go in the paper," Post Publisher Boisfeuillet Jones Jr. said, indicating he did not believe this incident involved a hateful message. "Gay marriage is a public issue and matter of public debate, and we believed its point of view has a right to be expressed."
First of all, nice name.

Secondly, this statement is entirely different than the suggestion (made pitifully by Marc Rosenberg, manager of corporate and public policy advertising for the Post) that it's simply an advertisement. Saying that the content of that insert was a point of view that has a right to be expressed arguably falls just short of an explicit endorsement of the expressed opinion. There's no debate, however, that the statement breathes legitimacy into the claims of the insert. Sure, I believe someone has the right to express the opinion that Mars is populated by giant green apes, but if I publish a periodical that has any integrity, I don't give that person space (paid or otherwise) to advance such ludicrous claims.
Post Ombudsman Mike Getler: "They might have insisted more that this be in a format that was clearly not a magazine. You could argue that the disclosure could have been larger. But the Post did not commit a sin by accepting it."
Interesting wording, 'commit a sin.' I sincerely doubt that anyone wrote to the Post accusing them of sinning; rather, it was likely that, like myself, people wrote demanding an explanation for the printing and distribution of what amounted to glorified propaganda. I’m curious whether the Post would have considered it a sin to reject the incoherent ramblings of this "Christian" group and their obvious agenda. Doesn't this strike anyone else as a particularly odd word choice to invoke in their defense of this piece? I find it highly disturbing that the ombudsman would use the language of the group advancing this anti-gay message in his response to complaints against it. It seems very strange and inappropriate to me, and somehow unprofessional, to include any reference to "sin" in this exchange. That's giving a wink and a nod to the authors of the piece, in my opinion.

John Aravosis suggests the following action, which I recommend, in addition to canceling your Post subscription, if you have one:
Contact the Post's ombudsman, Mike Getler. Try to explain to him why you consider this flyer (below) hateful, and be sure to ask him how the Post would feel about a similar ad about Jews or blacks and their physical inferiority to other races and peoples, and how that relates to those minorities not deserving civil rights:

- ombudsman@washpost.com
- (202) 334-7582

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Stupid is as stupid does...

For those of you unfamiliar with the comings and goings of Britain’s Royal Buffoons, you should know that a former Royal employee, who is claiming that she was passed over for promotion due to sexual discrimination, is suing our dear Prince of Wales. In the media fracas that inevitably followed, a memo was leaked from the Prince’s office, which made his feelings on the matter quite clear:


What is wrong with people now? Why do they all seem to think they are qualified to do things far beyond their technical capabilities? This is to do with the learning culture in schools as a consequence of a child-centered system which admits no failure. People seem to think they can all be pop stars, high court judges, brilliant TV personalities or infinitely more competent heads of state without ever putting in the necessary work or having natural ability. This is the result of social utopianism which believes humanity can be genetically and socially engineered to contradict the lessons of history.

It’s not very often that I agree with Prince Charles - after all, this is a man who talks to his houseplants, but in general I think his clumsily expressed sentiment to be a good one. The Prince has, of course, been guillotined in the mainstream press for what seemed to many an elitist put-down, but more serious commentators have adopted a less hysterical interpretation. Andrew Sullivan, writing in The New Republic (subscription required) had this to say:


And this, of course, cuts to the chase of the meritocratic project. The inequalities of ability are far more crushing than the inequalities of a rigid class system. And the great mixed blessing of a democracy in which everyone has a chance at success is that inequality of results seems crueler and starker. It cannot be blamed away.
Sullivan’s comment is interesting to me because I think it explains how, in the middle of the Information Age, the fundamentalist right and their champion, Dubya, have been able to enjoy so much success. It had never occurred to me before how hard it must be to be stupid in a world that values information, and the ability to interpret it, above all else. It’s no wonder these people are pissed off; especially when, as Sullivan says, “It cannot be blamed away.” That these phillistines, in a desperate search for validation, have retreated into theologies that celebrate ignorance, and voted ignorant people into office should come as no surprise. They have no place in the modern world, they know it, and so they’re fighting desperately to change it.

Unfortunately for us, there seem to be an awful lot of stupid people: 59 million or so just in the United States alone.

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Updates

Greetings to new posting member Ben Grimm, who no doubt wants pie and a Coke, even though he doesn't need to eat.

Also, there's a new contact link at right. Email with topic suggestions, blogs that should be included in links, etc. Long, rambling missives about why I'm an idiot also seem popular. Bring it on, Righties.

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Sigh

Why does the Rude Pundit always make me laugh and cry at the same time?

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National Perks

I think these wingnuts have always existed, but now they’re being given a scarily prominent voice in the mainstream media. There’s some disagreement about whether the Bush administration is really going to cater to the conservative Christians as much as they hope, but there’s no doubt that the media is honoring their perceived mandate by publishing each new ridiculous demand, thereby giving them a legitimacy they never before enjoyed.

For roughly a decade, a film has been shown to visitors at Washington's Lincoln Memorial, depicting historic events that have taken place there -- from civil rights marches to antiwar demonstrations.

[…]

"It showed only those liberal, pro-abortion, pro-homosexual marches," said [the Rev. Lou] Sheldon, chairman of the Traditional Values Coalition.

Sheldon's influential Christian conservative group took its complaint to the government's top levels -- "so they could reach down and work their system and cleanse in a proper manner and make it fair and balanced," he said.

Sheldon would like film of some conservative marches intercut as well, though it is unclear whether any major conservative marches have taken place at the Lincoln Memorial itself, which is the film's focus.

The National Park Service is currently reviewing the contents of the film and debating whether it should remove images that Sheldon finds inappropriate -- including, for example, one visual of a protester holding a sign reading: "The Lord is my shepherd and knows I'm gay."

Some Park Service personnel resent having to edit the film.

"They felt that there was a political effort to rewrite history, to edit out gays, feminists, war protesters," said Jeffrey Ruch, executive director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, a nonprofit group.

I don’t think I’m going out on a limb here by suggesting that Park Service personnel might also be resentful that the National Park Service would even consider editing the film based on one man’s opinion of its content. Does my opinion, as blogmaven of Shakespeare’s Sister, that the aforementioned visual doesn’t bother me carry the same weight?

The fight over who controls the portrayal of history is playing out all over country, from the Lincoln Memorial to the Grand Canyon.

Park bookstores at the Grand Canyon now sell the book "Grand Canyon: A Different View," which contradicts science, saying the Grand Canyon was formed by the great flood from the Bible story of Noah.

The book was written by a "born again" river guide who writes that his view of the canyon's being millions of years old changed after he "met the Lord. Now, I have 'a different view' of the Canyon, which, according to a biblical time scale, can't possibly be more than about a few thousand years old."

Letters to the park service from leaders of the scientific community protest the inclusion of the book alongside those based on science.

"The book is not about geology but, rather, advances a narrow religious view about the Earth," wrote seven presidents of scientific organizations -- including the Paleontological Society, American Geophysical Union and Geological Society of America -- in a December 2003 letter. "We urge you to remove the book from shelves where buyers are given the impression that the book is about Earth science and its content endorsed by the National Park Service."
Despite the National Park Services’ statutory mandate to “promote the use of sound science in all its programs, including public education," the book remains on their shelves. One man writes a book that is denounced by multiple leaders of the scientific community, and the book keeps its place. This is beyond an overextension of an alleged mandate; this is total acquiescence to extremism. There may very well be an appropriate place for a book suggesting that the Grand Canyon owes its existence to the great flood, but it is not at a federally-funded park site that promotes sound science.

"During the Clinton administration, it's like we felt like we lived in outer Siberia," Sheldon said, "and [during] this past administration, it's like we died and went to heaven and got a preview of what's to come."

“What’s to come” being, of course, making those hedonistic, heretic liberals feel like they live in outer Siberia.

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Protect Dis!

For awhile now, clever liberal heteros have been pointing out that using the term “protection of marriage” to advance an anti-gay agenda is, well, kinda bullshit, as many of us feel our marriages need no such protection.

Apparently, the Christian Right has now clacked on to this:

"Protection of marriage" is now the watchword for many activists fighting to prevent gays and lesbians from marrying. Some conservatives, however, say marriage in America began unraveling long before the latest gay-rights push and are pleading for a fresh, soul-searching look at the institution.

"When you talk about protecting marriage, you need to talk about divorce," said Bryce Christensen, a Southern Utah University professor who writes frequently about family issues.

While Christensen doesn't oppose the campaign to enact state and federal bans on gay marriage, he worries it's distracting from immediate threats to marriage's place in society.

"If those initiatives are part of a broader effort to reaffirm lifetime fidelity in marriage, they're worthwhile," he said. "If they're isolated — if we don't address cohabitation and casual divorce and deliberate childlessness — then I think they're futile and will be brushed aside."
Deliberate childlessness. I suppose it doesn’t occur to Mr. Christensen that some couples may be deliberately childless because they can’t afford to have children. Not threatening as much as responsible, really. And, anecdotally, the couples I know who are deliberately childless tend to have great marriages. I do, however, know a few ex-couples whose attempts to save their marriages by having a child didn’t work out so well.

"That was the best argument same-sex marriage advocates had: 'Where were you when no-fault divorce went through?'" said Allan Carlson, a conservative scholar who runs a family-studies center in Rockford, Ill. "Any thoughtful defender of marriage has to say, 'You're right. We were asleep at the switch in the '60s and '70s.'"
Looking at the marriage success rates of some prominent conservatives (say, Newt Gingrich or Rush Limbaugh, for example), I’d guess that napping wasn’t as much the problem as being preoccupied by divorce attorneys.

Carlson decries no-fault divorce, where neither spouse is held responsible for the breakup, but acknowledges that its demise is not imminent. He proposes more modest steps: tax revisions benefiting married couples…

Tax revisions benefiting married couples is an awesome idea! The best way to strengthen hetero marriages is to widen the divide between the privileges granted straights and gays.

…a more positive portrayal of marriage in textbooks…

I don’t remember negative portrayals of marriage in any textbooks while I was in school. I do, however, remember it being widely known that several of the married teachers were having affairs; that I once saw the married assistant superintendent of schools making out with the married vice principal at the mall; and that the principal left his wife and married one of the guidance counselors.

…policies aiding young college graduates so they could afford to marry sooner.

Excellent idea. Because everyone knows, the younger you get married, the better your chances of success are.

Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and his wife have invited 1,000 couples to join them in a Valentine's Day (news - web sites) covenant marriage ceremony in which they would voluntarily reduce their options for a quick divorce.
Aww, how sweet. I heart Gov. Huckabee.

"For decades, Christians have been guilty for having a weak defense of marriage," [Jordan Lorence, a Phoenix-based lawyer with the conservative Alliance Defense Fund] told the Christian Post earlier this year. "Marriage has become a junior high school dating scene where if I am unhappy I could divorce my husband or wife and move on to someone else."

Which is bad, because the Christian way is to make sure you wallow as long as possible in an unhappy situation. And if Mr. Christensen has his way, your brood of children can wallow in it with you.

One group, the Alliance for Marriage, has focused almost entirely in the past two years on advocating a federal amendment that would ban gay marriage. The alliance's president, Matt Daniels, said the proposed ban is an essential starting point for other initiatives to strengthen heterosexual marriage — such as promoting family-friendly workplace policies.
Like banning women from the workplace. That way, there will plenty of jobs for the men, and the women can all stay home and raise babies. Sorry, barren women. Don’t know what you’ll do, since you can’t get married, either. Maybe you should try Canada.

"Heterosexuals changed marriage, not gays and lesbians," [Stephanie Coontz, a professor at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash., and author of a new history of marriage] said. "None of these measures is going to change the fact that marriage no longer plays the same central economic and political role that it used to. ... People see it as more optional."
That’s right. Marriage has changed because women wanted equal rights. They demanded equal opportunity and equal pay for equal work, and once they got it (or close to it), they realized they didn’t have to get married to survive anymore, thereby making marriage a choice, as well it should be. And all things being equal, it should be a choice for everybody.

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Whip It Good

Jesus’ General, who as we know is a 10 on the manly scale of absolute gender, calls our attention to the outrageous dismissal of a high school principal:

Jesus has become an outlaw in our secular society. First they outlawed state-sponsored prayer in schools. Then, they enacted hate laws so that we could no longer witness to homosexuals using our steel-toed boots of brotherhood. Now, a principal has been fired for demonstrating a little old-fashioned Christian discipline. When will it end?
The Anchorage Daily News’ Zaz Hollander has the story:
Matanuska Christian School's principal has been fired and a teacher has quit over a disciplinary incident in which the principal had himself whipped in front of two students.

Principal Steve Unfreid, who said he was inspired in his choice of disciplinary tactics by the actions of Jesus, asked teacher Joe Brost to whip him in front of two male students in the school's basement last month after the boys were caught kissing girls in the locker room for the second time in a week.

Unfreid, in an interview Friday at his home, acknowledged he should have called the boys' parents first but expressed no regret for his behavior.

The school's board of directors unanimously decided in a closed door session Sunday to fire Unfreid.

[…]

The decision to take the boys' punishment on himself showed a form of Christianity that was too radical for some members of the school community, Unfreid said, sitting cross-legged on a leather couch in his Wasilla living room Friday afternoon.

[…]

When the two seniors, 17 and 18, got caught kissing girls in front of younger students in late October, Unfreid said that while contemplating what discipline to hand out, he woke at 3 a.m. and prayed how to avoid expelling them. He said that was when he remembered years ago he had cured his son of chronic lying by telling his son to hit him with a wooden ladle instead of spanking the youngster.

Later at school, Unfreid walked the boys down to a basement room with Brost. He told them, " 'Guys, this has gotta stop,' " he said. " 'I've let the atmosphere get too lax. I share in this discipline. This is a one-time deal.' "

Then the principal took off his belt, gave it to Brost, and instructed the teacher to "discipline me like you would discipline your own son," he recalled.

He told the teacher to stop only when the students acknowledged their mistake. The whole thing, starting with the trip downstairs, lasted 5 to 10 minutes, he said.

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