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2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

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Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

Sounds good, but one has to wonder if joecct and flaggy will man up and admit their error.

Which is sad in a way. While Flaggy is generally thought of as a lost cause ;) getting people like joecct hooked into this idiocy is sad to see. Shows the deep problems conservatism has. They'll embrace any BS and turn themselves into laughingstocks just in the fleeting hope of scoring one for their side. That's fine if the beef is legit, but really, how many absurd stories have we heard already and we're only half way through Obama's Presidency?

As I often say, people like Dick Morris get paid to make fools of themselves. People like Michelle Bachmann hope to get paid to make fools of themselves. Not sure what the others are getting out of it...

My Dear Rover

I am 57 years old. I am going to assume that I am a few years older than you. I attended college from 1973 - 1977 and with one more year for the Masters, I entered the workforce in the summer of 1978 and was a member until I retired in 2010. I would not call Clarkson a liberal school at the time, but the attitudes were changing. I am also the product of 11 years of Catholic education that had not started to go off the rails too far until late in HS. Hence, my attitudes to some social prospects are a bit more dogmatic and conservative than those who were educated in later decades. I tend to see things more in terms of black and white then shades of grey. When my sociology professor back in 1976 professed that he would not be upset if he saw his son and daughter copulating, it shocked me and other members of the class. Today, I'm not so sure how the class would react.

I still believe in the 10 Commandments. Since I am not Christ or His Mother, sometimes I fail. But the Commandments are the central guidelines for good behavior, wouldn't you agree? Yet, it seems acceptable these days to violate a few (many), and it's OK - as long as you are not caught. And, if you are, repent (preferably in public), and you're OK to continue. The moral today is "don't get caught."

The article may have been 2 months old, but the bill mentioned in the story is an established fact. So, never mind the date, the facts are that a Congresswomen from California (Bay Area) introduced a bill mirroring the California law that could be construed to prohibit counseling to change a child molester's behavior. I pointed out the bill as an example of liberal lunacy. I'd like to change a molester's behavior, wouldn't you? Preferably while he/she is safely behind bars, but if the behavior is latent, then the earlier the better. Fortunately the bill died in committee.

Is conservatism, as you define it (anti liberal), dead? As I understand it, not yet, but it's getting there. Why? Partially because of the me first, anything goes, instant gratification culture that I see the parents teaching and colleges are turning out. Keep it up and the sheer weight of numbers will overwhelm the holdouts. Case in point is homosexual marriage. In the 1970's it was unthinkable. Now it's accepted. Where did the change in attitudes come from? It had to come from somewhere. If the trend started when I was in college, we've had a few generations who have been educated in our "elite" universities to blame the white western male for all of the world's troubles (simplification? yes, but it's prevalent).

Now, you may cite members of the Republican party as "conservatives". Some are - many are not. Barry Goldwater, God rest his soul, was a conservative. Jacob Javits was a liberal. Neither were opportunists. Maybe that's the problem today -- too many opportunists and too few "statesmen".

Sadly, respecting your opponent's views is not the case today. In academia, and on this board, a non-liberal, non progressive attitude is derided. I believe "knuckledragger" is the favored term. Others, particularly in academia, use "racist".

So, where does that leave us (me)? Right now I am wading through the Bowdoin College study. It's interesting and requires much thought as I read it. However, there is a theme in there, which I have observed repeatedly, both here and in other places -- when a liberal's views are questioned, they attack the messenger or the message. Very few will debate the issues.

Am I in favor of homosexual marriage? No. I think the behavior is morally wrong. However, if the state (not Federal) legislature votes it in, then it's legally correct. It may be morally wrong, but it's legal. Ditto with my stance on abortion. In the end, the Supreme Judge will let everyone know who is right/wrong.

I fear that once there is a loosening of moral standards, there will be a tipping point that may (may, Rover, not will) make the times of Nero look tame. I think the Greeks called it Pandora's Box. I wonder what historians will call it for us and the rest of Western Civilization.

So anyway Rover (and others), consider the source of all this back and forth -- a bill introduced by a California female democrat. I leave you with the 2010 words of LA Times columnist Burt Prelutsky
“Frankly, I don’t know what it is about California, but we seem to have a strange urge to elect really obnoxious women to high office. I’m not bragging, you understand, but no other state, including Maine, even comes close. When it comes to sending left-wing dingbats to Washington, we’re number one. There’s no getting around the fact that the last time anyone saw the likes of Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, and Nancy Pelosi, they were stirring a cauldron when the curtain went up on ‘Macbeth’. The three of them are like jackasses who happen to possess the gift of blab. You don’t know if you should condemn them for their stupidity or simply marvel at their ability to form words.”
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

joecct, we need more of the learned and scholarly you and less of the reactionary jack@ ss conservative one. Nice to see you're still in the former camp because we have far too many of the other (who shall remain nameless but they know who they are) out here. Stay away from Breitbart etc just as I don't post links to dailykos or whatever the left site du jour is nowadays.

Not sure where you're going on gay marriage. Personally I don't care either way as its not my job to judge the morality of others if those actions aren't affecting me as I don't know the will of God. Sadly I feel there's a whole host of people both in politics and not in politics, that DO believe they not only know God's will, but have a duty to act on it. That's a whole lotta arrogance IMHO as usually these people are acting on the voices in their head which probably aren't there due to a higher power. :eek: I just hope that whatever I do is good enough at the end of the day for whatever awaits us all.

Back in the day I was for civil unions but not marriage as too many people had a problem with using that term so why not make everyone happy by granting the status but just in a different name. As the issue was decided for me in my state by the courts, I've found that it hasn't changed my life any so why not. If it makes you feel better, I'm pretty sure that throughout history every generations decries the decadence and immorality of the one that comes after it, yet the country still manages to go on. In my pre-teen days, MTV came out and was for sure going to be the end of existence. Then it was people dissecting the deeper meaning of Beavis and Butthead. Look, things change. I think the proliferation of legalized gambling is stupid as well as de-criminalization of drugs because both are build on faulty premises of what is supposed to happen post-legalization. I'm not winning that battle, but that happens. While I'd like to see a world built in my image, the first thing I'd be getting rid of is Boston College, followed by outlawing tall women from wearing high heels. Gays/stoners/etc would be bit further down the priority list.

So at the end of the day the question becomes how to deal with crackpots. I enjoy taking them head on but that's not everybody's style. Not everyone opposed to Obama is a racist of course. However, the motivations of someone who continues to engage in Birtherism need to be looked at, and you can't dismiss the R word. Oppose Obama over tax hikes? No, racism doesn't apply. Want to pass a school voucher bill but exclude Muslim schools? What else would you call that?

EDIT: Just to finish my thought. What I find from my own personal observations is that older conservatives are having a terrible time reconciling the ideology that they knew with the juvenile stupidity that has taken it over. So in choosing between sticking to their guns and joining the herd, they've inevitably chosen to join the herd. For example, I find it hard to believe John McCain believes half the crap that he holds press conferences about but he's desperately trying to fit into something he doesn't understand. There was a time that conservatism represented a true choice of how to govern the country. Now it just seems like spiteful policies targeted at the latest source of outrage (women seeking birth control, muslims, people on public assistance, minority voters) or tax giveaways for big campaign donors. Sometimes its okay to leave an ideology until it gets its act together. Liberalism as governed by Tom Daschle and Dick Gephardt was a freakin' disaster. Conservatism in the hands of Romney/Ryan/Boner/McConnell is even worse.
 
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Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

And whose choice was it to go to that Chaplain? Yeesh. What is this, the complaint society?
The funny (shocking) thing is what did they expect when they went to a Catholic priest. They should have tried an Episcopalian or Unitarian (Have cousins that are ministers in ECUSA or Unitarian).
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

The funny (shocking) thing is what did they expect when they went to a Catholic priest. They should have tried an Episcopalian or Unitarian (Have cousins that are ministers in ECUSA or Unitarian).

I think they expected action, after the altar boy debacle... :eek:

The Episcopalian Church has been going through its own schism of sorts based upon that topic.
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

And why should he have to do that?
Because the Roman Catholic Church teaches that sex outside of marriage is wrong. Remember, it (we) are a Church of Inconvenient Truths.
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

And why should he have to do that?
Because the Roman Catholic Church teaches that sex outside of marriage is wrong. Remember, it (we) are a Church of Inconvenient Truths.
Not just wrong. It's a sin for which you will burn in eternal hellfire. You didn't have pre-marital sex, did you?
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

Not a mortal sin. Venial sin. Unconfessed Mortal Sins get you the express down elevator. Venial sins get you purgatory.
Is that one of those "If I confess it and say five Hail Marys it's all forgiven" sins, or are you heading for Purgatory anyway?
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

Is that one of those "If I confess it and say five Hail Marys it's all forgiven" sins, or are you heading for Purgatory anyway?
Any unconfessed sins get you in trouble with The Man. "What sins you shall forgive they are forgiven. What sins you shall retain, they are retained." Thus the priest, acting alter Christus, forgives your sins. But, you must confess your sins, have remorse, and promise to sin no more (avoid the near occasion of sin).

As to wiping the slate perfectly clean, I am not a theologian, and my Catechism is upstairs, but IIRC, only Baptism wipes the slate pure. The rest, I believe you have to work off your imperfections before you meet St. Peter.
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

Is that one of those "If I confess it and say five Hail Marys it's all forgiven" sins, or are you heading for Purgatory anyway?

What's the old joke? Guy confesses he's stolen some lumber. Priest has him say 5 Hail Mary's. Guy comes back and confesses he's stolen more lumber. Priest has him say 10 Hail Mary's. Guy comes back again, and again confesses to stealing lumber. Priest says: this time, you must make a Novena. Guy says: Father, if you've got the plans, I've got the lumber.
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

I thought I've seen it all. But, apparently not. Ever since the Land o'Lakes statements in the early 70's... But now we have a Catholic college, a Jesuit Catholic college denying recognition to a student chapter of the Knights of Columbus, because its members have to be -- (wait for it)

Catholic

http://www.cardinalnewmansociety.or...mbus-Student-Group-Because-it’s-Catholic.aspx
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

What is the best way to deal with the North Korea problem? Invade? No.

China is at the crux of this. It is China who are equally not behaving to keep Korea in line. They are passively allowing this to happen.

The best way is a full on societal (not government) boycott of Chinese goods to bring awareness to their inaction. It is a peaceful approach. It targets the key player with the influence. And it hits them where it hurts.

Done.
 
Re: 2nd Term - Part 3 - Echo Chambers, Chorales, and Wingnuts, Oh My!

What is the best way to deal with the North Korea problem? Invade? No.

China is at the crux of this. It is China who are equally not behaving to keep Korea in line. They are passively allowing this to happen.

The best way is a full on societal (not government) boycott of Chinese goods to bring awareness to their inaction. It is a peaceful approach. It targets the key player with the influence. And it hits them where it hurts.

Done.

The boycotting countries are going to be hurt more. China can just find other customers.
 
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