Monday December 06, 2004
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Vanity Foul Dedicated to the wanderings of an egotistical mind. |
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Well color me red! Ralph Reed says in a USA Today article
That describes me to a T, yet I voted Blue. And that the "values in school" that I want are critical thinking; not accepting everything you hear/read at face value. I don't feel that "gay marriage" is a threat to heterosexual marriage, I think that divorce is a much greater threat. And I don't believe that the way to reduce the number of abortions is to outlaw them. Outlawing behavior worked real well with alchohol, remember? And it has done wonders with drugs and prostitution. We have to get to the root cause of these problems, why people abuse drugs, why don't people use adequate birth control? [1] I don't have the right answers, but I recognize wrong answers when I hear them; and that is what I heard from the Republican candidates again this year. And yet they won. I believe that is because they gave the easy answers, the ones (most) people wanted to hear, the ones with the least ambiguity. Now don't take this as an attack on those who voted Red. The easy answer is very appealing, especially when no other is given. I don't think the Blue team presented much of any answer, except to occasionally (rarely) say "it isn't that simple." The bright spot? Nearly half of the country recognized it isn't that simple and voted for the guy without a clear solution. [1] Note that several Congress members have suggested outlawing all forms of birth control (I forget their names). How would that reduce teen pregnancies or reduce abortions? Sorry For All The Political Content but nothing has captured my interest more than this (recent) election, before and after. In fact, I've become significantly more motivated post-election, trying to understand the results as they relate to my personal beliefs. Intellectually I understand *what* happened even if I don't understand *why*. Emotionally it makes me sarcastic and bitter. That the results in the last two Presidential elections could be so close (within the margin of error with regard to polls) says that neither side was "right", and that neither side was particularly convincing. It was a "battle of the bases". And those bases appear to have become polar opposites. But I don't think they really are so opposite. I think they have the same goals in mind, so far as making America a better place, they just differ on the means for achieving those objectives. That said, I don't really want a discussion, I pretty well know what you're gonna say (from having visited many sites/blogs from both sides). If you feel you must respond please do so on your own site - you may use trackbacks.
Hate Apache much? This is about the snottiest tone I've ever read in a 'technical' article. Custom favicon.ico Nice tip for creating a favicon for your (Roller) blog. Fighting Words For A Secular America While I value the religious beliefs of everyone, I view the increased tenor of religion mixing in our government as something to fear. Evidently I'm not alone, as Mr's Washington, Franklin and Jefferson agree with me. Tomorrow may be too late A wonderful quote from Martin Luther King Jr. (via William Gibson)
That man provided us with a lot of lasting wisdom, it's a shame he wasn't allowed to live longer. Along with him, I often wonder what our country/world would have been like if Robert Kennedy hadn't been assassinated.
Please make me apologize... The FCC as Marketing Partner. Bloody brilliant! oops, can I say "bloody" on here?
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