Yes it sounds strange, but its both amusing and informative:
http://www.catsprn.com/twelve_sti_xmas.htm
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Clarification, with sadness (Hobd)
Earlier today I responded to a post of Brad Drell's on the Hob/d listserv. While I intended that post to go directly to Brad, instead I accidentally sent it to the entire listserv. In it, I basically thanked him for his direct response to posts regarding San Joaquin and mentioned my dismay at much of the angry discourse on the listserv.
I'll admit I usually love the Episcopal Church and its structured liturgy and polity. I love the unity and tolerance of different ideas and of each other that I found when I came to the Episcopal Church as well as the idea that we could "agree to disagree." I loved that we could all read the gospel and follow it to where we believe God is leading us without believing that those who believed it took them somewhere else were heretical.
But I'm not seeing that anymore.
There is name calling, self-confidence, and scorn. I see that people are hurt and I can feel much of that hurt. It is sad and painful that so many people have been forced to bear the weight of closemindedness as ignorance, but that is no reason for pride at the expense of others who truly believe that what we call progress is in fact a regression.
Similarly, there should be no source of pride at schism in God's church, and indeed, on the Hobd listserv we often forget that. Lost in canon and tradition is that, in the end, God wants his whole church to be his.
When I ran as an alternate for convention deputy I wanted to make a difference: I wanted to help people and be part of a body that helps to glorify God. That exists to the glory of God.
After Minneapolis I felt like I had found that body. After Columbus I found I have to separate my faith from my religion.
I am so sick of all this fighting. I'm sick of people being hurt and ostracized in the name of God. And I think that's what bugs me most of all: it doesn't seem like it is to the glory of God, it seems like this arguing is for tradition and to make sure we are following canon law. Yes, the canons and tradition are important, I'm Jewish, I know that.
I don't want to see litigation. I understand why it must be done, but I also feel that it is being done as ferociously as possible. I don't envy +KJS. Nothing she can do is "right" and and she is fairing quite well. If people feel they must leave, then leave. If people honestly feel they cannot act and worship to the glory of God in TEC then leave, but please don't drag us down with you.
I love the Anglican Communion, The Episcopal Church, the people, its liturgy, its respect for law, and its polity. But please, don't forget that first and foremost, we are working to do God's will and worship and praise God. Isn't that what the church is for?
I'll admit I usually love the Episcopal Church and its structured liturgy and polity. I love the unity and tolerance of different ideas and of each other that I found when I came to the Episcopal Church as well as the idea that we could "agree to disagree." I loved that we could all read the gospel and follow it to where we believe God is leading us without believing that those who believed it took them somewhere else were heretical.
But I'm not seeing that anymore.
There is name calling, self-confidence, and scorn. I see that people are hurt and I can feel much of that hurt. It is sad and painful that so many people have been forced to bear the weight of closemindedness as ignorance, but that is no reason for pride at the expense of others who truly believe that what we call progress is in fact a regression.
Similarly, there should be no source of pride at schism in God's church, and indeed, on the Hobd listserv we often forget that. Lost in canon and tradition is that, in the end, God wants his whole church to be his.
When I ran as an alternate for convention deputy I wanted to make a difference: I wanted to help people and be part of a body that helps to glorify God. That exists to the glory of God.
After Minneapolis I felt like I had found that body. After Columbus I found I have to separate my faith from my religion.
I am so sick of all this fighting. I'm sick of people being hurt and ostracized in the name of God. And I think that's what bugs me most of all: it doesn't seem like it is to the glory of God, it seems like this arguing is for tradition and to make sure we are following canon law. Yes, the canons and tradition are important, I'm Jewish, I know that.
I don't want to see litigation. I understand why it must be done, but I also feel that it is being done as ferociously as possible. I don't envy +KJS. Nothing she can do is "right" and and she is fairing quite well. If people feel they must leave, then leave. If people honestly feel they cannot act and worship to the glory of God in TEC then leave, but please don't drag us down with you.
I love the Anglican Communion, The Episcopal Church, the people, its liturgy, its respect for law, and its polity. But please, don't forget that first and foremost, we are working to do God's will and worship and praise God. Isn't that what the church is for?
Sunday, December 23, 2007
Sweeney Todd
Sweeney Todd = Great.
Enjoyed it more than the Broadway revival (even if they did take out The Ballad of Sweeney Todd. and its not a flashback)
Its great, go see it.
(If you don't know the plot, don't take the kids... during the viewing I attended there were some far too young audience members).
I assume most of you know better.
So go see it! What are you reading this for?
More later,
Peace and if I get distracted and don't write more,
Merry Christmas
Enjoyed it more than the Broadway revival (even if they did take out The Ballad of Sweeney Todd. and its not a flashback)
Its great, go see it.
(If you don't know the plot, don't take the kids... during the viewing I attended there were some far too young audience members).
I assume most of you know better.
So go see it! What are you reading this for?
More later,
Peace and if I get distracted and don't write more,
Merry Christmas
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
New GraSP homepage
I've just redesigned the index page for the Grace-St. Paul's website (you can see the former design in all the inner links).
Any comments or feedback would be greatly appreciated.
http://www.gracestpaul.org
Any comments or feedback would be greatly appreciated.
http://www.gracestpaul.org
Monday, December 17, 2007
Just... One... More....
DAY!!! One more day then FREEDOM!!!! (ish)
really, its going to be a rather busy semester break.
really, its going to be a rather busy semester break.
Monday, December 10, 2007
Behind the Scenes at Guantanamo Bay (its not what you think)
Where the media can't even take you.
Professor Marc Falkoff of Northern Illinois University (and editor of Poems from Guantanamo - all proceeds benefit the Center for Constitutional Rights)acts as legal representation to 13 prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. He has been able to go where the media and even the United Nations has not been allowed. Rutgers Amnesty International invited Falkoff to speak about his experiences.
The experience was nauseating, and as someone who grew up in love with America, it made me embarrassed as an American. I took five pages of handwritten notes. I'm just posting them as I took them as I can't handle making sense of them (scroll down a bit for conditions, that's later so that you can first understand why I feel as it do).
-----------------------------------
Of the men in Guantanamo :
770 have been through Gitmo.
Of that 10 have been charged with a crime.
1 has been convicted
3 have been reconvicted.
Only 5% were captured on the battlefield.
Only 8% have been accused of having any Al Quaeda affiliation.
One was picked up in Cairo, another in a university dorm.
Yes of all of those, the vast majority have been charged with NO CRIME!!!
I bet you didn't know that.
The Democratic congressmen didn't.
----The Democrats are in power, they don't even know what's going on at Gitmo. When they passed the Guantanamo Treatment Act many senators said they had "known" these men had been convicted of heinous crimes.
- Many of the men at convicted haven't been convicted of anything, and there is no real evidence held against some.
*Some are dangerous, but most are what they say they are - students, shepherds, men seeking medical treatment (hence country hopping).
*The government has stripped them of their governmental rights
- they are no longer guaranteed their "day in court"
*What role does the law have in policing the government?
*It took three years for lawyers to be allowed to go down there (it is all pro bono)
- lawyers are not allowed to tell the prisoners the evidence held against them
- the military is under orders not to call them prisoners (instead detainees) as to not invoke the Geneva Convention
*Many were deemed not to be "enemy combatants" but were forced to have their cases reviewed and reviewed until the those classifying them would eventually submit and call them enemy combatants.
*The military contends that even if the majority were exonerated in court they would still be considered "Enemy combatants" and held.
*Since the vast majority of prisoners were not captured in uniform, they are not POWs so the law of war does not apply, but the US is calling them "enemy combatants (which doesn't mean anything) and is claiming the Geneva Convention does not apply.
*Prisoners are not allowed to be told of Supreme Court decisions relating to Guantanamo
*Courts will not allow layers to bring doctors (courts claim there is adequate if not superior medicate care) - a prisoner coughing up blood was not allowed to go to the infirmary
*Prisoners can be moved w/o notification to the lawyers, often to Saudi Arabia or Jordan to be tortured.
*Almost all court documents have been taken from the prisoners b/c the men who committed suicide had lawyers representing them .
*Judges are no longer allowed to intervene on prisoner's behalf
*When prisoners committed suicide out of desperation the US govt called it a "political move."
*Hunger strikes are called a "voluntary fast," suicide is called "politically motivated self-injury"
*Most prisoners are afraid to commit suicide fearing it would be viewed as cowardice and they would go to "hell"
*Letters to or from families are used as leverage so many stop writing
* Kept prisoners in open air cages (open to tropical wind and sun) with only two buckets (one for water, one for feces).
*Guantanamo Bay has its own sub-climate -- its awful.
*as punishment, guards would remove prisoners pants so they couldn't pray
-would shave their beards
- would smear "menstrual blood" (really red ink, but the prisoners don't know) on their chests
- would remove mattress and make prisoners sleep on steel
*Riot police can beat a prisoner senseless with weapon if prisoner accidentally steps or TRIPS over a colored line while food is delivered
*According to the military's own logs, Detainee 063 was tortured. All information gathered during torture is assumed true. It was later found out that Detainee was not guilty of what he was accused as the true person they were looking for was later found.
*770 men have been sent through Guantanamo, 440 have been sent home or to third countries. The US govn't refuses to admit it has made any mistakes. If these men are really the worst of the worst -- as Cheney said, these men had to be blindfolded and gagged for the 20+hour plane ride to Gitmo so they wouldn't gnaw through the wires, how is it that they are no longer a danger?
---------------------------------
Mitt Romney said that he wants to double the size of Guantanamo Bay. That scares me. A lot. We are imprisoning innocent men who are just trying to live their lives. We are scaring them and angering them and torturing them. How can we be proud to represent that, or support those who are doing that?
As Falkoff said about himself: "His fighting for what America is all about. He is fighting for the soul of America." He hangs a flag outside his house and supports a country under our constitution.
He is called a traitor, but I believe he is a patriot. I only wish we all could be so brave.
Professor Marc Falkoff of Northern Illinois University (and editor of Poems from Guantanamo - all proceeds benefit the Center for Constitutional Rights)acts as legal representation to 13 prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. He has been able to go where the media and even the United Nations has not been allowed. Rutgers Amnesty International invited Falkoff to speak about his experiences.
The experience was nauseating, and as someone who grew up in love with America, it made me embarrassed as an American. I took five pages of handwritten notes. I'm just posting them as I took them as I can't handle making sense of them (scroll down a bit for conditions, that's later so that you can first understand why I feel as it do).
-----------------------------------
Of the men in Guantanamo :
770 have been through Gitmo.
Of that 10 have been charged with a crime.
1 has been convicted
3 have been reconvicted.
Only 5% were captured on the battlefield.
Only 8% have been accused of having any Al Quaeda affiliation.
One was picked up in Cairo, another in a university dorm.
Yes of all of those, the vast majority have been charged with NO CRIME!!!
I bet you didn't know that.
The Democratic congressmen didn't.
----The Democrats are in power, they don't even know what's going on at Gitmo. When they passed the Guantanamo Treatment Act many senators said they had "known" these men had been convicted of heinous crimes.
- Many of the men at convicted haven't been convicted of anything, and there is no real evidence held against some.
*Some are dangerous, but most are what they say they are - students, shepherds, men seeking medical treatment (hence country hopping).
*The government has stripped them of their governmental rights
- they are no longer guaranteed their "day in court"
*What role does the law have in policing the government?
*It took three years for lawyers to be allowed to go down there (it is all pro bono)
- lawyers are not allowed to tell the prisoners the evidence held against them
- the military is under orders not to call them prisoners (instead detainees) as to not invoke the Geneva Convention
*Many were deemed not to be "enemy combatants" but were forced to have their cases reviewed and reviewed until the those classifying them would eventually submit and call them enemy combatants.
*The military contends that even if the majority were exonerated in court they would still be considered "Enemy combatants" and held.
*Since the vast majority of prisoners were not captured in uniform, they are not POWs so the law of war does not apply, but the US is calling them "enemy combatants (which doesn't mean anything) and is claiming the Geneva Convention does not apply.
*Prisoners are not allowed to be told of Supreme Court decisions relating to Guantanamo
*Courts will not allow layers to bring doctors (courts claim there is adequate if not superior medicate care) - a prisoner coughing up blood was not allowed to go to the infirmary
*Prisoners can be moved w/o notification to the lawyers, often to Saudi Arabia or Jordan to be tortured.
*Almost all court documents have been taken from the prisoners b/c the men who committed suicide had lawyers representing them .
*Judges are no longer allowed to intervene on prisoner's behalf
*When prisoners committed suicide out of desperation the US govt called it a "political move."
*Hunger strikes are called a "voluntary fast," suicide is called "politically motivated self-injury"
*Most prisoners are afraid to commit suicide fearing it would be viewed as cowardice and they would go to "hell"
*Letters to or from families are used as leverage so many stop writing
* Kept prisoners in open air cages (open to tropical wind and sun) with only two buckets (one for water, one for feces).
*Guantanamo Bay has its own sub-climate -- its awful.
*as punishment, guards would remove prisoners pants so they couldn't pray
-would shave their beards
- would smear "menstrual blood" (really red ink, but the prisoners don't know) on their chests
- would remove mattress and make prisoners sleep on steel
*Riot police can beat a prisoner senseless with weapon if prisoner accidentally steps or TRIPS over a colored line while food is delivered
*According to the military's own logs, Detainee 063 was tortured. All information gathered during torture is assumed true. It was later found out that Detainee was not guilty of what he was accused as the true person they were looking for was later found.
*770 men have been sent through Guantanamo, 440 have been sent home or to third countries. The US govn't refuses to admit it has made any mistakes. If these men are really the worst of the worst -- as Cheney said, these men had to be blindfolded and gagged for the 20+hour plane ride to Gitmo so they wouldn't gnaw through the wires, how is it that they are no longer a danger?
---------------------------------
Mitt Romney said that he wants to double the size of Guantanamo Bay. That scares me. A lot. We are imprisoning innocent men who are just trying to live their lives. We are scaring them and angering them and torturing them. How can we be proud to represent that, or support those who are doing that?
As Falkoff said about himself: "His fighting for what America is all about. He is fighting for the soul of America." He hangs a flag outside his house and supports a country under our constitution.
He is called a traitor, but I believe he is a patriot. I only wish we all could be so brave.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Overheard in...
A few weeks ago PJ posted an amusing quote from the oh so wonderful website Overheard in New York. I've been reading this site for over a year now, and not only is it funny, but it always makes me feel even better about my choice in friends, and gives me a warm fuzzy feeling of schadenfreude.
I've recently found a number of Overheard websites. Most aren't updated as frequently as OHINY, but many are just as funny, and perhaps you may relate more to one of these than OHINY.
Overheard in...
... in New York
... at College
... at Howard U.
... at McGill
... at the Beach
... at UMBC
... at Western (Canada)
... Everywhere
... in Ann Arbor
... in Athens (Georgia)
... in Boston
... in Charlottetown
... in Chicago
... in Cork
... in Detroit
... in Dublin
... in Hoboken
... in Ireland
... in Law School
... in London
... in Melbourne
... in Minneapolis
... in Nairobi
... in Philly
... in Pittsburgh
... in Portland (Maine)
... in Portland (Oregon)
... in Providence
... in San Francisco
... in the Classroom
... in the Office
... in the UK
... in the Valley (Mass)
... in Utah
... in Vancouver
In Passing... (the original)
Enjoy!
I've recently found a number of Overheard websites. Most aren't updated as frequently as OHINY, but many are just as funny, and perhaps you may relate more to one of these than OHINY.
Overheard in...
... in New York
... at College
... at Howard U.
... at McGill
... at the Beach
... at UMBC
... at Western (Canada)
... Everywhere
... in Ann Arbor
... in Athens (Georgia)
... in Boston
... in Charlottetown
... in Chicago
... in Cork
... in Detroit
... in Dublin
... in Hoboken
... in Ireland
... in Law School
... in London
... in Melbourne
... in Minneapolis
... in Nairobi
... in Philly
... in Pittsburgh
... in Portland (Maine)
... in Portland (Oregon)
... in Providence
... in San Francisco
... in the Classroom
... in the Office
... in the UK
... in the Valley (Mass)
... in Utah
... in Vancouver
In Passing... (the original)
Enjoy!
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