Archive for August, 2008

The Partisans are All Wet

First there was a yahoo on the Right telling people to pray that Barack Obama’s outdoor nomination-acceptance speech would be rained out. Not to be outdone, and maintaining the balance of lunacy in the universe, the Left has its own yahoo, who opines that hurricane Gustav is proof of God’s existence. Why? Because it’s likely to disrupt the Republican National Convention.

This is what happens when people conflate religion and partisan ideology with “politics.” Maybe we could try for a political discourse grounded in facts and reason. Just this once?

Heroic Disappointment

John McCain went on Leno last night. In reference to a recent gaffe, when McCain couldn’t remember how many houses he owns, Jay asked him, “How many houses do you have?”

Everybody knows that John McCain was a prisoner of war, that he suffered more than five years of imprisonment. Most people, even those who serve in the military, do not experience such terrible things in service to their nation, and McCain certainly deserves respect for what he gave.

But when he responded to Jay Leno last night, he turned that awful time in his life into a trite dodge:

“Could I just mention to you, Jay, that, at a moment of seriousness. I spent five-and-a-half years in a prison cell,” McCain said. “I didn’t have a house. I didn’t have a kitchen table. I didn’t have a table. I didn’t have a chair. And I didn’t spend those five-and-a-half years because, not because I wanted to get a house when I got out.”

That’s not an honorable response. It takes something honorable and plays it for political value. It devalues his suffering. It’s unbefitting a hero and it diminishes the honor he is due.

I must respect Senator McCain for the suffering he endured in service to my nation, but I cannot respect him for using that suffering the way he did last night, or the way he and his supporters continue to tout it as a qualification to sit in the Oval Office. Having a distinguished military career does not automatically raise McCain above his present failings, or give him a ticket out of his embarrassing stumbles—like forgetting how many houses he owns. Even less so when he abuses that honor for political advantage.

A real hero can look back on something like a prisoner-of-war experience and say, “Yes, I was there, and I suffered, and it changed me irrevocably.” And a real hero should be respected for that. But a real hero takes the fortitude and integrity that spring from honorable suffering and builds on those things to be a greater person. A real hero does not use his naked honor as a skeleton key to open every door and escape from every trap.

If John McCain wants to keep being a real hero, he needs to stop playing the POW card, let his distinguished service stand as a quiet testament to the size of his character, and demonstrate that he is still the same man who found the strength to survive those five years as a prisoner of war, instead of just a man who needs to keep reminding us that once upon a time he showed that strength. We know. And it speaks for itself.

Morning in the Kaiser Wilderness

Here is what I saw when I woke up this morning.

View of College Lake, morning of August 24, 2008

The water in the background is College Lake in the Kaiser Wilderness in Sierra National Forest. The closest pack is mine, the next one is my brother’s, and I can’t remember if my brother was still in the blue sleeping bag when I took the picture.

Yesterday, my brother, my dad, and I hiked up to the top of Kaiser Peak, elevation 10,320 feet (about 3,145 meters) above sea level. Then we came back down about 800 feet (about 244 meters) into the College Lake basin and spent the night. This morning we hiked out.

It would have been a much better trip if I had felt better and been in better shape—three weeks after the bar exam, I am trying to pull myself together—but usually, after a trip to such a great place, memory of the irritants fades with time and only the scenery and the terrain persist.

If I have time tomorrow, I will probably post more pictures.

Star Wars: Episode VII

If you were a Star Wars fan with a couple kids, a computer, and a video camera, what would you do over the summer break?

Make a short fan film, of course.

Americans United in Fresno

After looking around on the website of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, I was disappointed to see that there are no local chapters in Fresno. There are chapters in Kern County, to the south, and Sacramento, to the north, but their activities appear to be mostly in Bakersfield and, of course, Sacramento, respectively. Nor do there appear to be any “Aligned & Associated Groups” in Fresno.

I emailed the national organization for more information, including information on joining their Lawyers Network, but I was wondering whether anyone here in Fresno or the surrounding area knows about any Americans United activities here. Are there any members of the Lawyers Network in Fresno? I’ve been unable to find a directory.

If you have information about these things, I’m interested in hearing about it.

Back from the Coast

I have returned from Cayucos. On Monday I’ll go back to work and try not to think about the bar exam. Nothing I do now can affect the outcome and thinking about it usually just results in coming up with reasons why I ought to fail. Since that will only adversely affect my mental health, which will set off a chain reaction adversely affecting my work and personal lives, I see no reason to dwell on it now. Time to start gearing up for reality.

Out of Town

I am going to the central California coast for the next week to detox from the bar exam. I may or may not have internet access. If I don’t post anything here, or if I fail to timely approve a comment that goes to moderation, that’s why.

Fun Poster

This poster is awesome. Okay, yeah, Lincoln, Jefferson, and Franklin probably were not thorough atheists, but they certainly had the fortitude to reject religious claims based on their own reasoned analysis. Darwin probably wouldn’t classify as a thorough atheist either, but he recognized the value of skepticism, too.

Atheism: Good enough for these idiots.

The lesson to take is that you don’t have to fall lock-step into any religious tradition to be a great person or do great things. Exercise your own mind and never underestimate your own ability to see through the lies of others, even when they tell them forcefully, with great conviction. And watch out, because you might be lying to yourself, too.

Found via Pharyngula.