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Ferguson Truth and Reconciliation

I can't hold it in any longer.  There has to be an outlet for what's been bottled up too long.  I've waited and waited to liberate the words.  The waiting required some discipline and strength, but now that I have the facts, the need to withhold judgment is past.  I kept an open mind, keeping suspicions carefully labeled as suspicions, and treating contrary opinions as possible.  But now, there's no more I can learn than the truth, so I must engage and I must submit to it.  It compels me to share, to address the fence-sitters in my audience to choose a side--the one the truth is on.  The one I'm on. There's a reason we have Grand Juries.  It's a system that evolved over time.  It doesn't guarantee that mistakes don't happen or that rigging the game doesn't occur.  But it does offer some structural guarantee that a filter passes between law enforcement and the judicial system.  It empowers ordinary citizens to review evidence an...

Blaming the Beaten

I've replied to politically posts as a way to stay passively engaged, but haven't made a positive political contribution on this or my personal Facebook page throughout the whole election cycle.  I have felt as strongly, and have felt pangs of conscience for not getting out and participating more, or at least being bold about what I believe.  It feels rather like I'm hiding it: I'm not, it's just not my time.  I made a conscious decision to put some other priorities ahead, even though I feel strongly that this was a super important election and the chance to turn the tide of some severely menacing trends in the halls of power was missed. And the failure has been blinding on the conservative side. Pundits have had their say now for a few weeks, and most of the conservatives right away have blamed Romney himself as a candidate.  They had been carrying water for him despite having worked against him in the primaries, and as soon as it was evident that he wasn't g...

The Folly of Coerced Gratitude

News outlets and blogosphere posters have been abuzz with comments and analysis on portions of Obama's recent speech in which he asserts something Elizabeth Warren did mere months ago in her bid to win election of the Massachusetts senate seat currently occupied by Scott Brown.  It has to do with what it takes for a business to succeed, and because of the polarized nature of the political atmosphere, the speech portions of both have taken on such an ideologically charged air, that I feel the subject is getting thought through askance.  There are a few important aspects I feel are getting lost in the war of implications between partisans accusing each other of missing the other's point, which I hope to draw out. First the relevant speech portions: Elizabeth Warren, Sept 2011:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcFDF87-SdQ and President Obama, Jul 2012:  http://www.theblaze.com/stories/president-obama-if-youve-got-a-business-you-didnt-build-that-somebody-else-made-th...

Propaganda Charts

So for a while now I've been seeing some charts put out by the Obama campaign to try to sway independents on issues they think they're vulnerable to Romney on, as the presumptive nominee at this point.  I've been waiting on commentary from the conservative blogosphere and talk radio, but not a lot has been forthcoming.  The charts look damning for Republicans, until you put them in context.  This is the way to beat all liberal thought, I've decided: just find the context they've conveniently elided, and they come undone themselves. I'm just going to tackle the recent one now on oil production under Obama. So here goes... Chart 1: http://secure.assets.bostatic.com/frontend/projects/energy-info/img/energygraph2.jpg Wow, we've been boosting production.  Except, the context is this: drilling moratoriums in the gulf, the keystone pipeline stalled, and frequent bad-mouthing of fossil fuels (including cap-and-tax proposals) on the part of Obama...

Just come at us head on

Wow, has it really been this long since I've posted anything?  I have GOT to make this more regular... So the whole Romney leading the Republican pack thing has generated questions about Mormonism, some from genuinely curious people, others from gotcha artists trying to get attention by making the candidate stumble or handle something gauchely.  For the most part, Romney's been equally artful at closing down the situation, usually with a terse "I'm not answering questions about my faith right now?" On the right, however, whenever situations make the news, the inevitable anti-Mormon attack squad comes out, followed by the defenders (some equally combative, and others simply standing up for their beliefs in a peaceful non-contentious manner).  Myself, I probably fall in between.  In a face-to-face situation, I generally judge if the person with tough questions is genuinely curious or not, and if they are, I'll take all the time necessary to help them understan...

Romney on abortion

Romney's going to take a hit on this one, but I think he's right to stand where he is.   According to Fox , he's decided NOT to sign a Susan B. Anthony list pledge.  You'd think that would be odd for him, since he's already got a reputation as a waffler on the abortion issue.  Conservatives are having a hard time believing his late conversion to purity on the issue (he maintains he's always been privately pro-life, but because of a family situation decided not to oppose the pro-choice camp), and make no mistake, the Conservatives which require strict purity on this matter are numerous enough to decide his nomination.  But this organization, named after the famously pro-life suffragette, is pushing more than purity, it's pushing pro-activity on a scale a president should never tie himself down to. Now to a pro-life supporter like me, the pledge sounds reasonable enough when it comes to appointing Originalist judges with a philosophy of judicial restraint, an...

More Anti-American Lies With Charts

Sometimes it's hard for me to decide whether liberals/progressives are well-meaning but misguided, or intentionally insidious.  In any case, I was recently exposed to another chart-dense article attempting to demonstrate that the American dream is in fact an illusion.  The argumentation style is overtly negative, but thoughtful in the sense that it at least attempts to set up straw men for conservative thought before blowing them away with fallacies.  So should I adopt a charitable tone in exposing the illogic?  I suspect it will change as the level of insidiousness becomes more and more annoying. So David Morris, longtime community organizer and anti-conservative agitator, as well as founder of a wannabe think-tank activism foundation, writes a column on AlterNet entitled: We're #1--Ten Depressing Ways America Is Exceptional .  A liberal Facebook friend linked to it and sadly, I took the bait.  I swear, I'm going to swear off these liberal blog sites e...