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February 23, 2007

So who wants to call bullshit on this one?

We want more Chaplains - IF they are of the appropriate religion....

Military Offers Incentive For Potential Chaplains - News:


WASHINGTON -- Military officials said they have stepped up efforts to recruit chaplains.

Chaplains are referred to as "force multipliers" because, officials said, they dramatically increase the effectiveness of combat units.

Major Mike Jason of the Army, who recently returned to the U.S. from Iraq, said the need for chaplains cannot be underestimated.

"Young troopers are seeing for the first time they deploy away from home horrifying things that they need to put into context. They've got tough questions. 'Am I doing the right thing?' And a chaplain is just a critical piece of leadership that is essential on the battlefield," said Jason.

The Pentagon has begun offering incentives to attract chaplains, such as signing bonuses and college scholarships.

"They're facing death, especially in Iraq and Afghanistan and overseas right now. And it's an opportunity to really just come alongside them, to encourage them, to lift them up," said aspiring chaplain Wayne Stinchcomb.

Some chaplains said they believe increasing troop numbers depends on support from religious leaders.

"The churches have to be willing to send more than the cookies and the letters. They got to send us some of their younger pastors. And, you know, sometimes that's a sacrifice because that's the guy they like," said Chaplain Ran Dolinger of the Army Chief of Chaplain's office.

Stinchcomb said he knows he could end up in Iraq in the next few years. He also said that as he finishes his master's degree in divinity, he will pray that more men and women of faith follow his example.

ACLU Supports N.J. Student In Flap Over Preaching Teacher

Now this one DEFINITELY doesn't support the "Satan test" that I advocated as a means of determining whether or not a religious position is "neutral" and allowable under the constitution. The "Satan test" consists of removing Christian references and replacing them with Satanic ones. If the resulting issue would still be allowed, then it's neutral enough to pass constitutional muster. In this case, would a teacher be allowed to tell students that if they don't believe in Satan something bad will happen to them? Hmmm.... let's think about that....NOT!

ACLU Supports N.J. Student In Flap Over Preaching Teacher:


American Civil Liberties union is backing a Kearny High School student who objected when a teacher made religious statements in the classroom, including allegedly telling students that those who do not believe Jesus died for their sins belong in hell.

The student's lawyers filed a notice of claim on Feb. 13 against the school district, claiming that instead of addressing the teacher's conduct,

Army Boots Wiccan Chaplain

Oh gee, what a surprise! The very same military that won't allow Pagan dead to have the Pentacle as their symbol of belief on their headstones won't allow a Wiccan Chaplain. And only the non Christians will be outraged, and nobody will listen and this issue will die as all of the others do. Unless, of course, someone with a lot of money decides to fight it.....

Army Boots Wiccan Chaplain:


Don Larsen was, by all reports, an excellent Army Chaplain. When he was a Pentecostal Christian, that is. His superior while he was in Iraq, Chaplain Kevin L. McGhee, called Larsen "the best" out of the 26 chaplains he supervised. But then Larsen applied to change his religious affiliation to Wicca, and the Army railroaded him out of Iraq and out of the Army.

The whole sordid story is extensive

February 22, 2007

Idiot Chops Down Trees

Exec busted for clearing 1,100 trees on mountain so paraglider could take off - MSN-Mainichi Daily News:


HIROSHIMA -- A company executive was arrested on Wednesday for clearing about 1,100 trees in a mountain forest here, which had been planted and grown by the forest owner, to use the area as a place for his paraglider to take off, police said.
Masaharu Hashimoto, 55, a resident of Hiroshima, is accused of violating the Forest Law and destroying property.
He denied the allegations during questioning. "I obtained permission from the owner of the forest," he was quoted as telling investigators.
Hashimoto used a chainsaw to clear about 1,100 Japanese cedar and cypress trees in a privately-owned forest near the summit of 837-meter-high Mount Amida in Saeki-ku, Hiroshima, investigators said.
He never allegedly obtained permission to clear the trees from the forest owner. His crime caused losses worth some 7.5 million yen.
Most of the trees were 20 to 50 years old and were left lying at the scene. (Mainichi)


February 18, 2007

Chaos Magic

Chaos Magic:


What is Chaos Magic? First off, an article explaining Chaos Magic probably doesn’t belong in a strictly Pagan listing of traditions. Since many Pagans may be into certain occult practices, they may have heard of Chaos Magic. This article was written for two reasons: To counter any preconceptions or prejudices some Pagans may have towards it; and to show the beautiful and vivid collection of approaches to magic that fall under the term. There are also many Pagans of various traditions who ...

The Golden Apple of Eris

The Golden Apple of Eris:


by Terri Paajanen



Discordianism is a bit of a black sheep in the Pagan world (or perhaps they would prefer to be called purple sheep?) One of the symbols of Discordianism is a golden apple, with a K on it. Though much of Discordianism seems based in improv, this symbol has its roots in a well-known Greek myth.



The Discordians worship Eris, the Greek Goddess of discord and chaos. She is not as well known as some of the other Greek Deities, but she does have a prominent place in one of the major Greek myths: the Trojan War. And it's in this myth that the golden apple is found. It all began at the wedding of the Goddess Thetis and King Peleus of Greece. Eris had not been invited, and decided to do a little mischief as payback. She tossed an apple of gold in among the guests (Gods and mortals alike).

February 16, 2007

Evolution to be cut from Texan Schools

Oh boy! Maybe now they'll accept my application as alchemy and astrology professor.

Evolution to be cut from Texan Schools:


By ROBERT T. GARRETT



Memo: Stop teaching evolution



Georgia lawmaker's plea comes to Texas through No. 2 in House. The second most powerful member of the Texas House has circulated a Georgia lawmaker's call for a broad assault on teaching of evolution. House Appropriations Committee Chairman Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, used House operations Tuesday to deliver a memo from Georgia state Rep. Ben Bridges.



The memo assails what it calls "the evolution monopoly in the schools." Mr. Bridges' memo claims that teaching evolution amounts to indoctrinating students in an ancient Jewish sect's beliefs. "Indisputable evidence – long hidden but now available to everyone – demonstrates conclusively that so-called 'secular evolution science' is the Big Bang, 15-billion-year, alternate 'creation scenario' of the Pharisee Religion," writes Mr. Bridges, a Republican from Cleveland, Ga. He has argued against teaching of evolution in Georgia schools for several years.

Asinine Christian pediatrician denies ch...

Asinine Christian pediatrician denies ch...:


Christian pediatrician denies child service because parents are tattooed. You know, just like Jesus would have done

February 15, 2007

Resources Available on Physician Refusals to Provide Reproductive Health Care

Resources Available on Physician Refusals to Provide Reproductive Health Care:


ACS is pleased to distribute a discussion by University of Wisconsin Professor of Law and Bioethics R. Alta Charo entitled, "Health Care Provider Refusals to Treat, Prescribe, Refer or Inform: Professionalism and Conscience." The phenomenon of doctors imposing their moral...

February 09, 2007

A witches' brew of religious discrimination | Chicago Tribune

A witches' brew of religious discrimination | Chicago Tribune:
When he was alive, the U.S. government had no trouble finding a place for Patrick Stewart, never mind his unconventional beliefs. It inducted him into the Army National Guard, issued him dog tags giving his religion as "Wiccan," and deployed him to Afghanistan. He died there in 2005 when Taliban forces shot down his helicopter. It was only later that Uncle Sam had second thoughts.

Sgt. Stewart was buried in a veterans cemetery in Nevada, and his widow asked that his memorial plaque include the encircled five-pointed star of Wicca, a religion based on nature worship. But the Department of Veterans Affairs declined, because that emblem is not among the 38 religious symbols it allows.

Eventually, the state of Nevada stepped in and said it was in charge of the cemetery and would provide the plaque, which finally was dedicated in December. But back in Washington, the VA is still treating fallen Wiccan soldiers as a terrible inconvenience.

For nearly a decade, family members have been asking for the right to put the pentacle on the gravestones of Wiccan soldiers, and so far, they have been disappointed. Last year, two widows filed a lawsuit accusing the government of unconstitutional religious discrimination. At that point, the department suddenly unveiled a proposed regulation for handling such requests.

But the department won't say whether the new policy will permit the Wiccans to use their symbol. Nor is it clear from the text, which says the department may refuse to recognize religious groups that "promote or engage in activity that is illegal or contrary to public policy," and may reject any emblem that "would have an adverse impact on the dignity or solemnity of cemeteries."

When I asked a department spokesman whether the Wiccan application would qualify under this policy, he said only that it would get "thorough consideration." The new rules didn't dissuade a federal judge from letting the lawsuit proceed.

Maybe the VA is finally ready to do the right thing. But after all the time it has spent stalling on this issue, the suspicion arises that somebody there has a major problem with the Wiccans. And it's not hard to imagine that the current secretary of Veterans Affairs would like to delay a resolution until the next administration, so someone else would get the blame for--as the change will undoubtedly be portrayed--giving a seal of approval to an evil cult.

But the question is not whether Wicca is a good or true religion--only whether its adherents are entitled to the same rights as everyone else. The Constitution has a simple answer: Yes.

In deference to freedom of religion, the VA makes room for lots of faiths. If you're buried in a military cemetery, you can choose from the familiar (several crosses, a Star of David, a Muslim crescent and star) or the esoteric (symbols of Buddhism, Baha'i and Sufism Reoriented).

There is even room for non-believers: One approved emblem is an atom, representing atheism. During the time the Wiccans have been waiting, the VA has added several other symbols, including one for Sikhs and another for Izumo Taishakyo, a branch of Shinto.

It's not as though Wicca is any less of a religion than these others. The Pentagon, which says there are some 1,800 Wiccans serving in the ranks, allows Wiccan groups to hold services on military bases. The Justice Department treats Wicca as an authentic religion in the reference manuals given to federal prison chaplains. The IRS grants tax exemptions to Wiccan churches.

But some people imagine adherents to be a dangerous throng of witches, warlocks, devil-worshipers and virgin-sacrificers who huddle around cauldrons chanting, "Double, double, toil and trouble." Americans United for the Separation of Church and State, which filed the lawsuit, suspects the VA may be fearful of provoking the religious right.

A few years back, after a flap over Wiccan events at military installations, some Christian groups called for a ban, and lobbyist Paul Weyrich of the Free Congress Foundation declared, "Until the Army withdraws all official support and approval from witchcraft, no Christian should enlist or re-enlist in the Army."

It doesn't appear his suggestion cost the military any Christian enlistees--which suggests that soldiers and sailors of many faiths can live, work and fight together despite their religious differences. If Wiccans are good enough to die for their country, they're good enough to be treated with respect afterward.

----------

Steve Chapman is a member of the Tribune's editorial board. E-mail: schapman@tribune.com

February 06, 2007

Eating your own dogfood - Pagan Prattle

Eating your own dogfood:



United States: No, not Gillian McKeith again. This time it's the Washington Defense of Marriage Initiative, which proposes some innovative legislation, insisting that marriage really is for the sake of the children, and for no other purpose.



If passed by Washington voters, the Defense of Marriage Initiative would:

  • add the phrase, who are capable of having children with one another to the legal definition of marriage;

  • require that couples married in Washington file proof of procreation within three years of the date of marriage or have their marriage automatically annulled;

  • require that couples married out of state file proof of procreation within three years of the date of marriage or have their marriage classed as unrecognized;

  • establish a process for filing proof of procreation; and

  • make it a criminal act for people in an unrecognized marriage to receive marriage benefits.




So which bunch of fundies is behind this initiative? The answer is that it isn't—it's the work of some Americans with a sense of irony.



The Washington Defense of Marriage Alliance seeks to defend equal marriage in this state by challenging the Washington Supreme Court's ruling on Andersen v. King County. This decision, given in July 2006, declared that a legitimate state interest allows the Legislature to limit marriage to those couples able to have and raise children together. Because of this legitimate state interest, it is permissible to bar same-sex couples from legal marriage.




The way we are challenging Andersen is unusual: using the initiative, we are working to put the Court's ruling into law. We will do this through three initiatives. The first would make procreation a requirement for legal marriage. The second would prohibit divorce or legal separation when there are children. The third would make the act of having a child together the legal equivalent of a marriage ceremony.




Absurd? Very. But there is a rational basis for this absurdity. By floating the initiatives, we hope to prompt discussion about the many misguided assumptions which make up the Andersen ruling. By getting the initiatives passed, we hope the Supreme Court will strike them down as unconstit[u]ional and thus weaken Andersen itself. And at the very least, it should be good fun to see the social conservatives who have long screamed that marriage exists for the sole purpose of procreation be forced to choke on their own rhetoric.


The chief executive of Allies for Marriage and Children, a fundie organisation which supports special rights for heterosexuals, spectacularly failed to get the joke. (Thanks Supergee).



February 04, 2007

God Wants You To Be Intimidated

So how does one deal with the type of "religion" that mandates prosthelization by annoyance? These people truly believe that they have not only the right, but the duty to verbally attack and harass peaceful members of other religions who want nothing to do with them. THeir right to choice of religion means nothing to these people in the wake of their spiritual frenzy. The only rights that matter to them is their right to shove their religion in the faces of those who have made other choices. Am I angry about this? Damn straight!

God Wants You To Be Intimidated:


by Jason Pitzl-Waters



Some further information has arisen in the Grand Rapids "Freedom To Harass Us" case. To quickly recap, a group of preachers affiliated with The Street Preachers' Fellowship have filed suit against the city of Grand Rapids, Michigan, after a police officer ordered them to disperse and threatened arrest after they congregated at the Grand Rapids Pagan Pride Day celebration last year. While the preachers are claiming their free speech has been violated, others have put forward that the preachers were harassing and intimidating attendees (the organizers of the Grand Rapids Pagan Pride Day are withholding any public statements on the advice of their lawyer). Now someone identifying themselves as one of the preachers involved in the incident has posted a comment on my original blog entry dealing with the case. "Curt" starts off by explaining that true Christians won't act meek or peaceful. They embody a vengeful "Jehovah" who "hates" the wicked when they go out to minister.

Amidst bloodshed, millions of Muslims pray for peace - CNN.com

Perhaps if this occurred on a more regular basis from all religions, it would show that the vast majority of members of any religion are anti war and anti violence.

Amidst bloodshed, millions of Muslims pray for peace - CNN.com:


TONGI, Bangladesh (AP) -- Some 3 million Muslims put aside their country's violent struggle with political corruption and Islamic extremists and raised their hands in prayer for global peace at one of the world's largest religious gatherings.

The final prayer Sunday capped a three-day Islamic gathering on the sandy banks of the River Turag in a small industrial town just north of Dhaka, Bangladesh's capital.

Pilgrims, many of whom left work early to join the prayer, streamed into the site stretching 190 acres along both banks of the river. As the crowd overflowed the space, people arrived at the site on packed boats or climbed onto the rooftops of nearby buildings. (Watch a huge crowd gather to pray )

The annual gathering shuns politics, which have become increasingly bloody in Bangladesh, and focuses on reviving the tenets of Islam and promoting peace and harmony.

Participants discuss the Quran, Islam's holy book, pray, and listen to sermons by Islamic scholars from around the world.

Though extra buses and trains were sent to ferry devotees to and from the prayer site, there was standing room only, even atop the train cars, and many passengers hung on to the sides through open windows.

Many others simply walked the 12 miles back to the city.

Kaium Biswas, a local police official, said police estimated the number of pilgrims at 3 million, a significant increase over the 2.5 million thought to have attended last year.

About 20,000 security officials, including troops, have been deployed to the area of the gathering to prevent violence, said Biswas, after months of often violent protests to push for electoral reform.

Florida Worshippers gather to thank God ...

See, I still don't get this. Praising their god for destroying their homes, killing a few people, etc. etc. Why would a benevolent god do something like this? It just doesn't map. Oh well, I really did like the Fark headline though :-)

Florida Worshippers gather to thank God ...:


Worshippers gather to thank God for mercifully demolishing church with his noodly tornado

Does Free Speech Give Rise to the Right to Harass?

Witchvox Article:


On September 23 2006, several friends and myself drove down the Pagan Pride Day in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The sun was playing peak-a-boo with us all the way down. However, by the time we got to the park the clouds had parted somewhat. It was a beautiful day and we were excited about going to the festival. The parking lot was nearly full. We ended up finding parking spots on opposite ends of the lot for our two vehicles. As we walked to meet each other, we were suddenly confronted by men declaring we were evil and going to hell.

Some of them quietly handed out flyers with Christian tracts to pedestrians walking by, but they were also putting them on the windshields. Others weren't so benign.

They verbally assaulted people going into the festival, sometimes blocking their path and declaring they were in league with the devil. One man was arrested for using a bullhorn without a permit. Others went around the parking lot, writing down license plate numbers of the cars present. The only reason they would want that information is to harass the vehicle owners later.

Granted after a certain point, I stopped being nice to them. I’m a fully dedicate Wiccan Priestess, who goes out of her way to help others and make the world a little better. I resented being called evil and being cursed to damnation by people who knew nothing about me.

We paid our admission with cat food for the local animal rescue group and joined in the festivities. With or without garb, people were enjoying each other’s company, the shopping and the positive energy of the group as a whole. We arrived in time to take a scrying class. After which, our group started breaking off to find our own interests.


February 03, 2007

For those who feel that Muslims constitute the only risk to women's rights....

I had an interesting discussion with a friend who feels that Muslims are attempting to "take over" the United States and my disagreement with that sentiment meant that I'd only be happy if I was forced to wear a veil. This person, unfortunately, was not swayed by the fact that many Christian sects also limit women's rights, and also "wish to take over the United States." Now a bit more evidence that the Muslims aren't the only ones out there with serious difficulties regarding women's equality.

globeandmail.com: Women taking a stand to sit up front:


JERUSALEM -- It began as a peaceful morning, with a religious woman boarding a bus just after daybreak to take her to the Old City to pray.

But Miriam Shear's day quickly turned ugly when she was ordered by a religious man to move to the back of the bus, a common practice on many routes serving the religious population.

Ms. Shear, a 50-year-old Toronto-area resident who was in Israel that November day for religious study, refused politely when he demanded her seat, pointing to several others nearby. He yelled and spat on her. Incensed, she spat back. In the 20-minute scuffle that followed, which was joined by four other men, she was slapped, pushed out of her seat and onto the floor, beaten and kicked; her hair covering fell off, a great shame for a married religious woman, and she suffered bruising to her cheek.

Now, Ms. Shear's case, which has gained notoriety here as a kind of religious Rosa Parks incident, is cited in a petition to the Supreme Court to review the segregated bus policy, in what is seen as a test case in balancing the rights of a minority's freedom of religion against the basic human rights of all.

February 02, 2007

Here, women propose marriage and men can't refuse - CNN.com

Here, women propose marriage and men can't refuse - CNN.com:


ORANGO ISLAND, Guinea-Bissau (AP) -- He was 14 when the girl entered his grass-covered hut and placed a plate in front of him containing an ancient recipe.

Like all men on this African isle, Carvadju Jose Nananghe knew exactly what it meant. Refusing was not an option. His heart pounding, he lifted the steaming fish to his lips, agreeing in one bite to marry the girl.

"I had no feelings for her," said Nananghe, now 65. "Then when I ate this meal, it was like lightning. I wanted only her."

In this archipelago of 50 islands of pale blue water off the western rim of Africa, it's women, not men, who choose. They make their proposals public by offering their grooms-to-be a dish of distinctively prepared fish, marinated in red palm oil.

It's the equivalent of a man bending on one knee and offering a woman a diamond ring, except that in one of the world's matriarchal cultures, it's women who do the asking, and once they have, men are powerless to say no.

To have refused, explained the old man remembering the day half a century ago, would have dishonored his family -- and in any case, why would he want to choose his own wife?

"Love comes first into the heart of the woman," explained Nananghe. "Once it's in the woman, only then can it jump into the man."

February 01, 2007

Pagan Parenting

The below article is a quite good one, in my humble opinion. I feel very strongly on this issue, having been in the position of dealing with some of these spoiled little jerks and their oblivious parents who would dump their brats on me at Tae Kwon Do class and expect me to magickally undo the 6 or so years of indulgence of their darling in 2 hours a week of yelling Korean at them. Doesn't work that way, kids.

The "we can't discipline our child because it's stifling his growth" is a ridiculous way of saying "you should put up with our child because we don't have the basic parental skills necessary to bring up a well developed child who understands rules and boundaries." The rest of us then find OUR children being short changed in schools and elsewhere because the teachers have to spend so much time chasing little miss "can't say no." Of course, if the little angel hurts herself by doing something she was told explicitly not to do, the parents will sue the facility for something that's clearly their own fault.

So who gets hurt when you don't know how to discipline your child? All of us. Say "no," mean "no," and follow up.

Witchvox Article:


“We’ve never told him ‘No.’ We don’t want to create a barrier of negativity for him”
I shook my head in utter disbelief. What do you do when he’s doing something dangerous? “Well we tell him *Danger sweetheart, DANGER!*”

The thought of a parent chasing their two year old towards a freeway chirruping ‘Danger sweetheart’ leaves me in cold sweats to this day.

My son has been in the ‘No’ from a young age. When walking into a local shop full of lovely breakable objects I see shop owners cringe. They are waiting for the crash of merchandise and the inevitable justification. “Oh he’s just exploring” “Children have such an indomitable need to explore”. An elderly couple watches out of the corner of their eye.

Darting little hands seeking to seize a lovely porcelain pentacle which I can by no stretch of the imagination afford. “Bradley, NO.” The couple all but applauds. The bricks coming through the pores of the gal behind the counter shrink to gravel sized pellets. The hand raises again, and this time with authority in tone, “BRAD, NO.” Although I feel like a jerk, small hands abate their activity.