Threads from Henry's Web

Category: Politics

  • Seismologists Guilty of Manslaughter

    An Italian court has rendered what has to be on the top ten list of stupidest rulings in history in finding six scientists and government official guilty of manslaughter for being too reassuring prior to an earthquake (Source: MSNBC). Scientists around the world are condemning the verdict, as well they should.

    This illustrates the widespread cluelessness in matters of science. People want absolute answers and someone to blame. In this case science was not in a position to give such answers. I have no sympathy whatsoever for the people who prosecuted this case or for the court which rendered the verdict. It’s inexcusably wrong.

  • In the Mail: Dreams from My Real Father

    It’s a DVD of the movie. No, I didn’t buy it and I didn’t order it. I already read enough about it to know I have no interest in its paranoid ramblings.

    It came in my mailbox with a presort mail label, addressed to me by name, and my wife didn’t get one, so I must be on a specific mailing list. I’m wondering how far these folks are going to distribute this junk. Apparently WorldNetDaily has had nice things to say about it, but that isn’t exactly a positive.

    Anyone else get a free copy of this in the mail?

     

  • Removing Mormons from the Cult List

    There’s something deeply troubling about the decision by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association to remove Mormons from the list of cults on their web site.

    My concern is not with failing to list any particular group as a cult. In fact, as commonly used in Christian apologetics, I don’t think the label or lists of groups to which it should be applied, is very helpful. My approach is to be positive. I believe in a set of doctrines that I could label broadly orthodox Christianity (note lower case ‘o’), i.e. I’m a trinitarian Christian and I can say the Apostles’ Creed without crossing my fingers. My understanding is that a Mormon could not. That doesn’t make Mormons bad people, and the label “cult” tends to suggest that. At the same time, I don’t think it’s bigoted to point out that my beliefs and those of Mormons are not compatible in the sense that we won’t be in fellowship at the same church.

    If, at some point other than the election, the BGEA had removed the reference to Mormons as a cult in order to foster dialog, without otherwise modifying their doctrinal statement (i.e., one could easily read and see who believes what), I would have no objection. What troubles me is that this is done in the context of the election. That gives the feeling that this was done to accomplish a political goal.

    That’s dangerous in at least two ways. First, if it was important to note those differences in a document on cults before, what changed? Politics. The desire to elect a particular candidate has changed the way Christian beliefs are proclaimed. The gospel has been subjected to a political agenda. Second, it implies that even if Mitt Romney agrees with a Christian voter on most issues, he really needs to be labeled a Christian before we can vote for him. There are many reasons one might dislike or oppose Romney. The fact that he holds different doctrinal beliefs than I do is not one of them.

    Under the appropriate circumstances I could vote for a person who is Jewish, Muslim, Mormon, agnostic, atheist, or any of a number of other faiths. What are the “appropriate circumstances?” Agreement on a political agenda and the belief that the candidate has the integrity to carry out those goals.

    It has been noted by many that we’re not voting for pastor-in-chief, and rightly so, though people seem less likely to apply that standard to the candidate they oppose. At the same time, we must not behave as though we’re electing a pastor-in-chief. And that means don’t subordinate the gospel and the mission of the church to the beliefs of our candidate or to a political agenda. To those in the church, no political agenda can be as important as the mission of the church.

    (Also note comments on this topic by Arthur Sido.)

  • Third Party Debate

    I didn’t watch the debates with the major candidates, but I’m interested in the Third Party Debate for the same reason I’m registered independent. I don’t think the two party system is a good idea. Hopefully I’ll be able to watch this. Don’t make the assumption that I will vote third party, however. Sometimes it pays to decide which way the country will be harmed for the next four years.

    At a minimum I would like to see the issues these people raise become part of the national debate, including drug policy.

  • By the Way, It’s Not a Debate

    It just isn’t. It’s not even a very good joint news conference.

  • Bleeding Heart Libertarians and Austrian Economics

    I found this video enlightening. I like to note that I read von Mises before I met (encountered her writings) Rand. Rand is a cultural phenomenon, but von Mises is a deep thinker. In any case, this is an interesting interview. The more libertarians pay attention to this, the better, in my view. I’m a regular reader of the website referenced in the video, Bleeding Heart Libertarians.

     

  • No to Blasphemy Trials

    I agree with Joel Watts. Christians must protest this charge of blasphemy against a Muslim for desecrating a Bible. Blasphemy laws, no matter which way they are targeted, are not good.

  • In Reporting Polls, Please …

    … always consider the sampling error when you report the difference between successive polls.

    News organizations have been getting some better, in my subjective view, in noting when a result is within the sampling error in a particular poll, but they still report increases or decreases in a lead without that note. If a candidate moves from 46% to 48% in successive polls where the margin is +/-4%, that is not a statistically significant change. If multiple polls show results that are all within their various sampling errors, the polls are not scattered all over the map or giving a different story.

    I also wish new stories would define the various terms they use to modify “lead” or “trail.” One has no idea from the headline just what has happened.

    OK, that’s my whining for the moment. 🙂

  • The Great Energion Political Roundtable Continues

    … with answers to Question #6 from four Energion authors and one other blogger/book reviewers. Remember that all are invited to join in!

  • How Not to Convince Me

    I saw two approaches to political persuasion today that I find particularly unpersuasive. This is besides the truth-limited ads that fail to persuade me every day.

    1) Someone on Facebook posted a note that a particular claim was false. I should go to a particular website to learn the truth. The site? Her candidates web site. I don’t think so.

    2) Romney supporters here in Pensacola are putting empty chairs in their yards. This is supposed to remind people of the “wonderful” speech by Clint Eastwood at the Republican convention. I happen to like Clint Eastwood (as an actor). The empty chair act moved my political position not at all. I fail to see any reason why this should be persuasive to anyone.

    I suspect that if I listed everything I find unpersuasive, my list would include pretty much the entire political arsenal.