Learn something new every day!

Posted March 24, 2009 By John C Wright

Jack Kirby once did a comic book version of the famous (famous among geeks) science-fiction surrealist spy thriller THE PRISONER.

More info here: http://www.twomorrows.com/kirby/articles/11prisoner.html

and here: http://datajunkie.blogspot.com/2006/03/you-are-number-6.html

I had heard about Kirby’s short-lived 2001 SPACE ODYSSEY from a review by Fabio Paolo Barbieri (his review is here) and I regret that I have not yet got my hands on a copy — if it can be found anywhere — of this work. But the Prisoner exist only as a fragment in a few out of print Kirby Collections.

Illos Below the Cut…

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Mini Movie Reviews!

Posted March 24, 2009 By John C Wright

Rather then commenting on the continued decline and fall of the American Republic, let me mention the last few movies I saw.

On DVD I saw:
City of Ember — a well done sci fi mystery of two children discovering the secret of how to escape from their buried world of eternal darkness. There were one or two movie elements added, not in the original book, meant to heighten drama, but which I thought  unnecessary, or even foolish. Despite this, the mystery was gripping and the characters delightful.

I am a little surprised this did not do better in the theaters. The science fiction premise was simple enough that even a muggle could grasp it, and who cannot root for the main characters who have never seen the open sky, seeking to escape a dying underground city?  As a metaphor for everything from the fearless scientific investigation of the world, to youthful awakening, to maturity to rebellion against soft oppression,  to a spiritual awakening, it strikes a deep cord.

Cinderella Man — Every father or would-be father should see this film, especially the scenes where the father tells his son stealing is wrong, even if you go hungry, and where it is shown how a man pays his debts. Based on a true story, a prizefight so famous that even I had heard of it, the drama is gripping, and the message more pertient now than ever. If you liked the film Seabiscut, you’ll like this. Stars Russel Crowe, so rent this and rent Master and Commander at the same time, and make an all Crowe weekend of it.

High School Musical 3 — Sorry highbrow guys, but I just love me this Disney hoofers. It shocks me that Hollywood cannot make a film with half the energy and charm of his low-budget made-for-TV song and dance flick.

5000 Fingers of Dr. T — Maybe the weirdest little thing I’d ever seen on the silver screen. In a dream a child is kidnapped into a concentration camp (surrounded by electrified barbed wire) run by an evil piano teacher bent on world conquest. After the piano teacher has a duel of hypnotic whammies with the plumber, the piano teacher (who has his own physics lab) orders the plumber disintegrated atom by atom. Meanwhile the plumber falls in love with the kid’s mom whom the piano teacher has used his hypnotic powers to place in a trance. The kid and the plumber are thrown into a dungeon inhabited by all the abducted musicians of the world, and must escape with the aid of an atomic — a very atomic — music-fixing bottle. The happy fingers beanies must be seen to be believed. The only live action movie ever made by Dr. Suess, who also did the set direction.

Singin’ in the Rain — The best comic musical piece ever is Donald O’Connor singing Make ’em Laugh. My three sons (ten, eight, and five) made me rewind that scene and play it over and over. Cameo by the leggy Cyd Charisse.

[Trivia time! In the "Would You" number, Kathy Selden (Debbie Reynolds) is dubbing the voice of Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) because Lina’s voice is shrill and screechy. However, it’s not Reynolds who is really speaking, it’s Jean Hagen herself, who actually had a beautiful deep, rich voice. So you have Jean Hagen dubbing Debbie Reynolds dubbing Jean Hagen.]

While it does not count as a movie, I also recent re-watched the last few episodes of Avatar, the Last Airbender, which is almost Miyazaki-like in its depth, well-done kinetic motion, character development, lush animation style, charm and humor. It is almost impossible in SFF to portray an alien world that seems both exotic and comfortably familiar, but the writers and illustrators of Avatar found a way to do it.

Also saw the first two episodes of BBC’s Upstairs Downstairs starring Jean Marsh. Very impressive for a television production. Next time someone tells you we have a class society in America, show then this little gem of a series, so they can see what class societies are like, and what must be done to maintain order and discipline within them. The scene where the new maid’s name is arbitrarily changed by the mistress of the house should make the point clearly enough.

But in the theater I saw:

Gran Torino — hysterically funny in places, moving, deep and human in others. Not the ending you’d expect. For once, the Priest character in the film is not an ax-murderer. If you are squeamish about heading a LOT of racial slurs, this one is not for you.

Slumdog Millionaire — the only film that won an Academy Award in the last five years which actually earned it. Well worth seeing. The brilliant concept here is that a boy from the slums, who knows nothing, just happens — by providence, or fate, or Karma, or coincidence — to know the answers to the increasingly difficult questions of a ‘You Want to Be a Millionaire’ gameshow. Questioned by the police (who think he is cheating)the youth reveals the details of his sometimes bittersweat, funny yet often horrid past, and the girl who appears as a bright thread in the dark tapestry of his life, a thread he has lost and seeks, somehow, to pick up again. Soon we realize that more than merely a million dollars is at stake.

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Bankruptcy

Posted March 23, 2009 By John C Wright

As of the time of this writing, Treasury Secretary Geithner is asking Congress to hand over another trillion dollars of taxpayer money for additional economic stimulus. A trillion is a thousand billion. When added to the national debt already assumed during the first 60 days of the current administration, the sum is beyond imagination. If printed up in one hundred dollar bills, this would circle the planet thirty times. It is equal to the national debt of all the presidents from George Washington to George W Bush COMBINED. Which means that, if we had to pay once more for the continental railway, the national highway system, the New Deal, the Great Society programs, the moonshot, the Civil War, two world wars, and the Cold War all over again, we could do so with this amount of money and have some left over to spend on buying Alaska from Russia again. Added to what we have already spend, the current trillion of dead comes to over three trillion dollars.

You will never pay down this debt; your children will never pay down this debt; your grandchildren will never pay down this debt. Living under the crushing burden of this debt, your children and grandchildren can look forward to economic conditions created by high taxes, hyperinflation, and the exclusion of private sector borrowing from credit markets, since the Federal Debt will absorb that market.

And, no I am not outraged, or even interested, in the bonuses paid to AIG officers, except, perhaps, a clinical interest in seeing what happens when a once-great nation passes from a mere neurotic aversion to facts and truth, to full-bore psychotic break with reality.

It might be an interest course assignment for  a law student to count the number of Constitutional provisions and Blackstonian legal principles of Anglo-American law a penal tax on specific individuals might offend, when the individual not only broke no law, but did only what their contractual oblations demanded.

That the stimulus package originally contained an (perhaps an unconstitutional, certainly tortous) provision to prevent the payment of bonuses, which language was removed before the bill was signed, merely add insult to folly. That neither the drafters of the bill nor the President who signed it read the bill before its passage adds comedy to insult to folly. The legal precident involved is that the majority in Congress, bound by nothing but their own corrupt will, shall henchforth have the power to take any property, real or personal, in confescation, of any persons of whom they disapprove, for any reason, or no reason.

Let me quote Mark Stein: 

As Charles Krauthammer pointed out, the $165 million in bonuses is less than 1/18,500th of the $3.1 trillion budget. The massive expansion of government the president is planning is forever, and will ensure you that end your days in what Peggy Noonan calls "post-prosperity America." More immediately, what message do you send to the world when legal contracts can be abrogated by retrospective confiscatory bills of attainder? You think that’s going to get anyone investing in America again?

The investor class invests in jurisdictions where the rules are clear and stable. Right now, Washington is telling the planet: In our America, there are no rules. Got a legally binding contract? We’ll tear it up. Refuse to surrenderthe dough? We’ll pass a law targeted at you, yes, you, Mr. Beau Nuss, of 27 Plutocrat Gardens, Fatcatville. If you want a banana republic on steroids, this is great news. So cheer on thuggish grandstanding by incompetent legislators-for-life like Barney Frank if you wish. But, in any battle between the political class and the business class, you’re only fooling yourself if you think it’s in your interest for the latter to lose.

Let me quote John Hinderaker;

Wells Fargo didn’t want any TARP money, but the government forced it to take more than $5 billion worth, so Wells Fargo employees who receive bonuses would be subject to Pelosi’s proposed tax. Say you’re a teller at Wells Fargo and you’re married to a lawyer who makes $250,000 this year. You get a $10,000 bonus for your good work during 2008. The government steals it all (90 percent federal plus 8.5 percent state plus, unless it’s included in the 90 percent, 3 percent Medicare). That is simply insane.

If the Pelosi bill is actually enacted into law (which I still think is doubtful) and upheld by the courts, there is no limit to the arbitrary power of Congress. In that event, we have no property rights and there is no Constitution—no equal protection clause, no due process clause, no impairment of contracts clause, no bill of attainder/ex post facto law clause. Instead, we are living in a majoritarian tyranny.

Since he wrote those words, the House passed the measure. I don’t know if it has gone to the Senate yet.

 

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Very Belated Book Review: THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON

Posted March 20, 2009 By John C Wright

I finally got around to reading this HG Wells’ classic THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON. It is a short book and in the public domain, so it is easy to get a hold of, and easy to read.

We have entered the Second Age of Science Fiction. In the First Age, all science fiction was fiction, and the future was a blank page. In the Second Age, the page is overwritten with real events, none of which were correctly expected. Science Fiction of the Second Age carries with it a long history of discarded prophecies, what are called “retrofutures”, were we can look back and see what were our grandfathers’ meditations (literal or figurative) about their future. These are not exactly alternate history, nor do they fit the old definition of science fiction as fiction set in a possible future. The mood most likely provoked by old science fiction is one of nostalgia, melancholy facing the past, which, ironically, is the precise opposite of the mood they were meant to provoke, wonder facing the future. Reading Orwell’s NINETEEN-EIGHTY FOUR is simply a different experience for an audience circa 1948, when the Labour Party was in the ascendant in England, as opposed to 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell.

THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON was published in 1901, six decades before the real moon landing, and I read it in 2009, four decades after the last moon landing. The tale was not scientifically feasible even when written, nor, to be fair, was it meant to be: it was a figurative rather than literal mediation on the future.

The plot consists of failed businessman Bedford, who is staying in the country, hiding from creditors, trying to write a play. He meets absentminded scientist Cavor, who is developing a metal, Cavorite, an alloy of helium, that blocks all gravity waves, nullifying the attraction of Earth. The two contrive a glass sphere fitted with venetian blinds of the material, which allows them to cut off Earthly gravity while allowing Lunar gravity to attract them.

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Who exactly is the Monster we are discussing?

Posted March 19, 2009 By John C Wright

An ongoing discussion. Necoras  is arguing in favor of performing human experiments on death row inmates. In reply to a pointed question, he write this: 

The man who has done murder is now less than a man. I stand by it. Infect him with whatever you want, throw him to the wolves. Fight him to the death and pay off the widow of the murdered (I do have a problem with the degradation of a society who cheers at fights to the death, but that is a separate issue). He deserves no less. I do not make him less than what he was, he has done that himself. I merely speak the truth of what I see.

Degrees of murder are a legal matter. You are (were) the lawyer and can easily argue circles around me there. If evidence is strong enough to condemn a man to death, it should stand up to experimentation, particularly if that experimentation is given as an alternative choice to an electric chair.

I’ve never been a big fan of the "no cruel and unusual" punishment clause. To paraphrase Heinlein "a punishment must be cruel and unusual or it is not a punishment." Criminal punishment is meant to be a deterrent, not a day spa. Death sentences are made "humane" for the sake of those pulling the trigger, not the dead man. What does he care? At the end of the day he’s still dead. The executioner is the one who’s been forced to kill (not murder) another and has tolive with it. Why force the executioner to torture him first?

Your rabid dog will be taken as a health concern and burned. If your son had ebola he likely would be to. One can hold a remembrance service without a body. A murderer’s corpse is the property of the community he has stolen from (the state) and should be treated as such. The wife may take solace in the fact that out of her husbands actions there was some minor restitution.

My comments:

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The Pope in Africa

Posted March 19, 2009 By John C Wright

An interesting article on National Review Online about His Holiness Pope Benedict’s visit to Africa, and the (as expected) public displays of ignorance by the mainstream press on the matter. Ignoring everything but the particular object of their obsession, the mainstream press dismisses the Holy Father as being unrealistic and out of touch when it comes to the Church teaching on condom use. The argument is that people must have sex under any and all conditions, even at the risk of their lives, and their behavior cannot be modified; and furthermore that condoms prevent the spread of AIDS. (Both claims are false-to-facts, even simpleminded, but the reality-based community congratulates themselves on being rational, progressive and scientific about the matter.)

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=YzJlNzBiNWRlM2IyYzFjZThjNmUwOTcyN2JlZWI0NTY=

One interesting point made here, and notunrelated to an earlier conversation in this space, is that many Africans do not want to use condoms to hinder the spread of AIDS because — wait for it — they are married polygamists trying to get their wives pregnant. In other words, they are not engaging in what the Progressives call ‘sex’ (because when they use the word they mean seeking sexual gratification with a short term partner). They are engaging in what sane people call ‘sex’ (because when we use that we, are engaging in the act of sexual reproduction aiming at, or at least open to, sexual reproduction).

Hm. Let us see what Merlin the Magician says about what Progressives call sex: 

Sulva is she whom mortals call the Moon. She walks in the lowest sphere. The rim of the world that was wasted goes through her. Half of her orb is turned toward us and shares our curse. Her other half looks to Deep Heaven; happy would be he who could cross that frontier and see the fields on her further side. On this side, the womb is barren and the marriages are cold. There dwell an accursed people, full of pride and lust. There when a young man takes a maiden in marriage, they do not lie together, but each lies with a cunningly fashioned image of the other, made to move and to be warm by deveilsh arts, for real flesh will not please them, they are so dainty (delicati) in their dreams of lust. Their real children they fabricate by vile arts in a secret place.
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A question of the sanctity of life

Posted March 19, 2009 By John C Wright

oscillon has an interesting question. We are discussing the morality of embryonic stem cell research:

"What is confusing here is that according to your position, it seems like the primary crime was committed during IVF. The stem cell issue looks like what to do with the bodies. It seems like the focus should be on the primary act that caused the harm. I don’t mean that this would justify the secondary issue; it would not, but it does seem secondary."
 

I will make this as clear as I can.

Harvesting human babies, even small ones, for medical research cheapens human life. Allowing anyone to make a profit, or find it in their self-interest, in an act which cheapens human life is imprudent.

It is a question of incentives. Abortion mills, Planned Parenthood and so on, are not charity organizations. They make a profit from their acts. They buy houses and send their kids to college and so on. It is in their best interest to continue the practice of infanticide, and to expand the practice. The Abortionists have become a faction and a politic power in their own right, and influenced the laws and customs of this nation.

So, here. This stem cell research is worthless, scientifically speaking, or at least not as promising as non-destructive stem cell research. Allowing embryo stem cell research will create a faction with a monetary self-interest in continuing the practice, and expanding it.

This is true even if the primary practice of in-vitro fertilization cannot be stopped.

"I caught the last 2/3 of Apocalypto on late night tv last night. I had avoided it when it first came out because of the ultra-violence. I just don’t like watching it anymore. Anyway, there is a scene where the main character escapes from the human sacrifice guys. He comes across a mass grave of the previous victims. I was thinking about this thread. It seems to me the stem cell debate (from your position) is like arguing whether or not to use the bodies to fertilize the fields and ignores the human sacrifice itself."

I will grant you the question but not the conclusion. If I lived in a society that produced mass graves of innocent corpses, I would, as a civilized man, as a Christian, demand the bodies be decently buried and decently treated with respect. The argument would be the same as I use here: namely, that it is imprudent to create an incentive aimed at further dehumanization of the human race. Treating corpses as a raw material is the same as permitting cannibalism on the ground that it is unthrifty to let good meat go to waste. Once we start plowing the dead into the ground as fertilizer, once we stop treating the dead with respect, once we treat human beings as raw materials, it creates a faction with a powerful incentive ever further to erode the bulwark of laws and customs surrounding human dignity. Once that bulwark is down, the weak are livestock for the strong. 

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Had this been Bush, we’d never’d heard the end of it

Posted March 19, 2009 By John C Wright

President Obama read the wrong speech from the teleprompter during St. Patrick’s day meeting with Irish Prime Minister Cowen, including the line thanking President Obama.

Story is here.

Oddly enough, no video of the event is available.

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Defunding Useful Research to Fund Useless Research

Posted March 18, 2009 By John C Wright

In reference to another conversation,  oiboyz comments

http://www.lifenews.com/bio2786.html
"President Barack Obama did more on Monday than just force taxpayers to fund embryonic stem cell research that requires the destruction of human life. He also rescinded an executive order President Bush put into place funding adult stem cells and new research with iPS cells."

I had to search quite a while to find that– it looks like the mainstream media is burying that story even more than I thought.

I also searched and searched and did not find it. Kudos to your Google-Fu skills, Oiboyz!

The President characterized this decision as one driven by scientific principles, untainted by ideological basis. As we can see, it is a lie.

The purpose (or the negligently overlooked yet inevitable unindented consequence, take your pick) of the research is to devalue human life, so that the pro-choice lobby (who successfully remove the choice about the baby’s murder from the conscientious doctor, from the baby, from the baby’s father and grandparents, from the informed consent of the mother herself, and from the community and legislatures reluctant to live in a society where human life is held to be without value) can feel swell about their self-image. 

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Review Scorn for “One Bright Star to Guide Them”

Posted March 18, 2009 By John C Wright

Alas, some reviewers hold me to a higher standard that my poor talents can match.

A writer automatically loses honor if he disputes with critics of his work. A story should speak for itself. But in this case, the critics miss the mark so badly that I think my gentle readers will be amused to see the dart fly past the target and hit Maid Marion sitting next to the Sherrif in the grandstand.

Lois Tilton at Internet Review of Science Fiction (http://www.irosf.com/q/zine/article/10522) had this to say:

Thomas Robertson comes home from celebrating an unwanted promotion to find a familiar black cat in his hedge.
The black cat spoke in a voice as soft and clear as rippling water. “I am come to summon you to tourney, Tommy, to face a knight of ghosts and shadows. No weapon of mankind can cut him; and once he is called to come, no door nor gate can keep him out. Only one who knows his secret name can hope to vanquish him. He is the champion of the Lord of Final Winter, who also is called the Shadow King. He has been summoned to your world, now, and all of England is at hazard.” The black cat looked up at him with eyes as yellow and mysterious as moonlight. “The call is given. Listen: you can hear the trumpet of the Wild Huntsman. Will you go?”
As a child, he and his friends had fought the evil and triumphed, but now they are growing old; only Thomas is willing to take up the quest again.
The epigraph is the old line about putting away childish things; the story is about picking them up again where the characters left off. This is another Narnia grown old but unchanged, with all the expected appurtenances, including a glowing lion. Indeed, Wright has thrown the fantasy kitchen sink into the mixer, with magic keys, swords, mirrors, books [written in invisible elvish script], ships, ad inf. I think most readers may be waiting for the point of view to shift, for the childish things to be revealed as childish, for a mature vision to prevail–but the author plays this one straight, all the way through, until it gleams with his faith and sincerity. There is also a whole lot of lecturing about the nature of evil and the struggle against, in which some of the triumphs seem to be a bit arbitrary. I think it requires a reader far less corrupted by cynicism than I to appreciate.

My comment: First, let me salute that last line. This reviewer is skilled enough to distinguish between personal taste and critical judgment.

Second, I think we would have to have a discussion as to what constitutes ‘mature vision’ before the merit of that criticism can be allowed. Using children fairytale elements to criticize modern ills in grown-up society can be well done or poorly done, but we cannot say it was not attempted here. That was what that “whole lot of lecturing about the nature of good and evil” was.

You do not have to be religious to see that fairytales are children’s versions of grand religious myths: fairies are little gods, fairy magic is child-sized miracles, and fairytale happy endings are scaled-down models of the Resurrection of the Just on Doomsday. In other words, a ‘mature vision’ or grown-up version of C.S. Lewis’s THE LAST BATTLE is not Sartre’s NO EXIT, but the Apocalypse of St. John, which is hardly a book for kids.

“The author plays this one straight, all the way through, until it gleams with his faith and sincerity.” Faith in what? This tale was written by an atheist.

Colin Harvey at Suite101.com (http://scififantasyfiction.suite101.com/article.cfm/fsf_aprilmay_2009_reviewed) Gives my tale the Room 101 treatment:

John C. Wright’s “One Bright Star To Guide Them” concludes the issue with a sadly derivative tale of a man called to save the world from the evil Knight of Shadows. It feels like the conclusion to a non-existent Narnia-like series built out of stock fantasy elements, with many “As You Know, Bob” conversations peppering the narrative, and a wholly unconvincing depiction of an England drawn from American TV.

My comment:  This reviewer is less skilled, comically so. He does not correctly identify the point of the story. Derivative, was it? Feels like the conclusion to a non-existent Narnia-like series, does it? Sort of the same way Alan Moore’s WATCHMEN is derivative of Carlton comics, and feels like the conclusion of a non-existent Justice League-like series, maybe? Hm?

I hope the reviewer is merely being snarky here. Because if not, he actually thinks he was reading a botched attempt to retell a Narnia tale, where the author foolishly decided to set the story forty years after the action ended.

No doubt there are real errors in description when it comes to England. I am not English. But the unconvincing description of England comes not from American Television but from English children’s books, like C.S. Lewis’ Narnia or Alan Garner’s Alderly Edge series, who wrote in a brighter time. The England of the 1950’s and 1940’s may seem unconvincing to eyes grown used to modern darkness, even in the hands of a writer more skilled than I. (Why American? Why television? I can think of American-made movies set in England, such as Mary Poppins or Peter Pan, but the only shows set in England seen on the small screen are BBC shows, Doctor Who, Fawlty Towers, Jeeves & Wooster, etc.)

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Obama’s New Minister of Culture

Posted March 18, 2009 By John C Wright
Found this article over on Big Hollywood.
Reprinted here without comment. Draw your own conclusions.
 

Meet Obama’s new Culture Warrior:

President Barack Obama has established a staff position in the White House to oversee arts and culture in the Office of Public Liaison and Intergovernmental Affairs under Valerie Jarrett, a senior adviser, a White House official confirmed. Kareem Dale, right, a lawyer who last month was named special assistant to the president for disability policy, will hold the new position.

“It’s a big step forward in terms of connecting cultural and government with mainstream administration policy,” Mr. Ivey said in an interview on Friday. …

 Mr. Ivey, a former chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, said he expected that the job would mainly involve coordinating the activities of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services “in relation to White House objectives.” 

Okay, where to begin?

1. Yet another distraction for our overwhelmed president.

2. It’s creepy.

3. It’s unnecessary. Our “culture” already is falling over itself to connect with “mainstream administration policy.”  How much adulation from the media does our Narcissist in Chief need? He’s got all the free adulation in the world; now he feels the need for a post crafted specifically to handmaiden more of it?

4. Did I mention it’s creepy? He just admitted that his goal was not to advance “culture” itself — already a dubious proposition — but was in fact, specifically, “a big step forward in terms of connecting cultural and government with mainstream administration policy.” He just announced, in other words, his point was to be a propagandist, to inject “mainstream administration policy” into our “culture.” Like the government-sponsored artists of the 30’s, apparently our new “culture” will be in service not of art but in propagandizing the Obama Administration. 

Add another one to the ever-growing What If Bush Had Done It? file. 

There was a hue and cry over a Clinton era (and Bush era) government program to subsidize TV shows which carried anti-drug messages. Even that was considered a breech and improper marriage of government and media. (I have to say I’m uncomfortable with the precedent myself — look where it’s gone.) 

And now Obama’s Minister of Culture is going to connect “culture” with “mainstream administration policy,” and the NYT welcomes it as if it’s a positive development? 

Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?

 
 
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Saint Patrick’s Breastplate

Posted March 17, 2009 By John C Wright

I and others tend to overlook the denomination of various popular figures from history, myth and story. In case you forgot, St. Patrick was Catholic. For that matter, so were St. Nicholas, and Friar Tuck and Sir Galahad and the Flying Nun and Sister Maria from Sound of Music, and Father O’Malley from Bells of Saint Mary’s, Nightcrawler from the X-Men, and, come to think of it, so must have been Jake and Elwood the Blues Brothers, who were on a mission from God.

In honor of St. Patrick, and his victory over the snakes and druids he drove out of Ireland (wait — how come you can play a Druid in D&D but not an Irish Catholic monk?) let me here give the Ce­cil Alex­an­der trans­la­tion of a Gael­ic po­em called “St. Pat­rick’s Lor­i­ca,” or breast­plate. (A “lorica” was a mys­tic­al gar­ment that was sup­posed to pro­tect the wear­er from dan­ger and ill­ness, and guar­an­tee ent­ry in­to Hea­ven.)

I particularly like the lines about protection from wizard’s evil craft. Reminds me of Tolkien. (Frodo Baggins, come to think on it, was not Catholic. Nor was Solomon Kane, Puritan Adventurer.)

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The American Center for Law and Justice is collecting signatures on a petition. They explain it this way

The Conscience Clause was implemented by former President George W. Bush to give physicians and nurses the choice to act according to their conscience — to not participate in abortion procedures if it conflicts with their personal convictions. If President Obama makes this damaging move, if he reverses the Conscience Clause, pro-life doctors and nurses will be forced into performing abortion procedures, despite their individual beliefs.

The announcement was made Friday, March 6, 2009. Since the official announcement was made, the public now has 30 days to file comments with the White House … so we’ve got 30 days to make our voices heard at the White House.

Make a difference in this nation and stand for the freedom to act according to your conscience. Sign the online “Petition to Protect Pro-Life Doctors” below now. It will be delivered and filed at the White House no later than April 8, 2009.

Here is the link:

http://www.beheardproject.com

https://www.aclj.org/Petition/Default.aspx?&ac=1&Zip=*Zip&sc=3419

There is also an article on their website explaining the embryonic stemcell controversy. Apparently such research taken from adult stemcells (research which does have positive results and promises more) is being curtailed, whereas research experimenting on human embryos (research which destroys human life, and has no record whatsoever of any results) is being expanded. This is like the auto bailout: throwing good money after bad. Not to mention destroying human life. And the secularists call US anti-science.

I can understand the cold Nazi bloodlust of wanting to experiment on Jews & Gypsies, not only for science, but also to see them suffer, because I understand the psychopathology of sadism. I do not understand removing a promising line of research to persue an unpromising line of research. That is beyond pathological, and well into the satanic.

I am not anti-science, merely anti-satan.

Science says that a fetus as young as 14 days after conception shows brainwave activity. People who long to euthaize patients in comas point to the lack of brainwaves as a sign of a lack of human life. But then the presence of brainwaves in an unborn child should by that token indicate the presence of human life? Of course, that would involve talking about science, and, for some odd reason, only the Christians seem to know the basic facts available in any highschool textbook on biology. (For example, the secularists do not seem to know what a ‘species’ is, or how it differs from a ‘fetus’. When I ask then to what ‘species’ the ‘fetus’ in question belongs, they cannot answer, or they utter a paradox.) The pro-science group knows not that much about science.

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More review love for ‘One Bright Star to Guide Them’

Posted March 17, 2009 By John C Wright

Joshua Reynolds over at The Fix website reviews the April ish of F&SF, and has this to say:

“One Bright Star to Guide Them” by John C. Wright,… is an ode to past authors. The influences are obvious, with nods to C. S Lewis, Susan Cooper, Charles de Lint, and Lloyd Alexander being the most evident. Luckily, Wright manages to avoid the worst pitfalls of such a thing and instead builds up a unique spin on an old fantasy chestnut. Wright displays an easy confidence with the tropes and archetypes, never overdoing it or underplaying those aspects which continue to attract readers to these types of stories. Indeed, rather than a pastiche, this comes across as simply the next in line, with Wright taking up the banner for other authors and putting his own stamp on the page. There are several truly disturbing scenes, told in retrospect, which in particular give this story a unique slant, and I, for one, hope Wright revisits them in his later work. The climax is foregone, but no less enjoyable for all that, and if you enjoyed the works of Susan Cooper or C.S. Lewis, you’ll enjoy this as well.
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A reader recently commented on my blog that Pluto is not a planet, but a trans-Neptunian Object. I would reply to this asseveration using calm logic and astronomical fact, but I find it requires less effort and achieves greater results merely to call my opponents ‘Pluto Deniers’ and assert their conclusions are prompted by ‘Pluto Hate’ or, better yet, ‘Plutophobia’.

Coming to my aid is a little girl. This is the lovely daughter of John Scalzi (OLD MAN’S WAR, GHOST BRIGADES, etc.) responding to Scott Westerfeld (RISEN EMPIRE, PRETTIES, etc.) who are both REAL science fiction writers. I think her presentation sums up the pros and cons of the arguments for both sides nicely, and renders a cool and deliberate judgment.

There you have it! So if you think Pluto is not a planet, you will make a little girl cry, and the Great Old Ones will eat your brain. Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn!!

I trust that this settles the matter.

(P.S.: I also have a plush green stuffed Cthulhu doll in my house. I once saw my toddler son playing with it, and pantomiming an aerial dogfight between Cthulhu and Butterfree, the butterfly Pokemon. The butterfly won the duel. Reducing the Lovecraftian monstrosity to a floppy child’s ragdoll may have diminished his dignity and power somewhat.)

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