Facing the Issues

Following on (kinda left-turn-inspired by :-)) Chaotic Synaptic Activity’s recent “stream of consciousness” post… I envision this post as one in a twelve or more part series. It’ll be filed under the Mending Walls category, because while I’ll focus on stating issues, I hope some discussion will eventually turn toward addressing these issues with possible solutions.

First and foremost, I believe the issues facing the U.S. are almost all stemming from a lack of moral values based upon time-tested Western Civilization values. “Moral values” you say? Yep. For quite some time, probably beginning as far back as the time period of Nathaniel Hawthrone’s 19th century slanders against Puritans, the tendency in these (dis)United States has been to redefine “morality” almost strictly in terms of sexual morality, and then to disparage such sexual morality as dehumanizing (or worse, as “merely” quaint, outdated, unrealistic).

Morality, though, encompasses much more than what contemporary Mass Media Podpeople, Academia Nut Fruitcakes and others have brainwashed American sheeple into thinking. First, and here’s where the sub rosa communist-socialist agenda of mass Media Podpeople and Academia Nut Fruitcakes find cause to reject morality for an easily disparaged subset, moral values require an ultimate arbiter of truth, and Western moral values have always appealed to a Judeo-Christian God as that arbiter. That is, of course, why Mass Media Podpeople and Academia Nut Fruitcakes are in the forefront of those relegating God to the ash heap of superstition, even if only (if only!) by continually mis-representing people of faith.

Sidebar: it’s not only by misrepresenting Christians and their values in such Mass Media Podpeoples’ candy-coated cyanide pills as “Seventh Heaven” and “Touched By An Angel” and even more open slurs in other TV shows that distortion and misrepresentation of a couple of millennia of Christian thought (and a much longer span of Jewish thought) tears at the fabric of a “public faith” as practiced from the Founders on. No, it’s also by misrepresentation of other, non-Western, religions such as Islam that Mass Media Podpeople and their ilk attempt to destroy any sense of morality in America.

Oh? Well, what could be more immoral than the lies damned lies and Mass Media Podpeoples’ lies (the progression is intentional, with apologies to Twain) widely and continually propogated as truth (amid an atmosphere that also proclaims that all truth is subjective… except for the “truth” of anti-Western, anti-American, anti-Christian, anti-Jewish lies)?

Consider: when Christians, for example, are regularly portrayed as candy-coated wimps or fire-and-brimstone bigots but rarely–if ever–as, well, Christians, while Islam and Muslims are NOT presented honestly, the whole cult getting a bye on the little thing of veneration for a founder who is the very prototype of the modern Islamic terrorist, then that alone is enlough to establish the fundamental immorality of the Mass Media Podpeoples’ culture.

Americans cannot be a moral people until we the people are first brought face to face with the reality that we are answerable to a Higher Power for our day to day behavior. We are answerable for our political choices, our business and financial decisions, our decisions in entertainment and leisure time.

Over at Thought Renewal, Lyn (formerly of Bloggin’ Outloud) has instituted a discussion of a recent book concerning the “law of attraction.” It’s a discussion worthy of our attention, IMO. One statement of the principle Lyn has noted (one that long predates the watered-down and more than slightly twisted restatement in the recent popular self help book) is a principle that former generations understood well, at almost a bone-deep level (because they were not biblical illiterates):

Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap. For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.” –Luke 6:38

In another post, he goes further and restates the principle with this citation of Galatians 6:7,

“You reap what you sow.”

Unfortunately, IMO, Lyn fails to cite the entire quote, and that is critical to understanding the “reap what you sow” aspect in this case, for every principle linked to faith, to moral conduct, to one’s normative daily behavior has attached both a blessing and a curse… and the choice is ours which it is. Here is the rest of the verse as not cited above:

“Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.”

And that is the crux of the issue: the influence of Mass Media Podpeople, Academia Nut Fruitcakes et al, says, “Your behavior is not linked to real consequences. Good and bad events in your life are not influenced by your moral choices. Life is capricious; you will not be held accountable for your actions.” Oh, MMPP and ANFs don’t always say such things blunty (although sometimes they do), but it is at least a the subtext of most of their product.

For example, what rational, moral (as in committed to truth, at the least) person, after reading the Koran and the history of Islam from the time of the Butcher of Medina (Mohammed) on, could not see that the so-called “radical” Islamic terrorist is simply an honest expression of the principles laid down by the life and teachings of the founder of Islam? That claims by Islamic apologists, both among Muslims and among the dhimmis in the West, that Islam is a peaceful religion are all lies?

Well, the obvious answer is there is no rational, honest person who can make such claims for Islam, but nevertheless, we are subjected to such lies on a daily basis.

And this is but one example of the chief failure of morality in our society today: lies–about the nature of people, about various cultures, about “political realities”, about nearly every aspect of public and private life are daily pushed upon us with very little in the way of public outcry calling for concemnation of the lies and the liars who propogate them. In fact, anyone who points out simple truths is calling for their own condemnation! Take for example Vice President Cheney’s recent observation that nancy Pelosi and her cadre of surrenderists are espousing al-Qaeda policy. A simple comparison of Pelosi comments with verified al-Qaeda pronouncements reveals that Cheney’s statement is factual, true. And for this he’s been roundly excoriated in the media.

Oh, my. What an evil person! He spoke the truth.

M. Scott Peck wrote some 20 years ago or so about “People of the Lie” (a pretty insightful book, IMO, and one with particular application to understanding the Mass Media Podpeople Hivemind and politicians *spit* as a class) wherein he said that the truly evil “are masters of disguise and cloak themselves with masks of respectability, goodness and often piety.”

The Lie is central to the destruction of a moral culture, and it is by continually lying about darned near everything, continually selling the culture of The Lie that the culture of the Mass Media Podpeople Hivemind (almost entirely congruent with a culture of The Lie) makes its lies into reality, as sheeple ape the Mass Media Podpeople Hivemind in their daily life, in everything from envy of the lifestyles seen portrayed on the dullertainment offered to the political agenda of the Hivemind as revealed in dullertainment and “news”-ertainment programs.

And art. I saw a segment of a public television show the other night featuring an “artist” who painted on wood using house paints. The “artist” was shown as an example of a modern primitive painter. The “artwork” displayed was crap. And that’s speaking kindly. The worst stuff I’ve seen in years. Presented as “art”. When the very idea of art is debased to such a level, is it any wonder that in performance art we have such excrescence as “rap”? (Go on: try to make a convincing argument that listening to rap “music” does not debase an individual. Try. Please.)

I suspect (well, no, I do not suspect; I know) I could simply use any of the traditional lists of “Seven Deadly Sins” (there’s a slight variation in the listing over the millennia :-)) as an outline for this post series, and perhaps I’ll reconfigure it that way, but for now, be forewarned that the series will likely contain references to how moral behavior impacts (in no particular order)

Immigration/border control policy
Essential liberties/lies from the Left… and the Right
The growth of anarcho-tyranny (and the death-by-inches of justice)
Islamic Jihad/GWOT
Education, so-called
Abortion, or “murder by euphemism”
Science and pseudo-science (a materialistic approach to truth)
Energy, productivity and responsible management of resources
Work ethic

And a few more.


Trackposted to Perri Nelson’s Website, Right on the Right, Mark My Words, basil’s blog, Blue Star Chronicles, Pirate’s Cove, The Bullwinkle Blog, High Desert Wanderer, and Jo’s Cafe, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Monday Linkfest

Busy with other posts, life and all that. 🙂 You know what to do: Link to THIS post and track back.

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.

Dear John

No, this isn’t a post telling John McCain to get lost (although I certainly wish he would, the slimy anti-free speech political hack *spit*). This is just a min-semi-almost-rant and FYI.

Lately, I’ve been back up to a couple thousand SPAMs a day caught in my SPAM queue. In the past, I’ve spent time daily weeding through as much of the SPAM queue as I could in attempts to catch the few legitimate comments/trackbacks wrongly labeled as SPAM. But the task is taking too great a toll, now. With only about 3 legitimate comments/trackbacks per couple thousand in my SPAM queue, that’s about a 0.15% return on my time invested. Not worth it, even with setting the scroll rate rather high and skimming as fast as I can, no matter how much I appreciate your comments/trackbacks.

So, while I’ll ALWAYS continue to check the moderation queue, from now on, whenever there are 500 or more comments/trackbacks caught in my SPAM queue, I’ll just delete them all without skimming through to catch the almost vanishingly few legit comments/trackbacks. If you think a comment/trackback of yours has dropped down the SPAM hole, drop me a line via email or comment on the post you tracked back to (with a link to your tb’ed post, if it’s a tb) and I’ll fix it. Keep in mind, though, that your comment/trackback may be in my moderation queue, and I WILL get to it there, as I do attempt to check that queue several times a day.


FYI Trackposted to Pet’s Garden Blog, Right on the Right, Rightlinx, Woman Honor Thyself, Big Dog’s Weblog, The Pink Flamingo, Stuck On Stupid, Cao’s Blog, Gulf Coast Hurricane Tracker, Pursuing Holiness, and Conservative Thoughts, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

On the bright side…

Imagine if this had happened in The People’s Republics of Massachusetts, California or Oregon…

“SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — A tour bus of U.S. senior citizens defended themselves against a group of alleged muggers, sending two of them fleeing and killing a third in the Atlantic coast city of Limon, police said on Thursday.”

Instead,

…[Police chief Luis] Hernandez said authorities do not plan to press any charges against them, saying they acted in self defense.

“They were in their right to defend themselves after being held up,” Hernandez said.

Well, at least the rampant anarcho-tyranny plaguing citizens in this country hasn’t progressed (quite so far) in Costa Rica. If such an event had happened here, where Border Patrol agents can be railroaded into prison on trumped up charges simply for doing their job and substitute teachers can face 40-year prison terms for getting slammed by school district irresponsibility, the senior citizens (in their 70s) who defended themselves against armed robbery would likely have been slammed in the pokey, instead of commended for practicing their right of self-defense.

Anyone for retiring to Costa Rica, where goblins are apparently a no-tag, unlimited bag limit game? Maybe take along one of these? Or one of these? Nah. Both. In multiples.

It’s a thought, especially now that America’s Third World Countyâ„¢ has been invaded by WallyWorld, MacDonald’s and Disney has bought up a large tract of land. Moving to a third world (or even “second world” *heh*) country is starting to look more and more appealing. *sigh* Where disney goes, anarcho-tyranny is sure to flourish. Just ask all the folks under DRM threat. (Urm, that likely includes you, whether you know it or not.)


Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, Leaning Straight Up, Woman Honor Thyself, and basil’s blog, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Competition for NASA?

Well, not quite.

Utoobe has already pulled the video once because of copyright violation (it says–Utoobe is remarkably flexible and unreliable about claims like that), so I’ve just linked the video. As of now, there are scads of copies posted again, but who knows. See it while you can.

See the video (or not?) here.

h.t. Chaos Manor


Trackposted to Outside the Beltway, The Virtuous Republic, The Random Yak, Allie Is Wired, The Uncooperative Blogger ®, Adam’s Blog, The Pink Flamingo, Phastidio.net, Leaning Straight Up, Right Voices, Sujet- Celebrities, and Gone Hollywood, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Quick Windoze Tip

For Windoze users who are just flat-out tired of all the hoops they have to jump through to clean all the junk Windoze and Windoze apps leave scattered around, you’d think the Cleanup manager, included in Windows since Win98 (I believe) would be pretty useful.

It isn’t. At least, not in its default config.

But for Win2K and above, there are some things you can do to make it useful, approaching the abilities of $40 standalone cleanup utilities. Easy things.

First, try this: START>RUN>cleanmgr /sageset:99

When you run Cleanup Manager with this switch, it’ll offer a bunch of useful additional options. Click whichever you want. Change your selections any time by simply running cleanmgr again with the same switch invoked.

Next, open a plain text editor (Notepad will do) and type in (or copy/paste from here):

cleanmgr /sagerun:99

Save the file as Cleanup.bat or some such name. The “bat” extension tells Windoze to run the plain text file as a batch file and makes it easy to invoke quickly w/o a chance for typing mistakes. Save the batch file in a folder you make just for such things. You can even place a shortcut to the thing on your desktop or in your start bar. Just click on it whenever you want it to run. Better yet, use Windoze built-in scheduler to run it periodically.

Now, this won’t clean up all the gunk left hanging around on your hard drive(s), but it’ll help a lot. More lil tips later, but this (and running a good registry cleaner every now and then) can help decruft your system pretty well.

After all, as long as you’re going to keep using Windows, you might as well make it run as well as reasonably possible, right?

Typing by “The Biblical Method”

A PSA for regular twc readers

A reader over at Jerry Pournelle’s Chaos Manor in Review points out something I frequently gnash my teeth over here at twc. In reference to a posting of a long ago article Dr. Pournelle wrote for a now-defunct publication, the reader points out:

Your new [as in “newly-posted”–ed.] report begins, “In the 1980’s, I was [and] editor and columnist for SURVIVE Magazine.” The built-in Microsoft checker has no problem with that, even though VERB COORDINATOR NOUN makes no sense.

As I age, something happens ever more frequently. As my mind gets several words ahead, I unwittingly type a similar, but incorrect word, in place of the intended one. Spell checkers let those fall right through the cracks.

“As I age…” I experience much the same phenomenon. In addition to my already excreble typing “skills” (I type by the “biblical method”–“seek and ye shall find”) that result in all kindsa typos, I too frequently get ahead of myself or get lost in a train of thought waiting for my typing to catch up with my thoughts. Sure, a bare 35-40 wpm is pretty bad to begin with, but I tend to think at, oh, I dunno, about 300-500 wpm, so… *heh* (Yeh, I don’t talk nearly as fast as I think the words, either, although I’m sometimes accused of talking too fast for my listeners. Makes for some interesting conversations as I sometimes skip ahead several steps in an argument/conversation or wait for the conversation to roll around to where I already am… although folks don’t always bother to consult their script. *LOL*).

So it goes.

Words jump the queue. Whole thoughts are dropped or skipped. There are never enough words or sentences or paragraphs to fully express any given idea. Tough. The “holes and gaps, lacks and losses, absences, insipidies and the like” that plague my blogging along with queue-jumping words (or parts of words, sometimes!) are just what they are, and likely to stay that way. As Pournelle says of his blog, “It’s a daybook” and not all that intensively edited at that.

So, I’ll just continue slogging along at my herky-jerky pace and hope y’all read between the lines (or paragraphs, sometimes ;-)) and use those queue-jumping words, when possible, to aid the process.


Connecticut Prison for Kids Teams Up With Fake Justice System, II

For more on the Julie Amero case, here’s an email I recieved with specific permission to reproduce.

The Julie Amero Tragedy

The tragic case of Julie Amero, a substitute teacher who was convicted of “impairing the morals of minor” because pornographic images were visible on a computer in her classroom has riveted the attention of many in the education and computer security community. A new report, written by Nancy Willard, M.S., J.D., Director of the Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use, has just been released. This report presents a comprehensive review of the materials related to the case. Among the findings:

* The situation described by Amero is consistent with what is called a “porn trap” or “mouse trap.” When this occurs, the browser is no longer under the control of the user and porn images will simply keep popping up until the computer is turned off.

* Amero had been specifically told not to turn off the computer and probably did not know how. So she turned the computer so that students could not see the images. She could not lock the door when she left the room to get help because she did not have a key.

* Amero went to get help at a break and described the pop-up situation. People who are intentionally accessing inappropriate material do not try to get help. She told the assistant principal after school and described the situation to the principal, Scott Fain, the following day. The school reported the incident to the police just over a week later. Fain did not tell the investigating officer what he knew of Amero¹s activities on that day or her report to him the following day. He withheld information that would have allowed the officer to determine that Amero¹s access was not intentional.

* The computer had inadequate security and the browser would not block pop-ups. The district¹s content filter license had lapsed due to lack of payment. The technology director, Hartz, did not evaluate whether any malware was on the computer or the pattern of sites that appeared in the history log to determine whether the access was intentional or accidental. Hartz also did not tell the investigating officer that the content filter license had lapsed.

* The police computer crimes expert also did not determine whether there was any malware on the computer. He also testified in court that Amero had to intentionally access the sites for them to appear on the logs. This is totally inaccurate.

* Amero¹s response to this situation was far from reckless. Of the approximately 60 students who were in the classroom only10 saw anything. Of those, 6 specifically stated that they tried to look at the computer after being told of the situation by another student. Many students reported that Amero took specific efforts to block their view when she became aware that they were trying to see.

* The situation did not impair the morals of the students. Eight students reported seeing mild erotica. The two students who reported seeing people engaged in sex also reported that there were a bunch of little pictures on the screen. One was a distance from the screen and the other reported that the teacher did not notice him, so he must not have been very close.

* A recent study found that 42% of young people between the ages of 10 and 17 have viewed online pornography, one-third intentionally, two-thirds accidentally. Nine percent of these incidents reportedly occurred at school. There is no research evidence regarding the impact of such viewing.

The full report is available on the Center for Responsible Internet Use web site at http://csriu.org. Also available on this site are Willard¹s recent presentation notes addressing cyber-secure schools and cyberbullying. These presentation notes outline the concerns associated with youth online activity and strategies recommended for schools to address such concerns.

Nancy E. Willard has degrees in special education and law. She taught “at risk” children, practiced computer law, and was an educational technology consultant before focusing her professional attention on issues of youth risk online and effective Internet use management in schools. Nancy frequently conducts workshops for educators. She is expanding her use of Internet technologies to deliver “virtual” presentations and classes. She is the author of two books: Cyberbullying and Cyberthreats: Responding to the Challenge of Online Social Aggression, Threats, and Distress (Research Press) and Cyber-Safe Kids, Cyber-Savvy Teens: Helping Young People Use the Internet Safety and Responsibly (Jossey-Bass).

For more information contact: Nancy Willard at nwillard@csriu.org.


Nancy Willard, M.S., J.D.
Center for Safe and Responsible Internet Use
http://csriu.org
http://cyberbully.org
nwillard@csriu.org


And folks wonder why good teachers leave teaching and why it’s hard to maintain a pool of substitutes…


Trackposted to Perri Nelson’s Website, The Crazy Rants of Samantha Burns, basil’s blog, Pirate’s Cove, Blue Star Chronicles, Stuck On Stupid, The Bullwinkle Blog, Cao’s Blog, Conservative Cat, and Conservative Thoughts, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.

Go Tell the Spartans

Go tell the Spartans, Passerby,
That here, obedient to their laws, We lie…

–Simonidas, Epitaph for the Spartans who fell at Thermopylae

While the politicians diddled In Athens, the Spartans who had come to join the Athenians in repulsing the Persian invasion, held the pass… and died.

Politicians *spit*: The same yesterday, today and tomorrow. See the definition for Defeatocrat.

Meanwhile, this is twc’s weekend linkfest. Hit me with yiour best shots.

If you have a linkfest/open trackback post to promote OR if you simply want to promote a post via the linkfests/open trackback posts others are offering, GO TO LINKFEST HAVEN DELUXE! Just CLICK the link above or the graphic immediately below.

Linkfest Haven, the Blogger's Oasis

If you want to host your own linkfests but have not yet done so, check out the Open Trackbacks Alliance. The FAQ there is very helpful in understanding linkfests/open trackbacks.

Connecticut Prison for Kids Teams Up With Fake Justice System

Below is an excerpt from an article in the current issue of Windows Secrets Newsletter about the substitute teacher who’s been railroaded as a scapegoat for school district incompetence. Let it serve as both a warning for your personal computer use and as an indication of anarcho-tyranny in pubschool bureaucracy and the so-called “justice” system. *sigh*

I am unsurprised by the school system’s behavior in this travesty of justice. Nor do I find the “justice” system’s actions surprising (think Duke faux “rape” case, Martha Stewart, etc.). But where, pray tell, was the ACLU? Surely such a *cough* high-minded group would at least file an amicus brief when this horrible travesty came to light, given the broad implications affecting Truth, Justice and The American Way of the school system, police and courts’ mishandling of this case. Surely.

Not.


Pop-up ads can land you in jail

If you find yourself the victim of pop-up ads on a computer, with children in the vicinity, you could face decades in prison.

I wish that I was exaggerating or being sensationalistic, but for Julie Amero this is far too real.

Meet Julie Amero, substitute teacher

There’s a good chance that you’ve already heard something about Julie. She’s perhaps better known as the Connecticut substitute schoolteacher who’s been convicted of “child endangerment.” She now faces a sentence of up to 40 years in prison because porn pop-ups appeared on a school computer.

There are many points I could make about what’s wrong with her case. But I’ll stick with my core competency and just point out some of the technical flaws.

Flawed technology condemns an educator

The key issues were set in motion before Julie ever arrived to substitute-teach on the day in October 2004 that the pop-ups occurred. The school district had allowed its Web-filtering software support contract to expire, preventing the software from receiving updates. The computer in question was running Windows 98, and the browser in use was IE 6…


Go. Read the whole thing (plus the linked background above).

IMO, the school system, its administrators and IT people, should be the ones facing the possible 40 years in jail, for it was their callous indifference to their responsibilities that appear to be the issue.

But the kind of problem Julie faced is yet another good reason I’ve had the popup protection Opera offers years before it became available in Firefox or (finally!) in IE7, and a reason I practice paranoia concerning spyware and viruses, trojans and worms, Oh! My! _I_ certainly don’t want any site I do not intend to visit–or even sites I DO intend to visit–take control of my computer…

Good UP TO DATE anti-virus software (yes, even in Linux–Clam AV is pretty good, and makes a nice set of “suspenders” to go with Linux’s already pretty good security “belt”) and MANUAL SCANNING of ALL file downloads, good UP TO DATE anti-spyware software (I use FIVE different anti-spyware products on my Windows machines), a good hardware firewall and a strong software firewall combined with responsible surfing/computing habits have kept our lil network free of problems, but some folks are just too lazy and irresponsible to develop habits like that… or–as in the example above–even know (or care) when an irresponsibly mismanaged network can endanger users.

Just a lil Thursday fun stuff… *heh*


Linking back to Diane’s Wednesday OTA post at TTWA. Yeh, it’s a second link-in, Diane. What can I say? 😉

Trackposted to Right Pundits, The Virtuous Republic, Perri Nelson’s Website, A Blog For All, stikNstein… has no mercy, basil’s blog, Pirate’s Cove, The Pink Flamingo, and Pursuing Holiness, thanks to Linkfest Haven Deluxe.