Posts from December 23, 2003

Merry Christmas to our people in Iraq and Afghanistan

Merry Christmas to our people in

Iraq and Afghanistan

: It is now Christmas Eve day in Iraq and Afghanistan and so let us turn our thoughts and prayers and gratitude to our soldiers there.

They are away from their families and loved ones. They face danger every day. But they are generously bringing a great gift of freedom to people who have lived under the thumb of despots.

Remember that Christmas is not about presents and snow and Santa, of course. Christmas is not clean and shining and bright. As my sister, the Rev. Cindy Jarvis, preached last Sunday, “we tidy up the stable so antiseptically, deck the halls so exquisitely, reason our way to the manger with such sophistication that we avoid the scandal and deny the flesh his incarnation embraced, the body his resurrection redeemed.”

No, Christmas is about freeing God’s people from suffering. Christmas is about the least of them brought to a humble stable where nothing was going right: Then there was no room in the inn; now there is not enough electricity. Herod lurked in the shadows then; Baathists and al-Queda do now. These are the facts of life among those who need help.

I’m not suggesting, of course, that the soldiers are messiahs. But they are shepherds come to herald a new age and a bright future. They are wise men bearing gifts of great value — freedom, safety, democracy, modernity.

Let us pray for the safety of our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. Let us pray for their families, spending Christmas without them. Let us pray for the people of Iraq and Afghanistan to find a bright future. Let us give thanks for the sacrifice our soldiers and those of many nations are making in the name of peace.

And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased.”

iraqchristmas.jpg

Murder in the palace

Murder in the palace
: Prince Anne’s dog kills Queen Elizabeth’s dog.

“The incident has certainly put a damper on the Christmas holiday. It’s terrible and everyone at Sandringham is very upset,” the unnamed source was quoted as saying.

Elizabeth was said to be “absolutely devastated” over the death of Pharos after he was savaged by Dottie, according to the newspaper.

Just last year Anne, known as the Princess Royal, was fined after Dottie attacked two children in Windsor Great Park, in west London.

Iraqi Christmas

Iraqi Christmas
: Here’s what Christmas is like for Iraqi Christians.

THE last-minute gift

THE last-minute gift
: Give the gift of blog.

The geek cafe

The geek cafe
Scoble and Mayfield happen to meet at a Cheesecake Factory and geek out over the POS system.

Iceblog

Iceblog
: Last year, there was a blog from Antarctica that melted. Here‘s a new one.

The chosen beer

The chosen beer
: Just heard a funny WNBC report on He’brew, The Chosen Beer. There’s Messiah Bold, “It’s the Beer You’ve Been Waiting For!” It comes with slogans aplenty: “Jesus, that’s good beer!”

Bloghetto: official vs. independent weblogs

Bloghetto: official vs. independent weblogs
: Jonathan Chait of The New Republic complains on his Dean-o-phobe blog that the Dean campaign is creating a comfy online island in its weblogs:

One of the most disturbing things about Dean and his hard-core supporters is that they give the impression that they know nothing at all of why President Bush is successful, and therefore what it takes to beat him. Read the pro-Dean blogs, and the you come away with the view that Bush is strong because he’s ruthless and has lots of money, and therefore if the Democrats are also ruthless and raise lots of money, they can beat him. This ignorance is compounded by the fact that many Deanies seem to exist in a isolated cultural milieu in which everybody is secular, socially liberal, and antiwar. They can’t fathom why those things might hurt Dean in a general election because they don’t ever talk to or read anybody who thinks differently. Dean’s Internet networking–which has had lots of positive effects on American politics–has probably intensified this cloistering, by creating intellectual ghettos on the web where true believers can interact, undisturbed by those who don’t share their faith.

Gene over at Harry’s Place agrees:

Well, yes, which is one reason to avoid those cyber-ghettos. And it’s one reason I appreciate the wide range of opinions reflected in the posts and comments at Harry’s Place. I’m pleased that– no matter what you believe– you can’t get away with intellectual laziness here. Many ideological web sites are devoted largely to carricaturing the opposing side; it’s hard to do that here because someone from the opposing side will usually call you on it.

Right.

: Official weblogs, by the very fact that they are annointed as as official, must give the party line (see my earlier post on the essentially and necessarily one-way and propagandistic nature of an official weblog). You go to the official blog to find out what is official. They try to influence down.

Independent weblogs, on the other hand, have more freedom to discuss and argue. You go to them to see what the people say. They try to influence across and up. Their independence is their value.

: UPDATE: Dave Winer went to see Dean last night. His post isn’t up because of a rabid bot going after his server. But the post is up on his RSS feed. A quote:

There were 150 people in the room, mostly it was about lies, bedtime stories, telling people what they want to hear. No minds activated. Some good lines, a glimmer that minds may have played a role in the Dean campaign at one time, but not today. Now they’re trying to get elected, and I believe in doing so are guaranteeing that they won’t. If you’re looking for an airbrushed guy, Clark is much stronger. I don’t know why people care how much money Dean has raised, that’s just going to buy commercials. I’d love to see one of the pols use their money to solve some problems now, win or lose. Put some teeth behind We Love The Internet and The Internet Loves Us.