
Friday, January 30, 2009
Nerves of Steele
Way to go Mike Steele! I have liked him sine clear back in 2003. This is really cool-the RNC needs a good media guy at the top-espeically one as intelligent and likeable as Mike.
Of course, missing from this AP article is a word that starts with 'h' and ends with 'istoric.' Racial progress only counts if you're a Democrat, apparently.
Still, yay Mike. See, minorities? We have NOTHING against you. I would have happily pulled the level for Mike Steele last November.
So the leaders of both political parties is an African American-that's really something. To quote Dennis Miller: "In New York City this week, whites officially became the minority of the ethnic groups. And I, for one, am SICK AND TIRED of being hassled by the man!"
I hope he goes far. This is a great day for bald Republicans who wear corrective lenses! Now we finally have someone on the inside!
Of course, missing from this AP article is a word that starts with 'h' and ends with 'istoric.' Racial progress only counts if you're a Democrat, apparently.
Still, yay Mike. See, minorities? We have NOTHING against you. I would have happily pulled the level for Mike Steele last November.
So the leaders of both political parties is an African American-that's really something. To quote Dennis Miller: "In New York City this week, whites officially became the minority of the ethnic groups. And I, for one, am SICK AND TIRED of being hassled by the man!"
I hope he goes far. This is a great day for bald Republicans who wear corrective lenses! Now we finally have someone on the inside!

Thursday, January 29, 2009
Daily Winwood
It's good to be back to my normal, hope-less self. Welcome back.
I was pondering a childhood memory the other day. I could have swore that in the Steve Winwood video for "Valerie," at one of the later iterations of the chorus
Steve struck kind of a rock em' sock em' robots pose with both his arms. Hillary thought it was like this as well. But when we YouTube'd the video, there was nary a robot pose in the entire thing. In fact the whole affair is just tremendously boring, with Steve standing around while a girl who looks like Mallory from Family Ties spins around in the background.
My memory is starting to slip. Soon I will forget who I am. In case I forget all of you, know that you are in my heart. Goodbye.
I was pondering a childhood memory the other day. I could have swore that in the Steve Winwood video for "Valerie," at one of the later iterations of the chorus

My memory is starting to slip. Soon I will forget who I am. In case I forget all of you, know that you are in my heart. Goodbye.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Intelligent life

NPR once asked William F. Buckley to comment about the existence of God. His response was a bit intellectual, but basically he had this to say:
This I believe: that it is intellectually easier to credit a divine intelligence than to submit dumbly to felicitous congeries about nature. As a child, I was struck by the short story. It told of a man at a bar who boasted of his rootlessness, derisively dismissing the jingoistic patrons to his left and to his right. But later in the evening, one man speaks an animadversion on a little principality in the Balkans and is met with the clenched fist of the man without a country, who would not endure this insult to the place where he was born.
So I believe that it is as likely that there should be a man without a country, as a world without a creator.
Not exactly a ringing testimony but nevertheless there's the take from an intellectual, and a good man.
A great many people think that the 'intellectual' route is to not believe in something as 'unlikely' as God. But people like the William F. Buckleys and the Neal A. Maxwells of the world showed that, even though the best way to know God is spiritually, it is clearly intellectually feasible as well.
Said Maxwell:
C. S. Lewis pointed out that some people are angry with God for His not existing, and others for His existing but for failing to do as mortals would have Him do. Instead of such childishness, we are urged to know God and to learn of His attributes.
All of this is not to say that discovering God intellectually is the best way or the preferred way-it isn't. But I know of a great many people who, if they're going to arrive at a belief in God at all, will only open the door from an intellectual angle. That's probably where I was about back in high school or college for a time. I certainly firmly believed in God, but I had a know-it-all desire to have it all make intellectual sense.
The funny thing is that the force of will required to blot out evidence of God all around us is almost overwhelming. It's sheer idiocy to think this all happened by accident. I see the Lord in everything, everywhere, every day, every minute of the day.
My brother gave my wife a bowl of flower bulbs for Christmas, and they bloomed this week.

This is just the first in a series of posts I'll have about the intellectual angle to the gospel. Stay tuned for post #2.
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
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