Thought of the day

PZ Myers wrote about a new survey of religious beliefs. Read it, it’s good. But I especially like this reference to God.

Bearded Ape of Cosmic Proportions

But that isn’t completely accurate. All the concepts of gods so far have been rather small-minded and local so far.

Well, let's just internalize the whole damn world

Christ.

Today’s moment-of-pause has been brought to you by Wal-Mart and the city of Peoria, Az. Apparently, some photo-clerk vigilante, diligently on the lookout for child pornography, saw photos of kids during bath time and decided to call the cops, according to a story on Good Morning America.

Next thing the parents of these kids knew, the children were removed from their home. For an entire month. Mom got suspended from her job for a year and both — Anthony and Lisa Demaree — were added to a list of sex offenders. The judge in the case said the pix were harmless.

“I don’t understand it at all,” Anthony Demaree told GMA, with his wife by his side. “Ninety, 95 percent of the families out there in America have these exact same photos.”

Now they’ve got another shot to take. This time it’s directed at Wal-Mart and their hometown.

I’ve long railed against the stupidity of rule internalization. This is where someone is aware of a rule or law and applies it to inappropriate situations; they ignore the reason for the rule in favor of the rule itself. It is an exercise in infringing upon the rights of others for no other reason than to be a tattle-tale.

The above case is awful. No sexual deviancy was at hand. No harm was present for anyone. There was no issue. All that happened was that someone noticed a rule and sought to enforce it without any good reason. Perhaps the Wal-Mart clerk was being overly cautious, not maliciously stupid. But the police? And child services? And Lisa Demaree’s employer? None had concern for reason. They have all apparently reached a point where the very ideas of rules take precedence over what is right, what is just, what is good, what is reasoned.

Well, let’s just internalize the whole damn world

Christ.

Today’s moment-of-pause has been brought to you by Wal-Mart and the city of Peoria, Az. Apparently, some photo-clerk vigilante, diligently on the lookout for child pornography, saw photos of kids during bath time and decided to call the cops, according to a story on Good Morning America.

Next thing the parents of these kids knew, the children were removed from their home. For an entire month. Mom got suspended from her job for a year and both — Anthony and Lisa Demaree — were added to a list of sex offenders. The judge in the case said the pix were harmless.

“I don’t understand it at all,” Anthony Demaree told GMA, with his wife by his side. “Ninety, 95 percent of the families out there in America have these exact same photos.”

Now they’ve got another shot to take. This time it’s directed at Wal-Mart and their hometown.

I’ve long railed against the stupidity of rule internalization. This is where someone is aware of a rule or law and applies it to inappropriate situations; they ignore the reason for the rule in favor of the rule itself. It is an exercise in infringing upon the rights of others for no other reason than to be a tattle-tale.

The above case is awful. No sexual deviancy was at hand. No harm was present for anyone. There was no issue. All that happened was that someone noticed a rule and sought to enforce it without any good reason. Perhaps the Wal-Mart clerk was being overly cautious, not maliciously stupid. But the police? And child services? And Lisa Demaree’s employer? None had concern for reason. They have all apparently reached a point where the very ideas of rules take precedence over what is right, what is just, what is good, what is reasoned.

Leaving comments

I almost never sift through all the spam comments that get automatically blocked from my blog, so it’s quite possible that perfectly legitimate posts are getting deleted. I recently found one that had been blocked because it had too many links in it (I’ve upped the limit to 5).

I am not the type of person that is terrified of people, say, calling me out for a long history of dishonesty and academic squalor, so I do not have any settings in place which require approval of comments. If you make a post and it does not show up either immediately or at least very, very soon, there is some reason which has nothing to do with my approval. Make a second comment or try commenting on another post and let me know that something is up.

Update: To make up for the long delay from when that missed comment was made and when it was actually posted, here is a link to a post by the commenter, The Godless Artist. He describes his unfortunate time at a creationism seminar. Isn’t it interesting how atheists are willing to hear what the creationists say, but so few creationists are willing to actually go get the proper education on evolution?

Thought of the day

There was a man walking along a cliff. He walked too near the edge and a rock gave way. As he began to tumble toward his death in the chasm below, he grabbed hold of a branch. This man had never been a believer in God, but finding himself in such precarious circumstances he began to yell out. “God! Dear God! Are you out there? Can you not help me?”

And then God responded. “Yes, my child, I am here.”

“Will you help me, my Lord?”

“Yes. Be free and let go of that branch.”

And the man paused. He looked down at what would be certain death. His eyes began to scan the edges of the cliff.

“Is there anybody else out there?”

CVS fined for deceptively peddling alternative 'medicine'

Sorry for the redundant post title. I suppose there is no way to peddle alternative medicine without also being deceptive. That’s the whole point of all these snake oil salesmen.

Anyway, CVS has been fined $2.8 million for marketing a dietary supplement called AirShield. They made the claim that it could “prevent colds, fight germs, and boost immune systems”, all without evidence. Pesky thing, that.

“Students returning to college campuses and parents sending their kids off to school want to take precautions to fight the germs that can cause coughs, colds, and the flu,” said David Vladeck, Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission. “As the CDC has advised, there are good practices to follow. But consumers should not be misled by false claims about the germ-fighting properties of dietary supplements. With orders against Airborne, Rite Aid, and the one proposed against CVS, manufacturers and retailers are on notice that they have to tell the truth about what dietary supplements can and cannot do.”

CVS fined for deceptively peddling alternative ‘medicine’

Sorry for the redundant post title. I suppose there is no way to peddle alternative medicine without also being deceptive. That’s the whole point of all these snake oil salesmen.

Anyway, CVS has been fined $2.8 million for marketing a dietary supplement called AirShield. They made the claim that it could “prevent colds, fight germs, and boost immune systems”, all without evidence. Pesky thing, that.

“Students returning to college campuses and parents sending their kids off to school want to take precautions to fight the germs that can cause coughs, colds, and the flu,” said David Vladeck, Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission. “As the CDC has advised, there are good practices to follow. But consumers should not be misled by false claims about the germ-fighting properties of dietary supplements. With orders against Airborne, Rite Aid, and the one proposed against CVS, manufacturers and retailers are on notice that they have to tell the truth about what dietary supplements can and cannot do.”

Thought of the day

Two men in Worcester are married and having sex tonight. A straight, conservative Christian couple in Boston feels no effect. Not them, not their friends, not their children, not their freedom, not their liberty, not their finances. Not now, not ever.

Jefferson, the Supreme Court, and Rights

There are some key points which need to be considered in deciding the need to legally allow – and protect – marital rights for particular groups. I want to focus on what Thomas Jefferson wrote, what the Supreme Court has said in cases which can be extended by principle to same-sex rights, and what are some fundamental concepts of what define rights. This is an extension of a recent post.

A central concept of what defines an important part of American society is the ‘separation of Church and State’. Jefferson coined this phrase in his Letter to the Danbury Baptists. But he said something more than that, something which speaks of the role of government regarding rights in general.

Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for is faith or his worship, that the legislative powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should “make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,” thus building a wall of separation between Church and State.

The man was not one for ambiguity. The government should not be in the role of legislating morality. Its role is to protect the freedoms of its citizenry. If there are actions which happen to be immoral and the government outlaws them, it is not because of the question of morality; it is because those actions infringe upon the rights of others. That morality is imposed de facto is incidental.

But this is not to say that morality does not get directly legislated. It does. And that’s unfortunate. But Jefferson loathed such a notion. He was clear on this. What one believes and does is not of concern to the government except insofar as said beliefs and actions make a real world impact; they must restrict the rights or freedoms of others, cause physical or financial harm to others, or rob the property of others. If one’s beliefs and actions do none of these things, the government is not to give its say. Jefferson embraced this principle.

There’s another important concept that Jefferson subsumed. When writing the Declaration of Independence, as I said in my aforementioned/aforelinked post, Jefferson wrote of non-temporal, transcending, universal rights. He wasn’t specific to his culture or to his race (though slavery was legislated as a matter of the fact that it was something that existed and needed to be addressed, whether any one liked it or not). No, instead he wrote a sweeping declaration of the rights of all people, something that was far larger than the conflict facing Great Britain and its American colonies. One of those declared, inalienable rights was the pursuit of happiness. Its importance cannot be understated.

In the 1967 Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia (how appropriate a plaintiff in how appropriate a state in which for this to have happened), Chief Justice Warren wrote, “The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.” He was ruling on an anti-miscegenation law. That’s a law which prohibits the mixing of racial groups in various settings, often including marriage. It was easy to recognize just how illegitimate a law it was. It prohibited and restricted the freedoms and rights of an entire group of people and for no good reason. Interracial marriage offered no impact on the rights of others, no infringement upon their lives, liberties, or pursuits of happiness.

Expanding upon this concept of rights I have laid out is this either unsourced or poorly sourced quote. It may be from a man by the name Marty Lewinter.

“As Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said, ‘The right to swing my fist ends where the other man’s nose begins.’ Rights must apply to everyone in the same sense at the same time. So rights must therefore be limited to claims of freedom to do anything which does not violate the freedoms of others. This requires recognizing, respecting and abiding by anyone else’s wishes to be left alone whenever he wants, and his wishes to be free to do anything which doesn’t violate others. This is why no one can claim a ‘right’ to interfere with your life in any way without your explicit, personally-given consent for a specified purpose. There can be no such thing as a ‘right’ for anyone (or any group) to mess with you whenever he wants (or whenever they want) since it obviously isn’t applying to YOU in the same sense at the same time.

Regardless of who said this, it encompasses a principled, universal idea of what rights really are. An individual’s rights should go as far as possible. Where the limit comes is from the infringement upon the rights of others. In order to justify the restriction of the rights of a person or group, it must be shown that said person or group never really had the rights in question in the first place; if that person or group is infringing upon others, they are doing it not by the free exercise of their own rights, but by the exercise of something else, something probably sinister. No person or group has the inalienable right to negatively impact the rights of another person or group.

This all aptly applies to same-sex marriage. There has been no convincing case made against allowing all adults into the institution of marriage. The union of two consenting individuals says nothing of the rights of two unrelated*, independent individuals. There is no infringement upon others. Same-sex marriage violates no one’s rights.

The outlawing of same-sex marriage, on the other, hand does offer a violation of the principles set forth by Jefferson, utilized by the Supreme Court, and embraced by philosophers, professors, and thinkers. By denying rights to a group, it must be shown that they are causing some form of harm through action. This harm must happen to people who did not consent to having any action imposed upon them. To date, no one has made out a good** case that any harm has or can or will be done to anyone. What has been made abundantly clear, however, is that the denial of certain freedoms and rights to the gay community, especially concerning marriage, does infringe upon many of the ideals espoused by the aforementioned groups and entities. By disallowing same-sex marriage, government is disallowing a rightful pursuit of happiness. It has not a right to do any such thing. Indeed, it has a specific obligation to explicitly do otherwise.

*This does not refer to familial relations. But to address the point, same-sex unions also say nothing of the rights of those in the family of the couple.

**Hell, the cases laid out so far are so awful, calling them “bad” would raise their status to an undue level.

Thought of the day

I am concerned for the freedoms of homosexuals because I am concerned for the freedoms of blacks, whites, Asians, atheists, Christians, men, women and children. Deny one group rights they inherently deserve and you’ve undermined the rights of all those groups. I cannot stand for it.