From Pine View Farm

Culture Warriors category archive

“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Neighborly politeness.

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More Mean for the Sake of Mean 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Charles Hebert looks at the recent decision by the Supreme Supremacist Court allowing jurisdictions to criminalize homelessness; he sees no good coming from it.

He makes four main points. Follow the link for a detailed exploration of each one.

  • The Supreme Court decision on homelessness has downstream detrimental effects on vulnerable individuals.
  • Persons experiencing homelessness often suffer with mental illness.
  • The involuntary displacement of unsheltered individuals with substance use disorders increases overdose risk.
  • The Covid-19 pandemic has magnified the number of those experiencing homelessness.

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“Corruption without Consequence” 0

Sam and the crew discuss AOC’s speech about abuse of power by Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and the rest of today’s Supreme Supremacist Court.

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Stray Thought, Still Rising Again after All These Years Dept. 0

I think I’ve finally figured out just what heritage the “Heritage” Foundation is determined to preserve.

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Patriot Gamers 0

Frame One, captioned

Click to view the original image.

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“When People Show You Who They Are, Believe Them the First Time,”* Reprise 0

A woman and a black man stocks.  Woman says,

Via Job’s Anger.

______________

*Maya Angelou.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

Thom Hartman looks at the series of opinions by the Supreme Supremacist Court and concludes that

It’s almost impossible to overstate the significance of this (series of decisions–ed.), or its consequences. We no longer live in America 1.0; this is a new America, one more closely resembling the old Confederacy, where wealthy families and giant companies make the rules, enforce the rules, and punish those who irritate or try to obstruct them.

In America 2.0, there is no right to vote; governors and secretaries of state can take away your vote without even telling you (although they still must go to court to take away your gun). .

Follow the link for the context of his conclusion.

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Republican Thought Police, Reprise 0

At the Charlotte Observer, Kate Murphy, pastor at The Grove Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, pushes back at the current wave of they-call-themselves Christians and their push for establishmentarianism. A snippet:

I am a pastor and a practicing Christian, but all this blasphemous foolishness has me declaring this Festivus in July because, in the words of the fictional Frank Costanza on Seinfeld, “I got a lot of problems with you people.”

If the governor of Florida can, by the power not vested in him, unilaterally declare that the church of Satan isn’t a religion, then he can also wake up one morning and decide that Islam isn’t a religion, or Hinduism, or Catholicism or any faith that allows women to preach or doesn’t handle snakes.

The point of the separation of church and state, as any fourth grader with a reasonably competent history teacher can tell you, isn’t to limit a citizen’s ability to practice their faith, but to protect it.

(Broken link fixed.)

____________________

*Methinks in this context, “Christian” is New Speak for “Secesh.”

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Republican Thought Police 0

Denial is not just a river in Egypt. It’s how Republicans teach history.

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Republican Family Values 0

“Mean for the sake of mean” is a Republican Family Value.

Frames One to Three:  Woman with small child says,

Via Job’s Anger.

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American Taliban 0

Rebecca Watson discusses the establishmentarians’ efforts to (en)force their creed on the polity.

Or you can read the transcript.

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Republican Thought Police 0

Thom dissects the duplicity.

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Establishmentarians 0

The Arizona Republic’s Laurie Roberts has a question:

Is there anything more un-American than forcing your beliefs on a country that was founded on the concepts of religious freedom and democratic ideals?

In related news, Leonard Hitchcock, writing in the Idaho State Journal, notes that:

Isn’t it apparent, when we look at the history of Protestant Christianity, that Bible interpretation is rarely indisputable; and that a) those who do the interpreting usually end up finding what they wanted to find, and b) that what they wanted to find was a divine judgment that agreed with their own beliefs, and c) that those beliefs were formed from a variety of psycho-socio-political influences, not just meditation upon the Biblical text?

Follow the links for context.

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They Would Be Gods 0

At The Japan Times, Nina L. Khrushcheva takes penetrating look at political leaders who attempt to imbue their earthly policies with godly sanction. I find it a particularly timely read in this period surging establishmentarianism. Here’s a nugget:

Leaders who claim to have divine missions are those who seek to increase their power and extend their rule, ideally indefinitely.

Go read the rest.

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The Rule of Flaw 0

Screenshot of Twitter post that reads

Via PoliticalProf, who comments, “That’s about the size of it.”

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Republican Family Values 0

Rebecca Watson cites statistics showing that state that recently enacted strict anti-abortion laws are experiencing significant increases in infant and maternal mortality.

Of you can read the transcript.

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Establishmentarians 0

Truthout tracks their attempts public schools into pulpits for proselytizing. Here’s a bit of their report:

According to Gill (Allison Gill, vice president of legal and policy at American Atheists, Inc.–ed.), the many attacks on public schooling are meant to dismantle public education, a longstanding goal of conservative individuals like former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos whose American Federation for Children has funneled millions of dollars to candidates and incumbents who support an anti-public education agenda. Groups, including the Alliance Defending Freedom, First Liberty Institute, Heritage Foundation and Moms for Liberty have also jumped onto this bandwagon.

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Establishmentarians 0

At the Kansas City Star, Dion Lefler argues that life has started to echo Monty Python.

As the comedy troupe Monty Python once said, “Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition.”

I certainly didn’t expect it in Oklahoma.

But Inquisition 2024 came to our neighboring state on Thursday, when Oklahoma’s authoritarian superintendent of public instruction, Ryan Walters, issued an edict that every classroom from fifth to 12th grade must have a Bible in it, and every teacher, regardless of their own beliefs, has to teach from it — or else.

Follow the link for his reasoning.

And, in a related piece, Marty Ryan points out that there is a certain–er–lack of consensus on the number and wording of the Ten (or so) Commandments.

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The Short Economy Version 0

Moses stands on Mt. Sinai with two tablets that read together

Click for the original image.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

Thom points out that, under the policies of today’s Republican Party, a rising tide lifts only those who own the boats.

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