 | | From: | Chris Ambidge | | Subject: | Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 16:21:13 GMT |
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 | .... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is
SpongeBob SquarePants
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm
ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob
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 | | From: | Scott Safier | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 17:39:05 -0000 |
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 | Chris Ambidge: > ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm
I assume that real sponges have genitals (though, not on their skeletons), but SpongeBob always struck me as more of a plastic sponge. Do plastic sponges have gender?
-- Scott http://www.pink-triangle.org/scott AOL IM: CorwinScot YahooIM: CycleMuscle
"Stand firm for what you believe in until or unless logic or experience prove you wrong. Remember, when the emperor looks naked the emperor is naked. The truth and a lie are not sort of the same thing. And there's no aspect, no facet, no moment of life that can't be improved with pizza." -- Daria
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 09:33:49 +0100 |
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 | In article <10v1ehn10e3f3e7@corp.supernews.com>, Kathryn Burlingham wrote: > Robert Cumming wrote: >> Kathryn Burlingham wrote: >>>Robert Cumming wrote: >>>>Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they? >>> >> We all have our ways of being sure of our gender identity, Kathryn. > Oh, that's right you are a cartoon character! OK, the penis is assumed. > > That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that > matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I > would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries.
Well, those jpg files _are_ the originals. I can organise signed printouts, if you really want. You wouldn't be the first[0].
Robert [0] The second, actually.
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 | | From: | Kathryn Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 23:38:50 -0800 |
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 | Robert Cumming wrote: > > Well, those jpg files _are_ the originals. I can organise signed > printouts, if you really want. You wouldn't be the first[0].
That would be completely delightful. Do you have a really good printer and good quality archival paper? Is there an art printer somewhere? I'd pay all costs, etc etc. Let me go through what you have up and pick my faves--what a lovely display they would make!
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 22 Jan 2005 23:27:06 +0100 |
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 | In article <10v40oh35sgh817@corp.supernews.com>, Kathryn Burlingham wrote: > Robert Cumming wrote: > > Well, those jpg files _are_ the originals. I can organise signed > > printouts, if you really want. You wouldn't be the first[0]. > That would be completely delightful. Do you have a really good printer > and good quality archival paper? Is there an art printer somewhere?
Not that I know of. I only have access to the colour printers at work, really. And, to be realistic, these are just 450x450 jpegs we're talking here (I'm flattered to be compared to the Oregonian art market, but it can't possibly be as crap as you describe).
> I'd pay all costs, etc etc. Let me go through what you have up and > pick my faves--what a lovely display they would make!
No probs. Send me some PVT mail or something.
Robert
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 | | From: | Kathryn Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 17:27:08 -0800 |
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 | Robert Cumming wrote: > Kathryn Burlingham wrote: >>Robert Cumming wrote: >> >>>Well, those jpg files _are_ the originals. I can organise signed >>>printouts, if you really want. You wouldn't be the first[0]. >> >>That would be completely delightful. Do you have a really good printer >>and good quality archival paper? Is there an art printer somewhere? > > Not that I know of. I only have access to the colour printers at > work, really.
I've just been on the phone to God, and she's told me look for giclee printers--there's one downtown that does prints to order, I'll get on to them and see if they'd be able to do it, if that's OK with you. The paper is important to me, if I'm going to hang them.
> And, to be realistic, these are just 450x450 > jpegs we're talking here (I'm flattered to be compared to the > Oregonian art market, but it can't possibly be as crap as you > describe).
Most art available in galleries is intensely--generic. I've been looking and looking, and haven't been able to find anything that really excites me. Pleasant to look at, yes. Interesting subjects occasionally. But I actually love some of yours, and would love to see them on the wall every day. You must know by now that I respond to the personal in art, I love diaries and letters, and your journal jpegs capture a distinct person, one that's different enough from me to be fascinating, but with a resonance of intense focus on physical detail and the moment combined with a rich interior life and existential angst that I relate to. And I just happen to find your style delightful.
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 20:07:24 +0100 |
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 | In article , Scott Safier wrote: > Chris Ambidge: > > ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > I assume that real sponges have genitals (though, not on their > skeletons), but SpongeBob always struck me as more of a plastic > sponge. Do plastic sponges have gender?
Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they?
Robert
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 | | From: | Kathryn Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 22:01:31 -0800 |
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 | Robert Cumming wrote: > > Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they?
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 | | From: | Chris Ambidge | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 16:05:58 GMT |
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 | [scott] >> I assume that real sponges have genitals (though, not on their >> skeletons), but SpongeBob always struck me as more of a plastic >> sponge. Do plastic sponges have gender?
I seem to recall an interview about six months ago with SBSP's creator, saying in amused exasperation to the assertion, something like "Bob is a *sponge* for goodness sake. he doesn't even have a , let alone a ual orientation."
[robert] >Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they?
jessica rabbit
manly panda i'm not bad, i'm just drawn this way
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 | | From: | Scott Safier | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 21:18:58 -0000 |
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 | Robert Cumming: > In article , > Scott Safier wrote: >> Chris Ambidge: >> > ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is >> > >> > >> > SpongeBob SquarePants >> > >> > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm >> I assume that real sponges have genitals (though, not on their >> skeletons), but SpongeBob always struck me as more of a plastic >> sponge. Do plastic sponges have gender? > > Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they?
Tell it to Betty Boop, or the Betty Boop -like character on Drawn Together.
-- Scott http://www.pink-triangle.org/scott AOL IM: CorwinScot YahooIM: CycleMuscle
"Stand firm for what you believe in until or unless logic or experience prove you wrong. Remember, when the emperor looks naked the emperor is naked. The truth and a lie are not sort of the same thing. And there's no aspect, no facet, no moment of life that can't be improved with pizza." -- Daria
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 08:57:20 +0100 |
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 | In article <10v16lrb8iemj23@corp.supernews.com>, Kathryn Burlingham wrote: > Robert Cumming wrote: >> Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they? >
We all have our ways of being sure of our gender identity, Kathryn.
Robert, twigging (possibly)
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 | | From: | Kathryn Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 00:15:49 -0800 |
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 | Robert Cumming wrote: > Kathryn Burlingham wrote: >>Robert Cumming wrote: >> >>>Cartoon characters are male by default, aren't they? >> >> > > We all have our ways of being sure of our gender identity, Kathryn.
Oh, that's right you are a cartoon character! OK, the penis is assumed.
That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries.
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 | | From: | Ann Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 19:16:59 -0500 |
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 | Kathryn Burlingham tells robert cumming:
> That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that > matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I > would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries.
yes.
-ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, why didn't we ask for a price list?
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 | | From: | Ned Deily | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 01:43:43 -0500 |
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 | AnnB: > -ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, > why didn't we ask for a price list?
Unlike Robert's artwork, *that* artwork was priceless. And should remain so.
--EyesD
-- Ned Deily, nad@visi.com -- []
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 | | From: | Dennis Lewis | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:00:27 GMT |
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 | >AnnB: >> -ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, >> why didn't we ask for a price list? > >Ned: >Unlike Robert's artwork, *that* artwork was priceless. And should >remain so.
Having missed the Stockholm con, I can only guess at the subject of that artwork.
However, while we're discussing fine art, there's an interesting item on the Guardian's site today. (I imagine that at leas editor on the copy desk was sorely tempted to give this the headline: "Why does David have such a small dick?")
http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/news/story/0,11711,1396033,00.html
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 | | From: | Dennis Lewis | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 19:23:27 GMT |
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 | On Sat, 22 Jan 2005 15:00:27 GMT, I wrote: > >... (I imagine that at leas editor on the >copy desk ...
Oops -- meant to write "at least one editor" ...
>http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/news/story/0,11711,1396033,00.html
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 22 Jan 2005 09:17:24 +0100 |
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 | In article , Ann Burlingham wrote: > Kathryn Burlingham tells robert cumming: > > That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that > > matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I > > would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries. > yes. > > -ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, > why didn't we ask for a price list?
You foresaw the fuss when, like the UK and the Elgin Marbles, Sweden realised what a national tresure thay had lost to the US.
Robert
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 | | From: | Linda Yanney | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 03:42:27 +0000 (UTC) |
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 | Robert Cumming wrote: >Ann Burlingham wrote: >> Kathryn Burlingham tells robert cumming: >> > That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that >> > matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I >> > would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries. >> >> yes. >> >> -ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, >> why didn't we ask for a price list? > >You foresaw the fuss when, like the UK and the Elgin Marbles, Sweden >realised what a national tresure thay had lost to the US.
This whole discussion is vaguely disturbing.
LJ --
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 23 Jan 2005 10:30:10 +0100 |
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 | In article , lyanney@arthur.avalon.net (Linda Yanney) wrote: > Robert Cumming wrote: > >Ann Burlingham wrote: > >> Kathryn Burlingham tells robert cumming: > >> > That reminds me, I haven't looked at your stuff (or anyone's for that > >> > matter) on LJ recently. Y'know, if there were a way to buy originals I > >> > would. It's tons better than anything I find for sale in galleries. > >> > >> yes. > >> > >> -ann, suddenly remembering the art at the stockholm .con hotel - why, > >> why didn't we ask for a price list? > >You foresaw the fuss when, like the UK and the Elgin Marbles, Sweden > >realised what a national tresure thay had lost to the US. > This whole discussion is vaguely disturbing.
It's nothing to the original artwork. Which, for the record, depicted cats.
Robert
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 | | From: | Ellen Evans | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 12:32:58 -0500 |
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 | In article , Chris Ambidge wrote: >... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm
Meanwhile, the folks at Fox, worried about the FCC, are now pixelating the naked bums of cartoon babies.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16857-2005Jan17.html -- Ellen Evans If my life wasn't funny, it would jeev@panix.com just be true, and that's unacceptable. Carrie Fisher
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 | | From: | Michael Carden | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 12:40:36 +1000 |
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 | Ellen Evans wrote:
> In article , > Chris Ambidge wrote: >>... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is >> >> >>SpongeBob SquarePants >> >>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > > Meanwhile, the folks at Fox, worried about the FCC, are now pixelating the > naked bums of cartoon babies.
I don't know whether to laugh, cry or just shudder
-- Dr Michael Carden, Sodom/olog/ist, Religion Dept, Queensland University, Brisbane, Australia, 4072. ph: +61 (07) 3365 7490, http://www.sodomology.org "If I can't dance it's not my revolution" - 'Red' Emma Goldman
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 | | From: | Kathryn Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 21:11:09 -0800 |
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 | Ellen Evans wrote: > > Meanwhile, the folks at Fox, worried about the FCC, are now pixelating the > naked bums of cartoon babies.
Bloomers!
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 | | From: | Lee Rudolph | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 13:21:47 -0500 |
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 | jeev@panix.com (Ellen Evans) writes:
>In article , >Chris Ambidge wrote: >>... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is >> >> >> SpongeBob SquarePants >> >> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > >Meanwhile, the folks at Fox, worried about the FCC, are now pixelating the >naked bums of cartoon babies.
Why, everybody in Mandrake Falls is pixelated.
Lee Rudolph
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 | | From: | Tony P. | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 20:44:55 -0500 |
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 | In article , ambidge@ecf.toronto.edu says... > ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > > > ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis > first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob >
On the basis of "know thine enemies" I signed up for Wildmon's little hateblog. The emails are most enlightening. Persecuted Christians indeed.
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 | | From: | Usenet Posting | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 19:41:41 GMT |
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 | On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 16:21:13 GMT, ambidge@ecf.toronto.edu (Chris Ambidge) wrote:
>... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > > >ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis >first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob
At least WAFF had a mature response:
WAFF spokesman Mark Barondeso told the newspaper that anyone who thought the video promoted homouality "needs to visit their doctor and get their medication increased".
-- The pain is pretty overwhelming, prolly comparable only to childbirth or kidney stones. --Brian L.
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 | | From: | Brad Macdonald | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 16:16:03 -0500 |
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 | On Sat, 22 Jan 2005, Usenet Posting wrote: > On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 16:21:13 GMT, ambidge@ecf.toronto.edu (Chris > Ambidge) wrote: >> ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is >> >> SpongeBob SquarePants >> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm >> ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis >> first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob > At least WAFF had a mature response: > WAFF spokesman Mark Barondeso told the newspaper that anyone who > thought the video promoted homouality "needs to visit their doctor > and get their medication increased".
Yet we read in the NY Times today that the group of "super-secret commandos [who] stood ready with state-of-the-art weaponry to swing into action to protect the presidency" at Thursday's inauguration "operated under a secret counterterrorism program code-named Power Geyser."
Brad
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 | | From: | Tim McDaniel | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 18:45:39 -0600 |
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 | In article , Chris Ambidge wrote: > Subject: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It >... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > > SpongeBob SquarePants > > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > >ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis >first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob
I like today's survey at http://www.cnn.com.
SpongeBob SquarePants is: ( ) Promoting the acceptance of homouality ( ) Promoting tolerance and diversity ( ) Absorbent, yellow and porous
The _choices_ are atrocious -- I agree with all three -- but I do love the last answer. 72% of all those polled agree with me.
-- Tim McDaniel; Reply-To: tmcd@panix.com
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 | | From: | Robert Cumming | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 09:01:59 +0100 |
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 | In article , ambidge@ecf.toronto.edu (Chris Ambidge) wrote: > ... is, according to James Dobson of Focus on the Family is > > SpongeBob SquarePants > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4190699.stm > ailuropoda melanoleuca torontonensis > first it was tinky-winky, now spongebob
I'm just wondering, do the religious right see these odd little media issues as central to their mission, or do they get annoyed at how their most trivial campaigns get the most coverage?
Robert
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 | | From: | Ann Burlingham | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 19:17:58 -0500 |
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 | Robert Cumming writes:
> I'm just wondering, do the religious right see these odd little media > issues as central to their mission, or do they get annoyed at how > their most trivial campaigns get the most coverage?
i was wondering that, too. or, tangentially, deciding to be happy that they're fussing over something so trivial, stupid, and wrong. may all their causes be thus.
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 | | From: | Michael Carden | | Subject: | Re: Latest threat to Western Civilisation As We Know It | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 12:38:26 +1000 |
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 | Ann Burlingham wrote:
> Robert Cumming writes: > >> I'm just wondering, do the religious right see these odd little media >> issues as central to their mission, or do they get annoyed at how >> their most trivial campaigns get the most coverage? > > i was wondering that, too. or, tangentially, deciding to be happy that > they're fussing over something so trivial, stupid, and wrong. may all > their causes be thus.
I just find the whole thing totally bizarre. I'd hate to have a look knside some of these people's heads. It reminds me of the final episode in John Safran vs God (http://www.johnsafran.com/tv.html) when he got exorcised by this US fundie preacher. The guy was a total loonie and comlpete paranoid who saw demons everywhere and was constantly exorcising his congregation members.
After seeing that, I got a glimpse of how Dubya and his bogus 'war on terror' could be such an election winner.
-- Dr Michael Carden, Sodom/olog/ist, Religion Dept, Queensland University, Brisbane, Australia, 4072. ph: +61 (07) 3365 7490, http://www.sodomology.org "If I can't dance it's not my revolution" - 'Red' Emma Goldman
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