Stickybuffalo.com

"Belaboring the Obvious Since 2001"

RSS Stickybuffalo.com Diggs

  • Out of Touch: Cindy McCain's Monday Outfit Cost $300,000 September 4, 2008
    One of the persistent memes in the Republican line of attack against Barack Obama is the notion that he is an elitist, whereas the G.O.P. represent real working Americans. But when Vanity Fair priced out Cindy McCain's Monday Night Convention outfit, the total price was staggering to say the least.... between $299,100 and $313,100
  • About Sarah Palin: an e-mail from Wasilla September 4, 2008
    An email from Anne Kilkenny, Wasilla resident, reprinted by Crosscut.com with her permission. This is the best, most comprehensive, objective writing on the history of Mayor Palin and her climb up the political career ladder.
  • Pollster.com: TIME/CNN: Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio (8/31-9/2) September 4, 2008
    Obama up 15 pts in Iowa
  • Oops! MIC's still on, commentators about Palin..... September 4, 2008
    2 conservative commentators forget the Mic is still on, and get caught saying what they REALLY think about Sarah Palin.....
  • Fringe Alaskan Independence Party: Palin was a Member September 2, 2008
    McCain's campaign likes to herald the independence of its new running mate, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin. Officials of the Alaskan Independence Party say that Palin was once so independent, she was once a member of their party, which has been pushing for a legal vote on whether or not residents of the 49th state can secede from the U.S.
  • sbuffalo commented on CAPTCHAs flummox bots, but may be doomed by CAPTCHA farmers September 1, 2008
    so does this mean that someone solves a captcha and it goes in a database of "solved?" It seems like there's only so many manual solvings that can happen per person per day. It would be much easier to say this captcha equals "XYZ."
  • CAPTCHAs flummox bots, but may be doomed by CAPTCHA farmers September 1, 2008
    CAPTCHAs were once considered proof (or at least an excellent defense) against the likes of spammers and automated registration programs, but those days appear to be almost over. CAPTCHA-cracking is now big business in India, and a means of gainful (if not quite legitimate) employment.
  • PALIN-tology - 35+ Problems for McCain's VP in just 35 hours August 31, 2008
    We all know that she is under investigation for abuse of power and there are audio recordings to back it up. What you won't hear on the news is this list of other things you didn't know about the woman they call "Miss Baracuda."
  • The Myth of "Obama Fatigue" August 29, 2008
    "...We are treated to the fiction of "Obama fatigue" as a cause of a "tightening race" - a spurious explanation of a non-event."
  • DailyKos Election Day Scoreboard August 28, 2008
    Why follow results on TV when you can get them on the web? Flash-based map showing live poll results from across the country in all levels: House, Senate, Gubernatorial and the White House.
  • Jun
    25

    there’s a lovely serendipity to the news sometimes. you absorb one mildly interesting bit of information, begin to digest and draw conclusions from it. then you notice another meme floating by, distinct from but related to the first, that complements and contextualizes what you were already thinking. then something else happens, something that harmonizes the whole thing in an immensely satisfying way.

    for the last few weeks, newspapers and blogs have been peppered with little sidebar items about obama’s outreach to religious voters, including some mild expressions of surprise and curiosity at the possibility that he may actually be making inroads among evangelicals, of all people. punditical analysis has mostly been limited to the notion that jesus folk are pissed off at bush and looking to punish republicans for their failure to implement full-on theocracy; hence, they’re turning to obama the way clinton democrats were supposedly turning to mccain (so much for that theory). a secondary competing hypothesis held that evangelicals are merely susceptible to that obama magic just like everybody else — they grudgingly respect him, and even if they won’t vote for him, they’re not galvanized against him the way they were against john kerry.

    there seemed to be some truth in both explanations, but there was still a piece missing. what does the obama campaign know that we don’t, that led them to court religious communities as their first step toward transitioning into general-election mode? perhaps more importantly, why does it seem to be working, without obama having to back off his socially progressive positions or cozy up to agents of intolerance?

    that’s when i read about the new pew survey on religion and politics, which confirms something i’ve suspected for a while: faith and religious affiliation are fairly worthless as predictors of political behavior. in a study based on interviews with 36,000 religious americans, researchers learned the following:

    - a plurality are Democrats or lean Democratic
    - almost 3/4 self-identify as moderate or liberal
    - a majority favor legal access to abortion in all or most cases
    - a majority favor acceptance of homosexuality by society
    - a majority feel that “government is too involved” in policing morality
    - a majority, including 54% of evangelicals, take a dim view of adventurist foreign policy and want the government to focus on domestic issues
    - a resounding 61%, again including 54% of evangelicals, favor tougher environmental regulation

    in other words, the ideological views of the devout mostly mirror those of society at large — not so surprising in a country where 95% claim some form of religious or spiritual belief, including 78% who follow a christian tradition. the study goes on:

    [M]ost Americans have a non-dogmatic approach to faith. A majority of those who are affiliated with a religion, for instance, do not believe their religion is the only way to salvation. And almost the same number believes that there is more than one true way to interpret the teachings of their religion. This openness to a range of religious viewpoints is in line with the great diversity of religious affiliation, belief and practice that exists in the United States.

    if these findings seem counterintuitive, especially to those of us whose politics over the last generation have been formulated more or less in diametric opposition to the brutal insanity of the religious right, it’s because we’ve been force-fed a false image of christianity and christians. and in our own way, we’ve been complicit with the robertsons and dobsons in propagating the view that christians are, by definition, backward and bigoted. this is the great crime and the great tragedy of our generation in the american political left: they told us that ‘faith’ was incompatible with science and equal rights and reproductive freedom, synonymous with imperial aggression and environmental destruction, and we believed them. to barack obama’s great credit, he didn’t…

    One Response to “this week in god”

    1. [...] who dare use the label without adopting their framing.  It’s very similar to the situation Josh discusses, wherein a small handful of stupid people who call themselves “Christians” have managed [...]

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.