Thursday, December 21, 2006

The Problem Is Pagans

In the U.S Congress!!!

Discussion on the latest American religion and politics scandal, whats new, on CNN's Wolf Blitzer Situation Room.

Republican Spinmeister; "Bay" Buchanan blurted out her secret fear, the ultimate conspiracy theory, the problem with the Belt-way was all the Pagans in Congress

BEGALA: So, Carville is a Catholic. Ellison is a Muslim. And they were both in a synagogue at the same time. That is America.

(CROSSTALK)

BUCHANAN: Keith Ellison got -- actually received the endorsement of a Jewish newspaper.

I mean, this is a man that ran on a certain platform. He gathered people from all different faiths to support him. And he has every possible reason in this great country to represent that district.
His religion, to me, is a strength, his strength. I mean, I will tell you what I'm far more concerned about in Congress, is -- than a Muslim, is the pagans we have up there.

(LAUGHTER)

BUCHANAN: I think they are a greater threat to us than anyone who has some religious beliefs.

(LAUGHTER)

Pagans in Congress? Heck the right wing mudpuppies are upset over a Democrat Congressman wanting to swear his oath of office on the Koran. Pagans, sheesh, America is not that liberal.

Of course saying something completely outrageous and untrue sounds better if you also make it outlandish. I am not sure what she was getting at with her us and them designation of Congress, but maybe if she said "believers and unbelievers: she would come under scrutiny of Homeland Security.

Or if she accussed Congress of being full of atheists, well that would have been laughed off, not an athiest among them, they make sure we all know that.

Nope pagans it is. And of course coming from a Catholic we all know what that means; any one who is not a Papist. Glad to know she didn't really mean Pagans just Non-Catholics.



I was suddenly envisioning the new Congress making Halloween and May Day sacred holy days on par with Christmas, and bringing back the Wicker Man for George W. Bush.




Instead being in a Yuletide mood of joy and giving I recommend someone sit Bay down and make her listen to Dar Williams; The Christians and the Pagans.



Amber called her uncle, said "We're up here for the holiday,
Jane and I were having Solstice, now we need a place to stay."
And her Christ-loving uncle watched his wife hang Mary on a tree,
He watched his son hang candy canes all made with red dye number three.
He told his niece, "It's Christmas Eve, I know our life is not your style,"
She said, "Christmas is like Solstice, and we miss you and its been awhile,"

So the Christians and the Pagans sat together at the table,
Finding faith and common ground the best that they were able,
And just before the meal was served, hands were held and prayers were said,
Sending hope for peace on earth to all their gods and goddesses.

The food was great, the tree plugged in, the meal had gone without a hitch,
Till Timmy turned to Amber and said, "Is it true that you're a witch?"
His mom jumped up and said, "The pies are burning," and she hit the kitchen,
And it was Jane who spoke, she said, "It's true, your cousin's not a Christian,"
"But we love trees, we love the snow, the friends we have, the world we share,
And you find magic from your God, and we find magic everywhere."

So the Christians and the Pagans sat together at the table,
Finding faith and common ground the best that they were able,
And where does magic come from? I think magic's in the learning,
'Cause now when Christians sit with Pagans only pumpkin pies are burning.

When Amber tried to do the dishes, her aunt said, "Really, no, don't bother."
Amber's uncle saw how Amber looked like Tim and like her father.
He thought about his brother, how they hadn't spoken in a year,
He thought he'd call him up and say, "It's Christmas and your daughter's here."
He thought of fathers, sons and brothers, saw his own son tug his sleeve, saying,
"Can I be a Pagan?" Dad said, "We'll discuss it when they leave."

So the Christians and the Pagans sat together at the table,
Finding faith and common ground the best that they were able,
Lighting trees in darkness, learning new ways from the old, and
Making sense of history and drawing warmth out of the cold.

Yep, that should clear things up for her. Since we share a common ethic.


Pagans in Congress what a fantasy.

If that were to occur you would have a government of true federalism, and natural justice.

Yep pure fantasy.


[jacket image]

McCloskey, Deirdre N. The Bourgeois Virtues: Ethics for an Age of Commerce. 634 p., 3 line drawings, 8 tables. 6 x 9 2006

Cloth $32.50 0-226-55663-8 Spring 2006

For a century and a half, the artists and intellectuals of Europe have scorned
the bourgeoisie. And for a millennium and a half, the philosophers and theologians of Europe have scorned the marketplace. The bourgeois life, capitalism, Mencken’s “booboisie” and David Brooks’s “bobos”—all have been, and still are, framed as being responsible for everything from financial to moral poverty, world wars, and spiritual desuetude. Countering these centuries of assumptions and unexamined thinking is Deirdre McCloskey’s The Bourgeois Virtues, a magnum opus that offers a radical view: capitalism is good for us.

McCloskey’s sweeping, charming, and even humorous survey of ethical thought and economic realities—from Plato to Barbara Ehrenreich—overturns every assumption we have about being bourgeois. Can you be virtuous and bourgeois? Do markets improve ethics? Has capitalism made us better as well as richer? Yes, yes, and yes, argues McCloskey, who takes on centuries of capitalism’s critics with her erudition and sheer scope of knowledge. Applying a new tradition of “virtue ethics” to our lives in modern economies, she affirms American capitalism without ignoring its faults and celebrates the bourgeois lives we actually live, without supposing that they must be lives without ethical foundations.

High Noon
, Kant, Bill Murray, the modern novel, van Gogh, and of course economics and the economy all come into play in a book that can only be described as a monumental project and a life’s work. The Bourgeois Virtues is nothing less than a dazzling reinterpretation of Western intellectual history, a dead-serious reply to the critics of capitalism—and a surprising page-turner.

CRITIQUE AND COMMENT

Towards Embodied Justice: Wrestling with Legal Ethics in the Age of the 'New Corporatism'

MARGARET THORNTON

[This article considers what feminist ethics might be able to offer public law and challenges the idea of ‘public’ law when strategically invoked by private interests. The article argues that ostensibly neutral phenomena, such as the public law–private law distinction, norms of universality and adversarialism are key technologies of power that facilitate the ‘new corporatism’. It is suggested that ‘care’, which is commonly assumed to be a corollary of feminist ethics, is problematic because it is associated with what is termed the ‘fictive feminine’, an impoverished notion of femininity within the popular imagination. An ethical feminist consciousness can nevertheless contribute to a new vision of justice by incorporating the perspective of the ‘other’, which involves effecting a dialogue between the universal and the particular.]


Pagan Virtue: An Essay in Ethics by John Casey at Questia Online ...


Man as person is absolutely free to choose his
destiny, his values, even his nature. His existence as a person, and
hence as a moral being, is not determined by something called
'human nature'. Morality must be concerned with man in his
freedom, and the moral law is the law of freedom. Ideas such as
these we can associate with Spinoza, Kant, and Sartre. Kant argued
that since the moral law must apply to all rational beings generally,
then it must apply to man simply as a rational being. No truly
moral command could be based on man's 'empirical' nature -- upon
particular desires, strengths, or skills.

In fact, the concept of a person, and its consequences for values,
is a focus of ideological disagreement. 'There is neither Jew nor
Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor
female: for ye are all . . .' 5 persons. To insist that someone is above
all a person is to insist that all these other characters he may have
are irrelevant to that distinct pattern of response that is appropriate
to rational beings. To say that someone's colour, or sex, or caste is
irrelevant to his personhood is usually to say that it is inappropriate
or wrong to withdraw certain sorts of consideration from him
because of these features or accidents of birth, or to accord certain
sorts of consideration to him because of them.

Pagan Virtue: An Essay in Ethics. (book reviews)

This book presents the author's reflections on the "pagan" cardinal virtues of courage, temperance, justice, and practical wisdom (phronesis) as depicted by Aristotle in the Nicomachean Ethics. Casey sees these virtues as pagan because they "are undeniably worldly . . . , include an element of self-regard, and . . . rely on material conditions for their fulfillment" (p. viii). Christian virtue, by contrast, centers on the next world, emphasizes humility, and is independent of the vagaries of fortune because it depends (as Kant articulates in the Grundlegung) ...


The Sense of the Past:
Essays in the History of Philosophy

Bernard Williams
Edited and with an introduction by Myles Burnyeat

Bernard Williams' insistence that morality is about people and their real lives, and that acting out of self-interest and even selfishness are not contrary to moral action, is illustrated in his "internal reasons for action" argument, part of what philosophers call the "internal/external reasons" debate.

Philosophers have tried to argue that moral agents can have "external reasons" for performing a moral act; that is, they are able to act for reasons external to their inner mental states. Williams argued that this is meaningless. For something to be a "reason to act," it must be magnetic; that is, it must move us to action. How can something entirely external to us – for example, the proposition that X is good – be magnetic? By what process can something external to us move us to act?

Williams argued that it cannot. Cognition is not magnetic. Knowing and feeling are quite separate, and a person must feel before they are moved to act. Reasons for action are always internal, he argued. If I feel moved to do X (for example, to do something good), it is because I want to. I may want to do the right thing for a number of reasons. For example, I may have been brought up to believe that X is good and may wish to act in accordance with my upbringing; or I may want to look good in someone else's eyes; or perhaps I fear the disapproval of my community. The reasons can be complex, but they are always internal and they always boil down to desire.

With this argument, Williams left moral philosophy with the notion that a person's moral reasons must be rooted in his desires to act morally, desires that might, at any given moment, in any given person, be absent. In a secular humanist tradition, with no appeal to God or any external moral authority, Williams' theory strikes at the foundation of conventional morality; namely, that people sometimes do good even when they don't want to.




See

Pagan



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Santa's Sweatshop


Of course while Ms. Claus gets exploited so do the elves,after all they represent a classic icon for child labour don't they. Santa's Sweatshop.
Producing all those sweatshop toys for girls and boys, in the developed world. But you can now shop sweatfree.

Thai toy shop fire kills six. 15/01/2005. ABC News Online



At the American Apparel store on New York's Fifth Avenue this week, there was a Christmas shopping buzz as customers rifled through brightly coloured racks of t-shirts, underpants and bras. Helpful little cards advised on suitable presents: a pair of baby rib briefs, for example, for your "favourite boy".
The boss of the underwear chain is getting a rather more substantial Christmas gift. Dov Charney, who founded American Apparel in 1997, will receive $200m in shares under a $383m takeover announced yesterday by a financial buyer, Endeavour Acquisition Corporation.
Although eye-watering, Charney's windfall is hardly unusual in present business climate of daily multi-billion pound private equity buyouts. But this is no ordinary takeover.
Ever since its inception, American Apparel has trumpeted its small-scale values. All the manufacturing is done in a factory in downtown Los Angeles where production line staff typically earn between $12 and $18 an hour - not a fortune, but well above the industry average and a good deal more than the people who stitch Gap underpants together in Indonesia.
American Apparel trumpets its vertically integrated, sweatshop-free business model at every opportunity. Charney, who sports a handlebar moustache and once appeared bare-bottomed in an advertisement, has a strong sense of counter-intuitive cool and likes to upset Californian politicians by campaigning for free immigration.
Yesterday's deal, however, is intended to transform American Apparel into a global player. The new owner, Endeavour, intends to open 800 stores, half of which will be outside America, to add to the existing chain of 145.
American Apparel appears to be joining a long list of once ideological "ethical" names which have succumbed to the multinational shilling. Body Shop's founder Anita Roddick found a takeover by L'Oreal impossible to resist - just as Pret a Manger opted for a partial sale to McDonalds, the organic chocolate maker Green & Black's was gobbled by Cadbury Schweppes, and ice-cream king Ben & Jerry's was bought by Unilever

The War of the Christmas Trees

The National Christmas Tree Association's Web site claims that real tree sales outnumber sales for artificial trees 32.8 million to 9.3 million. But artificial trees are used year after year, and studies commissioned by the artificial tree industry show that 57 percent of all Americans actually own fake trees.

Further, the NCTA claims that plastic trees are made in Chinese sweatshops, harbor cancer-causing and poisonous chemicals, and can go up in flames at the strike of a match.

Real trees, it says, are renewable, recyclable and biodegradable. Nurseries proudly tell customers that one evergreen tree produces enough daily oxygen for 18 people.


Sweat-free carols at Melbourne fashion retailer
by pc Tuesday December 19, 2006 at 07:06 PM

As in previous years, the FairWear anti-sweatshop campaign took its Christmas sweat-free carols to town, visiting this year fashion retailer Rich, one of far too many who have so far refused to sign up to the Homeworkers Code of Practice ...

Sweat-free carols at...
click to enlarge


After a quick rehearsal in the Mall, the 'choir' made its way into the up-market shopping mall that has replaced the old Post Office in Melbourne's landmark GPO building and lined up in front of the fashion display for a rendering of modified version of three well-known carols - Jingle Bells (Sweatshop workers all deserve/their Christmas bonus pay - HEY!), God Rest Ye Weary Laborers (O tidings of justice and rights/ human rights, O tidings of justice and rights!), and the classic Twelve Days of Sweat Shopping (On the eleventh day of shopping, my true love bought for me,/ tax breaks for sweatshops, workers without unions, sexual/harassment, cancer-causing fumes, twelve-hour days,/six cents an hour,/RAM-PANT COR-PORATE GREED!/pre-sweated pants, slave labour shoes, toys made by kids,/all gifts made in sweatshops right here).
The performance was then repeated on the steps outside, much to the fascination of the crowds waiting to view the Myer windows...
After the performance, members of the 'choir' handed out useful wallet-sized cards listing companies certified to use the NoSweatshop label on their Australian Made clothing. Visit the website for details:

http://www.fairwear.org.au

Anti-Sweatshop Christmas Carols


Away in a Sweatshop
to the tune of Away in a Manger

Away in a sweatshop where no one can see
The immigrant seamstresses work constantly.
Conditions are awful, the pay is absurd
The boss he will fire them if they say a word.
Away in a fact'ry, an ocean away
Young girls making shoes for a dollar a day.
But please don't complain about worker exploitation
Cause this factory's in a Most Favored Nation.
Away in the Congress, the Senators fat
Count up their PAC dollars, pass NAFTA and GATT.
They couldn't care less about workers in need
These corporate whores traded their conscience for greed!

Slaving in a Sweatshop Wonderland
to the tune of Walking in a Winter Wonderland

Door bell rings, are you listening?
On your brow, sweat is glistening.
You're working tonight; it just isn't right,
Slaving in a sweatshop wonderland.
Gone away are the good jobs
Here today are the sweatshops
They want you to sew
Seven days in a row
Slaving in a sweatshop wonderland.
In Toronto, Woolworth has used sweatshops
And they've paid the lowest rates in town.
Ask about a union, they'll say no ma'am.
Homeworkers do the job for the poorest pay around.
Later on, they'll conspire
How to raise prices higher
The plans that they've made
Won't make us better paid
Slaving in a sweatshop wonderland.
Door bell rings, are you listening?
On your brow, sweat is glistening.
You're working tonight; it just isn't right,


And this little missive from the Right makes the point too..


Will the Feds Bust Santa Claus?

by George Getz

When Santa Claus comes to town this week, he'd better watch out -- because the federal government may be making a list of his crimes (and checking it twice), the Libertarian Party warned today.

"Hark the federal agents sing, Santa is guilty of nearly everything," said Libertarian Party press secretary George Getz. "The feds know when Santa's been bad or good -- and he's been bad, for goodness sakes."

Does Santa belong in the slammer? Instead of stuffing stockings, should he be making license plates?

Yes, said Getz, if he's held to the same standards as a typical American. For example:

* Every December 25, the illegal immigrant known as Santa Claus crosses the border into the United States without a passport. He carries concealed contraband, which he sneaks into the country in order to avoid inspection by the U.S. Customs Service. And just what's in all those brightly colored packages tied up with ribbons, anyway? The Drug Czar and Homeland Security want to know.

* Look at how this international fugitive gets around: Santa flies in a custom-built sleigh that hasn't been approved by the FAA. He never files a flight plan. He has no pilot's license. In the dark of night, he rides the skies with just a tiny bioluminescent red light to guide him -- a clear violation of traffic safety regulations.

* Pulling Santa's sleigh: Eight tiny reindeer, a federally protected species being put to hard labor. None of these reindeer have their required shots, and Santa's never bothered to get these genetically- engineered animals registered and licensed. It's no wonder: He keeps them penned outside his workplace in a clear violation of zoning laws.

* But Crooked Claus the Conniving Capitalist harms more than just animals -- he's hurting hard-working American laborers, too. Isn't Santa's Workshop really Santa's Sweatshop, where his non-union employees don't make minimum wage and get no holiday pay? Add the fact that OSHA has never inspected the place, and you have a Third-World elf-exploitation operation that only Kathy Lee Gifford could love.

* No wonder Santa is able to maintain his monopoly over the toy distribution industry: He's cornered the Christmas gift market. Santa dares to give away his products for free in a sinister attempt to crush all competition -- just like Microsoft's Internet Explorer. Antitrust Lawsuit Memo to the feds: Is Santa Claus the Bill Gates of Christmas?

The bottom line, said Getz: "It might be tough sledding for Jolly St. Nick this Christmas if the government decides to prosecute him.

"We're just surprised it hasn't already happened. After all, Santa Claus is everything that politicians aren't: He's popular, reliable, and gives us something for nothing every December 25th -- instead of taking our money every April 15th."
See

Sweatshop


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Ms Claus Gets No Coin


Here is another reason why we need a social wage in Canada, one that would include wages for housework. Single family tax credits are for the rich, we need a real living wage for all workers including homeworkers.

Deck the halls with unpaid labour

For a certain Bethlehem-born babe, seasonal swag is all about gold, frankincense and myrrh. But for personal saviours closer to home - namely, Canadian moms - a new survey suggests the more appropriate gift is $10,017.

That's what the average mother would collect if her holiday efforts were remunerated in current market terms, according to data from Service Canada and the British drugstore giant Boots.

The five-figure payday draws from a British survey of 2,000 mothers of children age 16 and younger, each of whom was polled on the number of holiday hours she spends wearing 11 seasonal hats: costume designer, craftsperson, personal shopper, event planner, financial manager, public relations officer, interior designer, chef, chauffeur, nanny and housekeeper. Compensation was then determined using Canadian labour market information from Service Canada for each of the jobs.

See:

Kids Are Commodities

Indentured Servitude

Build It And They Will Come

New Meaning for Nanny State

From Nanny State To Ikea


Living Wage


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Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Getting Drafty Down South


Bush Says US Needs to Boost Size of Army, Marines

Gee and how do you do that?

Can you say; D R A F T





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Poetic Science



Moths drink the tears of sleeping birds


This headline is a fine example of

surrealist






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PM's Toughest Decision


Was not to send our men and women in dangers way in Afghanistan. Nope. No need for any thought about that. It was the post election victory Photo Op for Mr. Macho.

Nope his toughest decision was to Tax Income Trusts.



2006 death toll in Afghanistan - 37

The majority after Harper moved troops to Kandahar

Total Casualties- 45

Total Wounded- 111

At least 110 injured Canadian soldiers have been flown to the centre for treatment since Canada began its mission in Afghanistan in early 2002. Of those, about 100 have gone to the hospital in the past year.


Another soldier was injured the other day by a landmine. As many Candian soldiers have been injured by landmines and accidents as by enemy IED's.


Total Cost of War in Afghanistan- $9 Billion


Current Death Toll from Income Trust Taxation - 0

Total Wounded- 0

Total Cost of Income Trust Tax Announcement - $20 Billion

The income trust sector plunged in the wake of the federal government's bombshell announcement of tax changes, and it dragged the TSX index down with it. Analysts described a bloodbath as income trust investors saw more than $20 billion in paper losses, and pulled out of companies that had planned on converting to the legal structure.



Yep that sure was a tough decision to make. The toughest. A real bloodbath versus a financial one.




So whats the price of our soldiers lives? Why the cost of Glory and Fame.

Soldiers' deaths in Afghanistan the price of leadership: Harper

They whom serve give their lives not for freedom, nor Canada, nor Afghanistan's liberation, nor against terrorism, but for the vain glory of the RH Stephen Harper, PM.



Also See:

Kandahar

Friendly Fire


Afghanistan

War


Income Trusts



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Tags








Privateer Runs Wheat Board


The Conservatives have pulled their coup on the farmers run Wheat Board.

And in firing the current CEO his replacement is pro privatization, pro corporate monopolies. Strahl made his firing public complete with staged rally.

Gosh the PM reads the biography of Stalin this summer and we get an autocratic PMO. Wonder what Strahl was reading this summer?

How To Stage Nuremburg Rallies, maybe.


Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl has moved on an opponent of his plans to end the monopoly of the Canadian Wheat Board.

He fired Adrian Measner, the board's president and a 34-year veteran of the organization, on Tuesday.

"It's time for the wheat board to make a buck for Canadian farmers and to quit fiddling around in the political game," Strahl said.

The minister made his announcement at a staged rally west of Winnipeg. Farmers who oppose the wheat board's current monopoly on international wheat and barley sales surrounded him.

Greg Arason, a former wheat board president, is the interim president. Arason supports the government's plan to end the board's monopoly.


Mr. Arason was President and CEO of the CWB between 1998 and 2002 and prior to that was CEO of Manitoba Pool Elevators. He has served as a director of a number of agri-business companies and industry associations including CanAmera Foods, Can-Oat Milling, The Chamber of Maritime Commerce, Canada Grains Council, Prince Rupert Grain, Westco Fertilizers, Western Grain Elevator Association, and XCAN Grain.


For more coverage of the Wheat Board from the Left see Buckdog.

See

Wheat Board

WTO

Farmers


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Deck Chairs on Tory Titanic

Moving the deck chairs. In doing so Oda loses out.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper will shunt aside embattled Environment Minister Rona Ambrose early next month in favour of one of his top lieutenants, sources tell The Canadian Press.

Jim Prentice, Indian affairs minister and head of cabinet's powerful operations committee, is expected to take on the pivotal environment portfolio.

He is to be replaced at Indian Affairs by Peter Van Loan, now heading up the Intergovernmental Affairs Department, say government and Conservative party sources

Pete Van who???

And the removal of Prentice from Indian Affairs, which is his personal peccadilo, has upset at least one Blogging Tory.

And where does Ambrose go, well where she came from Intergovernmental affairs.

Will she be in denial after todays story?

Environment Minister Rona Ambrose told reporters Monday: "I know that my position has been widely publicized by the media, but so far there doesn't appear to be any takers," she said

.


See

Oda


Ambrose


Prentice

Harper


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Tannenbaum


Lets get Christ out of Christmas and just go back to celebrating it as a pagan heathen holiday.

Is There Too Much Christian Influence in Christmas?

Ever since a bunch of evangelical right wingers and their Fox media syncophants decided to put Christ back into Christmas everyone is attacking poor Christmas Trees.

Judge's Christmas tree ban triggers protest

Rabbi wants menorah in airport, Christmas trees removed instead


Heck they aren't even a Christian symbol, never have been. Even some Christians recognize that, those of the Calvinist persuasion as well as the World Wide Church of God.

There was a strong Calvinist element in Lochdubh which frowned on Christmas. Christmas had nothing to do with the birth of Christ, they said, but was really the old Roman Saturnalia which the early Christians had taken over. And as for Santa Claus -- forget it.


The Christmas tree represents the eternal life, the ever-green tree. Which was absorbed into Christian mythology as they adapted pagan traditions into their syncratic Catholicism. The Holy Roman Empire strode Borg like across Europe. The later Reformist revolts continued to subdue the pagan peasants and absorb their radical theologies, pagan as well as protest-ant.

In the German-speaking countries the Christmas tree is part of the pre-Christian tradition of the "12 Rauhnächte" (12 harsh or wild nights), which later became the "Twelve Nights of Christmas." The tree is put up on December 24 and taken down after New Years or on January 6, known as "Twelfth Night." A part of the tradition of taking down the tree is the "Plündern," raiding the tree of cookies and sugar plums, an event, anxiously awaited by the children. January 6 is also known as "Three Kings." On that evening carolers, three of them dressed as the three kings or Magi, stroll from house to house. In some areas the old trees will be brought to a public place and burnt in a big bon-fire. January 7 ushers in the pre-Lenten Fasching or Carnival season.O TANNENBAUM - O CHRISTMAS TREE




Deutsch
Tannenbaum
TEXT: Ernst Anschütz, 1824
MELODIE: Volksweise (traditional)


O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum,
wie treu sind deine Blätter!
Du grünst nicht nur
zur Sommerzeit,
Nein auch im Winter, wenn es schneit.
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum,
wie treu sind deine Blätter!

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Du kannst mir sehr gefallen!
Wie oft hat nicht zur Weihnachtszeit
Ein Baum von dir mich hoch erfreut!
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Du kannst mir sehr gefallen!

O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Dein Kleid will mich
was lehren:
Die Hoffnung und Beständigkeit
Gibt Trost und Kraft
zu jeder Zeit.
O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum!
Das soll dein Kleid
mich lehren.
English
O Christmas Tree
Literal English translation - HF
Traditional melody


O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree
How loyal are your leaves/needles!
You're green not only
in the summertime,
No, also in winter when it snows.
O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree
How loyal are your leaves/needles!

O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree
You can please me very much!
How often has not at Christmastime
A tree like you given me such joy!
O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree,
You can please me very much!

O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree
Your dress wants to
teach me something:
Your hope and durability
Provide comfort and strength
at any time.
O Christmas tree, o Christmas tree,
That's what your dress should
teach me.


And for those of you who celebrate it as the orgy of capitalist consumption it really is well $ea$on$ Greeting$, to you too.

Which is what this is really all about, the commercialization and materialist consumer nature of secular Christmas season. Capitalist Christmas if you like. Christmas in North America today is a secular holiday.

Disagreement focuses on whether decorations are religious or seecular

It's a season not a day, it is the season of the dying and returning Sun, transformed by Christians into the birth of their dying and reborn Son. It is Winter Solstice, the longest night of the year. It is the season of light in the darkness hence Hanukkah, by the by Happy Hanukkah.

All three are celebrated in Hawaii.

Trees, Menorahs Light Up Hawaii Airports

And even as a secular holiday it celebrates the season of fraternity, sorority and solidarity, that of giving from thems thats got to thems with not. Which is why the Alaister Sim version of Scrooge resonates with us as does the Grinch Who Stole Christmas.

Moral tales for an era of unbridled Capitalism, past and present. For like its pagan origins the Solstice season of giving comes from an earler tradition that of the gift economy.

Happy Yuletide,

Merry Christmas,

Happy Hannukkah,

Blessed Be,

One and all,

this Solstice Day,

from a Pagan and a Heathen ,

friend of the Rebel Jesus.








Original recording from the chieftain’s album the bells of dublin

All the streets are filled with laughter and light
And the music of the season
And the merchants’ windows are all bright
With the faces of the children
And the families hurrying to their homes
As the sky darkens and freezes
They’ll be gathering around the hearths and tales
Giving thanks for all god’s graces
And the birth of the rebel jesus

Well they call him by the prince of peace
And they call him by the savior
And they pray to him upon the seas
And in every bold endeavor
As they fill his churches with their pride and gold
And their faith in him increases
But they’ve turned the nature that I worshipped in
From a temple to a robber’s den
In the words of the rebel jesus

We guard our world with locks and guns
And we guard our fine possessions
And once a year when christmas comes
We give to our relations
And perhaps we give a little to the poor
If the generosity should seize us
But if any one of us should interfere
In the business of why they are poor
They get the same as the rebel jesus

But please forgive me if I seem
To take the tone of judgement
For I’ve no wish to come between
This day and your enjoyment
In this life of hardship and of earthly toil
We have need for anything that frees us
So I bid you pleasure
And I bid you cheer
From a heathen and a pagan
On the side of the rebel jesus.


See

Christmas

Xmas

Solstice




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Bush Spins

BUSH: We Are Not Winning - We Are Not Losing
We are standing in one spot spinning like a top.



It is after all Hanukkah, and time for dreidel games.

See:

Iraq

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l'affaire de Lavigne


Never under estimate the power of the blogosphere....

Turning on their own With their party sinking in the polls, New Democrat bloggers are starting to get cranky

Kady O'Malley, Macleans.ca | Updated Tuesday, December 19, 2006, at 22:45 EST

Not the news story of the week the Communications wonks would have liked to see, but the one they created.

Not about the Party but about messaging and the messanger. Hell hath no fury like blogger scorn.
WEESA SURRENDER

But never say Dippers only bitch and complain, Devin Johnson is offering a mitt full of good suggerstions.NDP Online Communications: Consulations Part I

And as a former chair of Communications and Strategy I concur.

Alberta put the NDP on the internet map back in the 1997 election. That was before the Democrats, or Dean. Alberta had the first election web sites in Canada battling it out during that election. The web was key to getting the message out. By the next election in 2000, it was a wide spread phenomena.

It hit its stride with the last Federal Election with real bloggers blogging about the election for CTV and CBC websites as well as election blogs in most major newspapers.

And while the Federal NDP have done some good things with their webpage and web prescence, like hip hop Ed, the Paul Martin Flag Ship campaign, etc. these were all Communications driven, they don't understand citizen media.

Whereas it was candidates pages like Linda Duncan, Edmonton Strathcona, that blogged, and linked to bloggers stories about her campaign, good and bad comments.

But the Federal Party had nothing. And since then as I said their blogging efforts are amatuerish at best; "Hi I'm Charlie from Timmins." But it is their sad lack of content compared to real Dipper bloggers, that is the embarassment.

The roar that will occur over this Macleans article will in all likelyhood turn on the big bad blogosphere and how dare we undermine party messaging. To late for that, the party communications wonks took care of that already, for the past four months.




See

Bumph And Grind

Brad Lavigne

NDP



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Tuesday, December 19, 2006

We Did It, Brad Removed

From the NDP web page as their Director of Communications.

Media Contacts

Canada’s NDP
Joanne Deer, Director of Communications
(613) 236-3613 x2228

NDP Leader
Karl Belanger, Leader’s Media Officer
(613) 995-6767

NDP Caucus
Ian Capstick, Caucus Media Officer
(613) 995-8259



A correction that was not there yesterday or earlier this morning.

Reminds me a little of the Stalin School of Falsification; now you see Trotsky, now you don't.



Photos: Pictures that lie


Of course Brad is still being the caucus mouthpiece, so my criticism still stands. New Communications director or not.

The Deer has to prove herself, and one way will be to see what happens to Brad. But don't expect too much, she has only been on the jobe since October. October.

And they only changed the NDP Web Page, today. Today being December 19. That's a pretty sttep learning curve for such a simple thing. Hello appointed in October and only chaning the web page now. And only after we blogged about it in the context of Brad's numerous failures.


Joanne is also selective in whom she emails, I still didn't get her missive she sent.
I blogged, got email address, comment space. Hmm selective in whom she communicates with.

Hey Joanne I am on the email list, and party donor list, Blogging Dippers list, email you guys regularly with comments. Did I mention I am on the PAC? Hey.....

Yoo Hoo over here. Waving at ya.

The NDP communications gurus still don't get it. Hello, the blogosphere is important. And just assigning your inept crew to blog occassionally , from your own convention or the Liberals, is pathetic and patronising to real Dipper bloggers.

And shows you still agree with Brad that blogging is irrelevant to the NDP.



See

Brad Lavigne

NDP



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Bumph And Grind

Liberals under Dion got big bumph in Quebec. So much for the "Dion Hurts Us In Quebec" campaign. And this was before he announced Iggy as his Deputy Leader, he could do no less for the Leadership front runner.


The pro-independence Bloc Quebecois campaigns only in French-speaking Quebec and the poll put support for the party in the province at 44 percent, compared to 31 percent for the Liberals and 13 percent for the Conservatives.


But not good news for the NDP. Their message just isn't getting out. Clearly the Liberals mushy muddle has appeal to NDP voters. Not hardcore dippers, but Buzz types. Down six points from November. Ouch.

The message, repeated again by Jack yesterday, that the NDP Makes Government Work, is just not resonating. Though irony drips off the phrase when you see it in print. Maybe they should change it to Harper Promises,We Deliver.

Angus Reid Global Monitor : Polls & Research
December 19, 2006

(ARGM) - The opposition Liberal party holds a slight advantage in Canada, according to a poll by Ipsos-Reid released by CanWest Global. 36 per cent of respondents would vote for the Liberals in the next federal election.

The governing Conservative party is second with 34 per cent, followed by the New Democratic Party (NDP) with 13 per cent, the Bloc Québécois with 10 per cent, and the Green party with five per cent. Support for the Grits dropped by two points in a week, while backing for the Tories increased by the same margin.

Canadians renewed the House of Commons in January. The Conservative party—led by Stephen Harper—received 36.3 per cent of the vote, and secured 124 seats in the 308-member lower house. Since February, Harper leads a minority administration after more than 12 years of government by the Liberal party.

On Dec. 2, former environment minister Stéphane Dion became the new leader of the Liberal party, defeating academic Michael Ignatieff in the fourth and final delegate ballot with 54.7 per cent.

Yesterday, Dion said his party would not support a call made by Bloc Québécois leader Giles Duceppe to topple the Harper government over its handling of Canada’s military role in Afghanistan, saying, "I don’t understand the Bloc’s position at all. It doesn’t seem very useful to me to want to bring down the government on that in February as Duceppe is proposing. (...) We’ll prepare for an election, but it doesn’t seem to me that Canadians want an election in the middle of winter."

Polling Data

What party would you vote for in the next federal election?


Dec. 14

Dec. 7

Nov. 2006

Liberal

36%

38%

29%

Conservative

34%

32%

37%

New Democratic Party

13%

13%

19%

Bloc Québécois

10%

11%

9%

Green

5%

5%

5%

Source: Ipsos-Reid / CanWest Global
Methodology: Telephone interviews with 1,004 Canadian adults, conducted from Dec. 12 to Dec. 14, 2006. Margin of error is 3.1 per cent.



See

Canadian Politics

Polling


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