Nuke’s News and Views

The Ring Thing

July 30th, 2007 at 7:35 pm . by el nuko

By now nothing that goes on in public schools should surprise me. We live in a through-the-looking-glass world where students are suspended for smoking cigarettes, but can get free condoms from the school nurse, where prayer is not allowed but t-shirts glorifying rap music and its odious messages are commonly worn, and where students graduate knowing how to TM while barely being able to read and speak articulately.

So why should it surprise me that an English school has forbidden a fifteen year old Christian girl from wearing a small silver ring that symbolizes her commitment to chastity until marriage? If you want the details, see this article here, although a Google search of Lydia Playfoot turns up quite a bit of material. Suffice to say, she has been told by the school to remove the ring or face expulsion.

I have two BIG problems with this.

First, this same school allows Muslim girls to wear their head scarves, and Sikh girls to wear the silver bracelets of their faiths. This I have no problem with. Freedom to express one’s religion is a basic human right. But hey, guys, point of order here: don’t Christians have the same rights as Muslims and Sikhs?

And perhaps more importantly, does anyone really think it’s such a hot idea to punish a teenager when she’s actually trying to do the right thing? Anyone who has ever been the parent of a teenager knows what a demoralizing experience this can be. There are just so many ways teens can screw up their lives: drugs, alcohol, sex, violence, gangs. No matter how hard you try to steer them away from these, many just blithely embrace some or all of these self destructive behaviors while regarding their parents as hopelessly out of touch simpletons. Any parent who can shepherd their teen to adulthood while keeping them in one piece has done something to be proud of.

Nowadays this process is harder than ever because there are just so many other influences on teens that parents must now compete with. Peer pressure used to mean the kids at school. Now, thanks to the Internet, it means kids all over the world. Kids are being urged by way too many people to make really, really bad decisions.

So in a world where teenagers kill just because they want to “see what it feels like”, it is refreshing to hear about a girl like Lydia Playfoot, who is actually doing the right thing and encouraging others to do the same. But instead of getting the praise she deserves, all she’s getting is a whole lot of undeserved aggravation. It is a sad indictment of our culture when a teenage girl is turned into a pariah for NOT having sex. The scarlet letter A used to stand for “adulteress”. I guess now it stands for “abstinence”.

In our increasingly secular world, there are many who find her extroverted brand of Christian faith cloying, but that is more of a reflection of our society than it is on her. I find it rather ironic that while the western world is predominantly Christian, Christianity itself is becoming ever more marginalized. Devout Christians are often looked down upon by the intelligentsia as rubes and simpletons. And yet in Muslim, Jewish, and other cultures, religious faith is still viewed as a virtue.

But one does not need to embrace orthodox Christianity to recognize the value of her message, or to be disturbed by the school administration’s attempts to squash that message, which should be regarded as a breath of fresh air. What parent in the world wouldn’t sell their soul just to hear their teen say, “Mom, Dad, I’ve been thinking about it, and I’ve decided not to have sex until I’m married. Is that OK?” In a world where so many influences are telling her to do otherwise, Lydia Playfoot is doing the right thing. Ring or no ring.

–Smith

“taking up a glowing cinder with the tongs and lighting with it the long cherry-wood pipe which was wont to replace his clay when he was in a disputatious rather than a meditative mood”–Dr. John H. Watson

Please visit my blog at murderofravens.wordpress.com

Comment posted by murderofravens
at 7/31/2007 6:37:43 PM

This post really isn’t about religion. What I’m saying here is that it’s rather dismaying that our secular society has taken “secularism” to the point where when a teenager is publicly ostracizied for NOT engaging in a classic form of teenage bad behavior. But a secondary theme is how Christianity has been marginalized to the point where any extroverted display of christian faith is frowned upon by our society. Sad, really.

-Smith

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 5:29:49 PM

When I read about that, my only question was “are these people out of their minds?” Somehow I doubt that somebody wearing a druid symbol would be banned from wearing it.

Comment posted by Mick
at 7/31/2007 5:20:46 PM

We must bow to the superior members of the religion of peace. I get it.

Comment posted by nuke
at 7/31/2007 8:28:52 AM

The scarlet letter A used to stand for “adulteress”. I guess now it stands for “abstinence”.
This message is reinforced in movies, tv, internet, etc, ad nauseum.
Sad, but true.
Great post MOR

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/31/2007 6:31:33 AM

I think the young lady, Lydia, will be just fine. When one has their head screwed on straight, the masses of idiots can’t undo them.
It’s more of a sad commentary on the quality of individuals that our children are placed in the care of, each day at school.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 10:09:19 PM

ROFL. That sounds like my job! I bitch and moan about it, and am told things could always be worse, so I quit complaining, and danged if they don’t.

Comment posted by beto ochoa
at 7/31/2007 9:50:55 PM

Swampy,
When I was a boy and things weren’t going well my Mother told me “Cheer up, things could be worse.” So I cheered up.
Sure enough, things got worse.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 9:47:46 PM

Lie down, and maybe it will go away.

Comment posted by beto ochoa
at 7/31/2007 8:49:22 PM

I feel a poem about oppression coming on.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 8:46:05 PM

What it is about is the deliberate discrimination against and marginalization of people that have moral values.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 8:44:57 PM

What surprises me (well, not really) is that the zero population growth people that have been chastising the Brits to have less children haven’t jumped on this. If the girl isn’t having sex, seems like she won’t be adding any little carbon producers/environmentally incorrect animal species to Gaia.

/The earth is my environment. I don’t know what planet those people are from.

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accidently… (on purpose)

July 30th, 2007 at 5:16 pm . by el nuko

Erika Engle, The Buzz

THE call letters KUNT have landed at a yet-unbuilt low-power digital television station in Wailuku, Maui. Alarmingly similar to a word the dictionary says is obscene, the call letters were among a 15-page list of new call letters issued by the Federal Communications Commission and released this week.

The same station owner also received KWTF for a station in Arizona.

From Skokie, Ill., comes a sincere apology “to anyone that was offended,” said Kevin Bae, vice president of KM Communications Inc., who requested and received KUNT and KWTF. It is “extremely embarrassing for me and my company and we will file to change those call letters immediately.”

source

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 11:51:01 PM

Henh, what about KLIT, or KUZE?
In the meantime, there is a new phenomenon brewing in New Zealand…vegansexuals.
*WARNING*Photo of couple will diminish sexual desire.

Comment posted by nuke
at 7/30/2007 11:53:40 PM

that looked like brokeback mounting

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 11:57:58 PM

Yeah, and a two-bagger, at that.

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 11:59:48 PM

night

Comment posted by nuke
at 7/31/2007 12:04:48 AM

nite

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/31/2007 12:12:24 AM

Hunh. Who wants to sleep with a vegetable?

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/31/2007 6:18:51 AM

Who wants to sleep with a vegetable?

Henh…and I’ll leave it at that.
/that’s our Swampie

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Great moments in socialized medicine

July 30th, 2007 at 12:04 pm . by el nuko
“I could be dead by then.”

Proponents of Hillary-Care, or fans of the propagandist movie “Sicko” would do well to study the actual day to day operation of socialized medicine before trying to impose it upon the United States.

This is the story of Olive Beal: a retired London piano teacher and former activist in the Suffragette Movement, who was told that she must wait eighteen months before she can receive a new hearing aid. At age 108, with failing eyesight and confined to a wheelchair, Mrs. Beal’s 5 year old analog hearing aid no longer functions effectively for her.

Her family said they had been shocked to be told there was an 18-month waiting list by the Eastern and Coastal Kent Primary Care Trust. A digital hearing aid costs about £1,000 on the open market.

Maria Scott, 52, her granddaughter, said: “After having a hearing test on Wednesday they said, ‘yes, she does need a digital hearing aid, but there is an 18-month waiting list’.

“I would have thought they would take her age into account as she probably has not got 18 months to wait.

“Olive has worked hard from the age of 16 to her late 60s and paid taxes. She has been healthy all her life and lived with her daughter until 15 years ago - she has never sponged off the state. I thought a 108-year-old deserved to be treated better than this.”

SOURCE

I still think the best line I heard about the idyllic Cuban healthcare system praised in Moore’s movie was along the lines of………..

“The best health care in Cuba is found at Gitmo. “

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 9:35:16 PM

I haven’t been to Mexico for awhile; do they still set the old folks alongside the roads that tourists frequent with their cups?

I don’t know, Swampie. I haven’t been to San Antonio in a long time.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 9:24:05 PM

GAD, I’ve got NIH on the brain because I’ve been doing some (online) research there today. I believe that lady’s particular acronym on her sign should be ECKPCT. I’m going to take a long vacation.

Comment posted by University Update - Sicko - Great moments in socialized medicine
at 7/30/2007 8:51:33 PM

[…] Contact the Webmaster Link to Article sicko Great moments in socialized medicine » Posted at Nuke’s News and Views on […]

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 8:32:25 PM

I think perhaps the family should set granny out in her wheelchair with a begging cup, and a sign saying “will work for hearing aids since I can’t get any from NIH”.

I haven’t been to Mexico for awhile; do they still set the old folks alongside the roads that tourists frequent with their cups?

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 6:31:43 PM

Not to mention the people that they are denying joint replacements to on the grounds that they are “too fat” but is a money-saving move. (Not to mention exercise is a tad difficult if you cannot actually walk.)

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 6:32:34 PM

And one person weighed 6 lbs. too much so she was “obese” and could not have the surgery. Based on that markedly accurate (not) predictor, the BMI.

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Flying pig moment

July 30th, 2007 at 7:08 am . by el nuko

pigflying.jpgThis may be THE Flying Pig Moment of 2007.

The New York Times has published an editorial by MICHAEL E. O’HANLON and KENNETH M. POLLACK that reflects much of the cautious optimism that we’ve seen since the stabilization of Anbar and the ejection of AQI from Baqubah.

Yes, you read that correctly.

Here is an excerpt:

Here is the most important thing Americans need to understand: We are finally getting somewhere in Iraq, at least in military terms. As two analysts who have harshly criticized the Bush administration’s miserable handling of Iraq, we were surprised by the gains we saw and the potential to produce not necessarily “victory” but a sustainable stability that both we and the Iraqis could live with.

After the furnace-like heat, the first thing you notice when you land in Baghdad is the morale of our troops. In previous trips to Iraq we often found American troops angry and frustrated — many sensed they had the wrong strategy, were using the wrong tactics and were risking their lives in pursuit of an approach that could not work.

Today, morale is high. The soldiers and marines told us they feel that they now have a superb commander in Gen. David Petraeus; they are confident in his strategy, they see real results, and they feel now they have the numbers needed to make a real difference.

As they say……..Read it all

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Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 6:00:53 PM

I was just reading Dems are no shows at DLC, and it was explained thusly:

While it’s hard to deny that candidates are rousing the liberal base, Marc Dunkelman, who runs the blog on the DLC-sponsored Ideas Primary website, writes that this is history merely repeating itself and doesn’t spell death for the DLC. Pandering to more liberal or conservative primary voters and then moving to the center is the way presidential politics are played, he says. After a nominee is selected in the primaries, he (or she) then moves to the center. Dunkelman reminds readers that Al Gore and John Kerry were no-shows at DLC National Conversations in 1999 and 2003, respectively, but both worked hard to gain the DLC’s support after winning the party’s nomination.

Yeah, I can see where it worked out really well for them, too.

Comment posted by nuke
at 7/30/2007 4:44:26 PM

ooooo, I like the way you think. Hehe

Comment posted by in2thefray
at 7/30/2007 4:00:36 PM

I saw the story and was heartened and disappointed at the same time. One I felt it was good to see positive troop related news. Sad due to knowing the spin would go where it has. “Doesn’t matter progress to late lets roll(over)” Off topic flying pig sqaudrons over Islamic jihadists mmm good psy-ops no ?

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 2:49:58 PM

The FPM of 2007…so far.
I saw the story headline, and a caption, early this a.m., but didn’t feel like messing with bugmenot. Every body has been talking about it on talk radio, today.
Looks like some body forgot to check with Soros, before they ran the story.
These two writers work for the left leaning Brookings Institute, and according to Laura Ingraham’s staff, they view these writers as moderate to slightly left leaning, and therefore not bonded to the quitters caucus.

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 11:41:23 PM

And here we have a brief moment of lucidity by a Dhimmi, quickly followed by a disconnect from reality, at the end of the article.
Clyburn: Positive Report by Petraeus Could Split House Democrats on War.

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 11:37:20 PM

This seems to be a good spot for this.
Hugh Hewitt interviews John Burns of the NYT.

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Monday Morning Jam!

July 30th, 2007 at 4:58 am . by el nuko


Good for what ails ya’.
Jaco Pastorius…he was special.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 5:28:26 PM

Oh, dang, looks like she messed it up for all the other relatives, too. Well, THAT family reunion is gonna be awkward.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 5:26:46 PM

Awwwwwwww. Well, she’s a big girl and is making quite a good living off her escapades. I wonder if she can subtract her vehicles, wardrobe, jewelry, and surgery from her taxes?

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 2:59:30 PM

Dang!
Don’t make grand-dad mad, Paris.
/now that’s hot

Comment posted by no2liberals
at 7/30/2007 2:45:13 PM

Sadly, he died tragically, at the age of 35.
He was voted the Greatest Bass Player To Have Ever Lived, in 2006, by reader submission to Bass Guitar Magazine.

Comment posted by SwampWoman
at 7/30/2007 1:13:53 PM

Here’s a headline you don’t see every day Bear involved in I-95 crash.

Comment posted by nuke
at 7/30/2007 11:18:45 AM

nice way to start the week.
thanks

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