Showing posts with label pagan rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pagan rights. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Sneak preview!

Today it's "welcome to a different kind of book launch."

In fact, this is the sneak preview, for readers of this blog only. The launch itself will be via newsletter tomorrow.

LEGENDS is up, it's ready, and it's open. The first eight or nine thousand words are online, plus a lot of artwork, housed in one of the most amazing templates I've ever seen. You'd hardly believe it was a blog, and you'd never guess it was working under the Blogger engine.

Here's the url to the LEADER page -- remember, being a blog it will always have the latest post up first! But if you book mark this url, you'll always hit the "cover" of the book! Here is is:

http://mel-keegan-legends.blogspot.com/2009/01/1.html



Notice that there are tabs across the top of the page (and THAT is a feat of magic in Blogger) which give you access to the Complete Contents, as well as a other stuff. The Complete Contents is just that: the direct link to every segment as it's posted, in order, identified by its title.

You can also navigate by a simple "chapter list" that's building in the left column; and you can page-forward and page-back from the top and bottom of each chapter/post. If you do get lost (and it won't be easy, because the navigation is too obvious!) go home to the Complete Contents from the tab-bar across the top of the page.

Lastly, where it says "Chapter Five is due tomorrow" ... well, this is the sneak preview. Chapter Five will actually be up a day after the site opens "to the public." Regulars on this blog are a special kind of "in group" with due privileges.

The rest of the Mel-o-Sphere is fairly dull: it's all about narrowly avoiding the hospital (not me personally), house cleaning, and being confounded by the prejudice you find in the oddest places --

In putting together the LEGENDS site, obviously it's "monetized" because the novel itself is free. So I've been looking around for an ad-server that would load a banner onto the page and pay whatever fee per thousand page impressions -- you know how it works.

I'm sure there are companies out there who would do this, but long before I found one which will work with me, I checked out the banner ad serving company that comes most highly recommended (seemed like a good place to start) and was both stunned and disgusted.

They have a problem with blogs, for a start: probably because blogs have the ability to be flexible, ephemeral, always changing, and content is uploaded so fast -- they can't hope to monitor (censor, filter, object to, haggle over) what's published. They have a problem with FOREIGN sites ...meaning, anything outside North America. They have a problem with sites that have anything to do with, or are linked to, sites about "different sexual orientation." They also have a problem with sites dealing with religion ... and on, and on.

The prejudice displayed by such a company is beyond comprehension. They come highly recommended by (surprise) American blogging pundits --

But what if you're "foreign," or Hundu, or (good grief!) GLBTI? You're persona non grata. These people refuse to serve ads to anyone who's not PLU -- heterosexual North Americans who either don't mention religion, or toe the (Republican) party line. Dominionists? Fine and dandy. Wiccan or Taoist or Hindu? I imagine they believe we're all going to burn.

Not good enough, people.I clicked out and passed on. At this point, LEGENDS is carrying Google ads, Amazon affiliate stuff, iPower and Serif (which we know inside out, can vouch for and recommend) and that's about it. I'm still hunting for an ad server without the incredible prejudice. Might take a look at Gay Ad Network. And when the traffic on LEGENDS has built up to a healthy torrent, Blog Ads should start to look attractive.

The experiment begins! Look out for a newsletter tomorrow, and I'll keep you posted as to results.

Speaking of results, it's interesting to note that the Amazon affiliate links actually do sell items. It works out to something like 10 items sold through about 2500 page impressions ... in other words, every 250 page loads, someone, somewhere, buys a book, a DVD, a CD, a jump drive, an SD card, whatever.

And of course this is the core of the experiment: can you give the book away and make enough "on the side" for the author to be reimbursed? Let's find out!

Ciao for now,
MK

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Prop 8, the racial vote, and the anger

It's an angry community this morning, and alas, the anger is justified. For a few days, I've been calling Prop 8 a windsock, but I hadn't realized how knowing which way the wind is blowing would bring about not just hurt and anger, but the worst kind of it.

One hardly knows what to say ... and it's almost impossible to say anything without upsetting someone, somewhere. So I'll be very cautious in what I say today, beg your patience, and start out with a caveat!

I've campaigned for gay rights for years; the name of Mel Keegan has been known internationally for just on two decades, and I've always been known as the most broad-minded, eclectic liberal, to whom human rights are the Big Issue: gay and racial and pagan. In other words the right to equality in your sexuality, your race and your faith. These are the Big Three rights. Everything else is down to your intelligence, your drive to get educated and be employed, the good or bad health Nature endowed you with ... and sheer luck, which plays a large part in your physical appearance and abilities, as well as your fortunes at the track.

Why pagan? Because paganism is an emerging religious form which has every constitutional right to coexist with the True Faith religions. Sheer, blind faith aside, no religion is founded on a shred of "proof" or 'evidence," and therefore, every religion has a right to be. The Constitution of the United States is very clear on this point: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ..."

Yet there are American religious groups -- and Sarah Palin belongs to one of them -- who identify and characterise themselves as witch hunters. The woman who was a paltry few voting percentages away from the White House is connected to a nutso religious group (who belong in a madhouse), who claim responsibility for the death of Mother Thresea. Yep. These Christian lunatics honestly believe they prayed her to death. They're after Catholics, as well as pagans. Now, many Americans would actually care if Catholic priests and nuns were "run out of town on a rail." Or one would hope US'ns would care! But comparatively few Americans care about the rights of pagans -- though pagans are constitutionally entitled to their faith. (And some Americans honestly believe that people of the Muslim faith "don't belong in this planet," but this is another story.)

Intrigued, horrified? Go here:
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2008/10/20/195730/89
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bruce-wilson/sarah-palin-linked-to-sec_b_137532.html

Now, the Holy Roman Empire and Islam are big enough to go out and fight their own battles. They can pour a billion dollars into the TV and Internet campaign to literally buy the mindset shift in the American people which would be necessary to win the religious equivalent of Prop 8, which states, "It is unlawful to persecute a person for his or her Catholic or Muslim faith." The Vatican and the oil sheiks wouldn't even notice that the billion had been advanced out of company funds.

And the mindset of the American people can most certainly be bought. The Prop 8 result on 11/4 proved this beyond any shadow of doubt.

So, for me, the pagan rights issue is by far the most important religious sticking point today, because pagans are a tiny minority who can be steamrollered out of existence by the same juggernaut of the "popular vote" which was used to strip civil rights from gays. ANY minority community needs the support of all, until the injustice and prejudice of the greater tide of humanity has been turned, by peaceful means, into tolerance and acceptance. And you can quote me on that.

Why gay rights? Same reason, as well as a certain personal preference, which ought to be fairly obvious to anyone who's read any book I ever published. Over the years, I've written so many hundreds of thousands of words on the subject of gay rights, I sometimes think I'm written out, I have no more so say, can't think of a syllable ... and then something else comes along -- like the incredible backlash after Prop 8 -- and I suddenly realize, we've hardly even scratched the surface.

Why racial rights? Same reason. Because gay rights and racial rights are HUMAN rights, they're two sides to the same coin. I've always believed that if you fight for one, you have to fight for the other. Right now, I'm down to praying that this belief is correct -- for the moment, I'll stand by it, and let nature take her course.

(For the record, I'm what they call "Euro-mongrel." I'm part Irish, part Scots, part Anglo, part Norwegian, part Romanian. I have Celtic coloring stuck on an eastern European kind of face, and I'm the first one to admit, it looks ... unusual. My family are nominally from the UK; one half fled the IRA "troubles" in Ireland about 90 years ago and went to England for work. The other half went to America. The folks who went to the UK hived off yet again ... some of them went to the US too ... some of us came to Australia. And here we are.)

So, if I had three feet (thank gods, I don't) I'd have one of them in each of three camps. American politics mean as much to me as Australian and British politics, and I sometimes feel as if I'm ripped in three directions. (Stop the planet, I want to get off.)

This is what I'm feeling right now, as a surge of racism boils up around the GLBTI community in the States. The Prop 8 windsock showed some rather unpleasant wind directions. We never knew that 70% of African Americans consider gays to be second class citizens. We know now ... and it hurts. In fact, it hurts a lot.

The tide of anger which is boiling right now is frightening, and saddening. You're starting to read things being said that haven't been said in decades, and it's chilling. My fear is that in their religious zeal to ban gay marriage, the Christan Right might have generated a tide of racial unrest which will have dreadful, and far-reaching consequences in the US.

There's so much anger in the media, and in the blogs, it's difficult to find a dispassionate overview of the situation. I would cautiously suggest this one:
http://socialistworker.org/2008/11/07/protests-erupt-over-prop-8

The bald facts are stated there, without rhetoric or bias.

Now, the issue of "black v. gay" is incredibly complex, with at least two faces. The first is about the painful knowledge we now possess ... that 70% of African Americans are homophobic. In other words, if you're talking to a stranger of color, you're far more likely to be despised and insulted when s/he finds out you're gay, than if you were talking to a European American.

It hurts ... it's not pleasant to know it's true, but it's very true, and one has to deal with it. Hence, the anger. I've been reading not only posts and articles, but also the reams of comments that have gushed forth after them. Some bloggers and journalists have had to close commenting, because it got real ugly, real fast. Which, in itself, is sad.

I'm not going to quote any of these comments here, nor link to them: throwing gasoline on a fire is not a smart thing to do!

The arguments run along the lines of, "the colored community was happy to take gay dollars to elect Mr. Obama, then they stab us in the back." And, "I'm extremely upset to know that black Americans are homophobic, and I resent their community for taking away my constitutional rights, which are no less justified than their own." And, "Something has to be done about out-of-state churches, such as the LDS for one, pumping money into California to market their point of view and skewing the public perspective."

On the other side of the fence, you have, "The people of California have spoken, your rights have been curtailed, it's over, live with it or go away." And, "If you don't want to live here anymore, go to Massachusetts." And, "Gods judgment has been brought down on you." And, "We have achieved a major victory against Satan." And finally, "The rights of chickens are more important than the rights of gays -- who cares if gays live in a cage?"

(If you need to wade in the torrent of anger, just Google "anger Prop 8 racial vote" ... and take a deep breath. It's ugly. It's frightening.)

Those seem to be the major fundamental arguments underlying the fury and outrage which is pumping through the Internet at this time. Beyond these pared-down statements, the whole thiing swiftly gets incredibly personal, subjective, furious and potentially violent.

Now, I had a comment posted this morning, on "Looking for an ups-side to the Prop 8 Fiasco:"
http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/11/looking-for-up-side-to-prop-8-fiasco.html

This is well worth a read, and to save you exiting this page, here's the best part:
I set up a spreadsheet with the exit polling data. There's probably rounding error, since the categories "White," "Latino," "Black," and "Asian" sum to 98%. Assuming that there's a demographic category for the remaining 2%, and the exit poll data is accurate, then the unnamed "other" had to have voted 100% in favor of yes. That would still leave results that were off 1 percentage point (PP). If "other" had results similar to Hispanics, then the exit poll results were off by 2PP.Still, that's pretty close to ordinary polling accuracy. Maybe "other" is not statistically relevant.If the non-White results are accurate, then the White vote would only need to be 53.8 no to 46.2 yes to completely offset the Black and Hispanic vote. So my point is that the Black vote only carries so much blame for this. Usually the Black vote is about 9%, and if that's what it were Tuesday, then the effect would be tiny. White people would have to have rejected the measure by less than 0.01 PP either direction.

Stats can lie, but they can also tell the truth. Share this news around -- please! Link to this! Turns out, the Black Vote didn't make Prop 8 pass after all ... but this won't affect the racial backlash.

Unfortunately, the windsock still brought out the truth, and here's the irony: the fury on the Internet today is tending toward racism, because the facts came out on the wash ... the African American community is homophobic. You can't argue with the numbers. At the same time, the Black Vote didn't swing the referendum. Prop 8 was going to pass anyway, according to the numbers. Go figure.

A couple of posts ago, I remarked that some years of "working the crowd" would get us the numbers to have Prop 8 tossed in the bin where it belongs. I also said, we'd find those numbers in the ethnic communities. Well ... perhaps not, after all. It could be that a lot of the numbers we need are hiding in the aged community -- which could be damned hard to influence.

The other very interesting section in the above comment was this:
Moreover, the Constitution guarantees equal protection under the law; it recognizes the integrity of contracts. Marriage has been a civil institution for over two centuries; it's no longer a matter over which any church can legitimately hold forth.

Oh ... boy. I long to believe. In answer to this comment, I wrote this:
Per the Constitution -- I'm sure you're fundamentally right! However, if the Constitution absolutely, clearly and unambiguously (!) guaranteed equal protection, it's safe to say that the Prop 8 "Fiasco" wouldn't be happening. It wouldn't be permissible, much less necessary! The lamentable fact is that in the minds of a majority of people, there remains the misconception that marriage rights have a religious connotation. We just saw the proof of this. I'm no kind of lawyer, but I do understand what I'm seeing when people vote with their Bibles, as their pastors have instructed them to. Also, the hard, clear fact that Prop 8 was mooted at all means that the issue is far from clear even at the legal level -- otherwise, it would not have found its way onto the ballot sheets. It would have been recognized at every level as being illegal ... and it wasn't. I would dearly love to agree wholeheartedly with you on the Constitutional point you make, but alas -- the reality of the last week has shown that many gray areas still persist, and a great deal more work must be done to make the Constitution unambiguous, clear and fair, in the minds of all people, not merely the lawyers!

In terms of gay rights: we have a long way to go. In legal terms (both state and federal) there is a long way to go to prove what the constitution actually means -- what it seems to mean, what it can be made to say. Many people are sure the Constitution protects gays; but if you put the vote to the people, a majority say "no, it doesn't, and we want to rewrite the Constitution to make damned sure it doesn't."

Can the people rewrite the Constitution to take civil liberties away from a specific group? This can't be lawful. If it were, African Americans need to start getting twitchy ... and pagans need to run for cover, fast.

The next weeks and months, as this question is fought out in the courts, and at the most fundamental constitutional levels, will be fascinating and chilling. We're about to find out how secure our civil rights really are. One would hope justice and reason will prevail, once and for all.

However, at street level, it's not so easy. People are justifiably wounded, and the true feelings of the majority of the ethnic community have been exposed. However ... people have a right to their true feelings. It isn't politically correct or morally acceptable to hate gays, but an individual has the right to hold this sentiment -- just as s/he has the right to belong to True Faith religion and believe that everyone else in the world, outside his/her own church, is a miserable sinner who's going to burn in hell.

The challenge, at the constitutional level, will to rationalize the rights of all, level the playing field, and make peace between all people, without discriminating against gays ... Christians ... Americans of color ... aged Americans ... and even the homophobes, who have a fundamental right to feel what they feel, even if we don't like it.

Voltaire nailed it, many, many years ago: "I might not agree with what you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."

[Sound of Keegan heaving enormous sigh]

To me, the bottom line in human terms is deeply troubling. Christians, and pariculartly priests, are supposed to love all mankind. Yet in their religious zeal to promote Biblical law, -- denying gays their rights to love and wed -- they've uncovered a nest of gender-based hate that has, as a natural rebound, blown up into racial anger which many of us had believed (or was it just hoped?) to be a thing of the past in Ameria.

Is anyone scared silly yet?

Happier subjects tomorrow,
MK

Friday, October 31, 2008

Halloween memories

This time of the year is always a little odd and a lot nostalgic for me. It's change of season ... in the northern hemisphere autumn (fall, if you prefer) is sliding down into winter; downunder, spring is drying out and heating up toward summer. In the north, it's Halloween (or Samhaine, if you're of the pagan persuasion), and no matter how long I spend in the southern hemisphere, the week which includes Halloween, my birthday and Guy Fawkes's Night still feels like it ought to be cold and dim, with possible early snow showers...



I guess, spending the first twelve years of your life celebrating your birthday while you scrape candle wax off the cement in the yard, and counting your fireworks, hoarding them against the big day -- November 5th -- makes so indelible an impression on a kid's brain that, 37 years after leaving the north, I am still haunted by thoughts and sounds, smells and impressions, of a time ... and a place ... that don't even exist anymore...



Small town England has been vanishing steadily as the cities conquer the landscape. Three or four villages collide with two towns and ... you've got a small city that swiftly expands. It was happening when I was a kid, and that was a long, long time ago. I remember the new housing estates (subdivisions, if you prefer) going up on every parcel of land that wasn't actually under the plow. But even so, small town England was never far from Nature, and when the seasons turned, when the land itself began to close down its branch offices in preparation for suspending business for the winter, you -- the human, even if you were only eight years old -- felt it...



In fact, you felt it keenly. All at once, you were looking for the biggest turnip or pumpkin you could find, to make a lantern (turnip lanterns were much more common in our part of the world; in those days, and in that place, pumpkins were close to unknown. I don't think I'd even seen one before landing in Australia in '71), and you were wearing your heavy coat, and the scarf, and the gloves. The days were shorter, not to mention colder. The shops were lit up by four in the afternoon -- and the display windows were full of fireworks...



Now, in almost every part of the world these days, fireworks are illegal. But in those days ... kids stood in line at the counter at the magazine shop to buy them ... 6d for this one, 9d for that one, and the others were four for a shilling. They had a fascination about them that belonged to this exact time of the year -- and also to this place. The US, Canada, Aus, Europe -- nowhere else in the world associates the smell of cordite, brightly-colored little cardboard cylinders, and the smell of raw turnips, and sizzling sausages, and woodsmoke, and cold, misty evenings with the first stars beginning to show...



Halloween and Bonfire night went hand in hand. The shops were full of fireworks for a couple of weeks before Guy Fawkes's Night, so one celebration overlaid itself on the other -- which was just as well, because Halloween itself was not the three-ringed circus it is today. In those days (and in that place) it was an excuse for a party for the adults, and a major romp for the kids, who would dress up as witches and goblins ... in home-made costumes, because the night was not (yet) commercialized, you didn't buy this stuff ... and have a turnip lantern bash in the back yard, with a sausage sizzle on the side. Talk about fun...



Winter was coming in, and in the back of every kid's mind was SNOW, and CHRISTMAS, and TIME TO GET OUT THE SLED (which in our part of the world was known as a sledge). Autumn, and Halloween, is a time every little northern hemisphere kid has to love, because you can feel the world changing, and you know Christmas is close. And for us, in a few days, on November 5th, there was going to be a ten-foot-high bonfire on the village green, where people would bring their fireworks and let them off, and it would be GREAT. There was no giant sky-show, as you see today (though, full marks go to the local County Council -- think city hall -- for organizing the biggest pyrotechnics show in the region, to replace the big bonfire and "b.y.o. fireworks," which were discontinued only a few years ago...



I feel myself privileged to have been there for the real thing: dwarfed by the bonfire, eyes watering on the woodsmoke, full of sausages and onions, watching my father set off rockets and Roman candles and Catherine wheels and what have you ... while forty other kids were doing the same. Guy Fawkes's night -- bonfire night -- was sheer magic, and also the day after my birthday ... made the celebrations go on and on, and you had the time of your life. Of course, it all began with Halloween, in a time and place where "Trick of Treat" was a phrase which was heard only in American movies. We had no idea what that was all about, couldn't make head or tail of it...



We lived in a particularly "haunted" part of the country, at a time when people were a lot more "sensitive" to the other, paranormal side of life. The past was all around you, in the form of streets that had been there since the time of Dickens and churches that looked like something right out of the Middle Ages. And some of them had great stories attached. Like the one above. It's ruined now ... vandals burned it to a shell. They also tried to burn the tree that stands in the foreground, but the tree ... wouldn't burn. Locally, it's been known as the "Witch Tree" for longer than anyone can tell. The legend says, a young woman accused of being a witch was been pursued by a rampaging band of Christians in a murdering mood. She fled to the church to beg for sanctuary, protection, but the priest denied her. To prevent the mob from burning her, she turned herself into a tree. And that tree will not burn. Eventually, after the church itself was abandoned, young vandals burned it, but still, the tree wouldn't burn, though God's House went up like a torch...



The place and time time seemed "haunted" by otherwhens and otherwheres. I was always a little bit psychic (not very; that, I left to my mother, who inherited it from her Irish grandmother), and I suppose I was half-aware of the other times, places and people that seem to come in close at Halloween -- if you can divorce yourself from the commercialized American kiddy-fest and remember the age-old night of Samhaine. The Celtic tradition, several thousand years old now, holds that on this night the "veil between the worlds" is so thin, it barely exists at all. The dead can and do walk; you can talk to them, be visited by departed loved ones -- and also by those who might have a grudge against you, so beware! This is the essence of Halloween, and when I was a kid, one had this half-awareness of it, which was the product of growing up in a very big, very old Irish community where the Catholicism was a paper-thin veneer laid over traditions which are so old, they were around when Christ was still swinging a hammer...



So, this was Halloween, for me: standing in line to buy fireworks, with the nose full of the sharp smell of gunpowder ... carving out a turnip lantern, inviting friends over for a bash in the backyard ... collecting twigs and sticks in the ancient church yard that dated back to the Napoleonic Wars, to make a backyard bonfire ... feeling the crispness in the air, smelling the woodsmoke of the bonfires which were bring lit all over the countryside as the "hedgers and ditchers" cleared out the byways before the snows came ... wondering if I was going to get for my birthday what I really wanted ... wondering when the first snow would come ... making some kind of costume to wear for the Halloween party ... all with the thoughts of Christmas in the back of the mind, and the much clearer thought that the 4th was my own big day (good golly, I'm in double figures this year!), and then it would be off to the village for the massive bonfire, and let off the fireworks I'd spent my pocket money on for the last couple of weeks...



To this day, chilly mornings, skeletal trees, mist curling in the shadows, the smell of woodsmoke (albeit, now, from the chiminea), the smell of sausages and onions sizzling, the whoosh!! of small fireworks, the smell of raw turnips and candle wax and toffee apples (think candy apples) -- it all brings back memories of a time, a place, which I don't suppose exist outside my own mind. Right now, we're making preparations for having miscellaneous kids knock on the door come twilight, yelling "trick or treat" and expecting candy ... only the pre-wrapped variety and no fruit, because in our lamentable era, one can't trust people not to put poison or razor blades in the mandarin oranges and home-made goodies. Kids aren't safe, knocking on doors ... some of them don't even dress up in costume, they just knock, yell "trick or treat" and expect candy ... and almost none of them know anything about the essence of Halloween -- Samhaine, when the earth is settling down to hibernate and the veil grows thin, and the dead walk.

Happy Halloween, 2008
MK

(Photos for this feature are by Mike Adamson, a writing partner of mine who was fortunate enough to visit the area in 2006, and brought back the evidence on a couple of flash cards.)

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Internet filtering, banned books and the APA

I was thinking again about Internet censorship and its impact on the free (as in, uncluttered and unfettered) transmission of information, and I got to wondering if we're not focusing too much on the media, and forgetting the content. Let's be logical about this: as phenomenal and indispensable as it is, the Internet is only around 15 years old, and if you go back to 1993, you land in the Outer Limits, or the Twilight Zone, of Telnet, BBSs, notice boards, Compuserve, and other subscriber services which were like the WWW but not really the same as what we know today.

(The only services I can think of on today's Net that are similar are the subscription pages where they'll give you the summary of an academic paper, then tell you that you need to pay a whacking great fee to get access to the archive where the material lives ... also, those "friends only" blog pages where you need to be logged in to read more than the first 100 words of the post. In other words, you have to be a member (either for a fee or a registration) to access the content.)

So, as fantastic as the Internet is, it's so recent a medium that getting one's knickers in a twist about censorship of (or on) it is only partially intelligent. It's not the medium we're actually fretting about; it's the information which is transmitted over the web, to which we stand to lose access if they're start in on this Internet filtering stupidity. Right?



Long before the Internet, there was a beast called the Amateur Press. APAs (amateur press associations) flourished back as far as the days of mimeograph machines and staplers; and when photocopying and laser printing came in, they enjoyed a golden age. In the 1970s right through to the 1990s, the APA-sphere went absolutely berserk.

What did they publish? Magazines. Newsletters. Books. Catalogs of the above. Fiction; nonfiction; critical review of anything, anywhere, and everyone. Celebrity watches. Anthologies of short stories; poetry; artwork; photos; full-length novels; book and movie reviews; political commentary...

In fact, everything that would be replaced by wepbages and, in these last years, blogs.

In a worst case scenario, if the Internet ends up crippled, we can always fall back on the APAs. And it will be a worse-case scenario for several reasons. First, we'll have to pay money for photocopying and postage (shock, horror) as we used to 20 and 30 years ago. Secondly, we'll have to wait 2-3 weeks for the post office to deliver (ditto). Aaargh, we'll never survive!

We're used to getting everything NOW, and mostly FREE. That's the real lure of the Internet -- not the fact that it carries materials which you can't get anywhere else (yes, you can), or because it transmits information that's so far out there that there's no other way to get it (yes, there is), but because we want our goodies NOW, and we don't wanna pay.

In other words, we're spoiled rotten. Or are we? Consider this:

Cost of an ordinary PC: $1500. Extra harddrive: $200. Big jumpdrive: $50. Broadband connection: $720/year. Scanner: $100. Garden variety color printer: $100. Spindle of blank DVDs: $60. Box of budget paper for printer: $30. Ink tanks or toner cartridge: $90. Basic color laser printer: $400. Color toner refills: $800.

You're up around an absolute minimum of the three grand marker now ... that's a high price to pay for your "free" feed of censorship-sensitive goodies, guys (say that three times, fast; have three vodkas and try it again).

Way back when -- let's go back to 1988 -- you bought your reading in the form of an APA magazine. It was photocopied onto whatever paper size, and very nicely bound (could be on a coil; could be perfect bound). Big-run magazines had full color covers. Smaller run mags had silk-screened color work, including color interior art. Photos and art were "screened" and printed at quite high quality. Color photos were sometimes shipped separately on a 3.5" floppy disk -- or perhaps a set of 2 or 3 disks which shipped along with the magazine. And this "mag" might be 300pp thick ... more like a massive book than a magazine.

Subject matter? You name it. Anything. Everything. Price tag? Could be $30 + postage -- meaning, maybe $50 to get it delivered to your door. For that, you got up to a half million words to read and scores of photos, illustrations, plus photo disks.

You're going "ouch! Fifty bucks!" Well, you just don't realize you're paying three grand to get your "free" Internet goodies. How many APA mags could you get for that price? You could get about two new ones a month for three years. That's maybe 20,000 pages of ... whatever; as much as twenty million words to read, and dozens of photo disks.

In fact, it probably turns out that your "free" Internet feed is costing you more than the old APA supply, where you'd watch your mailbox and a great big, thick, beautiful book would be delivered with virtually any content you can imagine.

Uncensored. Unfiltered. Uncut. Because you bought direct from the APA, and they printed five or ten as they needed them. Inside these magazines, a contributor would say anything, about anything ... the era of free speech was never so liberated. For example, gay fiction abounded in the APA long before it dared come out significantly in the commercial world. And as for erotica ...! Also politics, pop science, UFOs, climate watch, conspiracy theories, book reviews, anything, everything.

The Internet came along as both a blessing and a curse. In the early days of the changeover, APA publishers used webpages to sell their magazines. Slowly but surely, the magazines went online; some became blogs, others became archives. Newsletters turned into emails. The physical magazines vanished altogether...

Everything became free (or, "click the $2 donation button" to help pay for the costs of website hosting and anti-virus software and graphics ... and you'd be shocked to know how many people are so cheap these days, they won't even click a dollar donation button).

And then we started to realize that there were strings attached -- but in the early days the strings were long and loose, and there weren't too many. I recall a time when there was no advertising on the web. None. The first strings to be attached to the Net were the ads -- suddenly you had to endure the fluttering, flickering, dancing animated GIFs that made pages take an hour to load over slow connections...

But behind the scenes the software routines were being written to target ads, set cookies, handle sales, record customers, block IP numbers, track searches ... and report.

Report what, and to whom? Essentially, to report everything; and it's neither a secret nor a joke that Google answers to security services such as the CIA and FBI. The argument is that Google is used to plan terrorist campaigns.

It's a good argument, almost certainly true; but the use to which the argument is being put is not so cool. Search Engines record the IP address (which is the unique ID of your computer) behind every search, everywhere, all the time.

So, if you think there are no strings attached when you go online and search for pages about [fill in the blank] which are perhaps a little naughty, think again. Google knows which computer originated the search. What Ma Goog knows, the US government knows. It's dead easy to track an IP address down to a street address ... your ISP knows where you live, because you use a credit card to pay your account.

The strings attached to your "free" information are getting shorter all the time. Now, for myself, I don't have a problem ... I don't surf the "mature content" sites, and the only interest I have in terrorist activities is a morbid fascination which I share with all other humans. Also, as a writer, I need to know a bit about them, otherwise I can't characterize them believably...

What troubles me, personally, about Internet censorship is that it will inevitably be widened to include subjects like politics, religious freedom, sexual preference, euthanasia. Say, you're a gay pagan who's just been diagnosed with a terminal disease. You're going to score highly in all four categories: you're politically marginalized everywhere you turn ... and just looking for a way to safely and painlessly get the hell out of this life before the end turns too ugly.

In a censored world, where Big Brother is not only recording your web searches but (and it's the next step) filtering the content you need to see to make your death as pleasant, as spiritual, as tranquil, as painless, as possible ... you're screwed. You'll land on a respirator in a geriatric ward with a homophobic nurse and a Christian chaplain reading Bible-babble to you, as you shuffle off this mortal coil.

Not good enough, is it?




This is the price of "free goodies" in medium that's widely thought of as being free ... and in fact, isn't. The WWW is bloody expensive, and the strings which are attached to everything we do online are getting terribly short -- they're just shortening and tightening invisibly.

Governments like those in America and Australia are playing with fire, though they don't yet know it. Censorship of the Internet will -- in the honest opinion of Nostrakeeganus! -- usher back in a new version of the old APA era. When you drive freedom of speech underground, it bears fruit ... with bigger, juicier, sweeter crops than ever. Think about this:

You want your stuff (paganism, euthanasia info, erotica, gay stuff, whatever). You visit a webpage you've read about in an email attachment on a newsletter, or more likely on the grapevine. The attachment was zip file for which you need a password; the password is given in a second, GIF attachment. Inside the zip file is a directory of what's in 1,257 other zip files, all accessible from a plain page. You read your catalog, decide what you want, download the zip archive of your fancy ... enjoy ... and for godsakes have the decency to click the $2 donation button and help cover the costs of this setup. Also, tell your friends. The grapevine rules. The more the merrier. Searchbots cannot read passwords given as GIFs, and they cannot open ZIP archives.

The age of the APA could easily be reborn. Of course, the government is going to know full well what's going on, because pages will be popping up everywhere with thousands of ZIPs linked to them, and healthy -- bland -- email newsletters going out, all with these two attached files, the ZIP and the GIF.

Push will quickly come to shove ... you know the people responsible for Internet censorship and filtering, and search engine monitoring, will get into the eAPA archives and look for ways to shut them down. And yes, they'll find ways. What's next?

Let me put it like this: desktop printed magazines are really, really pretty ... guys who refill toner cartridges are going to start getting rich, and the post office will start making a fortune. And unless Uncle Sam and the dickheads in Canberra fancy opening every parcel heading into any country carrying a label saying, "Contents: 1 Book," you'll get the stuff you want exactly the way it was delivered as long ago as (!) 1965.

And here we begin to slither into a whole new area: banned books. You can bet your bottom dollar there will be banned APA books, the same way books are still being banned right now, today. What kind of books? At the moment it's less about sex than about information:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_banned_books

For example, euthanasia is a topic some governments (Australia's) don't want you to know about, no matter how sick you are, how much it hurts, and how much you believe in life after death. If they can find the book with the real data, they'll ban it. But copies will slither through and, hey, we all know how to work xerox machines. Even beyond the APA was 'circulation" ... features articles, stories, even whole novels carrying the "print me, pass me on" label.

You won't be able to buy the books you want at Amazon.com, and you certainly won't be able to download them. But you can be on a grapevine that'll tell you where to go to download a ZIP file, and then you print out the PDF and ... done. Pass it on, pass it on. Remember what I said a moment ago about driving freedom of speech underground?

Freedom of speech might have to find a way to hang on by its fingernails, until the current age of rabid irrationality and Big Brother wannabe governments passes by. But that's what photocopy machines were invented for. You could be printing things like this (and no one would know about it, which is a far cry from anything that happens online these days):



With the forward race of technology, liberty finds itself in jeopardy and doubles back to old solutions ... before the dark times, before the empire. (Thank you, Obiwan Kenobi; who also said, "You must do what you feel is right, of course.")

Cheers,
MK

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Australian Internet: Big Brother's watching ya, mate!

You know, there are times when you're proud to be an Australian ... and times when you aren't. Today is one of the latter.

I just received a forward of an article from http://www.computerworld.com.au/ which can only make you sigh. The gist of it is that the Australian government is implementing blanket Internet censorship ... which is being euphemised as "content filtering."

Don't get me wrong: I do NOT agree with having hard-core sites available to kids, nor having sites which feature "the language of hate," racism, sexism, drugs and death, out there. But blanket censorship is not the answer -- bear with me, let me explain.

How is the technology going to tell the difference between a hate-filled website and a fiction site running a novel?! Page 117 of the novel is filled with hate language, because that's the page where THE BAD GUYS make themselves look stupid and evil, before THE GOOD GUYS rock up and bust them.

Hard core sites are going to be blocked, and to be honest with you, it won't affect me at all. I don't surf there, it won't make any difference to me --

But you can bet your bottom dollar there's a whole lot of innocent sites will be blocked along with them ... which bothers me, because I'm a writer.

How in any hell am I supposed to craft a novel without putting nasty words into the villains' nasty mouths ... without talking about the drugs being smuggled, for which said villains are going to be busted ... without writing the part of the terrorists who are going to go up with their own bombs, or get on the business end of the Good Guys' guns, at the end of the piece?

Having written the book, one puts a sample online to let prospective readers see what it's about, how it's written. So the pages are up there. And along comes the filterbot, and reads gun; bomb; death; hate; drugs; rape; blow up; terrorist, plus the usual tossed salad of profanity which has entered the every-day language as colloquialism and slang.

There is already enough on this page to get it filtered out. Blocked. Censored. I've said guns, bombs, drugs, hate, death, hell, evil ... and all I'm doing is talking about the content of a hypothetical novel in which the good guys prevail and peace and justice are restored to the streets of Australia!

Now, let's see a glorified SPELL CHECKER tell the difference. Because that's what we're getting here. Australian writers and bloggers are going to be under the kosh of having Big Brother breathing down our collars, scanning for KEYWORDS.

Remember, keyword scanning is not contextual. All the scan does is go through a page and pick out the profanities and the usages of words such as gun, bomb, drugs hate, death ... in which case, this page is toast, because I've broken the rules just by talking about the software algorithm that will very soon be online in this country.

At this point, the scanning / censorship / filtering / blocking will be geared to "illegal" content which RIGHTLY discusses pornography involving children, pornography involving illegal acts (probably meaning animals, and something called "snuff" ... which has nothing to do with powdered tobacco and spices, and sneezing ... look it up), plus weapons, explosives, and terrorist actions, including plots, and also the language of hate intended to incite people to terrorist behavior.

This is all well and good -- Keegan is the first one applauding, if you can figure out a way to get krudd under control. And yet ... and yet ...

When will red flags start to go up when the words Islam, Jihad, Muslim, Jew, Palestine, Israel and so forth are picked up by the scanner? The same mechanism could easily be perverted to filter out the religious free speech of other nations, leaving only Christian sites intact. Turns out, Kevin Rudd is a very, very, very Christian PM ... and no, I was not aware of this when I voted for him. Mea culpa. I bloody voted for him. Well, shoot.

Once the filters are in place, they can be expanded to cover wider ranges of subjects. How long before it's illegal to discuss euthanasia online, because you've got a Christan air-head in Parliament House who believes in the Will of God? How long before it's illegal to criticize our political leaders? Sites countering the country's policies and haranguing our politicians, are ... blocked. Filtered. They vanish.

Freedom of speech is one of the most fundamental of human rights, and one can see at a glance, we're skating on thin ice if we put in place this kind of Internet filtering. Who decides what is legal, and illegal, to talk about online? Who sets the taboos?

How long before coarse language is filtered out? Or gay sites, which speak frankly about ... well, being gay. And AIDS education sites, which are either frank and informative or useless. Using the word "condom" might become illegal, because an eight year old might read the page and wonder what they are, and what they're for. And God forbid we should have a picture of one, with a diagram of how to fit it properly.

How about wiccan and pagan sites, which are often besmirched by the same church whose fully ordained Christian priests can't seem to keep their hands of their children parishioners for more than ten consecutive minutes.

And on this theme, what about criticisms of organized religion, examinations of the stupidity on which Christendom was built? There are scholarly sites galore, with not even a whisper of profanity, which tear to pieces the very foundations of the Christian faith by revealing its venal, mercenary and arbitrary roots. Will these sites vanish?

You're halfway to banning freedom of speech and deciding what can be taught ... and the worst part of this is, the same filtering can be used to protect the system which set it up. In other words, when it's been cemented in place, it will be VERY hard to get rid of. Some dickhead prime Minister could decide to have Creationism taught in schools to the exclusion of evolutionary science, and back it up the a "clean up" of the Internet ... why should we be left out? American politicians are heading in this direction so fast, we're just getting left behind here.

There are times when you're grateful to live in this country, which is as beautiful and peaceful as any nation on the planet.

And there are times when you want to beat your head on a wall because the buff-heads in charge can be so incredibly stupid, you wonder what century they're living in.

As a parting shot in this argument, I'll just include the remark made by ISPs regarding the filtering: Internet Service Providers (ISPs) contacted by Computerworld say blanket content filtering will cripple Internet speeds because the technology is not up to scratch.

Well ... bugger.

If you want the whole story, go here: http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php/id;1399635276

Read it and weep.

*sigh*
MK

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Gay marriage rights: Prop 8 opens the door to a dark future

In a fair legal system, there's supposed to be one law for everyone, rich and poor alike. You're not supposed to get away with blue murder because you've got a billion dollars (though one suspects, people do), and civil rights are supposed to be decided by the people -- meaning, what real people in the street feel and think and believe off their own bat ... not what they've been duped and coerced and indoctrinated into deciding.

You'd have to say that marriage rights -- gay or hetero, it makes no difference -- are central to civil rights. It's the right to spend your life, legally, with the person whom you love. Right?

As I pointed out in this post -- http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/10/california-marriage-rights-gays-and.html -- marriage and children have very little to do with one another. The statistic I recently heard says less than 6% of gay couples have kids, so using "what about the children?" as a reason for choking off civil rights is void.

Yet, civil rights are about to be decided by the dollar. I just received a forward from the Human Rights Campaign, and here's the gist of it:

    Marriage equality in California is now losing by 5 points, according to the latest poll numbers.

    Until that poll, we were leading in California. What happened? Anti-LGBT groups are winning the fundraising battle by more than $10 million -- and their vicious, untrue ads are everywhere.

    Our lead has slipped, but victory is still within reach. We need to get on the air quickly to counter their lies and we need your help to do it.


Something, somewhere is dead wrong. If this were Muslims dumping a billion dollars into a campaign to have Christianity knocked down a peg or two, there'd be hell to pay -- there could even be bombs falling in the Middle East over it! If it were the KKK pumping billions into pimping their point of view, force-feeding you piffling bilgewater about Americans of color being less worthy than white ones, there would be an uproar. But gays, like pagans, are still on the outside, the way African Americans were still riding in the back of the bus when a lad called Cassius Clay won the gold medal. This was in the days of Black Power ... and I'm quite old enough to remember athletes with raised, black-gloved fists, collecting their medals. European Americans didn't like it, but at the time it was very necessary. These actions got the desired result, and in today's world, a scant four decades later, an African American is top of the Hollywood A-List, making more money than his European American colleagues. (It's Will Smith, if you're wondering. And Keegan is the first one standing up and applauding.)

You could hazard a guess that Gay Rights and Pagan Rights are, therefore, lagging a few decades behind Racial Rights. And you also have to speculate about what in the hell needs to be done to drag this whole wagon-load of miserable human rights abuse into the twenty-first century.

Because the bottom line to whether Prop 8 gets a yea or a nay (and I've pointed this out before: http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/gay-wedding-bells-can-be-expensive.html) is, the minds and hearts of the Californian people. I'll save you some reading, and myself some typing, and paste over the crucial outtake from the aforelinked post:

    What the people of California decide regarding gay marriage rights in November is, in fact, more important [than who is elected to the White House], because an official referendum if a very accurate barometer of the public mind, public sentiment, the "collective consciousness," if I might be forgiven for misquoting Jung.

    Presidents come and presidents go. Some get shot. Some start wars. Some pay off the national debt (come back, Bill, all is forgiven!) while peace spontaneously breaks out all over the world. No matter how foolish, hidebound, corrupt, or even wicked a government might turn out to be, four years later, the whole thing goes back to the country. The sandcastle gets turned back into slush, and you can start over.

    However, though presidents and governments come and go, the PEOPLE are the backbone, heart and soul of a nation, and it's what they think, feel and believe which counts ... because this is the quality we all have to live with. You can't vote it out in four years. You can't assassinate it. You can't debate it, impeach it or imprison it. The PEOPLE are the force which drives a nation.

    And it comes down to this: Can America still wear the laurels of the "land of the free?" Or do strict, rigid conditions apply to freedom? And who sets those conditions, on what terms?


And even as I type this, the question has become this: "Is freedom a commodity which one buys and sells in the US?" Is it a constitutional right to gull, dupe, con, and otherwise hypnotize, the voting public with a commercial campaign, selling Prop 8 as if it were the new shampoo, or the sizzling new batter at KFC?

This is what is happening right now. People are being "sold" a mind-set which has several loose screws. They're being indoctrinated via advertisement, to accept the gradual degradation of human rights which should be unalienable.

Understand the door which is creaking open at this moment. The following scenario is science fiction, but NOTHING in this scenario is a fiction. It has ALL happened, and much of it has happened well inside of America's very short history:

    In November 2008, gays lose their rights to marry ... in 2009, it's "mixed marriages" which become verboten.
    In 2010, gays lose their rights to equal opportunity in the workplace. The same year, it becomes unlawful to be Wiccan, "because of the children." Wiccans go underground, accept conversion to Christianity, or are arrested.
    In 2011, the religious right is gaining momentum based on previous victories which began in November 2008, over gays and, subsequently, pagans. This year, Jews [who are "Satan's Seed" -- US Citizens, do you know about this whacked-out, far right Christian twaddle? You should ... you're voting for some dangerous presidential candidates in three weeks!!] are required to display a sign on their person or clothing, making their religious/racial heritage obvious. Most states bring back the death penalty.
    In 2012, all GLBTIQ folks have to display a similar sign. The same year, a Dominionist Republican government is elected, and contraception and abortion become unlawful for all people, irrespective of gender or religious preference. Abortionists, and women who have had abortions, are deemed guilty of murder, and placed on death row.
    In 2013, Americans of color are barred from various colleges, country clubs and hotels. Teaching evolutionary science and sex education in schools becomes unlawful.
    In 2014, American women (of any racial heritage) are barred from higher education and important employment, as per Biblical edicts regarding the status of females. Jews are barred from trading on any stock exchange. Jewish companies are forcibly "nationalized."
    In 2015, the Catholic church is expelled from the US as "the Great Whore" [the firm belief of Palin, McCain and company, at this time. Want a giggle? Go here: http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/False%20Religions/Roman%20Catholicism/the_great_whore.htm ... and people like Palin and McCain believe this stuff! This one's the wheeze of the week]
    In 2016 it becomes unlawful to even BE gay, with a mandatory 20 year prison sentence if you're identified; and since you've been wearing a pink triangle since 2012, you're history, end of statement.
    In 2017, it becomes unlawful to "pass" yourself as a European American, if you have an African American grandparent: you must, by law, identify yourself as an American of color, any color, incuding Native, Asian, the works. The same year, freedom of speech and information are curtailed; blogs like this one would get an American imprisoned -- the US is therefore disconnected from the international Internet, so the next generation has no idea what human rights are.
    In 2018, the prisons are so full, the decision is made to expand the death penalty to include lesser crimes; Gays and Pagans, Catholics and Muslims who refuse to be "converted" to heterosexuality and the Dominionist faith, are executed.
    In 2019, it becomes unlawful to be Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist on pain of the death penalty. You can convert or be deported to "displaced persons" camps in Africa or Asia. If you stay in America, you're on death row.
    In 2020, the state religion of the US is announced and enforced; Old Testament law replaces the constitution (which is the ultimate Dominionist ambition -- and remember, Palin and McCain are Dominionists. In any doubts? Go here: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/7235393/the_crusaders/ and also here: http://rwor.org/a/033/dominionism-be-very-afraid.htm ...!)
    In 2021, the Dominionist government of the United States decides to bring the whole world under its one church, as per the core beliefs of their religion. World War III erupts, when the great superpowers, China, Russia, United Europe, don't want to play. Game over.

It all starts in three weeks, when California goes to the polls, and we see how the ordinary people have allowed themselves to be brainwashed by the "vicious, untrue ads" of the religious right (see above).

Here's the kicker: decent, intelligent, compassionate, forward-thinking people are actually immune to such brainwashing. You can't reprogram a mind that doesn't want to be hypnotized.

If Californians allow themselves to be programed to vote "yes" to Prop 8 --

What you really have here is a two-sided coin. On the head-side of it is a celebration of the fact (as is being proven at this time) that "Rich Rules" in America this year. If you've got the money to pump into something, anything, you can make the US public think, and vote for, anything, however compassionately and intellectually bankrupt it might be. The "Vote Yes to Pro 8" camp is five points up ... and they bought those points with millions of advertising dollars.

On the tail-side of the coin is the inescapable bottom line to the social experiment: the ad campaign that is currently programing these people wouldn't be working if they weren't agreeable -- just as you can't hypnotize a person who refuses to be hypnotized. The truth? The old gender prejudice is still right there, waiting to be activated.

You know the old sexual and racial prejudices are still there, masked for the sake of political correctness. The "N-word" is being bandied around way too frequently since Mr. Obama appeared on the political scene, and sexual discrimination is just as rampant ... it's just wearing various disguises to make it "PC."

I'm going to state it bluntly, though a lot of people won't like this -- feel free to post your thoughts here, pro and con! By all means let's get an argument going. It's healthy! Here we go. Bottom line: if Prop 8 gets the "yea" vote, it's a clear indication of the minds and hearts of a majority of the Californian people ... their paucity of compassion and intelligence, and their willingness to be hypnotized by commercials. Money doesn't just talk -- it rules, but the only reason it's allowed to rule is that vast numbers of human beings are still too mean-spirited, and much too dumb, to recognize what's happening and put a stop to it. Gay rights (like pagan rights) are still decades away ... and the rights of Americans of any other heritage save European, and any other faith save the whacked-out Christian right, are looking more shaky by the hour.

Thoughts, anyone?

See also:

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/president-sarah-palin-commander-in.html
President Sarah Palin: commander-in-chief at the end of days

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/not-gay-think-youre-safe-wrong-jewish.html
Not gay? Think you're safe? Wrong. Jewish, Pagan, Sarah Palin is hunting for your hide

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/palin-and-mccain-advocating-new-aids.html
Palin and McCain: advocating a new AIDS epidemic

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/10/california-marriage-rights-gays-and.html
California marriage rights: gays and dinks don't count?!

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/gay-wedding-bells-can-be-expensive.html
Gay wedding bells can be expensive


http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/see-what-youre-up-against.html
See what you're up against?!

http://mel-keegan.blogspot.com/2008/09/here-comes-damocles-with-his-chainsaw.html
Here comes Damocles with his chainsaw

Cheers,
MK

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Not gay? Think you're safe? Wrong. Jewish, Pagan ... Sarah Palin is hunting for your hide

Much of the body of this post, right now, is a re-post from http://www.wildhunt.org/2008/09/palins-anti-pagan-coreligionists.html ... and I'll be talking about this in my own next post. To date, I've only looked at Sarah Palin and the Republican religious fundamentalists from the perspective of the gay community. Frankly, it's worse than that.

You've known for some time that Palin is weird, but you probably don't know HOW weird. You knew, when she was gaffer in Wasilla, she charged rape victims for the rape kit. You know she was looking at ways to ban books. You know she and McCain will usher in a new AIDS epidemic, with their ban on condoms. Okay ... you're not gay, you're past procreating age, you don't read gay literature, you're not a rape victim, so you're saying, "I'm in the lifeboat, Jack -- pull the ladder up."

But, are you really in the lifeboat? Is there a lifeboat?

After reading the following, you will seriously doubt that any such lifeboat exists. This report comes from an American Pagan site, but it could just as easily have been reposted from an American Jewish site, an American Gay site, an American Catholic site -- or Muslim, or Hindu, or Buddhist, or Taoist, or anything other than the church to which Palin belongs. (Find out what a pagan is before you judge them. Find out what they think, believe, and say, and try to bear in mind your own Good Book's tip: "Judge not, lest ye be judged" ... wiser words were never spoken.)

Take a look at this, and squirm -- and I'll be back tomorrow, with a lot more...

9.09.2008

Palin's Anti-Pagan Coreligionists

Here I was thinking to myself that the chances of a modern Pagan angle to the Republican VP pick of Alaska's Sarah Palin would be truly minimal. Sure, you had her support of aerial wolf hunting (a cruel method that violates the ethic of "fair chase"), and her drill-happy attitudes towards ANWR, but nothing explicitly anti-Pagan had emerged. But a number of bloggers, most notably Bruce Wilson at Talk2Action, have been digging into Palin's religious background and found some disturbingly anti-Pagan connections.

"Sarah Palin's churches are actively involved in a resurgent movement that was declared heretical by the Assemblies of God in 1949. This is the same 'Spiritual Warfare' movement that was featured in the award winning movie, "Jesus Camp," which showed young children being trained to do battle for the Lord. At least three of four of Palin's churches are involved with major organizations and leaders of this movement, which is referred to as The Third Wave of the Holy Spirit or the New Apostolic Reformation. The movement is training a young "Joel's Army" to take dominion over the United States and the world."

These "Third Wave" Christians believe in supernatural powers, demon possession, curses, and ongoing spiritual warfare. Most of them are loosely grouped around C. Peter Wagner, founder of the World Prayer Center, and coiner of the term "Third Wave". Wagner believes that one of the greatest opponents to Third Wave Christian dominance is The Goddess.

"Several of their top prophets and generals of intercession spent weeks in intensive prayer to "confront the Queen of Heaven." This queen is considered by them to be one of the most powerful demons over the earth and is the Great Harlot of Mystery Babylon in Revelation ... Wagner and his group also claim that the Queen of Heaven is Diana, the pagan god of the biblical book Ephesians and the god of Mary veneration in the Roman Catholic Church."

Wagner is so serious about the "Queen of Heaven" (you know the one the ladies made cakes for) that he has written two books on the subject: "Confronting The Queen of Heaven" and "The Queen's Domain". Third Wave Christians participating in spiritual warfare against the Queen of Heaven believe their efforts (directly or indirectly) have caused earthquakes, hurricanes, large fires, and killed Princess Diana and Mother Teresa.

As for Palin herself, she spoke approvingly of being personally prayed over by Thomas Muthee just before winning governorship of Alaska. Muthee is a popular figure among Third Wavers for driving out the "spirit of witchcraft" that resided in Kiambu, Kenya.

"He and his wife committed to six months of prayer with various types of fasting before ever entering Kiambu. Their goal in prayer and fasting was to ask God to reveal the name of the demonic principality ruling over Kiambu and keeping the city under such oppression. God revealed through a vision that a spirit of witchcraft was the ruling principality there and that a number of other demonic spirits were functioning under the headship of witchcraft. An effective strategy for conquest would be to topple the spirit of witchcraft first and thus bring the coalition of evil spirits into disarray and drive them from the city."

Muthee's vision of spiritual warfare fits right in with the Third Wave's, and he has spoken at churches across America, including 10 consecutive sermons at Wasilla Assembly of God (Palin's main church until very recently). The idea of that sort of anti-witch hysteria being imported and cross-pollinating with extremist American Christianity is troubling.

While Palin has striven to present herself as a "post-denominational" Jesus follower, it should be noted that most Third Wave Christians also present themselves in this manner. Also, lest you think this article is some sort of liberal Pagan anti-Christian take-down, it should be noted that this Christian movement has been deemed heretical by several (conservative) Christian groups, including Fundamentalist Baptists.

What Pagans need to know, especially those who are considering voting Republican, is if Palin condemns or rejects the spiritual warfare teachings of the Third Wave movement. A movement that essentially espouses malicious Christian magic. Pagans have seen first hand that the religious opinions of Presidents have been used in the past by government agencies to deny us our legal rights. What would happen if our vice president thought we should be supernaturally eradicated?

... ... ...

So ends the repost. Stay with me a while longer: there's more...



Let me give you a couple of links to other pages you should look at without further ado:

http://timesonline.typepad.com/uselections/2008/09/palin-linked-el.html
... witch hunts will be "on" if these people find their way into the oval office...


http://shannynmoore.wordpress.com/2008/09/19/keith-olbermann-shannyn-moore-pastor-problem/#comments
Jewish, Israeli, or support thir community: on the above link, zero in on this comment:

    I was worried about Palin’s religious views before I knew about the the pastor as witchhunter.
    Palin beleives that Jews are going to Hell because they don’t believe in Jesus. She belongs to a church where the pastor could invite a “Jew” for Jesus as guest speaker. You can’t be Jewish and accept Jesus as your savior. If you are trying to convert Jews you are trying to reduce the number of Jews. Ultimately there wouldn’t be a single Jew left on the planet.
    Palind also beleives that Israel plays a role in the endtimes. She supports Israel because she believes that Jews must convert for the Second Coming to happen. A Jewish state with no Jews would be the result.


Posted by "Susan" on September 20.



http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10167
Read this several times to let the details sink into your brain ... the first time you read it, you'll be so gobsmacked, a lot of them will bounce right off. Armageddon, here we come. Got your bags packed? Make sure to pack something cool (cotton breathes), because we are ALL on the express elevator leading waaaaaay down.

You wondered why the Republicans would blithely borrow trillions and trillons of dollars, and are still borrowing? They only need to win (or fix) one more election, and the Second Coming is right around the corner ... they don't have to pay back a dime.

Or, so they believe.

More tomorrow.