I'm in the wrong field

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If people get paid to write stuff like this, I really am in the wrong field. A CNet writer writes a ~2 page article about how it's much harder to switch to MacOS X from Windows, and 90% of his complaints revolve around the fact that there are a lot of differences between the apps written for the respective platforms. A perfect example of what I'm talking about:

On the other hand, Office 2008 for the Mac bears little resemblance to Office 2007 for Windows. I've just gotten used to the new Windows version of Word and Excel. Now I have to learn a new suite for the Mac?
Imagine that. Microsoft actually adapted the interface of Office 2008 to be mostly compliant to Apple's user interface guidelines. What's ironic about this complaint is that MacOffice 2008 is pretty similar to Microsoft Office 2003 and earlier in its interface.

One thing I've learned along the way, so far, is that there is little meritocracy involved in people getting published like this. I've written submissions that were very well-received by an editor, but then turned down because it came a little too late, only to find later that they published a few more articles on a similar subject from more prominent writers.

On the other hand, software engineering tends to pay a lot better than writing >:)
-Liberals supported giving some land to the Jews out of guilt for the Holocaust, in spite of the normal left-wing tendency to engage in hatred of the Jews.

-Liberals felt like they could wash their hands of the Jews by giving them this land to assuage their guilty, and then looked on in horror as the Jews actually, *drum roll* defended their territory and then conquered more territory when invaded by the Arabs.

-Liberals now look on in horror as a nation founded by millions of survivors of state-sanctioned genocide, theft, rape and plunder defend themselves against their barbaric neighbors who wage war behind civilian human shields.

-Liberals look on in rage as many of their fellow Westerners and the majority of Israel don't feel bad that thousands of Palestinians get killed in the process in every "intifada" or resumption of hostilities because the Palestinian civilians allow themselves to be used as human shields.

Israel wasn't supposed to be a success. At best, it was supposed to end up like Liberia with a Jewish elite in an arab-dominated region living tenuously together. Realistically, the Jews were supposed to be wiped out by the 1948 war, so that the left could see them finally exterminated and have that subconscious pleasure, while being able to consciously feel solace in the fact that "they tried to make things right" by giving them 3 marginally connected scraps of land.

Hatred as a blessing

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From What's Wrong with the World:

If Jerusalem and the West Bank were the site of enormous crowds of entirely unarmed, peaceful protesters under the leadership of an Arab Ghandi figure, imploring Tel Aviv to establish a peaceful political arrangement--in front of the ceaseless watch of CNN, BBC, Reuters, etc.--the Israelis would completely unravel and wither under the political and moral pressure.
I think it's no coincidence that the hearts of so many Palestinians have been hardened against Israel. Using the biblical precedent, it's clear that God has hardened the hearts of the Palestinians to make them violently hate Israel for Israel's protection against world opinion. It is incredibly hard for any rational, reasonable, decent person to ever be sympathetic to an organization that promotes the total genocide of the Jewish people, and the population that wildly supported them as demonstrated by election results.
Population of Chechnya: 1,103,686
Number of chechens estimated to have been killed in the first and second chechen wars: 160,000

Population of the Gaza Strip: 1,481,080
Estimated killed and wounded so far between Hamas and civilians: 460 killed, 2,750 wounded

The world was mealy-mouthed when Russia killed approximately 14.5% of the entire population of Chechnya over secession. Yet, Israel is regularly attacked for its "disproportionate" response to daily barrages of missiles against its people by enemy combatants that want to destroy Israel, not break away from its control.

This is why I say that almost every single, solitary, last critic of Israel's policy toward the Palestinians is at least a closet Jew hater.
Over the holidays I confessed to my father-in-law that I am starting to come to grips with the fact that the predestinationist doctrines I was taught in the church that I got saved in have actually hurt me dearly as a Christian. Between them and the struggles that I have experienced with life in Northern Virginia, I have come to realize that they have left me feeling weak and powerless in the face of the devil and my own sin. As I look at the fruit that they have born inside me, I realize that they are tainted and rotten.

Now I know that it is essentially a logical fallacy to condemn an idea based on how it makes you feel, but I think there is something a bit different here. This interpretation of the Gospel has not filled me with hope and joy, but fear, fatalism and weakness. For too long I have believed that God must sovereignly act on me to enable my heart to change, and all the while I have ignored the fact that there is no point in "working out my salvation" with the Lord if my own works weren't an intimate part of the salvation process.

One other thing that I have noticed is that the churches that do the most effective evangelism do not preach the doctrine of predestination. The Pentecostals are making massive inroads in China, and no one would confuse them for being a band of crypto-Calvinists. I have noticed that the Lord seems to put the most favor and grace upon the churches that have embraced both His sovereignty and our own free will and responsibility. For a while now, I've been coming closer to that point myself, as I have realized that some of the things that are used to support predestinationist positions can just as easily be used to say more accurately "God is in control, and God will do what God will do." Romans 9 is an excellent example of this. It speaks more of God's unaccountability to us, than to God picking and choosing favorites, which would be fitting for an absolute monarch.

As Christians, we are supposed to look at doctrines and judge them based on the work that they do in the hearts of men. That is an aspect of discernment. I have not noticed nearly as much of an effective witness that leads to others coming to Christ in predestinationist congregations as those that embrace both God's sovereignty and free will. I can only conclude from that that the doctrine has often served as a negative influence on the congregation. I've lost track of the number of people I've met or been told about who have turned their predestinationist views on election into a source of pride and arrogance, rather than humility and grace. It's like a divine country club.

So, I think it's fair to bring up my favorite example once more: Pharaoh. I see both God's sovereignty and free will at play here. It is doubtful that left to his own devices, Pharaoh would have ever been good to the Hebrews or have even come to know God and worship Him. This was part of how Pharaoh chose to be. What God did was stripped him of the freedom to choose a reasonable path, and to have to choose a path that would lead ultimately to his own destruction. By hardening his heart, God rendered the tyrant incapable of choosing a reasonable path, such as allowing the Jewish people to leave Egypt after witnessing the first few plagues.

I don't know how divine sovereignty and free will can be absolutely, flawlessly reconciled as God will one day reveal to us. What I do know is that we cannot be accountable to God without freedom to choose to cry out to God. Not in any sense that would put a true burden of guilt on the damned soul. For under the predestinationist model, the damned may cry out to God and say "how dare you claim to desire that none should perish, and then deny us any path that would lead to our salvation?" And how would God be able to respond to this? With a flippant, adolescent "I'm God, I make the rules?" I suspect that such a thing would cause another third of the angelic host to reconsider their loyalties and the integrity and wisdom of Lucifer's rebellion if God were so infantile in His standard of justice. No, I suspect that God does extend sufficient grace to allow everyone to cry out to Him for salvation at least once in their lives, so that no one may have even the slightest excuse that they are but a wild animal, doomed to their fate from the start because nothing else was within their potential.

Our lives are lived inside a vehicle built around the wheels of time and change, which the Lord sovereignly guides with His hand. We are free to control our lives for the most part as we look outside the window during the trip that the Lord is taking us on. Just because we are not the driver, doesn't mean that we aren't a passenger free to do as we please on our section of the bus.
Unlike a lot of people who are strongly libertarian in their sentiments, I support the right of private, law-abiding citizens to violate the wishes of land and property owners by carrying weapons on their property against their will. The reason is that I believe that the right to life is so fundamental that it supercedes all other rights. Now, here's a situation for the libertarians who give the property owner unlimited rights in this regard.

Suppose there are no government-owned roads. Suppose a rich person who despises you buys all of the land around your house, in a perfect square surrounding your yard and home. You cannot cross from town onto your property without trespassing on their property. Society at large allows you to carry any weapon you want, but the rich person who despises you does not allow any weapon to pass over their property.

Do you have a right to violate their property right by carrying a weapon across their land as you travel between your home and society at large?

Welfare Queens

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Welfare Queens Demotivator

Double standards in quotes

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From Digg:

25 Year old man + 18 year old girl = ok
35 year old man + 18 year old girl = icky but ok
35 year old man + 17 year old girl = icky and illegal
35 year old man + 14 year old girl = sick and illegal
35 year old woman + 14 year old boy = AWESOME!
Thomas Sowell on why black civil rights was a cause morally superior to gay rights:

Despite heavy television advertising in California for "gay marriage," showing blacks being set upon by police dogs during civil right marches, and implying that homosexuals face the same discrimination today, the analogy is completely false.

Blacks had to sit in the back of the bus because they were black. They were doing exactly what white people were doing-- riding a bus. That is what made it racial discrimination.

I agree wholeheartedly with Sowell. The primary difference between gay rights and black rights is that homosexuality is a behavior that can be controlled when necessary. A flaming homosexual can "act normal" in mixed company. A black person cannot conceal their blackness unless they hide it physically or are so light-skinned that they can pass as a white person.

In the 1960s we lost the right of freedom of association in public accommodations, and with that we lost the ability to impose basic rules of etiquette and other reasonable social norms on society. Yesterday, my wife and I were trying to get into a restaurant, and the one door, a revolving door, was occupied by someone's children who were busily ensuring that no one could get through. The only thing that got the mother to pull them out of there was when she heard my wife comment that I might as well wait since the kids obviously had no intent of letting anyone else use the door.

I used to think that rude behavior like this was something that I had to accept until I realized how quickly I could post a high resolution picture of someone's blatantly anti-social behavior on Facebook with my iPhone. I've done that several times already, ranging from a pickup truck driver who parked his truck on top of a store's shrubbery because he couldn't be bothered to try to park better, to a soccer mom who decided to block both lanes leading in and out of a shopping center so that no one could get her place in line. I don't do this for just anyone--I have standards. Had I not been so hungry that I forgot that I had my iPhone with me, those kids probably would have ended up getting a picture or two of them uploaded to Facebook and my blog with a snarky caption--the mother's wishes be damned since she thought it was cute until people started getting angry at her kids.

There is a certain segment of society that is pathologically forgiving and non-judgmental, that has no standards it expects of others. They will no doubt call this behavior sick, judgmental, arrogant and God knows what else. For the rest of us, I'd like to point out that this sort of ostracism is probably the last, best hope we have for making people behave. I think camera phones are a good thing, over all. I think the advent of cheap, hi-def camcorders is even better. When people start to realize that anyone around them may be recording them behaving like a jackass and posting it for the world to see, they might hold their tongues, practice a little forced grace and manners toward their fellow man, and start watching their kids' behavior.

Youtube, Facebook, Flickr and blogs might be just the thing needed for making people realize that they have to behave decently toward others.

January 2009

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