Sunday, October 29, 2006

A Country Ruled by Faith

Checkout this very interesting article about personnel in the White House, it makes for some interesting reading.


A Country Ruled by Faith

By Garry Wills

The right wing in America likes to think that the United States government was, at its inception, highly religious, specifically highly Christian, and even more specifically highly biblical. That was not true of that government or any later government—until 2000, when the fiction of the past became the reality of the present. George W. Bush was not only born-again, like Jimmy Carter. His religious conversion came late, and took place in the political setting of Billy Graham's ministry to the powerful. He was converted during a stroll with Graham on his father's Kennebunkport compound. It is true that Dwight Eisenhower was guided to baptism by Graham. But Eisenhower was a famous and formed man, the principal military figure of World War II, the leader of NATO, the president of Columbia University—his change in religious orientation was just an addition to many prior achievements. Bush's conversion at a comparatively young stage in his life was a wrenching away from mainly wasted years. He joined a Bible study culture in Texas that was unlike anything Eisenhower bought into.

Bush was a saved alcoholic—and here, too, he had no predecessor in the White House. Ulysses Grant conquered the bottle, but not with the help of Jesus. Other presidents were evangelicals. Three of them belonged to the Disciples of Christ—James Garfield, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan. But none of the three— nor any of the other forty-two presidents preceding Bush (including his father)—would have answered a campaign debate question as he did. Asked who was his favorite philosopher, he said "Jesus Christ." And why? "Because he changed my heart." Over and over, when he said anything good about someone else—including Vladimir Putin—he said it was because "he has a good heart," which is evangelical-speak (as in "condoms cannot change your heart"). Bush talks evangelical talk as no other president has, including Jimmy Carter, who also talked the language of the secular Enlightenment culture that evangelists despise. Bush told various evangelical groups that he felt God had called him to run for president in 2000: "I know it won't be easy on me or my family, but God wants me to do it."[1]

Bush promised his evangelical followers faith-based social services, which he called "compassionate conservatism." He went beyond that to give them a faith-based war, faith-based law enforcement, faith-based education, faith-based medicine, and faith-based science. He could deliver on his promises because he stocked the agencies handling all these problems, in large degree, with born-again Christians of his own variety. The evangelicals had complained for years that they were not able to affect policy because liberals left over from previous administrations were in all the health and education and social service bureaus, at the operational level. They had specific people they objected to, and they had specific people with whom to replace them, and Karl Rove helped them do just that.


It is common knowledge that the Republican White House and Congress let "K Street" lobbyists have a say in the drafting of economic legislation, and on the personnel assigned to carry it out, in matters like oil production, pharmaceutical regulation, medical insurance, and corporate taxes. It is less known that for social services, evangelical organizations were given the same right to draft bills and install the officials who implement them. Karl Rove had cultivated the extensive network of religious right organizations, and they were consulted at every step of the way as the administration set up its policies on gays, AIDS, condoms, abstinence programs, creationism, and other matters that concerned the evangelicals. All the evangelicals' resentments under previous presidents, including Republicans like Reagan and the first Bush, were now being addressed.


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The head of the White House Office of Personnel was Kay Coles James, a former dean of Pat Robertson's Regent University and a former vice-president of Gary Bauer's Family Research Council,[2] the conservative Christian lobbying group that had been set up as the Washington branch of James Dobson's Focus on the Family. She knew whom to put where, or knew the religious right people who knew. An evangelical was in charge of placing evangelicals throughout the bureaucracy. The head lobbyist for the Family Research Council boasted that "a lot of FRC people are in place" in the administration.[3] The evangelicals knew which positions could affect their agenda, whom to replace, and whom they wanted appointed. This was true for the Centers for Disease Control, the Food and Drug Administration, and Health and Human Services—agencies that would rule on or administer matters dear to the evangelical causes.[4]

The White House was alive with piety. Evangelical leaders were in and out on a regular basis. There were Bible study groups in the White House, as in John Ashcroft's Justice Department. Over half of the White House staff attended the meetings. One of the first things David Frum heard when he went to work there as a speech writer was: "Missed you at the Bible study."[5] According to Esther Kaplan:

Aside from Rove and Cheney, Bush's inner circle are all deeply religious. [Condoleezza] Rice is a minister's daughter, chief of staff Andrew Card is a minister's husband, Karen Hughes is a church elder, and head speechwriter Michael Gerson is a born-again evangelical, a movement insider.[6]

Other parts of the administration were also pious, with religious services during the lunch hour at the General Services Administration.[7]

1.

Faith-Based Justice

The labyrinthine infiltration of the agencies was invisible to Americans outside the culture of the religious right. But even the high-profile appointments made it clear where Bush was taking the country. One of his first appointments, for the office of attorney general, was of the Pentecostal Christian John Ashcroft, a hero to the evangelicals, many of whom had earlier wanted him to run for president— Pat Robertson had put up money for his campaign. As a senator, Ashcroft had sponsored a bill to protect unborn life "from [the moment of] fertilization." As soon as he was nominated to be attorney general, the Family Research Council mobilized women to lobby at Senate offices for his confirmation.[8] The evangelicals had long been familiar with Ashcroft's piety. He told an audience at Bob Jones University that "we have no king but Jesus," and called the wall of separation between church and state a "wall of religious oppression."[9]

After his nomination but before his confirmation, Ashcroft promised to put an end to the task force set up by Attorney General Janet Reno to deal with violence against abortion clinics —evangelicals oppose the very idea of hate crimes. The outcry of liberals against Ashcroft's promise made him back off from it during his confirmation hearings. In 2001, there was a spike in violence against the clinics —790 incidents, as opposed to 209 the year before.[10] That was because the anthrax alarms that year gave abortion opponents the idea of sending threatening powders to the clinics—554 packets were sent. Nonetheless, Ashcroft refused for a long time to send marshals to quell the epidemic.[11]

That was one of many signs that this administration thought of abortion as a sin, not as a right to be protected. The President himself called for an amendment to the Constitution outlawing abortion. He called evangelical leaders around him to celebrate the signing of the bill banning "partial birth abortions." The signing was not held, as usual, at the White House but in the Ronald Reagan Building, as a salute to the hero of younger evangelicals. Ashcroft moved enforcement of the ban to the Civil Rights Division, a signal that evangelicals appreciated, implying that the fetus is a person with civil rights to be protected.[12] Then, in what was called a step toward enforcement, Ashcroft subpoenaed hospitals for their files on hundreds of women who had undergone abortions —Democrats in Congress called this a major invasion of privacy.[13]

Ashcroft's use of the Civil Rights Division for religious purposes was broader than his putting partial-birth abortion under its jurisdiction. Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten, two critics of Republican policies, write in One Party Country:

In 2002, the department established within its Civil Rights Division a separate "religious rights" unit that added a significant new constituency to a division that had long focused on racial injustice. When the Salvation Army— which had been receiving millions of dollars in federal funds—was accused in a private lawsuit of violating federal antidiscrimination laws by requiring employees to embrace Jesus Christ to keep their jobs, the Civil Rights Division for the first time took the side of the alleged discriminators.[14]

In a further step toward faith-based justice, President Bush called for a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. He had resisted this earlier, and his vice-president, Dick Cheney (whose daughter is a lesbian), had said that the matter should be left to the states; but in 2003 the Supreme Court knocked down the anti-sodomy law in Texas (Lawrence v. Texas), and the evangelicals responded to Antonin Scalia's ferocious dissent in ways typified by James Dobson, who said that this was "our D-Day, or Gettysburg, or Stalingrad."[15] The pressure from the religious right was now too great for Bush to resist, and he began to speak out in support of banning gay marriage by constitutional amendment.

2.

Faith-Based Social Services

In his campaign for the presidency, Bush offered as a proof of his "compassionate conservatism" the plan to give federal aid to church groups that perform social services—the so-called "faith-based initiatives." In feigned compliance with the First Amendment, the program claimed to have safeguards against using the money to proselytize. But since large grants went to people who do not believe there is any separation of church and state—Chuck Colson got $2 million and Pat Robertson $1.5 million— there was little will to follow the pro forma separation of preaching and aiding. Large grants went to abstinence-only forms of sex education, on the grounds that this was a secular cause, though only religious people were backing it.

The wisdom of the First Amendment was demonstrated by the political uses the faith-based program was put to. The program was largely targeted to benefit African-American ministers. As Matthew Dowd, an adviser to Bush, put it: "The minister is the number one influence in the African American community."[16] The aim was not to win the entire black community away from Democrats, but to shave a few points off the boost they normally gave to Democrats. With that in mind, the administration scheduled conferences to show blacks how to get grants in battleground states just before elections. Local Republican candidates attended, suggesting that religious grants would depend on their election. These events were organized by James Towey, the second man to direct the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives. As Hambuger and Wallsten put it:

Towey, his director of outreach at the time Jeremy White, and other White House staffers also appeared at Republican-sponsored events with candidates in half a dozen states. During the summer of 2002, for instance, the Washington Post reported that Towey appeared with numerous other Republicans in close races, including Representatives John Shimkus of Illinois, Tim Hutchison of Arkansas, and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia. After a South Carolina event for black ministers, participants received a follow-up memo on Republican Party letterhead explaining to ministers how they could apply for grant money. Of twenty publicly financed trips taken by Towey between the 2002 and 2004 elections, and publicized through press accounts or releases, sixteen were to battleground states.... [In 2002] more than fifteen thousand religious and social service leaders attended free White House conferences in battleground states.[17]

Towey also brought black ministers to the White House to meet the first black woman to become secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice.[18] The fruits of this campaign for black votes could be seen in 2004, when black voters in Milwaukee received fliers from the influential black preacher Bishop Sedgwick Daniels urging them to vote for George Bush because "he shares our values." He also shared with Bishop Daniels $1.5 million of taxpayers' funds for faith-based initiatives. Bishop Daniels had always supported Democratic candidates before 2004.[19]

The first leader of the faith-based initiative program, a man who had experience in community programs, the Catholic political scientist John DiIulio, resigned after complaining of the political uses the program was being put to. As he explained to a reporter friend:

In eight months, I heard many, many staff discussions, but not three meaningful, substantive policy discussions.... On social policy and related issues, the lack of even basic policy knowledge, and the only casual interest in knowing more, was somewhat breathtaking—discussion by fairly senior people who mean Medicaid but were talking Medicare.... On the so-called faith bill, they basically rejected any idea that the president's best political interests —not to mention the best policy of the country—could be served by letting centrist Senate Democrats in on the issue, starting with a bipartisan effort to review the implementation of the kindred law (called "charitable choice") signed in 1996 by Clinton.
For a fact, had they done that, six months later they would have had a strongly bipartisan copycat bill to extend that law. But, over-generalizing the lesson from the politics of the tax cut bill, they winked at the most far-right Republicans [Rick Santorum and J.C. Watts] who, in turn, drafted a so-called faith bill (HR 7, the Community Solutions Act) that (or so they thought) satisfied certain fundamentalist leaders.... As one senior staff member chided me at a meeting at which many junior staff were present and all ears, "John, get a faith bill, any faith bill."[20]

When the President was unable to get his faith-based bill through Congress, he just put it into effect anyway by means of two executive orders, going to Philadelphia to sign the second one. One of Karl Rove's celebratory signs was unfurled over the stage: COMPASSION IN ACTION. It should have read RELIGION IN POLITICS.

3.

Faith-Based Science

During the 2000 presidential campaign, Bush said that "the jury is still out" on the merits of Darwinism.[21] That is true only if the jury is not made up of reputable scientists. Bush meant to place religious figures on the jury, to decide a scientific question. As president, he urged that schools teach "intelligent design" along with Darwinism—that is, teach religion alongside science in science classes. Gary Bauer, like other evangelicals, was delighted when the President said that. Bush's endorsement proves, Bauer observed, that intelligent design "is not some backwater view." An executive at the Discovery Institute, which supports intelligent design, chimed in: "President Bush is to be commended for defending free speech on evolution."[22] By that logic, teaching flat-earthism, or the Ptolemaic system alongside the Copernican system, is a defense of "free speech."

The Discovery Institute claims that it is a scientific, not a religious, enterprise, but that claim was belied when one of its internal documents was discovered. It promised that the institute would "function as a wedge...[to] split the trunk [of materialism] at its weakest points" and "replace materialistic explanations with the theistic understanding that nature and human beings are created by God." The institute is mainly funded with evangelical money, and its spokespersons are evangelicals—one, Philip Johnson, says he was inspired by Unification Church founder Sun Myung Moon to "devote my life to destroying Darwinism." Another, Stephen C. Meyer, is a professor at Palm Beach Atlantic University, whose faculty "must believe in the divine inspiration of the Bible, both the Old and New Testaments."[23]

Since President Bush advocates the teaching of intelligent design, it is not surprising that in his administration, the National Park Service would authorize the sale of a book at the Grand Canyon claiming that the canyon was formed by Noah's Flood. A group of scientists protested this endorsement by the government of bogus science. In response to that, the Alliance Defense Fund, set up by James Dobson and other fundamentalists, threatened a lawsuit if the book was withdrawn from sale at the federal site. As other religious right figures chimed in, it was discovered that a draft guide for park employees stated that the canyon was not formed in the time period of the Flood; the guide was not released. A survey of Park Service employees in 2003 found that almost nine out of ten felt the scientific message of the Service was being skewed for political reasons.[24] That is the very definition of faith-based science.

So is the Bush administration's denial of global warming. The religious right would seem to have no stake in this position, but for whatever reason —the premillennial lack of concern for the earth's fate as Jesus' coming nears, the "dominion" over the earth given Adam—evangelicals have been urgent in denying what most objective scientists have been observing. The White House intervened to have cautions against global warming removed from a 2003 draft report on the environment.[25] Senator James Inhofe of Oklahoma has called reports of global warming "the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people."[26] His hostility to any environmental concerns is such that he has called the Environmental Protection Agency a "Gestapo," and likened its female director to "Tokyo Rose."[27] Inhofe is an evangelical who says that Israel was given the West Bank by God—he claimed that the attack on the World Trade Center was caused by America's weak support of Israel:

One of the reasons I believe the spiritual door was opened for an attack against the United States was that the policy of our government has been to ask the Israelis, and demand it with pressure, not to retaliate against the terrorist strikes that have been launched against them.[28]

4.

Faith-Based Health

One of George W. Bush's first acts as president—in fact, on his first day in office, signaling its importance to his evangelical supporters—was to restore a gag rule on aid to international organizations that counsel women on the subject of abortion.[29] Though abortion is legal in the US, the President was able by executive decree to proscribe its mere discussion in other countries if they are to receive money for their population problems. This was just the beginning of the imposition of moral limits on health measures abroad. Though the President was praised for devoting millions of dollars to preventing and treating AIDS in Africa, 30 percent of that money was earmarked for promoting sexual abstinence, and none of it was for condoms.[30] Religion trumped medical findings on what is effective.

Domestically, too, $170 million were lavished on promoting a policy of "abstinence-only" in the schools during the year 2005 alone. The Centers for Disease Control removed from its Web site the findings of a panel that abstinence-only programs do not work. A study of the abstinence programs being financed by the federal government showed how little medical knowledge mattered, as opposed to moral dictation. As Chris Mooney writes in The Republican War on Science:

In evaluating the curricula of these programs, the report found that the vast majority exaggerated the failure rates of condoms, spread false claims about abortion's health risks (including mental health problems) and perpetuated sexual stereotypes.... Perhaps most outrageously, one curriculum even claimed that sweat and tears could transfer the HIV virus. You might think that this would be a fringe claim even on the Right, but Senate majority leader Bill Frist, himself a physician, repeatedly refused to repudiate the notion of such transmission in an interview with ABC's George Stephanopoulos.[31]

The religious right had for years been spreading the unfounded claim that abortion causes breast cancer. The National Cancer Institute had correctly reported that no study has proved such a thing, but twenty-seven pro-life members of Congress pressured the NCI to remove that from its on-line fact sheet.


Another concern of the religious right was the morning-after abortion pill. Bush put one of the pill's known opponents, David Hager, on the board of the Food and Drug Administration that was to decide whether that pill could be sold without a prescription. Though Hager voted with the minority of three on the board against over-the-counter sales of the pill, as opposed to a majority of twenty-four, he raised such a clamor about the danger of teenaged girls using it, increasing the pressure from the religious right, that the FDA refused to implement the board's decision. Hager gave himself and God the credit for this, telling an audience at an evangelical college in Kentucky:

I argued it from a scientific perspective, and God took that information, and he used it through this minority report [sic] to influence the decision. You don't have to wave your Bible to have an effect as a Christian in the public arena. We serve the greatest Scientist. We serve the Creator of all life.[32]

For years the Bush administration could not get a director of the FDA confirmed because the acting director kept up the ban on over-the-counter sale of the morning-after pill and the nominee would not promise to lift the ban. At last, to break the impasse, the nominee said that he would lift the ban, but only for girls over eighteen, leaving unsolved all the many unwanted pregnancies of younger girls.

The religious position on health was foremost in the first major domestic issue George W. Bush faced as president. The great promise of using embryonic stem cell research had to be beaten back by the evangelicals, who think that embryos are human persons. Bush spent much of his time working out a way to cut off research without seeming to. The religious right was consulted throughout the decision process, with Jay Lefkowitz as the White House liaison to the evangelicals.[33] The President decreed that only stem cell lines already being used could be federally funded—those, he said, "where the life and death decision has already been made." He claimed there were over sixty of these, but there turned out to be more like sixteen, most of those unusable by American scientists.[34] In July, Bush used his first veto since taking office to block a stem cell research bill that has passed both Republican-controlled houses of Congress. Once again, religion trumped medicine where health issues were concerned.

5.

Faith-Based War

The deputy undersecretary for defense intelligence, General William (Jerry) Boykin—a man leading the search for bin Laden—made headlines during the Iraq war with a slide- show lecture he gave in churches. He appeared there not in his dress uniform but in combat gear. He asked audiences (this was after the 2000 election and before the 2004 one):

Ask yourself this: why is this man in the White House? The majority of Americans did not vote for him. Why is he there?... I tell you this morning he's in the White House because God put him there for such a time as this. God put him there to lead not only this nation but to lead the world, in such a time as this.

Then he asked the congregation who the enemy is. He showed slides of Osama bin Laden, Saddam Hussein, Kim Jong Il, and Taliban leaders, asking of each, "Is this man the enemy?" He gave a resounding no to each question, and then revealed the foe's true identity:

The battle this nation is in is a spiritual battle, it's a battle for our soul. And the enemy is a guy called Satan.... Satan wants to destroy this nation. He wants to destroy us as a nation, and he wants to destroy us as a Christian army.[35]

This was not a momentary lapse on Boykin's part. He has been an active translator of war into religion for many years. After he led the failed "Blackhawk Down" raid on Mogadishu in 1993, he flew over the city taking photographs. When developed, the pictures showed black smears on the landscape. He showed them to his Sunday-school-teaching mother, and she asked, "Don't you know specifically what you were up against?" Only then did he get the full supernatural meaning of the pictures. "It was a demonic presence in that city, and God revealed it to me as the enemy that I was up against in Mogadishu." He remembered, in this light, the first feeling he had experienced in that non-Christian country: "I could feel the presence of evil.... The demonic presence is real in a place that has rejected God." His task was not simply to defeat an enemy force, but to carry Jesus to the benighted. "It is the principalities of darkness. It is a spiritual enemy that will only be defeated if we come against him in the name of Jesus."[36] The evangelical groups he addressed responded eagerly when he attacked the "godless" courts of his own country. "Don't you worry about what these courts say, our God reigns supreme."[37]

When General Edwin Walker began to promote the John Birch Society to his NATO troops, President Kennedy removed him. What happened to General Boykin after he went around calling Muslims Satanic? He was not silenced, demoted, removed, or even criticized. He has continued to work on the Pentagon's special intelligence group. His boss, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, said, "This is a free country," and that Boykin had "an outstanding record" in his active career as a Delta Force commander. What caused the difference in response between President Kennedy's time and President Bush's? Could it be the power of the evangelicals? As soon as Boykin became an object of public criticism, the evangelicals rallied around him.

When President Bush, asked about the content of Boykin's remarks, said, "He doesn't reflect my point of view," Gary Bauer was quick to attack his own leader for this mild expression of difference. He sent a memo to his organization's members:

I must be missing something. The general has said that America is under attack because we are built on a Judeo-Christian values system; that ultimately the enemy is not flesh and blood, but rather the enemy is Satan, and that God's hand of protection prevented September 11 from being worse than it was.... Precisely which of those statements does the president take issue with?

The Christian Coalition directed petitions to Secretary Rumsfeld urging him not to knuckle under to the "intolerant liberal mob [that] has castigated General Boykin, a true American hero." James Dobson, on his radio show, called Boykin a "martyr," and told his listeners to send in their protests to the White House.

There was nothing surprising in all this. Boykin was just repeating what other evangelicals had been saying about the war in Iraq. Charles Stanley, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, wrote: "We should offer to serve the war effort in any way possible.... God battles with people who oppose him, who fight against him and his followers." Jerry Falwell put it succinctly in 2004: "God is pro-war." For some evangelicals, this was a war against the enemies of Israel, who are by definition anti-God. The evangelical writer Tim LaHaye called it, therefore, "a focal point of end-time events." For others, it was a chance to spread Christianity to the infidels. An article syndicated on the Southern Baptist Convention's wire service said that "American foreign policy and military might have opened an opportunity for the Gospel in the land of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob." Franklin Graham, the son of Billy Graham, and Marvin Olasky, the inventor of Bush's "compassionate conservatism," agreed.[38] Boykin's was not a lone voice, then, but that of a member in good standing of the community that supported Bush on religious grounds, even in his warfare. Boykin was safe under the sheltering wings of a religious right that the White House did not dare to cross.

God's war needs God's warriors, and the White House was ready to supply them. Kay Coles James had been the White House personnel scout for domestic offices. The equivalent director of personnel for the Iraq Coalition Provisional Authority (headed by Catholic convert Paul Bremer) was the White House liaison to the Pentagon, James O'Beirne, a conservative Catholic married to National Revieweditor Kate O'Beirne. Those recruited to serve in the CPA were asked if they had voted for Bush, and what their views were on Roe v. Wade and capital punishment.[39] O'Beirne trolled the conservative foundations, Republican congressional staffs, and evangelical schools for his loyalist appointees. Relatives of prominent Republicans were appointed, and staffers from offices like that of Senator Rick Santorum. Right moral attitude was more important than competence.[40]

That was proved when the first director of Iraqi health services, Dr. Frederick Burkle, was dismissed. Burkle, a distinguished physician, was a specialist in disaster relief, with experience in Kosovo, Somalia, and Kurdish Iraq. His replacement, James Haverman, had run a Christian adoption agency meant to discourage women from having abortions. Haverman placed an early emphasis on preventing Iraqis from smoking, while ruined hospitals went untended. This may suggest the policy on appointments that put Michael Brown in charge of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but the parallel is insufficiently harsh. Chris Matthews brought it up on his television show while interviewing the Washington Post reporter who had covered the CPA in Iraq, Rajiv Chandrasekaran, who said, "There were a hundred Browns in Iraq."[41] But there were Bible study groups in the Green Zone.


There is a particular danger with a war that God commands. What if God should lose? That is unthinkable to the evangelicals. They cannot accept the idea of second-guessing God, and he was the one who led them into war. Thus, in 2006, when two thirds of the American people told pollsters that the war in Iraq was a mistake, the third of those still standing behind it were mainly evangelicals (who make up about one third of the population). It was a faith-based certitude.

Notes

[1] Bush to televangelist James Robison in 1999, cited in Stephen Mansfield, The Faith of George W. Bush (Tarcher, 2004), pp. 110–111.

[2] Mansfield, The Faith of George W. Bush, p. 84.

[3] Mansfield, The Faith of George W. Bush, p. 83.

[4] Esther Kaplan, With God on Their Side (New Press, 2004), pp. 84–85, 110–112, 120–121, 137–340.

[5] David Frum, The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush (Random House, 2003), pp. 3–4.

[6] Frum, The Right Man, p. TK.

[7] Hamil R. Harris, "Putting Worship into Their Workday: More Federal Employees Participating in Prayer Services at the Office," The Washington Post, November 19, 2001.

[8] David Johnston and Neil A. Lewis, "Religious Right Made Big Push to Put Ashcroft in Justice Department," The New York Times, January 7, 2001.

[9] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 34.

[10] "Violence and Harassment at US Abortion Clinics," Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance, November 9, 2004.

[11] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, pp. 135–136.

[12] Evangelicals have made a concerted effort to assert that the fetus is a person. When Bush set up a new part of Health and Human Services, the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Human Research Protections, and its charter spoke of embryos and human fetuses as "human subjects," the National Right to Life Committee praised it for including "all living members of the species Homo sapiens at every stage of their development." See Kaplan, With God on Their Side: George W. Bush and the Christian Right, p. 110.

[13] Eric Lichtblau, "Ashcroft Defends Subpoenas," The New York Times, February 13, 2004.

[14] Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten, One Party Country: The Republican Plan for Dominance in the 21st Century (Wiley, 2006), p. 129. Karl Rove also negotiated with the Salvation Army to exempt them from antidiscrimination laws where gays were concerned: see Dana Milbank, "Rove Heard Charity Plea on Gay Bias," The Washington Post, July 12, 2001.

[15] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 156.

[16] Hamburger and Wallsten, One Party Country, p. 115.

[17] Hamburger and Wallsten, One Party Country, p. 122.

[18] Hamburger and Wallsten, One Party Country, p. 133.

[19] Hamburger and Wallsten, One Party Country, pp. 129–130.

[20] Letter of John DiIulio to Ron Suskind, in Esquire, October 2002.

[21] Nicholas D. Kristof, "For Bush, His Toughest Call Was the Choice to Run at All," The New York Times, October 29, 2000.

[22] Peter Baker and Peter Slevin, "Bush Remarks on 'Intelligent Design' Theory Fuel Debate," The Washington Post, August 3, 2005.

[23] Chris Mooney, The Republican War on Science (Basic Books, 2005), pp. 164–174.

[24] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, pp. 91–94.

[25] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 105.

[26] Mooney, The Republican War on Science, pp. 79–101.

[27] Michael Barone and Richard E. Cohen, The Almanac of America Politics, 2006 (National Journal Group, 2006), p. 1365.

[28] James R. Inhofe, speech in the Senate, March 4, 2002.

[29] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 6.

[30] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 6.

[31] Mooney, The Republican War on Science, p. 213.

[32] Mooney, The Republican War on Science, pp. 218–219.

[33] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 126.

[34] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 126. Chris Mooney, The Republican War on Science, pp. 202–203.

[35] Kaplan, With God on Their Side, p. 21.

[36] Richard Leiby, "Christian Soldier," The Washington Post, November 6, 2003.

[37] Leiby, "Christian Soldier."

[38] All quotes in this paragraph are from Charles March, "Wayward Christian Soldiers," The New York Times, January 20, 2005.

[39] Rajiv Chandrasekaran, Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone (Knopf, 2006), p. 91.

[40] Chandrasekaran, Imperial Life in the Emerald City, p. 94.

[41] Chris Matthews, Hardball, MSNBC, September 20, 2006.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Genius Maths

MATHEMATICS GENIUS

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Saturday, August 12, 2006

Time to add another digit to your password?

I was reading an interesting article today that estimates the time required to crack a password (using brute force) for various types of passwords. You think your "paSSw0rd" is secure because you used mix-cased characters and numbers? Well it might be for someone with a Pentium 100 and a short attention span, but anyone willing to wait 1.5 years to crack your password will get your data. However, someone with a strong workstation doesn't need to wait that long - 25 days is all he needs.

So let's say you are even more sophisticated, as I used to consider myself, and you add some symbols to your password. I always thought my password was super-secure because it used mixed-case letters, numbers and multiple common symbols - something like "pA$$w0R@". However, according to the chart, this password could be cracked in 2.25 years with a reasonably strong multi-core workstation. This may seem like a long time, but it really isn't - your password should last as long as the value of the contents require - my banking information will likely remain valid for the next 10-20 years. For me, 2.25 years is simply not enough. So maybe I should add one more digit?

Before adding just one digit, consider a distributed network of machines like distributed.net is using for their RC5 project. This project recently showed that it was capable of trying 139,285,658,551 passwords a second!! That's 139 Billion keys (yes, that is a B) per second. Simply amazing. With a system like this, a hacker could break your 8 character password (that includes symbols) in 83 days.

Adding a single digit would increase this time to about 22 years to crack, which is still a little too close for my liking. After all, in 20 years machines will be a million times faster, so the equivalent of a Pentium 100 in 20 years will be able to crack your password in about 2 hours.

I think it's time to ditch the 8 character password and use something more reasonable like 12. This would expand the keyspace size by 84 million times. This would cause a network like distributed.net to take 20 million years to crack. Even in 20 years, the it would still take 20 years to crack.

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Wi-Fi for the masses

- It looks like a large Styrofoam takeout container. The 14-pound box would fit into a backpack were it not for the two antennas, set well apart. It can withstand subfreezing temperatures and 165-mph winds; it's even lightningproof. With the lid bolted down tightly, the box offers no clue as to what's inside.

Now this is something the islands of the Caribbean need to consider. Setting up a mesh, in my opinion is the way to go. and everyone can be involved in that. Not just the large corps. Vincy, take note.

read more | digg story

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Confessions of an IT Pro: My Nine Biggest Professional Blunders

this is a great read for those of you who are into IT. I sure this has happened to a lot of us, the trick is to learn from the mistakes and if others do it, learn from them too.


Over the past 16 years of being paid to make computers and people work together in perfect harmony, I have collected a number of incidents that make me wince and blush in embarrassment when I think of them. The mistakes I've made fall roughly into three categories: technical, political, and career management.

read more | digg story

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Hawking rewrites history... backwards

Hawking and Hertog call their theory 'top-down' cosmology, because instead of looking for some fundamental set of initial physical laws under which our Universe unfolded, it starts 'at the top', with what we see today, and works backwards to see what the initial set of possibilities might have been. In effect the present 'selects' the past.

Tell me what you think, is it a reasonable theory?

read more | digg story

World scientists unite to attack creationism

The world's scientific community united yesterday to launch one of the strongest attacks yet on creationism, warning that the origins of life were being "concealed, denied or confused".

Ok, Swords drawn, mark a line in the sand, which side are you on?

read more | digg story

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Friday, June 16, 2006

Einstein's Writings on Science and Religion

"The mind can proceed only so far upon what it knows and can prove. There comes a point where the mind takes a higher plane of knowledge, but can never prove how it got there. All great discoveries have involved such a leap.�

An interesting read

read more | digg story

Thursday, June 15, 2006

What Search Engine Spiders See

Have you ever wondered exactly what those search engine spiders actually see each time they visit your website?

Wonder no more.....this useful little tool will scan your page and show you the results, as well as provide useful page data such as word density, meta keywords, links, etc.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

What Frequencies can 'you' hear?

Test your hearing with different frequencies of the same noise at the same volume. I can hear up to 20,000. How bout you?

read more | digg story

Friday, June 09, 2006

What's this 'scotomisation' in The Da Vinci Code?

In the current blockbuster film, The Da Vinci Code, there is an important scene where Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks), Sophie Neveu (Audrey Tautou), and Sir Leigh Teabing (Ian McKellan) discuss the possible hidden images in Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece, The Last Supper.

Does the picture depict John the Apostle or Mary Magdalene? Are there signs that Mary and Jesus are married? Where in the picture is the Holy Grail? Is it there at all?

At one point in this scene, Sir Leigh refers to scotomisation - a word not in the current vocabulary of most film goers - and he hardly explains its meaning. Understanding this concept is one of the keys to unlocking the mystery within a mystery within a mystery: Why people perceive differently what's in The Last Supper, the artistic and historical mysteries surrounding it, and the mystery of why there's all the excitement about The Da Vinci Code book and movie.

"Scotomisation" is the psychological tendency in people to see what they want to see and not see what they don't want to see - in situations, in themselves, in anything, even in a painting - due to the psychological impact that seeing (or not seeing) would inflict.

In this case, it is one of the most famous paintings of all time and an icon in the faith of millions of Christians. The emotional power of this is considerable. It is no wonder then that The Da Vinci Code book and film have been so controversial throughout the world.

Perception involves seeing and processing information through the filter of our intellect and our emotions. That's why people often see the same thing differently. Scotomisation can be a false denial but also a false affirmation of our perceptions.

The term used in behavioral science is borrowed from the science of optics and ophthalmology. “Scotoma” is from the Greek word skotos (to darken) and means a spot on the visual field in which vision is absent or deficient.

The French psychiatrist Rene Laforgue (1894-1962) is thought to be the first to have used the term in a psychiatric sense. In a 1925 letter to Sigmund Freud, Laforgue wrote that "scotomisation corresponds to the wish that is infantile...not to acknowledge the external world but to put the ego itself into its place..."

At the time, Laforgue was talking about denial and repression in schizophrenics, but the term can have a more general application.

Psychiatrist R.D. Laing (1927-1989) describes scotomisation as a process of an individual psychologically denying the existence of anything they see with their own eyes that they really don’t want to see and hence don't want to believe.

He writes in Interpersonal Perception (1966) that scotomisation is "our ability to develop selective blind spots regarding certain kinds of emotional or anxiety-producing events". So it may be a matter of faith with the evidence of The Da Vinci Code.

Seeing is believing, but not always.

Stephen Juan, Ph.D. is an anthropologist at the University of Sydney.

Monday, June 05, 2006

Build your Memory.

Who dosen't want a better memory?

Well this is a site with tons of ways to help build your memory.
How to remember names, how to remember dreams, how to master a foreign language and more.

read more | digg story

Build your own 1000 Watt Wind Turbine and Power your House!

We built a 1000 watt wind turbine to help charge the battery bank that powers our offgrid home. It's a permanent magnet alternator, generating 3 phase ac, rectified to dc, and fed to a charge controller. The magnets spin with the wind, the coils are fixed, so no brushes or slip rings necessary

For all you peeps who hate paying Vinlec every month and want to try their own thing, try out this project

read more | digg story

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Is the Brain Really Necessary?

A neurologist studying people with hydrocephalus found that half of his most severe cases had IQs greater than 100, even though they had 95% of their cranial cavity filled with cerebrospinal fluid. One of them was a student who had an IQ of 126 and had a first class honours degree in mathematics while having "virtually no brain."

The more you know about the brain the less you know!!!!!!

read more | digg story

Monday, May 29, 2006

MacDaddyVC

Well my mate in Vincy has his own blog now so check it out when you get a chance. I'm sure you'll find it very interesting. Just click on the link below and you'll be zoomed straight to his blog.


http://macdaddyvc.wordpress.com/

Saturday, May 20, 2006

RIP: Last Male of a Species Died Today

"Any time we lose a species it diminishes us all."

read more | digg story

Sunday, May 14, 2006

A future with no bananas?

Go bananas while you still can. The world's most popular fruit and the fourth most important food crop of any sort is in deep trouble. Its genetic base, the wild bananas and traditional varieties cultivated in India, has collapsed.

All you Vincy farmers, you've been warned!!!!

read more | digg story

Friday, May 12, 2006

Solve the Rubiks Cube in 22 Turns

The infamous Rubik�s cube is solvable from any mixed up position. In fact, there are mathematical theorems that say the cube can be solved from any mixed up position in 22 turns. However, no one has been able to prove this theorem�yet. So we will approach a much simpler method to solving the cube.

For all those who wanted to solve that brain teaser, here it is!!!!

read more | digg story

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Rare Mirage Last for 4 Hours Off East China (Pictures)

A mirage appears off the shore of Penglai City in eastern China's Shandong Province on Sunday, May 7, 2005.Thousands of tourists and local residents witnessed a mirage of high clarity lasting for four hours off the shore of Penglai City in east China's Shandong Province on Sunday.

read more | digg story

Friday, April 21, 2006

Amazing photographs of rainbow

I thought I'd seen my share of amazing rainbow photographs until I saw this one.

The wonders of creation

read more | digg story

British drivers believe their nav-sat system instead of their eyes

THERE is a lucrative new sport in the Wiltshire village of Luckington: fishing stranded motorists out of a ford at £25 a time.

Since a road closure, dozens of drivers have blithely followed directions from their satellite navigation systems, not realising that the recommended route goes through the ford. Pict included.

read more | digg story

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Overcoming Procrastination

Several practical tools for overcoming procrastination.

This is a followup to an article I posted a few weeks back.

Its a good read.

read more | digg story

Giant Deep-Sea Volcano With "Moat of Death" Found

Beneath the waves of the South Pacific lies a volcanic realm nearly as strange as that featured in TV's hit drama Lost. The volcano found in the South Pacific is dazzling scientists with its weird features, including a swirling vortex, strange animals, and a toxic zone that only one creature can survive.

read more | digg story

Monday, April 10, 2006

Lucid Decapitation - Creepy but interesting!

Many argue that a beheaded person will almost instantly lose consciousness due to a massive drop in blood pressure in the brain, and/or the heavy impact of the decapitation device. But there are countless eyewitness reports in history describing a few moments of apparent awareness in the victim.

I say, stick to hanging, saves all the trouble.

read more | digg story

Thursday, April 06, 2006

BMW 'Techiest' car company

Look at the graph, short, simple, and sweet! and off course, we all knew that already !

read more | digg story

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Your Reasoning Behind Procrastinating

"The procrastinator is often remarkably optimistic about his ability to complete a task on a tight deadline; this is usually accompanied by expressions of reassurance that everything is under control." Don't lay this article off to the side, you need to read it now.

Look, we all do it but you can get out of this downward cycle, read on bro read on

read more | digg story

how fast can they crack your password

An interesting article on the speed at which passwords can by cracked. Comparing types of passwords.

read more | digg story

Friday, March 31, 2006

Bill Gates' Stock Transactions - This is incredible.

3,826,396 MSFT
Sale at $26.55 - $26.88 per share.
(Proceeds of about $102,222,000)

These transactions occur multiple times a day. Its unbelieveable.

I can only dream eh, and think about it, 3 days worth of transactions is worth more than the GDP of St Vincent!!!!! jeez. go figure

read more | digg story

Autistic or just a Geek? Take the Test

Apparently a much higher than average percentage of computer workers are diagnosed with a mild form of autism called "Asperger's Syndrome". This test allow you to filter yourself out as just Geeky or maybe having something to actually worry about.

read more | digg story

Friday, March 24, 2006

Amputee Controls New Robotic Arms With Brain

After a horrible electric accident this new technology gave this amputee new hope with the ability to control his robotic arms with his mind. By rewiring live nerves that control his arm movements with the new robotic arms, Jesse Sullivan essentially became the worlds first "$6 million man"

read more | digg story

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Capsaicin (the stuff in peppers) triggers suicide in cancer cells

Capsaicin, the stuff that turns up the heat in jalapeños, not only causes the tongue to burn, it also drives prostate cancer cells to kill themselves.

No wonder Vincy peeps don't get this kind of cancer!!!! Too much pepper in you food!!!

read more | digg story

Amazing Literal Periodic Table Of The Elements, with samples & pics!

This dude built a huge periodic table of the elements from wood. Under each tile is a compartment to hold an actual sample of the element in question. Plus he has cool pics and info about each one. Time sink!

For you chemistry peeps out there

read more | digg story

Monday, March 13, 2006

Epigenetics: We control our genes far more than we know

Scientists are rewriting the laws of heredity as they learn more about a mysterious second genetic code that turns our genes on and off.
And you thought we were complicated beings!!!

read more | digg story

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Next Gen Contact Lenses During Night Only

OrthoKeratology (Ortho-K) is a non-surgical process which reshapes (flattens) the cornea of the eye using custom made contact lenses during the night to reduce refractive errors (nearsightedness and astigmatism). The patient would take the lenses out in the morning and they are able to see the rest of the day without any glasses or contact lenses.

read more | digg story

Friday, March 10, 2006

Screenshot of Microsoft.com's First Web Page

This is a flash back to the early days, when this sort of design would have been THE SITE.

The good ole days or is it the bad old days!!!!

read more | digg story

NASA survey confirms climate warming impact on polar ice sheets

"In the most comprehensive survey ever undertaken of the massive ice sheets covering both Greenland and Antarctica, NASA scientists confirm climate warming is changing how much water remains locked in Earth's largest storehouses of ice and snow. ... The Greenland ice sheet could be facing an irreversible decline by the end of the century."

read more | digg story

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Genes determine coffee heart risk

"Drinking large amounts of coffee each day could increase the risk of heart attack for people with a particular genetic profile, a study has suggested. In a study conducted by the Journal of the American Medical Association, those who were slow at breaking down caffeine were 64% more likely to suffer a cardiac arrest."

read more | digg story

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Simple ways to increase your cleverness

Experiments by the BBC Programme 'Get Smarter in a Week' show that making simple changes to your lifestyle can help with memory, decision-making, & confidence, by improving your brain's functioning.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Scientists: Coke, Pepsi Need Health Warning Labels

New studies say soda is the top cause of America�s obesity epidemic. The man-made sweetener in soda (high fructose corn syrup) leaves more calories and "bad" fats in you than natural sugar. The nation's single biggest "food" is soda. Scientists call for warning labels like those used on cigarettes.

Go on, Do it!!!!

read more | digg story

World's Fastest Internet

An article in today's (6th March) Times describes the roll-out of a 2GB/s broadband service.
Sign me up right now!

read more | digg story

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Data center for the paranoid

"The Bunker" is situated in England. It is an impregnable fortress 30 meters below ground. It has three meter think concrete walls, steel doors weighing over two tons, 24-hour watch, guard dogs and CCTV. It offers protection from attacks including crackers, terrorists, electro-magnetic pulse, electronic eavesdropping, HERF weapons and solar flares

read more | digg story

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

How to: Save a Snowflake for Decades

Create a lasting cast of nature�s perfect crystals with a drop of chilled superglue

For all you Vincies out there, want some snow??????

read more | digg story

51 Year Old Hobbyist, from Mexico, Builds His Own Jetpack, from Scratch

Lozano is not a rocket scientist. He is not a stuntman. He is an animated, often goofy granddad who is afraid of the sight of blood. He says, �The difference between me and everyone else is that these guys didn�t create their own rocket belts from scratch.�

If he can do it, so can we.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Amazing Google Vid- "Quantum Physics Double Slit Experiment"

This experiment shows the really mysterious behavior of quantam particles. Electrons behaving like waves and then like marbles? Mind blowingly cool.

read more | digg story

Monday, February 27, 2006

Ridiculous 4D Rubix Cube-type Puzzle

Magic Cube 4D Applet -- 7 standard rubix cubes mashed into one big 4D cube. Try it!

For those of you who thought the normal rubix cube was bad try this for size. Talk about putting you in a tizzy!!!!

read more | digg story

500 Simple Exeriments anyone can do

Explorium, San Francisco's Museum of Science, art, and human perception has a page dedicated to 500 simple experiments anyone can do. It's all hands on! I wrote a bigger review of the site here:
http://www.sharewonders.com/2006/02/26/exploratorium/

read more | digg story

Thursday, February 23, 2006

The Bible in Excel

I found a text file with the complete King James Version of the Bible. I wrote a few macros and dumped it all into an Excel workbook. Each book is on a separate worksheet, and each verse is in a separate cell.

It has a handy hyperlink table of contents so you can jump to any book. I also wrote some summary formulas to calculate the number of characters in each book, and the average number of characters per verse. Then I added a word count feature: Enter a word and it displays the number of occurrences in each book.

Why? I just wanted to play around with Excel and its just good to see whats possible when you put your mind to it.

If you want the spreadsheet, drop me an email and I'll arrange for you.

How Things Work - Explaining the physics of everyday life

You know when people ask really strange questions its usually the geeks among you that have some sort of answer, well hey, now you can be the clown in the party. Some great questions are on the web site so check them out and collect some useless bits of knowledge.

read more | digg story

Berkeley lectures as podcasts

Almost as good as actually attending Berkeley...? at least its another educational use for iPod!!!!!!

read more | digg story

How they named companies

Lists how many of the corporations got their names. Read on, its good fun. For example: Xerox- The inventor, Chestor Carlson, named his product trying to say `dry'.

read more | digg story

Monday, February 20, 2006

Don't lead your sheep astray!!!

Sometimes you really have to wonder how some christians think, the adoption of certain ideas and the merging of them with bibical principles just dosen't go but still they push the idea to the very end. Take the issue of "Intelligent Design", a lot has been said, both publically and privately from both sides of the discussion but the demarcation line is normally scientists on one side and theologists on the other.

Now even that is looking shaky, CNN did an article on it recently, (check out Scientists enlist clergy here) and what was shocking to note were some statements from "highly educated" theologians, statements like "We believe that the theory of evolution is a foundational scientific truth, one that has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human knowledge and achievement rests" and "The intelligent design movement belittles God. It makes God a designer, an engineer," said Vatican Observatory Director George Coyne, an astrophysicist who is also ordained. "The God of religious faith is a god of love. He did not design me."

Well for goodness sake, if you as a priest/pastor is willing to dismiss much of what the Bible says about God creating mankind then I'm sorry to say YOU ARE IN THE WRONG JOB!!! Stop the double standard of professing God while at the same time dismissing him, in fact, do the right thing and get out of the ministry, stop leading your flock astray.

Well enough of the sermon now but just to say we all need to practice what we preach and when someone in a position of leadership abuses that position then we should all speak out.


One Billion Mazes

This site contains one billion mazes in high-quality printable PDF format. You may view, print and solve these mazes... and yes, there are exactly one billion mazes!

Now if your really bored, for a very long time, and your imune to square eyes, then this is the website just for you, bet you can't tell me how long its going to take you to complete all of them!!!!!

read more | digg story

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Top ten reasons Geeks make good fathers

Might pacify your wife/gf/baby-mother if she complains of being a "computer widow".

You got to read the previous day's blog as well, my sentiments exactly.

read more | digg story

Amazing Stone keeping guiness record, 40 skips video

Kurt Steiner is the official Guinness World Record Holder of skipping a stone in a pond. The video captures the throw from difrent angles and at slow motion.

Now this brings back childhood memories but I just can't remember skimming a stone for so long. I certainly was no record breaker.

read more | digg story

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Mormon Scripture Disproved

Oh no! The Book of Mormon is wrong! Bedrock of a Faith Is Jolted.

From the time he was a child in Peru, the Mormon Church instilled in Jose A. Loayza the conviction that he and millions of other Native Americans were descended from a lost tribe of Israel that reached the New World more than 2,000 years ago.

"We were taught all the blessings of that Hebrew lineage belonged to us and that we were special people," said Loayza, now a Salt Lake City attorney. "It not only made me feel special, but it gave me a sense of transcendental identity, an identity with God."

A few years ago, Loayza said, his faith was shaken and his identity stripped away by DNA evidence showing that the ancestors of American natives came from Asia, not the Middle East. "I've gone through stages," he said. "Absolutely denial. Utter amazement and surprise. Anger and bitterness."

For Mormons, the lack of discernible Hebrew blood in Native Americans is no minor collision between faith and science. It burrows into the historical foundations of the Book of Mormon, a 175-year-old transcription that the church regards as literal and without error.

Oh well, at least the Bible is still without error.

From slime

Something to think about, from the I Saw Jesus Christ group on MySpace:

Child: Mommy where did we come from...?

Mother: "Slime son, we evolved over millions of years and come to be what you see today?"

Child: "........ok......so i'm the result of slime?"

*Ten days later Timmy shoots 5 people and then shoots himself in the head at school*

Mother: OMG WHAT WOULD CAUSE MY CHILD TO DO SUCH A THING!!!! *cry*

*Timmy wasn't aware that there were consequences for doing evil deeds, and since he thought he came from slime, whether or not he lived or died didn't matter. He was going to die anyway eventually. Since Timmy was unware of this, lied to, and a child, he will descend to heaven along with the other 5 innocents he murdered. However, because of the suppression of truth, his mother would suffer much long after the death of her beloved child.



For you Adventists out there, what your take on this?

The Physics of Time Travel - Real or Fable?

Physicists have always scoffed at the idea of time travel, considering it to be the realm of cranks, mystics, and charlatans, and with good reason. However, rather remarkable advances in quantum gravity are reviving the theory...

Anyone remotely interested in time concepts should check out the paradoxes mentioned in this blog, some real conversation pieces.

read more | digg story

Sleep A Thing Of The Past

New drugs which will allow people to survive on only two hours sleep a day are being developed, scientists have said.
The drugs will allow people to cope with the pressures of 24-hour society.

All I have to say is if God rested on the Seventh Day, who are we to try and change that!!!!

read more | digg story

Quantum Mechanics Made Relatively Simple

Funny title. Here are three lectures on quantum physics and quantum mechanics by one of the greats.

For all budding scientists, this is a must see

read more | digg story

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Spray-on Solar-Power Cells

"Scientists have invented a plastic solar cell that can turn the sun's power into electrical energy, even on a cloudy day."

Just for our lovely English Weather!!!!!

read more | digg story

The Assasin Spider

The worlds most deadliest spider, to other spiders. Check out the picture, weird looking.

What a weird and wonderful world we live in

read more | digg story

The Physics Behind Stone Skipping

What makes a stone bounce repeatedly when thrown across the surface of a lake, and how many bounces can it perform?

read more | digg story

Babies have an innate ability to do simple maths

Even before babies learn to talk they have a bit of a grasp of maths, according to new research concluding that infants may have an abstract sense of numerical concepts.

read more | digg story

Monday, February 13, 2006

The Birthday Paradox Revisited

if you're sitting in a room with forty people in it, what are the chances that two of those people have the same birthday?...Not 11% as most would conclude but in reality, due to Math's convoluted reasoning, the odds are about 90%. This phenomenon is known as the Birthday Paradox

For all you maths lovers out there

read more | digg story

Online morse code translator

- .... .. ... / .. ... / .- / .--. .-. . - - -.-- / ... .-- . . - / - --- -.-- .-.-.- / . -. .--- --- -.-- .-.-.-

Here's a retro look at the good old days of morse code, if ever you need to send a message then try this site out

read more | digg story

Light speed by 2100?

Researcher Dr. Franklin Felber has, supposedly, figured out a way to accelerate a payload to nearly the speed of light while negating the massive pressures that were assumed to exist at that speed. If his theory is correct, we could have near-light speed travel by the end of the century.

read more | digg story

Pic of Galaxy on its Side

This is a picture of the Sombrero Galaxy. This the coolest space photograph I have seen in a long time. Off course, it smacks of intelligent design, but then we knew that already didn't we!!!!!!!!

read more | digg story

Thursday, February 09, 2006

LEDs really do run on pennies!

Lately the hoopla concerning LED lighting has been overwhelming. I decided to put a new twist on a classic science experiment to prove that LEDs do cost pennies to power. Literally.

But who's going to do the British version of the experiment? any offers?? send me the results when you get it.


read more | digg story

Indonesia Lost World With PICS!!!

The pictures of the new species found in Indonesia.
Pretty amazing! and just another proof of God's creative ideas.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

King and cartoons

This last week has displayed two sides of a coin called "Free Will", first the death of Coretta Scott King, the widow of the Rev Martin Luther King Jr, she was known affectionately as "the first lady of the civil rights movement" , a movement that changed America and in fact the whole world. Thousands of people lined up in silence watching the casket at the famous Ebenezer Baptist Church, a half a world away, buildings were burnt, thousands protested and riots broke out at the publishing of a cartoon displaying the prophet Mohammad in a not too reverent depicition.

Both offered on the basis of free will v human rights, yet total opposite in how it played out, some say you have to stand up for what you believe, others say your actions speak louder than your words, both were radical and illegal in their days yet both made a difference to the belief in "Absoulute Truth" from whatever perspective they were looking from.

One thing I would hope that comes from this modern day oxymoron is a fuller understanding of our purpose here on this small piece of rock and how what we do affects others around us, both negatively and positively.

Map Showing the International Undersea Cables

The vast bulk of international telephone and Internet traffic travels through underwater cables. This map shows the cables that were in use as of the end of 2004 and gives an indication of where traffic is heaviest.

Could it be that little ole St Vincent has a fibre cable running past it? off course, both Cable & Wireless and Karib Kable run their cable through the Eastern Caribbean, must be worth some business don't you think.

read more | digg story

Sunday, February 05, 2006


Moor Close team

Praise......

More singing

And the choir sings.......

Moor Close Nights

For those of you who don't have too much interest in religion, you probably wouldn't have experienced anything like Moor Close Nights, even those who come from the traditional Vincy background would struggle to imagine a service like this. But hay, the best thing I can say is go and see for yourself; for those of you who can't get there, let me know and I'll get a DVD to you.

The Moor Close Nights programme, which has been running for over a year and is based at the Newbold church near Bracknell. Growing out of the regular Moor Close Sabbath service, which has been operating at Newbold for more than nine years, Moor Close Nights is an alternative worship service, usually held on the first Saturday evening of each month. This timing is designed not to clash with other services so that the worshipers, and those taking part, can remain fully involved with their usual church activities.

Moor Close Nights includes all of the elements familiar to those who attend regular Adventist services - praise, exposition, contemplation, prayer, and the inevitable offering. However, it is the way that these components are put together that makes Moor Close Nights different. True, there is more music than in your average Adventist service, and some of it is more lively and interactive than that experienced by most Adventists on a Sabbath morning. However it is also true to say that the music is of the very highest quality. Hundreds of "person-hours" are spent in rehearsals and preparation, and the result is a well co-ordinated experience where the music perfectly complements the different phases of the service. Exuberant praise and thankfulness for what God has done in the lives of those taking part is followed by more contemplative music leading to confession and intercession.

Check out some of the pictures here or look for me at their website http://moorclose.info/

Go on, pay them a visit and be inspired.

Caffeine Free: Blue Light Makes People Alert at Night

There's much more than meets the eye to how we perceive light, researchers have learned in recent years. The latest revelation: blue light helps fend off drowsiness in the middle of the night.

Where can I get a bottle of da stuff???????

read more | digg story

Los Angeles police will propel a GPS device onto a fleeing car. The device

Los Angeles police will propel a GPS device onto a fleeing car. The device will stick to the car and track its location. That'll hopefully reduce dangerous high-speed chases.

Talk about taking the fun out of car chases, at least its not likely to happen in the UK, they just haul out the chopper for you

read more | digg story

New space-time theory does away with big-bang, dark energy etc.

A new theory presented by Alexander Franklin Mayer at Stanford claims time is not just linear, but points in different directions, just like gravity does not point in the same direction everywhere.

Nothing like a bit of deep thinking on a Sunday morning

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How to Speed Read

Learn the techniques to read anything faster and that always comes in handy in Vincy!!!

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Download CD and DVD covers for FREE

In one simple search - No sign-up, No membership - No cookies, just simply search and it will bring up all the covers for you to download FREE

For all you Vincies, life just got so much easier when getting those CD's together eh!!!!

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Saturday, February 04, 2006

Mangoose Belly alive and kicking!!!!

What is De Mangoose Belly? where did it come from? what does it think about? Who does it belong to? Well pull up a pew, chill for a while and view the world from mangoose belly's point of view.