blueollie

End of July 2007

Workout notes 2500 yard swim (medicore, as usual), 3 miles of walking on the Rivertrail (goose loop), then 3+ home. I noticed that the right knee is slightly swollen (it didn’t hurt at night though), and bending the knee while going uphill seemed to hurt it; walking with a straight knee (racewalk style) helped.

Evidently, the hill running (too much, too soon) and the Hero pose is what caused this latest episode; for now, appropriate yoga, cycling, swimming and “light” walking should be ok.

That is the problem of introducing running back into my program: my areobic fitness allows me to go more than my weak legs will allow (weak in terms of running strength).

Politics

Max Blumenthal (The Nation): Christians United for Israel Tour (they want to bring on the end of the world and the so called rapture). Hat tip to RichardDawkins.net.

[...]
Over a dozen CUFI members eagerly revealed to me their excitement at the prospect of Armageddon occurring tomorrow. Among the rapture ready was Republican Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay. None of this seemed to matter to Lieberman, who delivered a long sermon hailing Hagee as nothing less than a modern-day Moses. Lieberman went on to describe Hagee’s flock as “even greater than the multitude Moses commanded.”

Throughout CUFI’s Israel Summit, videographer Thomas Shomaker and I were hounded by PR agents seeking to prevent us from interviewing attendees about the End Times. The conference, we were told, was about “one message” – evangelical Christians supporting Israel. We were instructed to only interview CUFI leaders capable of sticking to the talking point that their support for Israel has, as Hagee declared, “nothing to do with the End Times.” But I was forbidden from asking Hagee about statements he made in his book, “Jerusalem Countdown,” that appeared to blame Jews for their own persecution. After doing just that during a press conference, I was removed from the conference by off-duty DC cops summoned by members of Hagee’s family.

I have covered the Christian right intensely for over four years. During this time, I attended dozens of Christian right conferences, regularly monitored movement publications and radio shows, and interviewed scores of its key leaders. I have never witnessed any spectacle as politically extreme, outrageous, or bizarre as the one Christians United for Israel produced last week in Washington. See for yourself.

The video lasts about 10 minutes.

Videos

John Edwards on affirmative action

Redstate update: invitation to Republican candidates!

Illegal Immigrants in the United States; one describes his experience.

July 30, 2007 Posted by blueollie | edwards, injury, politics/social, running, swimming, walking | | No Comments Yet

Why I took so long to accept evolution

I was blown away by the Darwin exhibit at the Chicago Field Museum; wait, I already told you that. :)

And of course, evolution has been on my mind lately; it has even influenced me to the point where I am writing a mathematical article motivated by it.

But, when I was young, I actually embraced creationism. I remember the first time I admitted to “believing in evolution”; I was a senior at Annapolis (a First Class Midshipman) and one of my aunts asked me what I believed about the origins of the world and of humankind. She asked “do you believe in evolution or in creationism” and I said “evolution”, almost without thinking.
(I was a Roman Catholic at the time, who still practiced the Church Rituals).

I don’t know when I first changed.

But in grade school, I believed in a sort of creationism.

What did I think of the scientific theories? Believe it or not, I thought about it this way: “a good scientist has to look for the natural causes for things; a scientist who said “oh, it was a miracle that caused that” would be a bad scientist. Hence, they HAD to believe in natural origins, and I thought that my god would give them special dispensations because the scientists were good, honorable people who just didn’t have the special revelation that us non-scientists had.

True, a Roman Catholic could safely believe in evolution at that time (when I was a kid), but neither I nor my mom knew that.

I do remember the footnotes in my Douey-Rhiems Bible saying something to the effect that one had “to choose” between believing “modern theories” or “God’s word”. (note: The Douey-Rhiems Bible was the one that was a translation from the Latin Vulgate, or a “translation of a translation” that had all of the Latin-like names to the various books).

I remember my 4′th grade teacher introducing “evolution” to us in the classroom; we saw a series of drawings that depicted an ape like creature, some “sort of ape, sort of human” creatures, and then finally a human.

I kept wondering the following: “ok that is well and good and I can see the similarities. But why did the species change at all? Why?

And, as my dad (who was non-religious) said “if we evolved from apes, why are there still apes?”

Also, I remember talking with my aunts, listening to all of those Bible stories (totally true, by the way) and reading some of her creationist books (little books).

And, because my last biology class was in 7′th grade (!), I never understood what caused evolution to happen.

I don’t remember when the egg broke and I embraced evolution all of the way, but it had something to do with

  • hearing the term “natural selection and survival of the fittest”
  • seeing moths evolve into spotted ones that better hid in sooty areas
  • hearing of bacteria which evolved to be resistant to current anti-biotics

So, that is my story; of course, part of what helped me along was actually reading the Bible in high school, being horrified by much of it (especially the Hebrew Bible, commonly called the Old Testament), and losing my bibilical literalism (thanks to Priests and good footnotes).

But, my taking so long to embrace evolution had something to do with the way it was first explained to me: no one told me WHY species might “improve” over time, and Lamarkian improvements never made sense to me. It was the “mutation that happend to be benefical” idea that sold me, but I didn’t hear that until much later in life.

July 30, 2007 Posted by blueollie | creationism, religion, science | | 7 Comments