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Buh???

Mar. 5th, 2009 06:09 pm
pt_tangles: (The Dumb)
I had a few hours to kill yesterday, and I thought I would catch up with LJ a bit.  And this is what I found -->

Christian-izing Salt is Just Not Kosher

According to Examiner.com , a retired barber Joe Godlewski was getting sick of seeing so many television chefs gravitate towards kosher salt that he said: "What the heck's the matter with Christian salt?" and has created his own Blessed Christians Salt to compete.

Riiiiight.  Because the kosher salt thing is totally an attack on Christianity.  Personally, I prefer a nice smoked sea salt, but seriously - Christian salt??  Geez.

--PT

FINALLY!!

Jun. 24th, 2007 12:37 am
pt_tangles: (Sunflower Field)
This guy gets it. Finally, we can put an end to the goddamned scare tactics! If everyone can understand that arguing about what WILL happen to the world is not important, then we might be able to figure this whole thing out.

This is one of the very few areas where I think that many of my fellow environmentalists are morally wrong. When you know that some popular propaganda is not true, but you use it anyway to promote your cause, that is wrong. It makes you just as wrong as the people who push terrorism on the news in order to push their views on people.

I am going to be cross-posting this to all of my places on the web (well, not Wickets, but that is because she isn't open yet).


http://view.break.com/311805 - Watch more free videos

--Phae
Is Gary Coleman still alive or not?  I know I haven't heard anything about him dying, but everyone at my work is sure that he died of his kidney problem.

And then I *just now* saw him in a car insurance commercial.  Does anyone know for sure?

--Phae
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I think that I have read at least 15 posts on my FList today regarding Falwell's passing.  Most are joyous celebratory posts, if tinged with the slightest bit of venom.   A couple were more thoughtful, and a couple more were simply news stories.

I have been trying for the last 10 hours or so to try and figure out how I feel about this.  I don't feel happy.  I don't feel celebratory.  I feel ... shocked.  It's kind of like when you are pushing against something so hard, and when it is suddenly removed, you fall on your face.  You sit up dazed for a moment wondering what the hell just happened.  I think that is where I am at now.

I don't see death as a bad thing.  Or as a good thing.  It is just something that happens.  And it happens to us all.  The fact that someone dies isn't usually reason for grief for me (unless I will miss the departed greatly), it doesn't strike me as any kind of punishment for misdeeds.  Death, for me these days, just leaves a strange hole and a weird sense of nostalgia.

That said, the manner in which one dies can occasionally be a punishment, but for those who truly deserve it, the release of death is more mercy than they should have.

I didn't like Jerry Falwell, and I don't wish him happiness in the afterlife.  I don't wish anything to him at all.  I think that he will end up passing from my mind and my life as if he never existed in the first place.  I am releasing his memory to time.  I hope that in a few years time, I won't even recognize the name.

I do, however, find delicious irony in the fact that Fred Phelps is planning to picket Falwell's funeral.  That makes me giggle.  (If anyone deserves my venom, it is Phelps.  That is a man I would celebrate the death of.  His life and deeds should be rewarded by him being beaten to death by the bare hands of his own battered family.  I think his wife should get to use a baseball bat.)

Thus ends Jerry Falwell.  May he and his influence pass into obscurity.

--Phae
It's because Jason is so willing to hear other points of view, and even reconsider his own position when new information comes to light.  Kudos to you, man!

http://www.wildhunt.org/2007/05/re-thinking-pentacle-face-paint-issue.html


Since some commenters disagreed with my comments concerning a high-school girl who was sent home (twice) after coming to school with pentacles painted on her face, I thought I would re-visit the issue and discuss some of the larger themes this brings up.

First off, concerning the girl, it was brought to my attention that the press coverage left out some details concerning her motivations. It seems the pentacles were painted on after she experienced harassment from students and teachers for wearing a pentacle necklace.

"Though I do need to explain my daughters action on painting the pentagram on her face. She has had necklaces taken from her by faculty, she has had other students rip them right off her neck. She said if its painted on my skin they can not take it away from me."
--Phae
I found an interesting article the other day through Chas Clifton's blog about Pagans and rosary-style prayer beads.  It seems that the practise of prayer and use of prayer tools is becoming larger in the general Pagan community.  I am passing this on to anyone who hasn't seen it yet, and also because I want to be able to refer back to it later (it might be useful for an article on the 'growing up' of the Pagan community that has been churning in my mind).

Picking up her Catholic rosary, Meg, a 24-year-old from Maine, begins her prayers like this:

"Hail Persephone, full of strength and beauty. ... Blessed are you and blessed is the cycle of your life. Holy Persephone, queen of life and death, pray for your children now, and in the hour of our need. Blessed be."

Full Article Here

--Phae
Today's article in the WildHunt has hit on something that I have been contemplating for some time now.  In my interactions with teens and Newbie Witches, I have seen it become more and more popular.  It is the idea that Witchcraft can be seperated out of Wicca.

"What is Wicca if it isn't religious Witchcraft? How much can you change or remove before certain forms of Wicca aren't even recognizable as part of a larger religious framework? Will we end up with congregational models of Wicca that seem little removed from a Unitarian-Universalist service (no offense intended to my UU pals)? It seems entirely possible that this desire to be seen as inoffensive (in order to escape persecution) won't reward us in the long run."

There are different trends reguarding use of the label 'Wicca'.  In some English communities I have seen that what they think of as American Eclectic is called Wicca and traditional models of Witchcraft are called Witchcraft.  Where it seems most the opposite in most communities here.  Wicca is reserved for the traditional religion, and eclectics and others are just left with Witchcraft to name their paths.  Then, on top of that you get the spelling and capitalization differences (wicca = eclectic neoWicca and Wicca/Wica = BTW).

Do you think that Wicca will fracture into a myriad of different faiths ... some which bear no resemblance to one another.  Similar, perhaps, to how Christianity has splintered between Catholic and the many different Protestant/Morman/JW faiths?  Will there be new names altogether in an effort to subtley point out that they don't do what I do?  Or will Witchcraft religions come to a point (or perhaps return to that point), where all Witchcraft is seen as a different tradiiton of Wicca, and the label will come to mean only 'British/European-based Witchcraft'?

Is it something that is to be fought for or against?  Or is it something that is better left to run its course and see where the dust settles?  Thoughts?

--Phae

x-posted to Phae In Space (my covenspace)

Yay, Canada!

Mar. 31st, 2007 10:53 am
pt_tangles: (Canadian Pagan)
There hasn't been much we have been doing right, lately.  I am glad to see that religious equality out in the field is one thing on that short list.

"Canadian Forces chaplains are in Afghanistan for everyone. Maj. Malcolm Berry smiles as he recalls being approached on the NATO base in Kandahar a few weeks ago by a group of soldiers of the Wiccan faith - a neo-pagan religion strongly tied to nature. "They wanted to welcome the spring in a ceremony where they are very thankful to Mother Earth and the new moon with pagan prayers,"

http://www.wildhunt.org/2007/03/canadian-military-chaplains-leading-way.html


Go, us!

--Phae
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Watch out fellow bloggers - your online journal can now be used as an excuse to fire you! This is not a trend I like to see.  Seems to me that Pagans in the education field will want to start collecting all of their performace reviews and anything that says that you are great at your job.  It is beginning to look like freedom of religion is for everyone but politicians and educators. Fun fun. Tongue Out 12

--Phae
Man says sex toy caused his erratic driving
Canadian Press
Mar. 16, 2007 10:28 AM
VANCOUVER - A man says it wasn't the 10 beers and a double cocktail that caused his car to weave before being pulled over by police.

http://community.livejournal.com/vancouver/3022741.html

It wasn't the booze! It was the dildo! ROFL 5

--Phae
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