Public Criticism

Posted by Doug Tue, 08 Mar 2005 17:20:00 GMT

I posted two blog entries I knew would be controversial last week. The first was my review and editorial on George Barna’s book Turning Children into Spiritual Champions and my comments on stiffer fines for FCC indecency violations. I had discussions on IRC about both topics both before and after I posted. Since I don’t allow comments on my blog (due to too much BlogSpam and lack of time to deal with it), I thought I’d go ahead and link to a couple blog posts by individuals from IRC who disagree with me. I’m not really going to counter either of these posts here. I’ve already discussed the two issues. All I’m doing is providing a link and as neutral summary as I can to dissenting views.

First, there’s a post by Fufie on Resigning to censorship. He equates the FCC indecency rules to censorship and those who support or enforce them as waging a “War on Reality”. Since I’m interested in photography, he thinks I should be more likely to want a clear picture of reality including things labeled by the FCC as indecent. He also has a side-bar condemning me for brainwashing children and says I’m “having a garage-sale with your soul.”

Second was what I found a more thoughtful post by varjag/blog/archives/000192.html” target=”_top”>Spirituality. I think he objects not so much to parents training children in religion, but to “force-feeding the doctrine”. He poses a valid question asking what I would think if I had been raised Muslim and given no choice in my spiritual development.

I’ll go ahead and answer that question. First, there’s absolutely no way we can divorce ourselves from our past. Our past is who we are. Second, there’s no way children can escape the profound impact of their parents—either for good or bad. I believe the Bible is true and is “the inspired Word of God.” I believe it is “sharper than a two-edged sword” and can “pierce the heart” convicting man of what’s True and Right. As such, I’d hope and pray that I would be able to study the Bible with an open mind and come to believe the Truth.

I guess I can’t resist. Both of these posts regarding my parenting seem to have one thing in common. Both decry taking the spiritual training to some excess. I think nearly everyone would agree that excessive spiritual training is a bad thing. What’s different is where we all draw that line. I don’t know where Fufie would draw the line. My impression is that he’d rather me demonstrate my own Faith and leave it at that. Varjag seems to think that taking kids to church is OK. My position is that it’s my duty to actually teach them about God. I said in my earlier post and in IRC discussions that I wasn’t advocating “force-feeding” “The Answers”.

What I understood Barna to be advocating, and what I’m advocating is to pose philosophical questions to my kids (such as “Does God exist?”, “What is the nature and character of God?”) in an age appropriate manner and let them reach their own conclusions based on their own thinking. I think the key to Barna’s research is that if you wait until later in life to ask these questions, odds are they won’t really be open minded about the answers.

Finally, a word about my blog. It has always pretty much had two purposes. First, I wanted to journal my thoughts as a parent raising my kids. As a parent over the last seven years, I’ve often wondered what my parents were thinking during certain circumstances from my youth. This blog is an effort to record some of those thoughts in the hope that one day my children will find it valuable. Why make this publicly available? Two reasons. First, I’m inherently lazy and don’t really accomplish very much without accountability. Making this blog public is a form of holding my feet to the fire to make sure I write regularly. Second, since my immediate family is mostly isolated from our extended family, there are people scattered about who find value in keeping up with us this way.

My second purpose is actually much less important. As a geek, I like to have an avenue for noticing cool things as they happen. I talk about Emacs, Linux, my Mac and my camera. In the grand scheme of things, those posts really don’t matter. However, Google doesn’t discriminate my blog content and people find my site by searching for things like “thinkpad a22m”, “calibrated powerbook profile”, and “dotemacs”. I’m glad people can find useful information on my website. I also secretly hope to impart some amount of geekness on my very non-geek family who reads my blog.

The point is that if you find one part of my blog more annoying than another part, I’m sorry. I have RSS feeds for each category of my blog. Simply add “index.rss” to the end of my url followed by a category (for instance http://lathi.net/diary/Photography/index.rss). I’m also sorry I don’t have comments enabled so you can express dissenting views directly on my blog. Email them directly to me or post on some place I can find and I’ll try to post links to them.

And now I’ll consider this topic sufficiently beat upon. As I said, I’ll welcome email about either of these topics and of course, feel free to post about them on your own blog. However, I doubt I’ll post on these topics again until either something new happens or something new is said.

So long, and thanks for reading.

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Baptism by Fire

Posted by Doug Tue, 08 Mar 2005 16:31:00 GMT

One of my former coworkers recently graduated from Quantico as an FBI agent. She stopped by the office today for the first time. Talk about a huge buzz. Everyone wanted to talk with her and hear all about it. Yes, she was packing; Glock 22, .40 caliber, 15 rounds. She showed her badge. Talked about all kinds of cool stuff. She’s working in D.C. right now doing background checks on Presidential nominations. This is just a temporary assignment though.

In 60 days she’s transferring to her first real assignment: Public Corruption and Domestic Espionage in Chicago. The corruption in Chicago is legendary at least as far back as Al Capone. She confirmed that Cook county has the highest rate of corruption of any other counties in the US. I’m a little surprised they gave her this assignment. I’m sure she can hack it. It just seems a little intense for right out of the shoot.

It took her about 15 months from the time she first applied for the FBI until they accepted her. Once she finally got the offer she was pretty nervous about actually accepting it. I’m glad she did. It’ll be exciting for her. When you’re young you’ve got to do stuff like that because it gets harder and harder as you get older. It’s cool to see her. She’s a manifestation of “going for it”.

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What's in your gadget bag?

Posted by Doug Tue, 08 Mar 2005 16:24:00 GMT

I saw a post on Gizmodo titled, What’s In Your Gadget Bag, Dave Barry? If you don’t know, Dave Barry is humorous author (UPDATE: I had originally said he drew “Dilbert”. I had thought Barry got his start as a cartoonist, but I guess now). He’s a very funny guy. This short article about the gadgets he carries doesn’t disappoint. In fact, it inspired me to write my “What’s in your bag” post.

Jansport Backpack I commute daily somewhere between 20 and 40 minutes each way on the bus. I have a Jansport backpack I’ve used for years. The back compartment has a MacCase 12” Sleeve for my PowerBook.

I cary an firewire enclosure cable for my Hitachi 2.5” 60GB hard disk. I’m pretty paranoid about hard disk failures. I use Super Duper! to mirror my PowerBook’s internal disk to this external disk daily. The enclosure came with this cool faux-leather wallet. That’s a good thing because the drive is too tall to fit in the enclosure. So I just cary around the logic board with the drive plugged into it. The drive and logic board still fit in the wallet, so I don’t worry too much about it.

Today I’m carrying my Scandisk compact flash card reader. I was really annoyed when I bought this. The picture on the web site where I ordered it showed that the reader plugged directly into the USB slot. The reader I received requires a separate USB cable to connect to the computer. Yet another cable wadded up in my bag. frown I’m carrying my CF reader because I took some photos last night at Josh and my Cub Scout Den meeting and wanted to post-process them on the bus ride. I’ll post those photos probably tonight.

My trusty side-kick is a Sony Ericson T637 I use with the Cingular network. I got this phone because it’s got both bluetooth and a camera. Turns out the camera is pretty similar to Dave’s “CrapCam”. I thought I’d take more photos of odd and/or unique stuff that I see. The camera is so crappy when I do take photos their uniqueness is totally lost. I guess I should learn to embrace it’s crappiness and use it as an art form. whatever Anyway, I’ve started syncing both my address book and calendar to my phone. It’s not like I can do much appointment scheduling, but I can at least see when a day’s already scheduled. One of the cool things I really like is Bluephone Elite. This handy little app sits in my menubar and connects to my phone. When it rings it mutes iTunes and pops up a dialog for me to answer it. I can also take notes on the call with it and send/receive SMS messages. It uses my address book for caller ID. I really recommend it.

I’ve got a mess of other stuff. I cary mundane stuff like Tylenol, Tums, Carmex, and Hals. I’ve got a cheap pair of Sony MDR-10 headphones that sound surpisingly good and are very comfortable to wear nearly all day. I’ve also got a cheap headset for my T637. It’s not bluetooth. frown I had a “cheap” Jabber bluetooth headset that was bad. It’s actually dead right now. It won’t pair with the phone at all. frown I started carrying the wired headset though because there’s a fundamental limit (it seems) with phones to only pair with one device at a time. So, I couldn’t pair with my PowerBook and a headset. What I want is to have a caller ID popup on my computer and then immediately answer the call using my bluetooth headset. No dice. I’m also carrying a silly little 64MB USB memory stick. That’s only because who uses a floppy disk any more? The other incidental item I carry is my passport; because you never know…

What’s noticeably absent from this list is “our” camera. The first rule of photography is you can’t photograph anything if you don’t have your camera with you. I told Carla last night that as Spring comes upon us I wanted to start carrying the camera around. I’m not sure how that’s going to work. I guess I’ll probably just start toting our older Canon Powershot A10.

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