PARVUM OPUS

 

Number 252

November 16, 2007

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I PRE-APPROVED THIS MESSAGE

 

Cynthia L. commented on the silliness of sales pitches that say "Congratulations! You have been pre-approved to apply for a new business credit card!" It is vaguely deceitful. You might think you’ve been approved to actually receive the credit card. However, I once did a proofreading job for some kind of financial company that sent out thousands of such letters, and their mailing list was based on certain things like credit and income, etc. So there’s a grain of truth there. (That was a one-day job for me. It was unbearable.)

 

GOOMEY-BAHNDE           

 

Herb H. wrote that gum band “sounds like an English pronunciation of the German word. I never saw it in writin', but an East German refugee friend of my youth called a rubber band, Goomey-bahnde.”

 

OPEN AND SHUT CASE

 

Bruce S. mentioned the book by Allan Bloom, The Closing of the  American  Mind: How Higher Education Has Failed Democracy  and  Impoverished the Souls of Today's Students.

 

His writing style  leaves a lot to be desired but the book is full of interesting analysis.

Referring back to the lynching discussion, I once read a legal case about a man who was convicted of his own lynching. Lynching has a different meaning in the field of criminal law. It has to do with the aiding of escape of a prisoner (if my memory is correct).

 

Suicide is usually illegal, isn’t it? So a failed lynching might get you in trouble, or as the devil said to Stanley Moon in Bedazzled, “In less enlightened times they’d have hung you for it.” I’ve never heard “lynch” used to mean aiding escape. I haven’t read the Bloom book but I will add it to my to-do list.

 

Bitter Homeschooler’s Wish List

 

Bill R. sent “The Bitter Homeschooler’s Wish List” by Deborah Markus from Secular Homeschooling Magazine. I don’t know why she’s so bitter; the items on her list call for nothing more than annoyance. But she makes a good point about distinguishing between “socializing” and “socialization”. I homeschooled my older son through grades 1 and 2, then he wanted to go to school so I sent him. Years later I got in the middle of a quarrel between a homeschooling parent and another friend who was getting an advanced teaching degree. Yes I think kids ought to toughen up to the outside world but yes I think it’s fine if you want a specialized education for them. I think both things at the same time. And I’m more disillusioned about the school system than I was when I was homeschooling, though for different reasons. I had a vague notion that the “system” was stifling to creativity, etc., but now I think it simply doesn’t teach as much as it did when I was in school.

 

RESPECTFULLY YOURS

 

Since I discovered KaraokePlay.com, the top songs have been removed. Don’t know why (but I do miss a great blues singer named Wa11ace whose version of “It’s a Man’s World” is as good or better than James Brown’s; look for Wa11ace, with numeral 11 instead of two el’s, elsewhere on the web). The site gave this caveat: “All songs listed are property of their respectful owners.” They may be, but the writer meant “respective”.

 

AU CONTRARIAN

 

G. K. Chesterton wrote in Saint Thomas Aquinas, “The Dumb Ox”:

 

[Aquinas] does emphatically believe that men can be convinced by argument; when they reach the end of the argument. Only his common sense also told him that the argument never ends....

            Are things so different that they can never be classified; or so unified that they can never be distinguished?

 

Hold this in your mind while I respond to Charlie M.’s reply to my question, why do some people object to the term islamofascism? He wrote, “Perhaps because it links two absolutely unrelated concepts?” I won’t attempt to define fascism; I will say what has to be repeated over and over again, this does not apply to all Muslims. However, many people do find certain acts and actors not absolutely unrelated, and capable of classification, yet people who have no trouble accusing the current administration of fascism cannot identify either fascism or Islam in actions all over the world in recent and remote history that are unified by the common element of Islamic or rather jihadist belief, even though both the actions and motivations trace back to Mohammed himself.

 

I know the arguments that say these familiar acts of terrorism or aggression are merely individual criminal acts, nothing on a big scale, or else that we deserve them, we provoked them, etc. But after 9/11, for the first time I started reading books outside my comfort zone ~ i.e. I questioned the authority of mainstream media. It hasn’t been an easy path. As reader Kathy T. wrote, “What is happening to the world today when a person feels they can't share their ideas even if others don't agree?” But it was difficult for me just within myself to entertain new and uncomfortable ideas.

 

On the flip side of the same coin, Dave DaBee, talking about a conservative friend who has turned hostile to him, wrote:

 

I clearly recall when the insanely nasty rants started with the use of talk radio in the 90s. Ultimately, the best man at my wedding ... became totally taken up with the talk-radio thinking that someone who has a different view can't possibly be a good thinker and is probably the source of America's problems and should be stomped.  Eventually he stopped believing in me. It was sad and weird to watch.

But as I say, all it will take is for all of us to just knock it off.  And one thing that seems to work, for me, is to keep having conversations like this, with more and more people.

 

I remember that my first reaction to talk radio was loathing. It all seemed to be angry, arrogant men, who were boring to boot. The successful programs do seem to be mainly conservative. But after sorting through quite a few of them I’ve found that some are quite good and informative. And they do not make up a monolithic body of opinion. Here’s my take on the two worst: I may occasionally agree with Michael Savage (nee Michael Weiner) but he’s a madman and obnoxious and indeed savage. The ur-talk show host, Rush Limbaugh, is likewise personally repellant to me. The two best (I listen to them on the web): Dennis Prager, a religious Jew, is well educated, reasonable, and respectful. Comedian Dennis Miller, funny and well-read in history (though he trips up in his vocabulary occasionally), is also respectful of those who differ with him.

 

Finally, here’s part of my admittedly selective reading list since 9/11 on islamofascism (though I know there is no end to the argument). I’ve organized them into subcategories for your convenience. (I do read other things too.)

 

Amusing writers and titles on a not-so-amusing subject:

 

America Alone

Mark Steyn

http://www.marksteyn.com/

Demographics, especially in Europe.

 

Radical Eye for the Infidel Guy

Kevin J. Ryan

 

Schmoozing With Terrorists: From Hollywood to the Holy Land, Jihadists Reveal Their Global Plans to a Jew!

Aaron Klein

 

By women:

 

Reading Lolita in Tehran

Azar Nafisi

The best seller.

 

Now They Call Me Infidel

Nonie Darwish

 

Because They Hate

Brigitte Gabriel

http://www.americancongressfortruth.com/

By a fiery Lebanese Christian now living in the U.S. who learned not to hate Jews.

 

Inside the Kingdom: My Life in Saudi Arabia

Carmen bin Laden

Formerly married to a bin Laden brother.

 

Londonistan

Melanie Phillips

www.melaniephillips.com/

 

The Trouble with Islam Today

Irshad Manji

www.muslim-refusenik.com/

By a Canadian journalist, a lesbian who still identifies as a Muslim.

 

Infidel and

The Caged Virgin

Ayaan Hirsi Ali

http://ayaanhirsiali.web-log.nl/ayaanhirsiali/english/index.html

By the Somali-born woman who became a member of the Dutch parliament, and made the film with Theo van Gogh’s (Vincent’s grandson) for which he was murdered.

 

The Death of Feminism

Phyllis Chesler

http://www.phyllis-chesler.com/

Why aren’t feminists more vocal about the abuses of women in Taliban-type cultures?

 

Scholarly:

 

The war of ideas: Jihad against democracy and

Future Jihad: terrorist strategies against America

Walid Phares

http://www.walidphares.com/

 

By former Muslims (as are some of the other authors):

 

Islam and the Jews

Mark A. Gabriel

http://www.markagabriel.org/

 

Why I Am Not a Muslim

Ibn Warraq

http://www.challenging-islam.org/articles/warraq-debate-muslims.htm

 

Why I Left Jihad

Walid Shoebat

http://www.shoebat.com/

 

My year inside radical Islam : a memoir

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross

http://counterterrorismblog.org/experts/daveed-gartensteinross/bio/

By an American who converted to Islam and then left it.

 

General:

 

The Truth About Mohammed and

The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam

Robert Spencer

http://www.jihadwatch.com/

 

Koran

I’ve only read bits of it. If you read it on paper or online, do remember the concept of abrogation, that is, the later Medina (wartime) passages officially override the earlier (more peaceful) Mecca passages, but the text is generally not presented in chronological order.

 

Interesting article by James Kirchick on the word “neocon”. We could make a list of every hot word used as political shorthand.

 

 

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Link here to look for books on Amazon.com!

Or click on underlined book links.

 

NEW SHOP: Scot Tartans. NEW STUFF AT Parvum Opus CafePress shop:

"Flash in the Pants";

"If you're so smart why aren't you me?";

"If you build it they won't come";

Rage Boy/Bat Boy: Can you spot the difference?;

Akron U. Alma Mater: The Lost Verse;

PWE (Protestant Work Ethic) tote bag;

"I am here" T-shirt;

"Someone went to Heaven and all I got was this lousy T-shirt";

"I eat dead things" doggy shirt and BBQ apron;

new kids’ things, mouse pad, teddy bear, stein, and more!

 

ELSEWHERE

Parvum Opus now appears http://cafelit.blogspot.com/. It is also carried by the Hur Herald, a web newspaper from Calhoun County, West Virginia. See Editor Bob Weaver's interview with me (February 10, 2007 entry), and the PO every week in Columns.

 

WHEN SONNY GETS BLUE! Check out the video clips of Sonny Robertson and the Howard Street Blues Band at http://www.sonnyrobertson.com/ and http://www.youtube.com/rondaria, with his new original song, "A Different Shade of Blue".

 

SEARCH IT OUT ON AMAZON : "It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honour of kings is to search out a matter." Proverbs 25:2; "Get wisdom! Even if it costs you everything, get understanding!" Proverbs 4:7:

 

The poet Muriel Rukeyser said the universe is not composed of atoms, but stories. The physicist Werner Heisenberg said the universe is not made of matter, but music.

 

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Parvum Opus is a publication of KeithOps / Opus Publishing Services. Back issues may be found at http://www.keithops.us/. Feel free to e-mail me with comments or queries. The PO mailing list is private, never given or sold to anyone else. If you don't want to receive Parvum Opus, please reply with "unsubscribe," "quit," "enough," or something like that in the subject line, and I'll take you off the mailing list. Copyright Rhonda Keith 2007. Parvum Opus or part of it may be reproduced only with permission, but you may forward the entire newsletter as long as the copyright remains.

 

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