The Christian Coalition is Going Downhill

I try to keep myself subscribed to a wide variety of right wing mailing lists to see what they’re all up to (the left wing mailing lists tend to tell me what I already know).

I’m afraid the Christian Coalition is really going downhill. Here’s their latest missive:


Your Everyday Spending Will Substantially Help The Christian Coalition At No Cost To You !!!!

Dear Christian,

We gratefully appreciate your support, and would like to introduce you to a very powerful program, called SharingCertificates. We have partnered with SharingCertificates.com, which allows you to purchase gift certificates to hundreds of stores, theaters, restaurants, hotels and more, that we all shop at everyday.

You simply purchase gift certificates to your favorite stores, like Macy’s, T.J.Maxx, The Gap, Red Lobster, Olive Garden, Marriott Hotels, to name a few. Each gift certificate you purchase will bring a generous donation to the Christian Coalition.

We realize there are many of you who would like to help, but do not have the resources to send a gift monthly, but we all shop, go to restaurants, stay at hotels, etc..The SharingCertificates program was developed to enable us to support God’s work at NO COST to you. Giving Through Spending – AT NO COST TO YOU !!!!!!!!

It’s Just Good Stewardship

The SharingCertificates Program takes just a few minutes of your time monthly. You simply log on to www.sharingcertificates.com., go to the merchant list, find the merchants you normally use or intend to use, then purchase them immediately online. IT’S THAT EASY!!!!!!!!

On average, families typically commit to purchase $200/$300 monthly. While some will do less, many can do much more. We ask that you prayerfully consider supporting His work for the Family with a monthly commitment to the SharingCertificates Program.

Your participation in the SharingCertificates program will provide the Christian Coalition with additional funds that will make us far more effective in the culture war, returning this great country to the family values that we hold so dear. Thank you for your consideration.

In His Service,

Roberta Combs

President The Christian Coalition

—————————————————————————————

To unsubscribe from receiving these emails, simply reply to this message and ask to be removed

More on Genetically Modified Foods

More on the question of whether there is scentific evidence against genetically modified foods.

Hot Potato: Don’t Worry, It Is Safe To Eat—The True Story Of GM Food, BSE, And Foot And Mouth by Andrew Rowell documents the blacklisting of Dr. Arpad Pusztai. In 1997, Dr. Pusztai performed an experiment where rats ingested genetically modified potatoes. Unexpectedly, the rats ended up with smaller livers, hearts, and brains, as well as weakened immune systems. Bill Clinton phoned Tony Blair, who ultimately arranged to stop the research and break up the research team. Ultimately, Dr. Pusztai’s research was published in the British science publication The Lancet, but was widely attacked in the press. No one has attempted to repeat Dr. Pusztai’s experiment to this day.

It all sounds like a bit of a conspiracy theory, but I haven’t found any evidence to discredit the accounting of facts given above. Read the longer version and decide for yourself.

Genetically Modified Foods and the Precautionary Principle

Professor Lawrence Solum, visiting law professor at the University of San Diego and maintainer of the Legal Theory Blog, mischaracterizes the precautionary principle, responding to Stephen Laniel’s critique of Prof. Solum’s original post on genetically modified foods.

Prof. Solum’s original post suggested that perhaps we should prefer natural foods over genetically modified ones for aesthetic reasons. He also says:

Now, I am not an expert, but after reading several articles and two books on the subject, I became convinced that most of the health and safety arguments against GM foods were without scientific support.

Steve responded:

How about the law of unintended consequences, namely that the unintended consequences of a policy often overwhelm the intended consequences? Combine this with the fact that theres no shortage of food in the world, and we just arent allocating it correctly (and that the U.S. government continues to pay farmers to leave parts of their fields fallow), and basically the question becomes: Why should I invest in this uncertain proposition (GMOs), when the one Im familiar with (unmodified food) seems to do the trick just fine? As far as I understand it, GMOs dont even address any need, in the same way that grafting new roots onto grapes to make them hardier, or other such human interventions do. So the positive consequences of changing to GMOs seem small, and the potential negative consequences are unknown.

Finally, Prof. Solum characterized Steve’s argument:

Laniel’s argument seems to be that GMO’s are risky, but this really isn’t an argument at all.

He goes on to talk about the precautionary principle, following a definition from BioTech InfoNet:

In this form, the precautionary principle can easily swallow itself. The precautionary principle is itself a new method for making social policy that will effect the rate of technological innovation in ways that cannot be predicted. The precautionary principel might lead to disastorous consequences, delaying the introduction of new technologies that would prevent environmental disastors (such as global warming or depletion of the ozone layer) because they could not be proven safe “beyond reasonable doubt.” Can the precautionary principle itself be shown to be safe “beyond reasonable doubt”? Obviously not.

Clearly, this is a straw man argument. (Have you ever noticed that the attack—”this is a straw man argument”—can, itself, be a straw man argument?) Prof. Solum, perhaps understandably, focuses in on the standard of proof proferred in the definition, and thus reads the definition as self-defeating. In fact, the crucial issue is not so much the standard of proof, but rather the burden of proof (discussed more below).

Part of the problem here is that Prof. Solum has used the definition that comes up first in a Google search, which may be a reasonable technique, but is also likely to miss some subtleties. For the record, I prefer this definition, which appeared in Rachel’s Environment & Health Weekly, an excellent publication that provides extensive factual support for its claims. I also think the BioTech InfoNet definition did not intend “beyond a reasonable doubt” literally—it was simply part of an extended analogy to the presumption of innocence in the criminal justice system.

The precautionary principle, as I understand it, applies most strongly to those circumstances where it is very hard to put the genie back in the bottle, and where we don’t yet have sufficient information to make an informed risk assessment. This is precisely the issue with genetically modified organisms. Since they have been released into the natural environment, it will be practically impossible to get rid of them if they prove to have undesirable consequences. The precautionary principle would demand far more extensive “laboratory” testing before turning the entire ecosystem into a laboratory, especially since the primary benefit of the technology is only increased profits to large agricultural conglomerates (and obviously to the biotechnology companies themselves). The Panos Institute report, Food For All, demonstrates why political factors are the primary obstacle to world hunger, and why biotechnology is unlikely to improve the situation, and may even exacerbate it.

The problem of unintended consequences is particularly acute with ecological systems. We’ve seen time and time again that disrupting one element in the food chain can have disasterous results for many species, including ourselves. The introduction of rabbits into Australia is one common example. Thomas Austin introduced 24 wild rabbits into Australia in 1859, and by 1869 it is estimated that over two million rabbits had been destroyed on Austin’s property alone. Rabbits continue to be a major problem in Australia to this day.

The Precautionary Principle in Environmental Science (PDF), a commentary by several academics, set out these key elements of the precautionary principle:

  • Taking preventive action in the face of uncertainy
  • Shifting the burden of proof to the proponents of an activity
  • Exploring a wide range of alternatives to possible harmful actions
  • Increasing public participation in decision making

Obviously, it would be possible to adopt these principles without totally paralyzing all innovation. There may be close cases, particularly in the medical arena (a cancer cure, for example, with potentially unknown side effects). But the issue of genetically modified organisms is not one of those cases.

While it’s quite unlikely that genetically modified foods are going to turn any of us who eat them into mutants (I can say this as someone who spent several years splicing genes in the laboratory), the possibility for ecosystem disruption is quite high, or at least quite unknowable at this point. Rather than proceeding with careful controlled testing, we’ve released this organisms into the wild (to some degree, the ease with which GMO’s have been introduced into the ecosystem is the result of regulatory confusion between the EPA, USDA, and FDA).

It is not as if legitimate warnings have not been raised. There have already been several cases of cross-contamination, e.g., with StarLink Corn. An article in the prestigious science journal Nature raised concerns about butterfly mortality from B.t. corn. Certain GMO’s, which produce their own pesticides, are likely to reduce the effectiveness of traditional pesticides (because of increased resistance in the pest population), requiring all farmers to use GMO seeds in order to thwart the newly resistant pests. Since the seeds are patented, this forces farmers to acquire their seeds from a single source (which is bad for a number of reasons). There is also the possibility that modified genes will be transferred to other species. A common GMO (Monsanto’s Roundup Ready Soybeans) is engineered to be herbicide resistant so the crop can be sprayed with a herbicide that will kill everything except the soybeans. What if this herbicide resistance gene is transferred to the weeds themselves? This sort of gene transfer is common between plant species. This article provides many more examples of potential GM risks.

Given these risks, the relative novelty of the technology, and the lack of demonstrable widespread benefit, wouldn’t it make sense to shift the burden of proof to the proponents of genetically modified organisms before deploying them more widely?

Neuros Audio

Although I’m usually not one to make commercial pitches in this space (links to Powell’s Books and CD Baby in the sidebar notwithstanding), I do want to put in a good word for Neuros Audio.

The Neuros Audio player is one of the newer entrants into the increasingly crowded portable digital music player field. Although their players have a number of spiffy features (including FM broadcasting and recording), they really stand out from this crowd because of their support of open source/free software. They have set up open.neurosaudio.com, a site for community software development and related discussion, run by Emmett Plant, former CEO of the xiph.org foundation, someone I trust to preserve the free software spirit. They are releasing beta firmware for the ogg codec presently, and xiph has just released positron, a free software command line interface to the device.

They’ve even put forth a social contract. Although the document may leave something to be desired, it does manifest a fundamentally different approach to this stuff than the other big players.

The community might take pause at their position on patents:

DI maintains a portfolio of patents on its devices. These patents are an important defense against larger well-funded competitors in the consumer electronics space, but they will never be enforced against the Open Source community or other independent software developers. We hope to show the technology community at large that there is a difference between legitimate use of a patent on a hardware device, and patent abuse. We hope the Open Source community will understand our position, and continue to work with us to bring Open Source and Free Software to the technology industry.

At least they don’t see patents as an unmitigated good, and perhaps are the “least bad” option in this respect. I wonder how binding is their promise to never enforce patents against the Open Source comunnity. It’s a nice gesture, anyway.

So I just ordered the Neuros 128MB (all I could afford, and not even that). Right now there’s a fairly decent discount for the Open Source community (or anyone who goes to that page) which lasts until Thursday, and free shipping until the end of the week.

I’ll report back how it works out.

For the Record

Orin Hatch, the Utah Senator who crusaded against virtual child pornography, recently linked a porn site from his official webpage. Since it’s been removed from the site, I thought I’d preserve it for the record (Google Cache) here. Just click on “My Utah Search” (and cover your eyes).

I wonder how this happened. Was no one checking the links off of Sen. Hatch’s homepage?

Hatch has come under some fire recently for proposing a “kill switch” on computers to disable alleged copyright infringers.

Structured Procrastination

I’ve been engaging in a lot of structured procrastination lately. Many things pressing, but instead I released salonify as a Debian package; I hope to get it into the main distribution some day.

This blog entry is basically an excuse to refer you all to the “structure procrastination” essay. I recommend it highly.

Defend Palestine Announcement

The following posting was sent to my school-wide email list, and originally appeared here, on the New England Committee to Defend Palestine email announcement list. I discuss the fallout here.

DEFEND PALESTINE!
Protest the “Boston Celebrates Israel” Festival
Sunday, June 15
Gather at 11 AM – Old Northern Ave. Bridge, Boston

(Atlantic Ave. between Rowe’s Wharf and South Station, by the James Hook Lobster Co.) for a March to the World Trade Center

The protest of “Boston Celebrates Israel” on June 15 represents the third straight year that activists will confront the Zionists on their day of celebration. We demonstrated against Israel Day in 2001 in Brookline. We marched and rallied right next to the Zionists on the Boston Common last year. This year, these celebrants of racism, murder, colonialism, oppression, and genocide have been driven inside, and we will take our protest to their venue at the World Trade Center on the South Boston waterfront.

We protest because Israel has maintained its murderous occupation of Palestine for more than half a century, devastating the Palestinian people. Israeli “independence” has meant misery and deprivation for the indigenous Palestinians whose land was stolen to create the Israeli state.

We are outraged that this public celebration should take place in Boston. We protest the Israeli state, the U.S. government that backs, arms, and controls it to safeguard the profits of the U.S. oil companies, and the violent military occupation of Palestine.

End the occupation of Palestine!
End all U.S. aid to Israel – military, economic, and political!
Human rights for all Palestinians – including the right to resist and the right to return!

Sponsored by the New England Committee to Defend Palestine
www.onepalestine.org
necdp@onepalestine.org

More Speech Wars

A student recently posted this announcement to the school-wide email list, asking students to join in protesting the annual “Boston Celebrates Israel” event (for Palestinian rights issues). A series of angry responses ensued. One person called for a “unified response” from the Jewish Law Students Association, and another called the message “hate speech” that “shouldn’t be tolerated by our community or administration.” A similar “flame war” already occurred on this same topic on this same list last year.

I wrote the following response to the Jewish Law Students list. It has been edited slightly to remove the identities of the poster of the original message as well as a pro-Israel professor. I am sure these sorts of incidents are being played out all over the country, and many people in the academy have not come to terms with the information environment that results from the ease of reaching a wide audience with a mass email.


I’ve steered clear of this whole discussion, but I am uneasy about the prospect of a “uniform response” from JLSA et al. I could not sign on to any statement condemning this person’s postings, and a unified statement coming from JLSA criticizing this speech would seem, to me, to be misrepresentative of the views of many Jews I know at NUSL.

I consider myself a Zionist. I have lived in Beer Sheva, and have relatives in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. My father taught at Ben-Gurion University. Like almost any Jew, members of my family perished in the Holocaust. Yet if I had to chose between the positions staked out in e.g., some of Prof. X’s postings and this person’s, I would have to pick the latter, although I won’t go into detail since that’s not the point of this message. (Of course I fully support Prof. X expressing his viewpoint in the ways he does).

It’s quite dangerous (and in my mind, inaccurate) to brand these positngs at hate speech. Even the pseudonymous “John Faggart” postings (attacking same sex marriage rights, etc.) of the last two years are only questionably hate speech. Just because you find speech deeply offensive does not make it hate speech. If we define hate speech based on the subjective effect on the listener, and then sanction such speech, we live in a very limited speech environment indeed.

The rherotic in this person’s emails is quite similar to that targetted against any number of institutions that are viewed as oppressive by some—e.g., the World Bank/IMF, South Africa, the United States, George W. Bush. When these institutions are attacked, it is common to “personalize” the attack—”George W. Bush, how many Iraqi children have you killed today?” In fact, if you look at Supreme Court First Amendment jurisprudence, I suggest that you’ll find this person’s postings would easily fall within speech that warrants the highest level of protection—core political speech.

Just by contrast, I would consider it hate speech for someone to draw Swastikas on lockers of Jews (or anyone); to send out an email: “Jews have no place at NUSL. They are dirty pigs and should be put in gas chambers.” (or substitute Zionists for Jews); or, as is far more common: “Niggers, go back to Africa.”; or, a burning cross in the courtyard (see Virginia v. Black). Many of us would agree that none of speech should be protected. If you compare these examples to this person’s postings, I think you’ll find they come up woefully short of speech that should be punished.

Although NUSL may not be a State Actor and thus directly constrained by the First Amendment, the Academy has traditionally afforded speech greater protection than that provide by the Constitution. Note also 20 USC 1011a:

“It is the sense of Congress that no student attending an institution of higher education on a full- or part-time basis should, on the basis of participation in protected speech or protected association, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination or official sanction under any education program, activity, or division of the institution directly or indirectly receiving financial assistance under this chapter, whether or not such program, activity, or division is sponsored or officially sanctioned by the institution.”

Note also that other States do apply First Amendment-type protections against private actors. For example, the Leonard Law in California bars non-religious private colleges and universities from disciplining students for speech unless the government could prohibit the same speech.

I strongly oppose any request by JLSA for the administration to sanction this person’s postings, and I also believe that such a sanction may be illegal.

Jeremy Glick on the O’Reilly Factor

A while back, the son of a victim of the World Trade Center attack went on the O’Reilly Factor (see also oreilly-sucks.com) to speak against military action.

This transcript is an interesting reflection of the quality of discourse in American society. According to Harper’s Magazine, O’Reilly threatend to tear Glick to pieces after the cameras were turned off.

The Christian Coalition

I subscribe to a fair number of right wing mailing lists, for the most part to keep tabs on these organizations.

The funniest emails come from the Christian Coalition, which has clearly gone down hill since Pat Robertson left its helm. Half the messages I receive are spam for telecommunications services that give a kickback to the organization.

Today’s missive got to me, though. It purports to be a “survey” of Coalition members, with the following questions:

  1. Do you believe that Islam is a divine religion?
  2. How much do you know about the Koran?
  3. Do Christians in Islamic countries have the same freedom Muslims have in America?
  4. Is Islam a religion of peace?
  5. Do you support a war with Iraq?

Although there’s much to criticize in this survey, the question that bothers me the most is #3. First, because it seems to assume that the United States is a “Christian” country, without straight out saying so. Obviously, this would be the Christian Coalition’s preference. But it sure makes me feel left out. It also just seems like such an inapposite comparison. It might be better to ask whether Muslims in Islamic countries have the same freedom Muslims have in America. Or maybe Christians in Islamic countries vs. black men in America. Or maybe it’s just a dumb question, period.

More importantly, though, is the religious warmongering behind all of it. I suppose if Pope Urban II were alive today and needed to initiate the Crusades, he would probably circulate a survey along these lines rather than preaching an inflammatory sermon.