Panda's Postings

My mom's family owned and operated the newspaper in Post, TX from 1957 until my grandfather passed away in 1981. Everyone in the family wrote for the paper, including my mom (Susan’s Stuff) and my grandpa Jim, whose column was named "Postings." I never knew my grandparents, but I’ve read the old Post Dispatch and seen the town library my grandmother founded. So in honor of them, I write my blog, Panda's Postings, and hope that it carries on in the spirit of their paper.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Yes on Prop 8 deciphering

The argument I keep hearing from Prop 8 supporters: If gay marriage is socially and legally accepted, churches will be forced to marry gay couples or risk losing their tax-exempt status.

Such an outcome seems contrary to current U.S. constitutional law, but the Yes people I know keep expressing their fear about a recent court case in which a Methodist church lost its tax exempt status because they refused to marry a gay couple.

It took a bit of searching to find this because someone told me the church was in Massachusetts, but here is the New Jersey court case in question, and Misty of the More Musings on Christianity, Homosexuality and the Bible blog does an excellent job of distilling the actual facts and findings of the case. Read it!

Turns out, the decision was about whether the property in question (a pavillion on a boardwalk) was a public facility, subject to anti-discrimination laws, or a religious organization.

"The investigation will need to determine whether Respondent is a religious organization, whether the OGCMA's overall use of the boardwalk pavilion constitutes religious activity and whether its pavilion rental is a religious activity."
The court decided that based on the use of the facility, the large amount of public funding the pavillion has received over the years, and other factors, that it was not a religious organization. So the facility (not a church) lost its tax-exempt status because it was determined that it was not functioning as a religious entity, NOT because they refused to marry a gay couple.

Sheesh.

I knew my gut was right, but it feels even better to know the facts!

The Morman and Catholic churches can marry whomever they want, but they shouldn't be deciding who other churches want to marry, or who the state marries. And this civil union business isn't the solution. Doesn't anyone remember the lessons of "separate but equal?"

And now this word from one of my favorite commentators of our time:

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Twitter Vote Report

...is neat! Check it out. Tweet your vote. Follow me and I'll follow you!

UPDATE: Not endorsing Topicana, but the Freshly Squeezed Tweets are pretty cool too!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Oxymoron

I was just checking out the website of the new Marketside stores opening up in Arizona and I came across this great line:

"Marketside is a small community grocery store owned by Wal-Mart Stores, Inc."
I like that: owned by Wal-Mart. Not Wal-Mart, just owned by them. We're just a li'l community grocery store fillin' in where we already put out of business all the truly small community grocery stores on our path to become the largest food retailer in the world.

Monday, September 08, 2008

CNN

I know better than to watch CNN and take it seriously, but every time I tune in, I am amazed by how ridiculous it really is.

A few days ago I turned on CNN just in time to see John King talking about the Magic Map and how McCain's campaign was hoping to target Wal-Mart Moms and Hockey Moms.

"Wal-Mart moms make less than $60,000 a year. Hockey moms are more affluent, suburban women."
You'd think it was John King who thought up the 2008 version of the stereotypical 1996 demographic descriptor--he seemed so pleased by the "cleverness" of his terminology. (As in '96, both terms can be traced to the GOP). But perhaps he was just excited by the map.

Even more annoying than the Palinization of Soccer Moms, was the use of a company name in a news broadcast that is not about that company. Did Wal-Mart pay CNN, Business Week or the McCain campaign to use the name? Not directly, I assume, but in this day and age, who knows.

According to a recent article in Business Week:
"Just who are Wal-Mart Women? They're not as well-off as average Americans: Some 41% of frequent Wal-Mart shoppers have incomes below $35,000, vs. 25% of the population at large. They're less educated than their neighbors: 31% of U.S. voters have a high school education or less, vs. 39% for Wal-Mart Women. Those characteristics set them apart from the firmly middle-class Soccer Moms so closely tracked in past elections."
CNN didn't even get their numbers right. Magic map and everything, the out of touch news personalities apparently think $59,000 a year makes someone low-income. Wouldn't all the people who work at Wal-Mart love to make that much money!

Monday, June 09, 2008

Looney Lunatics

I attended the National Conference on Media Reform over the weekend and had a great time. Hopefully, if I can get through the mounds of work that have piled up in my absence, I will get a chance to blog about it. But in the meantime, I just thought I would share this video with my friends so that they could understand where I was:



The whole thing is so ridiculous. O'Reilly taunted the NCMR on his show on Friday, and then his camera crew goaded conference attendees to make sure there was footage to manipulate for Monday's episode. I'm familiar with Fox's nickname Faux News, but it really hits home when you are at an event that receives such distorted coverage.

NCMR is uploading lots of footage from the conference over the next few days. Check out the videos...there's some really good stuff!

And since I don't have time to counter the Fox coverage, here are some great responses from Josh Silver of Free Press and Eric Deggans of the St. Petersburg Times.

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Obama

I'm excited to say I witnessed in person yesterday's historic announcement. Of course, my pictures are all far away and silly, but I thought I'd share anyway. Whatever political pessimism has kept me from being more active since the GW reelection has now officially faded--I'm looking forward to this campaign season.

This was the view from our original seats...


But then we wised up and moved here.


Yay, Barack!


Check out all the thousands of people...I've never heard a stadium cheer so loudly.


When he made the big announcement, everyone stood up....
Except for this woman.

:)

(Click to enlarge if you can't read her shirt)

Friday, April 04, 2008

Half a kudo to NRDC

Once upon a time, I gave money to the United Farm Workers and I signed a petition from the ACLU. Now I get at daily requests for money and/or signatures from a myriad of cause-driven organizations.

Anyone who has made the bleeding heart mailing list as I have, knows that most organizations can't seemed to figure out how to create a petition that fits into the return envelope in a reasonable manner. I usually end up sending in a document folded 6 times that might as well be a crumpled little ball.

But today, for the first time ever, I received a petition from NRDC that actually fits inside the return envelope. I'm tempted to send a donation with my signature this time--especially if I could guarantee the money would go to the competent person who figured out how to measure.

So kudos to NRDC. But only half a kudo, because they still send me way to much junk mail to be "environmental." (And yes, I've been trying to contact all the interest groups who send me mail to ask to be taken off their list, but a reduction in mail has yet to become a reality.)

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Media Justice

Last weekend, I participated in a Common Cause conference that asked the question, "Is the Media Undermining our Democracy." I loved Brad Friedman's response below.



In general, the conference covered many of the issues I care about and have thought about before, but as I prepared for my session on Using Web 2.0 to Get Your Message Out, I was reminded of some sobering facts:

On Broadband Speed

  • Median real-time download speed in the U.S.: 1.9 megabits per second (mbps)
  • Average download speeds in Japan:61 mbps
  • Average download speeds in South Korea: 45 mbps
  • Average download speeds in France: 17 mbps
  • Average download speeds in Canada: 7 mbps.
  • More info: http://www.speedmatters.org/
On Access to Broadband
  • 22 out of 100 of Americans have broadband subscriptions, ranking the U.S. at 15th among industrialized nations
  • America ranks 5th among industrialized nations for the most expensive broadband
  • More info: OECD Broadband Portal
On What Americans do on the Internet
  • Check out these statistics. Sure, 75% of Americans use the internet everyday, but only 16% use it to access information about politics, just 9% log in to the very social network sites I talked about in my session, and only 7% read blogs.
So does the concept of Web 2.0 have value? Absolutely. But is it truly cutting through the b.s. put out by mainstream news sources? Not for the majority of the population.

We have a long way to go. In the meantime, let's do what we can to advocate for net neutrality, because if we don't stay on top of that, it won't matter who has access.

Monday, March 03, 2008

14 hours at Disneyland

Maybe it’s hypocritical to like Disneyland, given the problems I have with the Disney corporation, but I prefer to think of it as a shades-of-gray issue. The craftsmanship and imagination that went into the old attractions (and a couple of the newish ones) is well beyond your average theme park. I spent 14 hours at the “happiest place on earth” yesterday, and it was a very happy day indeed.

15+ Attractions that I loved. Among the best: Pirates of the Caribbean, Haunted Mansion, Tiki Room, Mark Twain, Thunder Mountain, Space Mountain, Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride, Peter Pan, Sleeping Beauty, Indiana Jones, A Bug’s Life, Storybook Land.

1 very low score on in the Astro Blasters ride. Jessica is a far more talented blaster. See pic.

2 Attractions that I did not enjoy: Star Tours and Soarin’ Over California (I feel sick just thinking about it).

5 food stops: Bengal BBQ (pictures coming soon), Pineapple Whip from the Tiki Room, French Onion soup and Monte Cristo sandwich "in" New Orleans, steamed milk around 10:30 (recharge!) and a peanut and caramel apple to go.

2 gift shop purchases: 1955 commemorative mugs for me and Jessica, and a Shag print of New Orleans Square.

1 Tinker Bell pin that the operator of Sleeping Beauty gave me as part of Disneyland's Year of a Million Dreams.

1 annoying conversation with a cheerleader mom about how I should pray for her daughter's team to win the junior national cheerleading competition that was being held at California Adventure that day. At the time, I just smiled and nodded. But I thought about it later and realized that, at the risk of offending this woman, I didn't stand up for my beliefs. I let her talk to me about God, and I didn't have the guts to tell her how I felt about cheerleading.

I'm still not sure what I would say if I could do it over again, but it was one of those moments where I realized that there is a difference between being polite (I could have expressed my disagreement politely) and being complicit. We saw girls from that squad and others in the park throughout the day and were just amazed at how grown up, and well, for lack of a better term, hot, they looked. Middle school! On that note, I've heard this film is good. Going to see if I can rustle up a copy somehow...