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A Dawn Patrol entry is featured in The Best Catholic Writing 2007.

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Portrait above by Matthew Alderman of Shrine of the Holy Whapping. Click on the artwork for a larger version.

Logo at right by Valerie of Kyriosity.

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The exploits of Dawn Eden
 
Tuesday, November 30, 2004
God Is My Co-Pilot


Many thanks to everyone who responded to the "Swiss Patrol" call for comments (see below). (If I accidentally left out your response, please let me know—I received several and it's possible one might have accidentally fallen through the cracks.) I enjoyed reading what everyone had to say and liked the points very much. Soon I hope to put them all on a separate page, so that anyone looking for insight on chastity and abstinence can link to them. Andreas, who asked the question which sparked the responses, has written to say he'll reply to them tomorrow.

Above, you can see me at around midnight last night, sleepy but exhilarated, having just enjoyed simulated flight. A friend of mine who programs flight simulators is in town and took me for a "ride" after I got out of work late yesterday evening. It was an amazing experience to sit in the cockpit as 3-D satellite photos combined with sound and hydraulic-powered motions to give the impression of flight. I particularly liked the wimpoid, Data-like voice which would freak out when we were perilously close to a tall building, calling out in increasingly agitated tones: "Obstacle! Obstacle! Pull up! PULL UP!

Lately I've been blessed with exciting experiences, as well as friends and family going out of their way to make me feel cared for and loved. It's especially wonderful to have such experiences this time of year, as I'm vulnerable to loneliness and self-pity around the holidays. It's almost as if God's saying that, while He's not yet sending me my beshert, He wants me to recognize and enjoy His blessings as much as possible while I'm waiting.

8:35 PM  |

The Swiss Patrol—Continued

More reader responses to Andreas Gossweiler, who wrote, "I'd
really like to know why some Americans praise chastity and abstinence." (Earlier responses are in Sunday's entry "The Swiss Patrol.") Andreas plans to reply to the responses tomorrow.


Mom (see bio linked at left) writes:

Yes, I do want to answer that very sweet Swiss gentleman, who was kind enough to ask a question, instead of just hurling an insult, as do so many who disagree with our sexual mores.

Trust me, Sir. Many many of us have tried it your way. It really doesn't work. What has your "sexually emancipated" nation and others like it really learned about intimacy, partnership, commitment, fidelity, all the glorious character traits that really make a strong nation? What have children learned about parents who STAY? What have young women learned about men who honor them, cherish them, and treasure them, just because they saved their most intimate expression of love for one man? How many Swiss girls' hearts are broken every moment of the day, because they buy the idea that there is no difference between the sexes, and that they really can feel nothing but a pleasant friendship (at best) with the man with whom they were "doing the what-comes-naturally" the night before? How can they explain away the pain and mistrust that tears away a piece of their soul with every lost liaison?

Even in your movies, my Swiss friend, your people still sit with tears and the spark of a memory of beautiful love, the love of so many of their forefathers and foremothers. Sure, you can cite exceptions, but there was a main line of happy families who stayed together and who trusted that Mom, Dad, husband or wife, would be there to the end, "for better or worse". Even in Switzerland, a man or woman still becomes angry, sometimes murderous, when the beloved cheats with another partner. Why do you think that is? Because we still hold love and marriage to high standards.

What is "natural" means what is in nature means what the animals do. We humans are endowed with souls, feelings, character, visions and dreams. We are not condemned to do what is natural. We have been given the grace to be SUPER-natural. What a gift!

With sisterly love from Rachel-Rose, Dawn Eden's Mom.
Air
Force Capt. Steven Givler writes from Baghdad:
For Andreas, who considers the natural-ness of something and its reservation for higher purposes mutually exclusive:

We praise chastity and abstinence because by doing so we recognize the special nature of sex. We recognize that sex is a gift God gives us, which increases intimacy between people whose union He has ordained. (In addition to creating children, which Richard Stuart has already addressed.)

Of course sex is a "natural" act, as are murder and bowel movements. In failing to value chastity and abstinence, people devalue sex, and place it in the same category as those other acts. What a loss—to miss the special significance of this wonderful gift, and to see it as nothing more than a response to stimuli.

That's the best I can come up with between rocket attacks here. Is it cold in NYC yet? [It's getting there, but no snow yet, thankfully.—Ed.
Roman Catholic seminarian Dennis Schenkel of Vita Mea has posted his response on his blog. He makes the important point that sex between a man and a woman is not something merely animal, but something sacred—hence the need to keep it free from a profane context:
Consider this: No Christian would go into the church building thinking, "Hmm... I'm a little hungry... I'd like a snack... I'll bet the Blessed Sacrament in the tabernacle would be tasty with a little salsa..." That would be blasphemous even to think such a thing, much less to actually do it. In the same way, Christians hold sex to be so sacred that, far from suppressing it, they cherish it and reserve it for only the most intimate of covenant relationships, namely, marriage.
Eric Slate writes:
Not only many Europeans, but many Americans have this strange view that chastity is somehow anti-sex, when it's actually how christianity fulfills sex. Basically, this stems from a misconception about what chastity is and does.

The liberal's view of chastity seems to include self-hate, fear, guilt, or some other kind of negative emotions. None of these are the case for various reasons. Guilt is brought about by the conscience reacting to perceived sin. Chastity exists to remove this sin from the act of sex. Fear of sinning needs not worry you if you plan on having chaste sex. Self-hate probably refers to some kind of loathing caused by a sinful life. For a real Christian, there is authentic healing from this, but it requires a life-amending effort.

The problem of course, is that many such people who don't like chastity really don't want to hear out its restrictions. After all, who has the right to tell me how to have sex? Well, since God made sex (along with the rest of creation), it's fitting that those who strive to serve him have the inside scoop as to the morality.

At its core, chastity is a set of rules designed to make sure that sin is removed from that act, leaving only the pure and good parts that God intended us to enjoy. If we follow these rules, not only do we not have to worry about sin ruining our relationships, but we're free from the guilt, fear, and self-hate associated with it as well.
Tag Evers writes:
As has been mentioned, sex is procreative. Its primary purpose is perpetuating the human race by having children. Contraception, technical means for avoiding children while having sex, has become much more common in the last 50 years, ushering in the era of free sex.

But sex outside of marriage is never free. Someone always pays. This is because sex involves more than making babies. In addition to being procreative, sex is also unitive, allowing for the recreation of the marriage bonds in the deep physical and
spiritual union of husband and wife. Scripture teaches us that sex creates a union, where two become one.

This is not merely an ideal, something to be strived for, but a fact. Sex involves deep intimacy and vulnerability. Every act of sex is a giving away of a part of ourselves. A part of another person becomes a part of us, as sex involves mutuality. If we do this with strangers, or with someone whom we know only casually, we lose a part of ourselves. Pieces of us are missing, and the parts we take on from others don't fit properly.

Sex is never casual. Scripture teaches us that sex is a wonderful gift from God, and nothing God gives is casual. It's deep stuff, this gift of sex, and because it's so deep, sexual hurt is never shallow. The greatest pain many of us have ever
experienced is the pain of a broken heart. When we bond physically without the protection of a life-long commitment, we may necessarily steel ourselves against emotional bonding, resisting the desire to let that someone touch the deepest part of ourselves. We tell ourselves and each other "this doesn't mean anything." But it does. It always does. Someone invariably gets hurt. It's because we are wired to want someone to love us for who we are, someone to hold us in our nakedness and never abandon us, someone with whom we can face any eventuality, including the blessing of new life.

But our postmodern world often doesn't regard new life as a blessing. Interestingly, the early days of the abortion-rights movement had strong financial support from the Playboy Foundation. [This is true; it's also public record that Playboy financed SIECUS.—Ed.] Why? Because using a woman as an apparatus for pleasure is perfectly consonant with having her vacuumed, sucked clean of any consequence, and then discarded in favor of the next plaything. Objectification never allows for community, never allows for responsibility, never allows for anything other than the selfish pursuit of pleasure.

Apart from an unwanted pregnancy, we risk another biological possibility with a laissez-faire approach to sex, and that's disease. Twelve million people contract a venereal disease every year in America alone. AIDS is decimating Africa and Asia. Barrier methods are not foolproof. Saving sex for, and confining sex to, marriage greatly reduces the risk of having a lifelong relationship with an unwanted virus.

Sex has the potential to open us up in the most human of ways, and yet, outside of the care and commitment of marriage, we are often left empty. For many, this emptiness persists, and sex then becomes a means for trying to fill that hole. As an
anodyne, sex is more powerful than any drug, and virulent addiction can be the result. The explosion of Internet porn speaks to this epidemic.

Does sex outside of marriage lead to closeness, care and commitment? In other words, does it lead to love? What is love? To love someone is to care for that person's highest good. Loving one another honestly and selflessly is the essence of God's law regarding sex. Thomas Aquinas defined sin as "an inordinate affection for a mutable good." Sex can be a good thing, but it is a mutable good, a contingent good, one that has context. That context, "for better or for worse, in sickness and in health, for richer or for poorer, as long as you both shall live," was devised for our protection.

Another definition of sin can be found in the writings of Reinhold Niebuhr. In The Nature and Destiny of Man, Vol. 1, he makes the claim that "all human life is involved in the sin of seeking security at the expense of other life." This living of life at the expense of life is at the heart of what the Bible calls sin. Marriage is the safe harbor for sexual intimacy because it places a primacy on mutuality and militates against the ripping-one-another-off that passes as love in this postmodern age.
Brett Taylor of Saint Kansas (a highly recommended site, but not for those shy of strong language) writes:
Andreas would "really like to know why some Americans praise chastity and abstinence. Most Europeans think
of sexuality as something natural, not as something that should be suppressed."

What I'd really like to know is, seeing as European marriage and birth rates are declining and Muslim immigration increasing rapidly, how long will Andreas consider his view as that of "most Europeans?"
Kevin Kane writes:
Andreas' point about sexuality being natural is true, but does anyone really claim otherwise? Many things are natural - eating, sleeping, going to the bathroom - but all societies have norms that regulate when and where these activities take place. This is not suppression, but the recognition that civilized society cannot function unless we control and regulate our natural urges. Most Americans believe that we were created by a God who has given us certain guidelines to live by. Of course if Andreas does not believe in God the moral argument in favor of chastity and abstinence may not mean anything to him, but it does resonate with most Americans.

For those who reject the moral argument, there is the utilitarian argument that a society failing to put limits on sexual behavior does itself great harm in the long run. Yes, one can argue that the freedom to sleep with who you want, when you want is loads of fun. But the greatest social disaster in the country over the past forty years has been the staggering increase in out-of-wedlock births. This problem is at the root of nearly every major social problem, and a society with no prejudice against promiscuous behavior will inevitably end up with lots of children who lack two committed parents and lots of busy abortionists.

Would Andreas like to argue in favor of this development? Maybe he'd argue that more birth control would prevent these problems. But if the Swiss birthrate is like the rest of Western Europe he doesn't have much of a case. In fact, he might want to start debating this issue with the Muslims who are populating Europe at such a staggering rate. Their views of Planned Parenthood will make Dawn's "attacks" seem quaint.

Finally, does Andreas believe that the society with a more casual attitude towards sex have a better sense of its importance than the society that restricts sexual behavior? Does a man who spends his paycheck the day he gets it understand the value of money better than the man who saves or invests it?

5:00 PM  |

To everyone who responded to yesterday's "Swiss Patrol" entry: I'll be putting up all the remaining responses this afternoon. Couldn't put them up last night, as I got caught up yesterday in an exciting, unexpected visit to a flight simulator (photo to come).
3:22 AM  |

Planned Parenthood Has Teens Waiting to Exhale

What would you say if I told you that Planned Parenthood has devised a means to put teenagers into an altered and ultra-receptive state of consciousness? And that they put the youths into that state as part of a seminar led by a lesbian on making sexual choices—encouraging them to "become conscious of energy throughout the body"?

Yup, Margaret Sanger's bunch is at it again, getting 'em while they're young—and this time, they're using wacky New Age mind control.

Dr. Judy Kuriansky's latest New York Daily News column describes the workshops she's pilot-tested with Planned Parenthood teen groups in metropolitan New Jersey and in Nassau County, N.Y., with two of the organization's sexuality educators, Heather Simonson and Danielle Varney. Varney, as Kuriansky has written before, is an out-and-proud lesbian.

Kuriansky writes:

One of my current efforts to help young people resist dangerous behavior is to help them learn to control their energy. I do this in a unique workshop I developed that combines Eastern and Western therapy techniques to help kids increase self-esteem and feel control over their lives. The techniques use breathing exercises to build up energy and then go into a meditative state, to become conscious of energy throughout the body and the difference between acting out and being in control.
In other words, the children are being led into a state between sleep and wakefulness, where their subconscious minds can be more easily manipulated by the good doctor and her sapphic sidekick. All in the name of teaching them how to be in "control"—whatever that means. It's positively mind-boggling to see the lengths to which Planned Parenthood will go to avoid instructing teenagers in any degree of continence, let alone abstinence.
Another exercise involves becoming aware of the ability to choose and making decisions about sex and other matters with awareness of the consequences. Other exercises include experiencing trust of others and oneself (by being led around while blindfolded) and listening techniques for more compassionate communication.
Yes, you read right: Planned Parenthood is teaching teenage girls to let teenage boys blindfold them and lead them around. I didn't have the guts to let a guy do that to me until I was 27! And it sure as heck didn't improve my sexual decision-making.

Kuriansky observes a difference between the boys' and girls' preferred activities:
The males in the groups particularly like the meditation exercises, while the females prefer the communication and interactive exercises.
Of course the teenage boys preferred the meditation—it gave them the opportunity to peek through lidded eyes at the teenage girls as they heaved their chests up and down during the breathing exercises.
The results are promising: that the teens feel better about themselves in general and more in control of making wise decisions about sex.
There's a world of difference between feeling "in control" of "making wise decisions" and being mentally equipped to make those decisions. Like the rest of Planned Parenthood's Clintonian sex-ed programs for teens, this breath-exercise program makes sense only if you inhale.

2:31 AM  |

Monday, November 29, 2004





Watch the "Swiss Patrol" post below for the many great reader responses that I'll be posting today, in the wake of a European's question about why Americans care about chastity and abstinence. I have several responses waiting to go up, including ones from religion writer Mark Kellner, Air Force Captain Steven Givler, bona fide European Wolf N. Paul, and Mom.

The photo at right is by Duncan Maxwell Anderson, taken November 17 when I saw him and his wife at a party at Slainte. See, it's not just a self-imposed nickname; I really
am a petite powerhouse.




3:40 PM  |

Planned Parenthood's Thanksgiving Turkey

Margaret Sanger's organization used the Thanksgiving holiday to kick off its latest action campaign: "Thank You Planned Parenthood!"

Apparently, all the opposition PP receives is taking a toll on its employees. So the organization's fighting back with a blatant solicitation for gratitude:

So during this time of year as we all reflect on the things for which we are thankful, take a moment to send a thank you note to your local Planned Parenthood clinic staff.  Let them know they are appreciated and tell them what Planned Parenthood means to you....They work tirelessly, in spite of adversity, to provide comprehensive health care to the community.
The plea is signed, "Happy Thanksgiving, Planned Parenthood Action Network."

So that's what Thanksgiving is all about—letting people who sexualize children and inject saline into wombs know just how much you appreciate them. I'm sure that's exactly what the Pilgrims were thinking as they bowed their heads that day in 1620.

Of course, if you are under 18 and want to thank Planned Parenthood, your parent or guardian must sign a permission slip—the rule's right there in the small print. Planned Parenthood can vacuum a live baby out of your teenage daughter's uterus without your knowledge or consent—but heaven forbid they risk a lawsuit by using her "thank you" note without your say-so.

2:09 AM  |

Sunday, November 28, 2004
Thought for the Day

"[S]tatistically Catholics divorce at the same rate as the rest of the population, just with more angst..."

         — Elena of My Domestic Church

8:32 PM  |

For you home-schoolers out there—and I know you're out there—here's a funny and sensitive article from today's Detroit News. The title: "When 3-year-olds ask for lip gloss, home schooling sounds pretty good."
7:59 PM  |

CALL FOR COMMENTS—The Swiss Patrol

Andreas Gossweiler, the Swiss man who inspired yesterday's post "EU Oughta Know," writes:

What I wanted to say was that from a European viewpoint, your attacks on Planned Parenthood are hard to understand. What they say is pretty much every European's view. In Switzerland, only members of small fundamentalist communities share your ideas. For example, my brother. He thinks homosexuals and unmarried heterosexuals who have sex are sinners. The majority of the Swiss think this is a whimsical and old fashioned, if not dangerous idea.

I'd really like to know why some Americans praise chastity and abstinence. Most Europeans think of sexuality as something natural, not as something that should be suppressed.

By the way, Switzerland is not part of the EU. You oughta know!
Andreas's question about why some Americans praise chastity and abstinence is well worth a thoughtful answer. Since I'm a bit played-out on this topic, I'd like to invite readers to respond. Please write me (dawn -at- dawneden.com) and I'll publish the best responses in this space. If you respond on your blog, please let me know so I can link to it. Thanks!

COMMENTS: Richard J. Stuart writes:
"I'd really like to know why some Americans praise chastity and abstinence." It's because we value children. Sex produces children. Children are valuable and someone has to raise them. The best people to raise children are the natural parents of the child. Now not everyone plans on having children, some people just like sex, but accidents happen. So the old deal was this: A couple wants to have sex, but the rest of the community does not want any single mothers or abandoned children. So we have this deal called "marriage."

The idea is that the young couple stands up in front of the community and promises to stay together and raise any kids that show up. If you didn't do this, society used to take a very dim view of events because the young couple is causing problems for the rest of us. If you were not married and had a kid, we expected you to GET married. Divorce was also really frowned upon, because, again, no one is raising the kids. Historically we frown very deeply on any sexual relationships out of wedlock.

Now, today we have better birth control. Big deal, accidents still happen. Moreover this isn't helping society because using birth control can torpedo society though a lack of children. Look at Japan where the birth rates are declining to the point that there is going to be a population SHORTAGE in the future.

So a lot of Americans think this whole sexual-revolution thing is a load of dingo's kidneys put out by a bunch of irresponsible jerks who can't be bothered raising children.

"Most Europeans think of sexuality as something natural, not as something that should be suppressed." We're not in favor of suppressing anything. Go find a girl (or boy). Have fun. Just before you do be willing to stand up in front of the community and be willing to take responsibility for your actions. Is that really so difficult? Over 5,000 years of human history says this is the way to handle things. If you want a different system you have the burden of proof to show that your system works. So far, looking at societies that have abandoned respect for marriage, I see every prediction for doom and disaster coming true in spades.
Mark Kellner writes:
Just because something is "natural," as Andree Seu writes in the Dec. 4, 2004 issue of WORLD magazine, doesn't mean it shouldn't be regarded as sin. Ms. Seu was talking about homosexuality, but the same argument can be extended to pre- and extra-marital escapades, irrespective of gender.

My "natural" proclivity may be to rob banks and kill bank tellers -- it isn't -- but if it were, would that make it "right" for me to express it? How about a "natural" desire to take Mr. Gossweiler's car -- or spouse? It's my desire, let's say for the sake of argument, it seems "natural" to me, so why CAN'T I then have Mr. G.'s car, wife or the money in his bank account?

Wait, I hear Mr. G. saying -- those things are "mine" and I have "rights" thereto. Fair enough, but why, if we follow Mr. G's underlying point, should his rights trump mine?

Hmmm. Let's see. Maybe it's something called civilization? And perhaps that civilzation has been influenced by, oh, I dunno, the Bible?

Mr. G. hails from Switzerland, which is the home (for better or for worse) of one Jean Calvin and Calvinism. I'm not a Calvinist theologically -- I don't even play one on TV -- and I don't like some of the things Calvin did. BUT, in bringing moral suasion and Protestant ethics to Switzerland, Calvin did a good thing, which set the Swiss up for centuries of prosperity and good living.

One argument for chastity and abstinence is that it helps preserve a civil society. By denying our "natural" urges, we avoid chaos; by waiting for marriage, we avoid the consequences of profligacy that others have discussed.

So the question then flips for Mr. Gossweiler: What is to be gained by throwing all caution to the winds? Where is the society that has been improved by such imprudence?
Wolf N. Paul writes:
As a European I would like to weigh in with some thoughts.

1. It is not just small, fundamentalist communities who think that sex should be confined to marriage. Any Catholic, Lutheran, Reformed, Baptist, Orthodox, etc. believer who takes seriously the teaching of his or her church would agree.

This teaching of the churches is based on the clear teaching of the Bible.

One problem of the churches in Europe seems to be that many members don't take their teaching seriously, and somehow the churches have not yet figured out what to do about that.

2. Additionally to the reasons given by Richard Stuart, the notion that it is all right to have sex with someone you're not married to leads sooner or later to the notion that it is all right to have sex with someone who's married to someone else. At that point you are contributing to the breaking of trust between the spouses, and that introduces all sorts of ethical problems.

3. Any serious Christian would say that EVERYONE is a sinner. Having sex with someone you're not married to, or with a member of the same sex, is just one way that sin expresses itself. Gossip is also a sin; so is greed (even though a major German electronics superstore advertises that "Greed is Cool"), and many other things. Christians are sinners, too; that's why they need a Saviour.

4. Actually MOST EUROPEANS would not be in favor of children under 16 being
given detailed instructions for engaging in sex. Even of those who have abandoned Christian sexual morality, the majority would be appalled if such instructions were made available to their own children at 11 or 12 years of age.

And THAT, after all, is on of the main points Dawn is making: that PP not only does not share our view of the proper place for sex, they are actually introducing children to it at a far too young age.

5. I am not up to date on the status of abortion legislation in all of Europe, but in Germany and Austria, at least, abortion "on demand" (i.e. without some clearly defined and limited reason) is legal only during the first trimester of pregnancy. I just looked it up on Wikipedia, and this is true for Switzerland as well, and with slightly different deadlines, for most other European countries.

PP, on the other hand, advocates the right to an abortion all the way up to the end of the pregnancy; indeed, "partial-birth abortion" constitutes the killing of the child at the moment of birth. Any European who does not understand why this is deplorable is out of step with the legal reality in his own country.

7:03 PM  |

Sullivan Unravels

With his latest column in London's Sunday Times, Andrew Sullivan continues his game of "You're Red, I'm Blue, Whatever You Say Bounces off Me and Sticks to You." Its title encapsulates his self-righteous view of American politics: Where the Bible bashers are sinful and the liberals pure."

Sullivan is a relativist who can only elevate himself by digging a pit for others. Readers of his blog will recognize his smug litany of conservatives' downfalls—in Bill O'Reilly's case, substituting insinuation when the facts are not on his side: "Rush Limbaugh, the top conservative talk-radio host, has had three divorces and an addiction to painkillers. Bill O’Reilly, the most popular conservative television personality, just settled a sex harassment suit that indicated a highly active adulterous sex life. Bill Bennett, guru of the social right, was for many years a gambling addict..."

The actively homosexual Sullivan, who takes advantage of the fact that his professed Catholicism and erstwhile conservative status qualifies him to be a "right-wing" commentator in the mainstream media, can fake his way through character assassinations. But he can't fake knowledge of statistics—and there he digs his own hole.

Juxtaposing good, liberal, Kerry-spawning Massachusetts with evil, conservative, Bush-boosting Texas, Sullivan writes:

Ask yourself a simple question: which state has the highest divorce rate? Marriage was a key issue in the last election, with Massachusetts’ gay marriages becoming a symbol of alleged blue state decadence and moral decay. But in fact Massachusetts has the lowest divorce rate in the country at 2.4 divorces per 1,000 inhabitants. Texas, which until recently made private gay sex a crime, has a divorce rate of 4.1.
Apparently Sullivan missed Maggie Gallagher's column on the New York Times piece from which he took his statistics. If he'd read it, he would know that there are several mitigating factors for the differing divorce rates, not least of which is the sharp difference between the states' marriage rates: It was 6.4 marriages per 1,000 people in Massachusetts in 2001 (according to Gallagher's column) and 9.1 per 1,000 in Texas that year (according to the state's Web site). (Sullivan does offer marriage statistics, but he doesn't source them, and he uses a different type of measure for marriage statistics than he does for divorce statistics—comparing apples to oranges, in other words.)

But Sullivan most blatantly allows ideological bias to triumph over fact in his boast that Massachusetts has fewer teenage births than the Lone Star State:
Teenage births? Again, the contrast is striking. In a state such as Texas where the religious right is strong and the rhetoric against teenage sex is gale-force strong, teenage births as a percentage of all births are 16.1%. In liberal, secular Massachusetts they are 7.4%, less than half.
One reason for the difference is stated in Gallagher's column; Texas is a younger state. People 18 and under make up 28 percent of Texas's population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In Massachusetts, they make up only 23.6 percent, also according to census statistics.

So where does the rest of the discrepancy arise? The answer is so sadly obvious that Sullivan would have to be a pathetic hack to miss it unintentionally. Certainly, despite his Catholic status, he doesn't have life issues on the brain. Because—hello?—MASSACHUSETTS HAS 37 PERCENT MORE ABORTIONS PER 1,000 LIVE BIRTHS THAN TEXAS. It has 333 per 1,000, to Texas's 209. More abortions = fewer teenage births.

The fact that cynical, disillusioned blue-staters in the media like Sullivan and the New York Times staff are reduced to twisting figures to justify their sense of superiority shows that even they know truth is not on their side—in so far as they even believe in absolute truth.

TRACKBACK: Thinkling Shrode responds thoughtfully with "Does Morality Equal Hypocrisy?" There are also a couple of related posts on the Texan group blog Lone Star Times.

1:31 AM  |

Saturday, November 27, 2004

Just got a message from the producer of WABC Radio's "Religion on the Line" that my appearance on tomorrow's show has been canceled. He said they might want to reschedule it, so I'll let you know if there's any word.
9:39 PM  |

EU Oughta Know

A European music fan writing to thank me for yesterday's link to Alan Price's home page added a line that made me smile:

I still don't understand why you are so furious about Planned Parenthood, but then I'm Swiss.

7:32 PM  |

Yahoo's Strip Search

An ad for Yahoo atop a subway entrance on Sixth Avenue near 42nd Street is an area map showing locations of two kinds of landmarks: ATMs and strip clubs.

What's more, it's part of a national campaign; a San Francisco blogger has spotted it there as well.

Apparently Yahoo's management still resents the fact that public pressure forced it to remove pornography from its online shopping and auction sites.

2:08 AM  |

A Planned Parenthood Christmas

[Warning: Explicit sexual language and heavy sarcasm ahead.]

Remember when Planned Parenthood introduced its "Choice on Earth" Christmas cards? ("'Tis the season," its catalogue chirps.) This year, its Boise, Idaho, branch has gone even farther—advertising for people to buy their favorite women and girls a trip to their local Planned Parenthood for Christmas.

Sounds like a pro-lifer's paranoid fantasy, doesn't it? Sadly, no.

The Boise Weekly "Holiday Gift Guide," a "special advertising section" of the paper, recommends two Planned Parenthood "gifts":

They don’t offer the most conventional gifts, but Planned Parenthood has some great services that are an essential part of health, wellness and sexual responsibility. For the thoughtful boyfriend who doesn’t know what to get his girlfriend for Christmas, why not purchase a year’s supply of birth control?
You can't make this stuff up.
Men should be more involved in contraception anyway, and a supportive financial and social partner is something every woman appreciates.
How about a supportive husband who treats her like a human being and not just a sex object he can squirt into at will without fearing a paternity suit?
From pills to patches to injections, Planned Parenthood has every kind of birth control available for about half the cost of prescriptions through an individual doctor’s office,
Those half-price prescriptions are subsidized by the federal, state, and—in all probability—local government, and Planned Parenthood is spending additional taxpayer funds advertising them.
and they provide education and counseling to ensure that users understand the risks and benefits.
Planned Parenthood, 6111 Clinton Street,...
Planned Parenthood sure didn't make the late Holly Patterson "understand the risks and benefits" when they prescribed her RU 486.
There are a few things women need to keep on their yearly checklists, and right above sending Christmas cards and losing five pounds is getting an annual exam. Doctors recommend that women 18 and older should have a full pelvic exam once a year to make sure that everything is functioning properly and free of disease. So if you have a teenage daughter who is nervous or may not feel she has the money to get her first exam, offer a free trip to the OBGYN at Planned Parenthood.
Planned Parenthood just loves those nervous teenage daughters. The more nervous and teenage, the better. Bring in the pliable for Planned Parenthood's pliers.
The staff is excellently trained and very understanding of individual needs, making their services one of the best ways to introduce young women to the responsibility of gynecological health.
Planned Parenthood, 6111 Clinton St.,...
Translation: "Moloch wants babies. Feed me!" All in the spirit of Christmas giving, of course.

1:37 AM  |

Just discovered the official home page of Alan Price, the singer/songwriter and former Animals organist I interviewed a while back. The biography is particularly well-written; I love its description of Price sitting on the tour bus reading Kafka while his fellow Animals were "out chatting up the birds."
1:17 AM  |

Friday, November 26, 2004

UPDATED—The Gay Pride Movement Loses Its Patron Saint

"20/20" reveals tonight that the motive for the murder of Matthew Shepard was robbery—not hatred of the youth's homosexuality.

Needless to say, the gay community—which holds up Shepard's brutalized corpse as proof that every straight person, deep down inside, hates homosexuals just for being homosexual—is furious.

The murder of Matthew Shepard remains a horrible crime. But while the thugs who killed Shepard are in prison, the public-relations flacks at GLAAD are still roaming the streets, using a man's purported "death by homophobia" to push through the organization's agenda: one that would ultimately ban Bible verses as "hate speech." Such restrictions have already been instituted in Canada.

John Kerry on the campaign trail spoke of Shepard's "crucifixion." Gay leaders realize the strong symbolism of the youth's murder, and they use it mercilessly to compel guilt from heterosexuals—the idea that we all killed him.

But there is no redemptive nature in such guilt. Matthew Shepard did not die for my sins.

In life, he may have been a beautiful, if sadly misguided, soul, one who was tragically and criminally robbed of his future. In death, Matthew Shepard is a false god.

I was sorry to hear that the real Matthew Shepard was murdered. But I'm glad the false image has been destroyed.

UPDATE: A fellow Christian blogger who strongly objects to "20/20"'s Shepard report is preparing a response to this entry, which will appear in this space [see trackback below]. Regardless of whether his murder was a hate crime, I stand by my position that the gay-rights movement's turning Shepard into a martyr is exploitative and wrong. A recent WorldNetDaily piece provides a reminder of how gay-rights organizations, with the acquiescence of the mainstream media, shamelessly used the youth's slaying to demonize Christians and anyone opposed to the homosexual agenda:

Shepard's death and the trials of McKinney and Henderson galvanized homosexuals and their supporters across the country, fueling the call for state and federal "hate-crime" legislation. Conservative Christians were singled out as having created a "climate of anti-gay hate" where such a brutal act could happen.

NBC's Today Show took the lead, focusing on a Christian ad campaign running at the time that said homosexuals could change their orientation.

David Gregory narrated: "The ads were controversial for portraying gays and lesbians as sinners who had made poor choices, despite the growing belief that homosexuality may be genetic ... Have the ads fostered a climate of anti-gay hate that leads to incidents like the killing of Matthew Shepard?"
TRACKBACK: Nathan Nelson, a Catholic who experiences same-sex attraction, responds with a cry of the heart: "Is Matthew Shepard an Icon?" Although I disagree with him about the need for hate-crime legislation—I don't believe hate crimes should be prosecuted differently from crimes not motivated by prejudice—he gives some good food for thought, particularly in describing what Shepard means to him:
I think he is an icon, but not just an icon for those experiencing same-sex attraction. That's too narrow. He isn't an icon to promote gay marriage. He isn't an icon to encroach upon people's free speech. He isn't an icon to ban passages from the Bible that aren't well-liked. Rather, Matthew Shepard is an icon reminding us of what exactly evil can do, what exactly disrespect for the dignity of human life can do. He is an icon like the picture of an aborted unborn baby is an icon; he is an icon like Terri Schindler-Schiavo is an icon. He reminds us what can happen when human beings reach the height of evil. He reminds us what can happen in a culture of death in which people no longer pay attention to the dignity of human life. He reminds us what happens when we forget that all the people walking the earth, regardless of who they are or what sins they've committed, are made in the image and likeness of God. He is an icon that humanity must look at and say: Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. He is an icon of sadness, but he can also be an icon of hope. The hope that this icon evokes is the hope that human beings will look upon what was done to him and never want to do something like that to another human being again -- for any reason, any reason at all.

8:01 PM  |

Pink Fraud

The kids who sang on Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall," long past their school days, are now suing the band for royalties.

Twenty-five years since that song was Number One around the world, and now they're suing?

Seems to me that those kids could have used some education after all.

6:39 PM  |

Necked to Godliness

This one's for the enigmatic, homeschooling librarian Sherry, who loves education-related humor: Professor Curt Niccum lists some of the funnier typos in papers students submitted for his classes. Here's my favorite, along with Niccum's own commentary:

“The Bible tells us that all sinners are necked before God” - Proof that Hooked on Phonics doesn’t work in Texas.

Speaking of Sherry, she has the best review of "Finding Neverland" that I've seen anywhere. It encapsulates why I refuse to see the film, even though I'm a tremendous fan of J.M. Barrie's work and would love to see a true-to-life film about him.
1:33 AM  |

I had a beautiful Thanksgiving visiting my father and stepmother, with many things for which to be thankful—including one that was completely unexpected.

My father is a scientist, and as far back as I can remember, he has been working towards cures. Before I was born, he co-discovered a hormone that he has always believed would lead to important advances in the field of immunity.

On Wednesday, the news came out that a protein derived from the hormone my father discovered has been shown in animals to repair and restore heart muscle after an attack.

As if that weren't news enough, I was surprised to learn that another angle of the story related to an issue close to my heart. Up to now. some scientists have been touting embryonic stem cells as a possible treatment for damaged heart muscle. But this new protein-derived treatment, which does not use any embryo-derived substances, is actually more promising, as the Associated Press reports: "Scientists who did not contribute to the experiment said the protein might work better and more easily than trying to isolate and implant stem cells to repair the heart and restore its function."

It's very exciting, and I am so proud of my dad.

12:09 AM  |

Wednesday, November 24, 2004

Sex Marks the Spot

I just saw a commercial for Seasonale, the creepy contraceptive I described yesterday in "Unnatural Woman" (below).

It opens with a shot of a model in a strapless, billowy, Fifties-style gown that's white with large fuchsia polka dots.

As a female voice-over tells how the pill reduces a woman's periods to only four per year, the model swirls around in a joyous dance, magically peeling off the dots—"periods"—and casting them away, until her dress is completely white.

The brazen symbolism reminded me of nothing so much as a modern-day Lady Macbeth. There's the feeling that the narrator is there to drown out the sound of the frenzied model's cries: "Out, out, damned spot!"

Likewise, you know, watching this buoyantly barren woman, that no matter how hard she tries, she will never wash away the feeling that there is something less than human about willfully altering her body so that her cycles no longer parallel those of the nearest heavenly body.
11:57 PM  |

Unnatural Women

[Be advised: Graphic anatomical language ahead.]

A "CBS Evening News" story yesterday on pharmacists who refuse to prescribe oral contraceptives delivered what was, for the news team, the shocking revelation that a pharmacist in Louisiana doesn't believe in any contraceptives.

The story, "The Drugstore War," appeared designed to make the druggist seem a wacko—make that Christian wacko, one of the mainstream media's favorite stereotypes. In the online version of it, the editors even call NFP "'natural' family planning," with scare quotes around "natural," as if there's something bizarre and unnatural about it, unlike good old healthy, organic, get-a-wire-IUD-shoved-up-your-uterus contraception.

Newsday columnist Marie Cocco tackled the same topic yesterday, from a similarly "Who are these crazy anti-Pill people?" perspective—and unwittingly revealed much more about the topic than she or other pro-abortion activists realize. (I say "pro-abortion" because she is pro-abortion, and because those who would disallow pharmacists the option of denying contraceptives would also disallow them the option of denying the morning-after pill.)

Cocco describes what she calls the "anti-abortion right"'s claim that oral contraceptives are abortifacients—that they can kill an embryo by preventing it from implanting in the uterus. Then she makes her odd admission:

Women taking the pill never know whether conception has or has not occurred before they menstruate.
That's a remarkable statement, because it encapsulates what is perverted about contraception. It separates a woman from knowledge of her own menstrual and reproductive cycle. By contrast, the woman using natural family planning knows exactly when and if conception has been achieved.

I had a shock recently, when I thought that, at 36, I was undergoing early menopause. For two years, I had been on Lo-Ovral, one of the low-hormone oral contraceptives, which a gynecologist prescribed for me after I had abnormal bleeding. That had appeared to normalize my periods—until last summer, when they dwindled down to almost nothing.

So I made an appointment with a gynecologist and told him that I feared I was menopausal. He responded that it was normal for women on the Pill to not have periods.

Normal, I thought. What is normal? It is normal for my childbearing-age body to stop displaying a key biological proof that it is female? If I started to grow a mustache and a beard, would that be normal?

Planned Parenthood touts a new oral contraceptive, Seasonale, which limits a woman's periods to four per year. Its slogan: "Fewer periods, more possibilities." I suppose those possibilities include having the physical experience of menopause before actually being menopausal, and getting more venereal diseases by having more days of the month available for sex.

Talk about a Brave New World. Take away all that yucky stuff from women's bodies and make them supercybersextoys.

Think about it. Suppose there were an oral contraceptive that had the side effect of making a woman's heart beat exactly 59 times a minute. So women on the Pill would all be perfectly "natural," except they'd have a weirdly robotic ticker. Would that be worth it, to make all contracepting women's hearts beat in Stepford symmetry, just so they couldn't have kids? Wouldn't it remove an essential part of what made them women? So why are they still "natural" women if they willfully deprive themselves of the one thing that really marks the femininine identity of a pre-menopausal woman—her fertility?

Or suppose there were an oral contraceptive with the side effect of giving its users platinum-blond hair and creepy, staring eyes like those kids in the classic British horror flick "Village of the Damned."
Of course, it would become fashionable for models and celebrities to have platinum-blond hair and creepy, staring eyes, to demonstrate that they were willfully infertile—oh, wait, that's already happened.

As cartoonist John Pritchett has noted of one of the Senate's strongest proponents of abortion rights, it takes a village...of the damned.

3:30 AM  |

In the wake of an e-mail from Dennis Schenkel detailing the Missouri Compromise, I have decided to remove my post making fun of the Communist Party USA for comparing their Missouri campaign for Kerry to the "Mississipi Summer." Apparently the CPUSA's ignorance of the Show Me State and the Magnolia State is matched only by my own. But the article I cited by the real-life Communists for Kerry (as opposed to the parody one) is still a hoot, especially for its description of the head of New York's NOW saying she wants to see lots of "red flags" at the abortion-rights March for Women's Lives. That alone raises my red flag.
2:39 AM  |

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

I wrote the headline in tomorrow's paper for the story about Martha Stewart's Thanksgiving in jail: FEAST OF BURDEN.
11:28 PM  |

Just put up more photos from my sister's wedding. I wanted to keep "Daze of Our Wives" (below) uptop, so the photos are just under that entry.
3:24 PM  |

Daze of Our 'Wives'

Pop Quiz: What TV show inspired a Newsweek writer to gush, "Considering how quickly [this show] has become a sensation, you do have to wonder: what took so long? Why haven't the networks put together a decent show about women and their real lives?"

That's right. Newsweek's Mark Peyser is raving about that remarkably true-to-life program, "Desperate Housewives."

If you're not familiar with that sex-filled show, where adultery is a key component of every plot, and no show passes without at least one female lead parading in her underwear, here's a sample plot as described in Peyser's article, "Sex and the Suburbs":

"Will any show be able to top the scene last week where Gabrielle's suspicious mother-in-law snaps a picture of her and her lawn boy toy in the sack, only to be run over in the middle of Wisteria Lane by Bree's drunken son?"

You know, I just knew my life was missing something. I'm not normal. In fact, according to Hollywood, I don't even exist. Otherwise I'd be spying on someone, having adulterous sex, or raising a son who drives drunk. Because we all know that's what real women do.

You can laugh off a show like this and say it's a comedy. But "Sex and the City" was a comedy, and many single women took it upon themselves to mirror its characters' consumeristic lifestyle—blowing money on designer fashions, and putting themselves on the meat market.

Likewise, the fantasy of the glamorous so-called "real" women on "Desperate Housewives" appeals to cynical women who think that materialism and casual sex will boost their low self-esteem.

Feminist commentators like Ellen Goodman claim the show upholds a "post-feminine mystique," a relativist triumph showing that motherhood has room for ambivalence—and that, she says, is a good thing. "Yes, you can be dedicated to doing the right thing and not at all sure you're doing it."

This is what Newsweek's Peyser means by "a decent show about women and their real lives"—the idea that women can wake up some days and wish they weren't a mother.

Except that, on this show, they're waking up next to the gardener. Not particularly decent if you ask me.

What was that Jesus said—"If you so much as look at your gardener with lust in your heart, cut your own grass"?

Or, in the immortal words of a truly decent desperate housewife, Erma Bombeck: "The grass is always greener over the septic tank."

2:54 AM  |

More Photos from My Sister's Wedding

These just in from Jennifer's Nov. 7 wedding in Cincinnati, taken by my stepfather Ron (whose biography is linked at left):



Jennifer, me, and my mom, Rachel, about to enter the temple. I love this photo.




Jen and Len cut the exquisite cake—note the kiddush cup on top!




Here I am, about to enter the reception. I liked my new face—somewhere between kewpie doll and '50s bad girl. (No plastic surgery—just lots of makeup from the bridal-party stylist.)

2:05 AM  |

Monday, November 22, 2004

Joel Belz has a great piece in World magazine on single-issue voters. It got under the skin of the editors at Christianity Today—which, given the magazine's recent coverage of abortion issues, is a good thing.
8:20 PM  |

Just added a trackback to the post I made earlier today about "abstinence-plus education", as Shock and Blog's Jinx McHue has put up an informative entry on the same subject. Also, sorry I forgot to put an explicit-language warning on today's post. I'd thought the headline would be a sufficient tip-off, but I was wrong. Unfortunately, when writing about the Planned Parenthood/SIECUS approach to sex ed, it's impossible to counter it effectively without exposing what it is in the organizations' own words.
5:42 PM  |

Life Imitates 'I'm Just a Bill-ding'

"This building is like my husband: It's paid off by wealthy Saudis."
3:32 PM  |

What's Wrong With Teaching Kids to Masturbate

[SEXUALLY EXPLICIT MATERIAL WARNING: This is a Planned Parenthood Teenwire-related post; expect the worst.]

In the wake of Bush's re-election, which they spent millions to prevent, Planned Parenthood is now putting its efforts to destroy what the president would like to be a major part of his legacy: abstinence-only educational programs. Search news Web sites for stories on Planned Parenthood and abstinence, and you'll see that the fight against abstinence-only education is being fought around the country—with Planned Parenthood always at the fore.

Margaret Sanger's organization lobbies for what it calls "comprehensive sexual education," a k a "abstinence plus." It bases its campaigns on the assertion that children need to learn to use condoms and other contraceptives.

Suppose for a moment, just for the sake of argument, that Planned Parenthood is right on this count. Suppose that teaching children about contraceptives is a good thing. Does that mean that the proponents of "abstinence plus" should be allowed to take all that nice federal money which would otherwise go to abstinence-only programs?

To answer that, you have to look at just what's in that "plus" in "abstinence plus." I can assure you that when you do, you will be nonplussed.

Both Planned Parenthood and SIECUS, the large nonprofit devoted to promoting comprehensive sex education, have a broad definition of abstinence. A foundational component of "abstinence plus" is masturbation. It's based on the hypothesis that children will be less likely to have sex if they masturbate.

As Cal State professor Barbara Flannery, an avid proponent of the PP philosophy, puts it, "The definition of abstinence has changed. It can include cybersex, anal sex, oral sex and masturbation."

On Planned Parenthood's Teenwire, where children age 6 and up are invited to register, that ultra-broad definition of abstinence is reflected in articles like "All About the Anus," which asserts, "Some straight couples use anal sex as a way to preserve the woman's virginity."

Teenwire also boasts dozens of articles propounding self-gratification, including "Masturbation Myths," which invites teens to "use masturbation as a kind of 'dress rehearsal,' to learn more about what they find pleasurable.

"People can learn about their bodies through masturbating," the Teenwire piece claims, "and this can help them communicate better with their partners about what they enjoy sexually."

But the core of Teenwire's message comes through in "Outercourse: Abstinence for Experts," where the writer advises teens on what "abstinence plus" really means in Planned Parenthood's language: "Hours of kissing sounds nice, huh? How about a little mutual masturbation that ends with orgasm? Get creative — talk to each other (before, during, and after you fool around)! Things can get pretty steamy even without having sex, as long as you keep in mind that you will not, no matter how tempted you are, have intercourse."

OK. Stop. Enough.

Am I the only one who thinks it's crazy to tell teenagers that masturbating will make them not want to have sex?

I'm trying to imagine a father talking to his 14-year-old son.

"What's that, Johnny? You want to do what with your classmate? Well, you know you can't—she's only 13. Go to your room and masturbate—then you won't be tempted."

Really, I can't get over how Planned Parenthood advises, "Things can get pretty steamy even without having sex, as long as you keep in mind that you will not, no matter how tempted you are, have intercourse." And these people think real abstinence is hard? Which is harder—never beginning that "Bolero" dance, or getting all the way to the fourth movement before suddenly turning on the red lights?

Come on: When it comes to halting a sex act, once we get to actually touching below the belt, we're all as hopeless as Ray Milland trying to beat the bottle in "The Lost Weekend." So why should "abstinence plus" advocates assume teenagers are any better?

The answer is, of course, they don't. Groups like Planned Parenthood, which received a quarter-billion dollars in taxpayer money in fiscal 2003, and SIECUS don't actually want to delay teenagers' sexual activity—so they give them a prescription for promiscuity.

TRACKBACK: Jinx McHue of Shock and Blog does some Dumpster-diving of his own in a highly recommended post. He writes: "[Teenwire's] 'advice' is so completely and unbelievably dangerous that I am just stunned. 'Watch it with direct genital contact.' 'Watch it?' 'Watch it?' Is that supposed to be PP's idea of a warning to teens? Or how about this: 'so be careful?' Please, spare me. In general, teens aren't known for consistantly being careful. This becomes even more true when they are having (non-sexual) fun. When it comes to sexual activity, the last thing on teens' minds in the heat of passion is going to be the words 'watch it' and 'be careful.'"

1:42 AM  |

Sunday, November 21, 2004

Contest Results: I'm Just a Bill-ding