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Archive for July, 2007

Garnett to the Celtics

Henry Imler July 30th, 2007

Wow.

It is not official yet, but it looks like Garnett will be going to
Boston for Al Jefferson, Gerald Green, Sebastian Telfair, Ryan Gomes
Theo Ratliff, a future first-round pick from Boston, and take back the
future first-round pick it sent to the Celtics in the Wally
Szczerbiak-Ricky Davis trade in January 2006.

So Boston now has Garnett, Ray Allen, Paul Pierce, and the 08 Eastern Conference title.

Looks like they finally matter for the first time in 15 years.

Huryea!

Henry Imler July 30th, 2007


Upcoming Iron Man Movie Snipits

Henry Imler July 29th, 2007

“Yes.” and “Oh heck yes!”

Comic Con sweetness. Surprising choice of music!

HT: CAD

The Hidden Transcripts of Edessa

Henry Imler July 24th, 2007

Resistance within and by the Edessan Christian community 150-250 CE

Introduction

The apothegm, “Dead men don’t tell tales,” is especially relevant in the study of vanished peoples. The purpose of this paper is to construct a method to uncover the lived religion in the everyday lives of a people-group located in the past, specifically, the people-group behind both the Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Thomas. One only knows this group from the text that was left behind. However, this in and of itself is a lucky break. The text at least alerts us about this group. Otherwise, their voices would be completely lost. A surface-level, or prime facie analysis of the text only reveals the beliefs and ideas utilized by the groups, or more specifically, about the leader or teacher’s beliefs and ideas. One cannot imagine that the texts were built with the consensus of the community as a whole. They are what James C. Scott called “official transcripts” of the community.

I am approaching this people-group and texts from a great distance, spatially, temporally, and culturally. Without further inquiry and qualification, the risk of importing my culture and beliefs onto the texts and as an extension, the people-group, is insurmountable. In the absence of intimate or first-hand knowledge of their culture, one must take great pains to reconstruct it from the ground up before analyzing the texts. It is also paramount to note that every people-group is located in a specific space at a specific time, even if the people-group persists through the before mentioned spaces and times. At every moment, their culture is being negotiated and transformed. Each text represents one such attempt at negotiation of the group’s values, beliefs practices, morale, and so forth. Thus, while a text can tell us about an instance of the negotiation process and as an extension, the phases before and after the text, one cannot assume that the text merely represents a static reconstruction of the community. It is also a record of an instance of the creative process of culture formation. It is with this attitude that texts will be approached.

Both the Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Thomas originated from the same community, Edessa, located in ancient Syria. (Klijn, p. 70) (Bernard, p. 161) The Gospel of Thomas date from the second half of the second century and the Acts of Thomas originate around 60-100 years later. Because of their proximity in both space and time, the two texts provide an excellent opportunity to look at snapshots of the same community in two periods of time. However, the question still remains of how to go about analyzing these texts. I will draw heavily on the theory of James C. Scott and the method of Burton Mack with the hope of obtaining an accurate comparative look at each community in their specific time period.

The paper will begin with an opening discussion of the theory of James C. Scott, moving on to an evaluation of Burton Mack’s attempt to reconstruct a lost community. Then a brief background on the historical record of the Christian Church at Edessa during the first two hundred and fifty years will be given. Both the Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Thomas will be analyzed in search of their hidden and public transcripts. The two sets of transcripts will then be compared to see the choices each community faced and the path they ended up taking. I will show how the Edessan Christian community not only created a space for itself in opposition to the surrounding culture, but also institutionalized rapidly. This created room for a hidden transcript within their hidden transcript that were protests against the institutionalization. Continue Reading »

Best Putdown of all time.

Henry Imler July 24th, 2007

I was watching some old G1 Tranformers during lunch today and I came across Megatron putting Starscream in his place:

You couldn’t lead androids to a picknick, how can you pretend to lead the decepticons?

How do you recover from that? I mean, seriously, once someone
challenges my navigational/leadership skills by strongly suggesting
that I am unable to do what Megatron is suggesting (I don’t even want
to repeat it **Shudder**) - I don’t even think I could face my team…
except for this: Androids don’t eat; why would they need to go to a
picknick? I seriously doubt Megatron even knows any real androids.

Interesting Take of Executive Privledge

Henry Imler July 23rd, 2007

Contempt and Congress

Rather than run from this fight, supporters of the
constitutional system ought to stand firm with the president.
Presidents, Congresses, and the courts have long accepted a president’s
right to keep internal executive discussions confidential. Even when
the Supreme Court ordered Richard Nixon to hand over the Watergate
tapes, it recognized “the necessity for protection of the public
interest in candid, objective, and even blunt or harsh opinions in
Presidential decision making.”

Without secrecy, the government can’t function. No one thinks
conversations between federal judges and their clerks, or members of
Congress and their staff, ought to be aired publicly without good
reason. The same goes for presidents–even if their poll ratings are
low.

Presidents Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Jackson, Polk, Lincoln,
both Roosevelts, Truman, Eisenhower (whose administration invented the
phrase “executive privilege”) Kennedy and Reagan, among others, have
kept executive deliberations secret from congressional inquiries,
usually over matters of diplomacy, national security and law
enforcement. Courts have recognized that discussions among their senior
advisers, not just meetings when presidents are in the room, also
receive protection. So why aren’t Republicans fighting to defend
executive privilege now?

Those who made their bones investigating the Clinton
administration’s misdeeds might squirm over Mr. Bush’s assertion of
privilege today. But then, Democrats who supported President Bill
Clinton’s assertions of executive privilege in the ’90s are being
hypocritical by jumping all over Mr. Bush now, too….

The Supreme Court held in 1959 that, “Since Congress may only
investigate into those areas in which it may potentially legislate or
appropriate, it cannot inquire into matters which are within the
exclusive province of one or the other branches of the Government.” In
the 1974 Watergate tapes case, the Supreme Court said that the
president’s right to protect information is strongest when law
enforcement, national security or his other constitutional powers are
involved. Under that rule, Mr. Leahy has no right to see the
president’s communications about the firing of federal attorneys, the
nomination of John Roberts or Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court or the
reduction of Scooter Libby’s sentence.

Crazy Dream of the Day

Henry Imler July 20th, 2007

I had a weird dream last night. I had some back pain that was
keeping me up. I took some medicine to allow me to sleep. I then had
the following dream.

In the dream, I awoke to a weird creaking noise. I walked into the
living room and I saw a horse walk by our sliding glass door. It was
pulling an old red, topless buggy. A red-headed woman (similar to Saffron that gave Mal problems in Serenity) was on the buggy and was holding a desert eagle
(the gun that Issac used to kill Simone in Heroes). They pulled up
around the corner and into the stairway. It was then that I noticed
that our door was unlocked. As I crept up to lock it, the creaking of
the buggy stopped. I knew it was a matter of time before the woman on
the buggy tried to open our door. Just as I was turning the lock as
silently and as quickly as I could, there was a clicking noise
emanating from below my hand. She was trying to open the door! It was
then that I woke up.

NBA Point Shaving?

Henry Imler July 20th, 2007

From the New York Post:

THE FBI is investigating an NBA referee who allegedly
was betting on basketball games - including ones he was officiating
during the past two seasons - as part of an organized-crime probe in
the Big Apple, The Post has learned.

The investigation, which began more than a year ago, is zeroing in
on blockbuster allegations that the referee was making calls that
affected the point spread to guarantee that he — and the hoods who had
their hooks in him — cashed in on large bets.

H/T :: HoopsHype

Gut-Punch of the Day

Henry Imler July 18th, 2007

Ctrl+Alt+Del :: Stink

I laughed - until I realized that I am going to the Wizard Convention in a month.

Laugh all you want. It will be a fun trip with a couple of my cousins and my brother.

I got excited a few days ago when I heard that Caprica 6
from Battlestar Galactica was going to be there. Laugh all you want -
but when I told Meredith - she got excited too. I would rather have the
Admiral, President Roslin, or Chief Tyrol there, but I’ll take Caprica 6.

Proper Christian Response to Islamic Terrorism

Henry Imler July 18th, 2007

Is it let them win?

Should there be any physical, political resistance at all to Islamist1 (or any other) terrorists?

I am not sure if there should be any, from an communal and individualistic perspective.

Now, I would also say that from a secular political perspective, it
is appropriate to respond with the best interests of the state in mind.
As a matter of fact, a state should always operate in its best
interests and in a relatively selfish manner. However, this is
different from what the Christian response should be.

Ed. Note: Clarified the original post.

1) No one has come up with a good name for the loosely
connected terrorist organizations and political structures that are at
war with that which is different with them. Islamic is too broad,
Islamo-fascist is a misnomer, and individual groups such as Hezbollah,
Al-Qaeda and even movement names such as Wahhabism are too exclusive.

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