Newsies...

Aug. 19th, 2003 10:07 am
elfs: (Default)
[personal profile] elfs
Hey, [livejournal.com profile] technoshaman, check out The Language Police, a new book about how school textbooks are authorized and written in the United States. Various textbook approval committees have banned stereotypes such as "whites living in affluent neighborhoods," or "boys expressing anger"; others have forbidden "snowman" and "forefather" on the grounds that they're sexist. One parent successfully got her daughter's grade overturned on the grounds that, since she lived in Chicago, she was unfairly disadvantaged by a writing assignment that asked her to imagine life on the ocean.


Ugh. Someone tell me that multiculturalism deserves a snowflakes's lifespan in a cyclotron after they read this.


Bwahahaha. Al Qaeda tells the boys back home, "Yeah, we caused the U.S. blackout. Don't pay attention to the news from the U.S. There was looting in the streets. New York now looks like Bagdhad."


The Baptist Press is reporting that Alan Keyes has spoken in defense of Roy Moore's Ten Commandments Monument, claiming that the First Amendment clause, as it is written, applies only to the Federal Government and not the states, and that states are free to implement whatever religious oaths and tests that they deem acceptable, to authorize state churches, and to make religious statements.

Someone remind Keyes of the following very important words:

No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.



A Norwegian man who discovered his friends were throwing him a surprise party decided to turn the tables and surprise them by lighting off his shotgun into the air. But he tripped and shot six of his friends instead. A likely excuse.


The Lord works in mysterious ways. At least, that's what's being said about the death of Hitoshi Nikaidoh, who was decaptitated in a freak elevator accident at St. Joseph Hospital in Texas just days before he was due to be sent to Africa as part of a Christian Mission.

Re: Have to agree, actually

Date: 2003-08-20 03:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Y'know, there is a check. It's called time, and the passage thereof. All your proposal will do is add more to the book and its interpretation. If the Supremes do things that we don't like, they can be impeached, each and every one of them, and the final decision of the legislature cannot be overturned.

And then the Congress and the President can get together and put in a new collection of autocrats to their liking.

Re: Have to agree, actually

Date: 2003-08-20 09:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wendor.livejournal.com
Justices of the Supreme Court can't be impeached for doing things that we don't like.....by "law" (based on the opinions of those very same people) impeachment requires more than just a ruling in a contested case. (such as an indictable criminal act)

The judiciary cannot overturn an impeachment decision (Nixon v. Unites States 1993)...but they have indeed managed to cover themselves on the front end.

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