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The JackB

"When you're in jail, a good friend will be trying to bail you out. A best friend will be in the cell next to you saying, 'Damn, that was fun'." Groucho Marx

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Politics

Jefferson On The Bible

July 21, 2008 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

The LA Times has an interesting story about Thomas Jefferson’s bible. Take a look at this:

“Making good on a promise to a friend to summarize his views on Christianity, Thomas Jefferson set to work with scissors, snipping out every miracle and inconsistency he could find in the New Testament Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.Then, relying on a cut-and-paste technique, he reassembled the excerpts into what he believed was a more coherent narrative and pasted them onto blank paper — alongside translations in French, Greek and Latin.

In a letter sent from Monticello to John Adams in 1813, Jefferson said his “wee little book” of 46 pages was based on a lifetime of inquiry and reflection and contained “the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man.”

He called the book “The Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth.” Friends dubbed it the Jefferson Bible. It remains perhaps the most comprehensive expression of what the nation’s third president and principal author of the Declaration of Independence found ethically interesting about the Gospels and their depiction of Jesus.

“I have performed the operation for my own use,” he continued, “by cutting verse by verse out of the printed book, and arranging the matter, which is evidently his and which is as easily distinguished as diamonds in a dunghill.”

The little leather-bound tome, several facsimiles of which are kept at the Huntington Library in San Marino, continues to fascinate scholars exploring the powerful and varied relationships between the Founding Fathers and the most sacred book of the Western World.

The big question now, said Lori Anne Ferrell, a professor of early modern history and literature at Claremont Graduate University, is this:

“Can you imagine the reaction if word got out that a president of the United States cut out Bible passages with scissors, glued them onto paper and said, ‘I only believe these parts?’ “

I’ll answer Ferrell’s question. In today’s America you cannot be elected unless you profess to believe in G-d. And even then, if you don’t believe in the right G-d you probably still cannot be elected.

Filed Under: Politics, Religion

The 50 MPG Car

April 23, 2008 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

I have been meaning to blog about a story I read on Newsweek for a while now. The subhead on the story says Why automakers don’t sell a car that gets 50mpg.

It is an excellent question and one that really needs more attention. This is not just an environmental issue, it is economic. As it becomes more expensive to operate a motor vehicle we will see it begin to impact the economy at large in all sorts of places.

There is no doubt in my mind that we have the ability to produce these vehicles. It really has been a question of desire. Gas is still cheap enough that most people do not have to stop and consider whether it makes financial sense to take a drive for pleasure, go to the store etc. But the day is coming where it is going to be harder and until we see that day I question whether we’ll have a strong enough push from consumers to see change.

Let’s take a look at some excerpts from this story.

“Wouldn’t it be great if you could drive a car that gets 50 miles per gallon? Well, you can. Just hop on a plane and fly to Europe, where all new cars average 43mpg, or Japan, where the average hits 50mpg. Here in the United States, we’re stuck at 25mpg in our considerably larger and more powerful cars, trucks and SUVs. So why can’t we do better? Here’s the dirty little secret: we can. “If you want better fuel economy, it’s just a question of when auto companies want to do it and when consumers decide they want to buy it,” says Don Hillebrand, a former Chrysler engineer who is now director of transportation research for Argonne National Labs. “Auto companies can deliver it within a year.”

A 50mpg car would certainly put a tiger in the tank of the moribund U.S. auto industry. But don’t get your checkbook out quite yet. The reality is that you won’t see a car on a showroom floor in America with 50mpg on the window sticker for at least three years and maybe longer. Sure, all auto companies are focusing on jacking up fuel economy, especially since Congress just mandated that all new autos sold by 2020 must average 35mpg. The new mileage mantra also is motivated by the fact that car sales are weak, partially because of panic at the pump. But putting out a 50mpg car any time soon is daunting even to the maker of America’s mileage champ, the 48mpg Toyota Prius. “We’re close enough to spit at that now,” says Bill Reinert, Toyota‘s national manager of advanced technologies. “It’s not an incredible stretch, but it’s an incredible stretch to do it on a mass-market basis.”

It might seem ludicrous to you that there isn’t a mass market right here and now for a 50mpg car. For crying out loud, we’ve entered the age of the $128 fill-up. (The cost of topping off a Chevy Suburban). But here’s the problem: to get to 50mpg in the near future, consumers would have to trade off at least one of three very important things—cost, drive quality or safety. That’s because the quickest way to make a car more fuel-efficient is to make it smaller, lighter and equip it with some high-tech (a.k.a. costly) propulsion system like a plug-in gas-electric system.”

and

Still, all the major automakers are putting their cars on a crash diet. Ford wants to drop 250 to 750 pounds in all its models by 2012. Toyota and Nissan want to cut the fat by 10 to 15 percent. But this slim-fast campaign is running into the drive for more safety features in automobiles. Back in the 1980s, the Honda CRX-HF and the Geo Metro each got more than 50mpg, but they didn’t have airbags or steel beams in their doors to protect occupants in a crash. These days, cars are equipped with six air bags, steel safety cages and electronic stability control to prevent spinouts. That makes cars much safer—but a lot fatter. “We are working in two directions,” says Toyota’s Reinert. “One is to make cars as safe as possible, and that generally makes them heavier. And the other is to make cars as fuel efficient as possible.”

Downsizing also has its drawbacks. For starters, U.S. highway statistics show the smallest cars have death rates 2.5 times higher than the biggest. What’s more, wimpy engines often (under) power small cars and that’s a drawback many Americans won’t abide. I recently drove the diminutive Smart car for a week. While it’s certainly cute, its puny 70-horsepower engine and slow-shifting transmissions made me feel like Fred Flintstone could outrun me. That might be enough power for twisty Old World roads, but here in America, we have a need for speed. “Going zero to 60 in 15 seconds doesn’t fit the average American consumers idea of mobility today,” says Reinert. “That’s too doggy.”

I have to admit that I hate the really small cars. I don’t feel safe in them. I also hate not having a car with any guts. It is nerve wracking and dangerous to try and get on the freeway in a vehicle that takes forever to get to speed.

Still, I am certain that there is no reason why we cannot overcome these issues. We have the ability, all we need is the desire.

Filed Under: cars, Politics, Science

You Can’t Fight Naked

April 4, 2008 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

I have never let my schooling interfere with my education.
Mark Twain

Initially this post started out with a comment about how a Jew and an Irishman engage in steam room diplomacy. But I didn’t like the flow so I turned off the jets and decided to scroll it back into something that didn’t sound like the start of some silly joke.

Because if I had to attach labels I’d have to say that it was two Americans discussing politics and life in America, not to mention a few words about the advantages of the blogosphere.

It is safe to say that our politics don’t always fall in line with each other. We have our differences and we have our similarities. I don’t mind disagreeing with people. It is good to challenge your beliefs. I’d like to say that I never fall into the trap of thinking that my way is the only way, but sometimes that is really how it goes.

Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please.
Mark Twain

We probably sat in the steam room for a solid 15-20 minutes. During that time I learned about how he began blogging and exchanged a few thoughts about the blogosphere and what it can do. Certainly his corner of cyberspace far exceeds my own, at least based upon the number of readers. So from a purely selfish point of view I was curious to hear what he had to say. I still blog for myself, but I’d be lying if I said that I didn’t want to dramatically increase my traffic.

I thoroughly disapprove of duels. If a man should challenge me, I would take him kindly and forgivingly by the hand and lead him to a quiet place and kill him.
Mark Twain

Eventually the heat got to be too much and it was time to go shower. As we walked out I mentioned that steam room diplomacy might be the way to go. Get two parties into the steam room and let them work out their differences. As Mike said, You Can’t Fight Naked.

Seriously, with that kind of heat you don’t have time to sit their and posture. You’re either going to get down to brass tacks or pass out from heat exhaustion. It seems to me that there is merit in forcing our diplomats into expediting the process. It might not fit into the current protocol, but I am not convinced that protocol is helping all that much. The old saw about thinking outside the box comes to mind.

Don’t part with your illusions. When they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live.
Mark Twain

On a more serious note I am disappointed to say that this is another election in which I am not happy with any of the candidates. I won’t not vote. I am going to give up that right, but I won’t sit quietly on the sidelines.

It is shameful and disappointing to look at the current group of politicians and feel like everyone of them is trying to say what we want to hear. If you voice opinions that are considered hard right or hard left you are unelectable. And so everyone comes to the center because that is a politicians safety zone.

I have been through some terrible things in my life, some of which actually happened.
Mark Twain

I have to imagine, I have to believe that some of our representatives are working for us because they want to help. I have to think that someone out there went into it for altruistic reasons. Because honestly the thought that every politician is a lying scumbag who is in it for power, prestige and money is too depressing.

I grew up hearing that anyone could become president. Part of me still believes that and part of me says that this has become a myth, a fable. If you don’t have money and access to the machine you can’t get there. If you’re not a Washington insider than you are an outsider looking in.

But maybe the dream that was America still lives. Regardless of how I feel about our candidates we can still say that a woman and a minority have a legitimate shot at being elected president. So perhaps in spite of all of the challenges we face there is a silver lining.

What do you think?

Filed Under: Politics, Random Thoughts

They Slaughter Our Children With Malice

March 7, 2008 by Jack Steiner 12 Comments

Yesterday’s terrorist attack in Jerusalem is indescribable. To call it tragic or heartbreaking is unacceptable because there are no words. I sit here at my keyboard struggling to produce a post that is worthy of the moment. It is with profound sadness that I stare at the keyboard and realize that this is not the first time that I have written that words fail me.

iTunes is playing in the background. It is the party shuffle so the mix of songs is filled with tunes that are both appropriate and inappropriate for the moment. Some are sad, some are happy and some are angry songs. It is the angry music that fills my heart. Angry because I look at pictures and read stories of the celebration of the terrorist and realize that I describe him as an animal. He and his ilk have been dehumanized in my head. I feel a bit of shame for admitting that.

I have been near terrorism, close to shootings and bombings, but never so close that I was directly involved. Some of you probably read Gila’s blog, My Shrapnel. She has more reason to be angry or upset than I do, she survived a bombing. If you haven’t read her, go check out her blog. It is worth the time.

This past summer I posted a video about relatives of victims of terror called Children- Survivors of Terror Speak. Until today I had forgotten about it, but then I saw it over at Gail’s blog and realized that it needs to be posted again. More people need to see it. Not just because of the emotion it evokes, but because it helps to make you realize that the victims of terror are not just nameless faces. The dead leave a gaping hole.

If that doesn’t strike a chord inside watch Three Days in Israel.

Look at these pictures

When you watch the videos and you see the pictures I want you to ask yourself what an appropriate response would be. Think about it and then tell me that you wouldn’t demand that your government respond with something more than platitudes.

I want to see peace. I want to see people living side by side without fear, but we don’t live in a time when that can happen. Not now, not for a long time. Too much has happened. It is time to sit down and say we agree to disagree. It is time to stop trying to force an agreement.

Related links:

IDF Special Unit training to fight terror

Inside Terrorism- The X-Ray Project

Defeat Stolen From The Jaws of Victory

Terrorism Awareness- Watch This

We’re Not Jews

Filed Under: Politics, Random Thoughts, Terrorism

Berkeley: City of Tolerance and Love

February 8, 2008 by Jack Steiner 2 Comments

Good old Berkeley, it should take Philly’s slogan and adopt it as its own. Then it could be Berkeley the city of brotherly love unless you are a marine in which case we want you to drop dead.

(CNN) — Berkeley, the famously liberal college town in California, has taken aim at Marine recruiters, saying they are “not welcome in our city.”

Republican lawmakers in Washington fired back this week, threatening to take back more than $2 million of federal funding to the city as well as money designated for the University of California-Berkeley, the campus that became a haven of protests during the Vietnam War.

The battle erupted after the Berkeley City Council approved a measure last week urging the Marine recruiters to leave their downtown office.

“If recruiters choose to stay, they do so as uninvited and unwelcome intruders,” the item says.

It goes on to say the council applauds residents and organizations that “volunteer to impede, passively or actively, by nonviolent means, the work of any military recruiting office located in the City of Berkeley.”

It is a good thing that no one in Berkeley is homeless and that there aren’t any drug problems there. It is a good thing that the schools are amazing and that there are a wealth of amazing jobs for the people to choose from.

Good to know that the perfect city exists.

Filed Under: People, Politics

Kung Fu Fighting For The Presidency

January 7, 2008 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

Click here.


Hat Tip: Wrymouth

Filed Under: Politics

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