Hello all, sorry to get you excited and everything. I’m trying out my (new) laptop’s new blogging program, to see if this is going to be useful in helping me to write blogs during the massive amounts of downtime I get whilst travelling to my job across town. If you enjoy my writing, keep your fingers crossed!
(considering) 8:28
Implications of the Sovereignty of God
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One of my more thoughtful co-workers was talking about the advantage of the world ending by a zombie outbreak. The reason that he thought it a good way for the world to end was that he thought that the world would do a heck of a lot better without us humans, and there’s something poetic about our civilization ending as it’s destroyed by us going insane ourselves and destroying it. Heck, as zombies we’d only be going quicker than we are now.
Pretty bleak point really, but not one without merit. Watching the news doesn’t really engender a lot of hope in our race, and when I look in the mirror, I realize that in many ways I’m not much better. There is something seriously wrong with the world, and we humans seem to be at the centre of it. While people blame politics (liberal or conservative), religion, ideology, technology, or even stupidity, I really think the problem goes deeper, perhaps to our very core.
So what does that have to do with Christmas? A lot.
But after he had considered this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary home as your wife, because what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit. She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.”
Matthew 1:20-21

Joseph, facing the soon birth of a child to his fiancee (despite his not having had relations with her), is told by God that this apparent example of something going wrong in the world, was actually the beginning of an answer to that problem at the centre of the universe, we humans and our sin.
So as we watch a world in failing economics, and with wars and rumours of wars, may we see hope, not in the coming extinction of humanity, but in the salvation God works through unlikely methods.
Happy Advent dear readers.
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Those who read what I sometimes write on this blog know that I don’t usually talk about politics. Up to about yesterday, I was probably going to keep up the streak of not talking about politics, but I’ve recently had several discussions with people around me that have changed my mind. The subject: The coalition of NDP/Liberals (using the CBC’s understanding of the coalition). Several of those I know have expressed some support for the ousting of Stephen Harper as Prime Minister, and I have to disagree on a few points.
1) I am told that Harper brought this on himself by coming up with the idea that federal campaign finance should be eliminated. You see, in Canada, each party gets an amount of money from federal coffers for each vote cast for it. Sounds good, doesn’t it? After all, it means that instead of individual Canadians giving to political parties, the government does through a function of government money. The problem? It means that since the Bloc Quebecois gets a lot of votes in Quebec, federal tax dollars paid by Canadians end up in the coffers of a party that wants to put an end to Canada (and seems to like deriding us anglophones).
Harper instead seems to think that if individual Canadians want to support a political party, they should support financially as well, and parties should be accountable enough that their funds are based, not just on a vote (as is true of Bloc funding), but on whether or not the average Canadian stands with their ideals enough to give them money. And no, a multibillionaire shouldn’t be able to give billions to a party, but then, that’s why we have a cap on donations.
So, to sum up, Stephen Harper advocated doing the right thing. It may be poor timing, but it is the right thing to do.
2) The coalition says (at least through ads I heard on the radio this morning) that Stephen Harper had no plan to deal with the economy. Well, um, he’s a conservative. Conservatives have the belief that the free market should be allowed to make corrections and that government interference usually does more harm than good. Many Canadians seem to agree, as the Conservatives have the most seats in Parliament.
3) The CBC (which I am told is impartial) says that Stephen Harper is lying when Harper claims that the coalition includes the Bloc. To deal with this, I offer some simple math: the conservatives have 143 seats in the House of Commons. The Liberals have 77, and the NDP have 37, while there are 2 independants. That means the total of all parties beside the conservatives and the Bloc is 116. 116 is less than 143. In order for this coalition to actually pass legislation, they need the support of the Bloc (or of some Conservatives). This is simple because as public opinion is showing after the NDP/Liberal/Bloc stunt, the Canadian electorate are quite happy to go to the polls again and give the conservatives a majority.
The result is that the Liberals and NDP would have to ALWAYS bow to the bloc, or the government would fall again, and we’d have another election where they’d be blasted. Thus while it is semantically true that the coalition is only between the NDP and Liberals, the simple fact is that the coalition cannot work without the complete support of the Bloc.The CBC are being true to the letter of truth, but are simply not looking at the underlying truth. Is this surprising? No. Does it surprise me that we (as the people of Canada) still fund them to compete with news organizations more capable of being straight with us? Yes.
4) Newfoundland and Labrador was silly, and listened to King Danny last election, electing Anyone But Conservatives. Now we have a real possibility that we’ll have a federal government beholden to the Quebec separatists, and that has NEVER boded well for Newfoundland and Labrador. After all, they seem to keep forgetting that border between Labrador and and Quebec. Now our 7 elected representatives are giving the balance of power to the separatists.
5) Nothing I’ve heard from the Liberal/NDP coalition seems to be a decent fiscal plan. Quite the contrary, they seem to want to do the same thing as failed in ending the depression under the New Deal (the depression ended with WWII). One of my family members said that “well, instead of using the massive financial spending of the war, we’ll spend on bridges and dams and such.” The problem? The WWII ending of the depression in the US was funded by massive public financial support through large series’ of war bonds. The spending the NDP/Liberals espouse would be through the forced expropriation of funds through taxation. The former leads people to increase spending later on the things that keep the economy going (consumer goods) as they have investments, the latter leads people to hoard money, actually stilting the economy. Even where it was solely government funding that kept the war going, there was broad public support because, well, people didn’t want to die or be ruled by Nazis. Taxes rarely, if ever, have public support unless there is a clear and present danger, and economics isn’t enough. If it were, the Stamp Act would have been greeted with open arms in all of the colonies, instead of an open rebellion (leading to the creation of that country to the south).
So yeah, I’m opposed to this coalition. I think Harper is a shiftless guy, especially after his statement that he would not allow an MP to bring forward legislation opposed to pre-birth infanticide (abortion), but he’s the one Canadians actually gave a mandate to. The party in the House with the next most seats (the Liberals at 77) have just over half the number of seats his party does.
But of course, I’ll never be asked any of this, because this is all going to be handled by parliamentary politics instead of the people of Canada.
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Charity: Carleton’s student union decides that cistic fibrosis isn’t an “inclusive” enough disease, and so pulls support for Shinorama.
Culture: In a stunning victory for freedom and tolerance, an American film festival director is forced to resign because he had the audacity to give money to support California’s proposition 8.
Gift giving: Not sure what to give a loved one this holiday season? How about Planned Parenthood gift certificates? Question: How could you give this appropriately?
Technology: Microsoft looks into the scourge of cyberchondria (deciding you have the worst disease listed on a search engine).
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Law: The American NAtional Park Police seem to believe a man handing out poppies (what we Canadians know as a symbol of war veterans) is a panhandler.
Evil?: GetReligion comments on the story of a young man who killed himself by overdose while many watched over webcam feed.
Reading: Tim Challies posts a series of tips on how to read better.
And just a simple quote:
Every age has its own outlook. It is especially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need to keep the clean sea breeze of the centuries blowing through our minds… by reading old books.
— C.S. Lewis from the ‘Introduction’, St. Athanasius, On the Incarnation