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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Blogging Course

I'm evaluating a multi-media course on blogging from the folks at Simpleology. For a while, they're letting you snag it for free if you post about it on your blog.

It covers:

  • The best blogging techniques.
  • How to get traffic to your blog.
  • How to turn your blog into money.

I'll let you know what I think once I've had a chance to check it out. Meanwhile, go grab yours while it's still free.

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Ethics in America, and the problem with the government.

Yesterday I was at the doctor's office. While sitting and waiting for my appointment (a 3 hour wait is typical) an asian man walked in with a garbage bag. He barely spoke english, but new everyone and everyone knew him. He placed the bag on the counter and everyone came running like he was Santa Claus.

He then pulled out close to 100 DVD's of today's newest movies currently in theaters. Movies like Harry Potter, Hairspray, Rush Hour 3, Ratitouile, Transformers, and much more. The nurses, receptionists, and even the doctors were buying away. Patients then started to take notice and made their purchases sometimes fighting over who was going to get the last copy of Hairspray. Each DVD was only $5, came in a poly sleeve and included a picture of the movie.

What boggled my mind was one of the doctors actions. He came out of his room where he was seeing a patient to "exchange" 4 movies he had received the week before because the quality wasn't good. Can you imagine the nerve? Paying $5 for a stolen movie and then demanding quality? Forget the nerve, can you imagine the ethics? I guess the hypocratic oath says nothing about purchasing pirated DVD's.

I sat there in amazment at what I was seeing. Don't get me wrong, I am not that naive to not know people are selling pirated movies and many people are buying them. I know of the stories of watching DVD's and seeing people throwing popcorn in the air and hearing people talk and laugh, and one report of a screen so dirty that you could see the soda stains in the movie where people threw their cups of drinks at the screen. No doubt in protest of a Michael Moore movie. But what I was witnessing was different. The attitudes of the people was astonishing to me, and more so, the doctors!!!

I chalked it up to greedy Americanism... Yes, I am still a republican conservative.

But today topped it off.

I just read an article about how the pentagon paid $998,769 to ship two 19 cent washers to a Texas airforce base. I at first assumed it was a pentagon problem and it was some glitch and a typo got through or something. Turns out, a company owned by 2 sisters (twins) found a flaw in the government's payable system. Any purchase order marked priority and eventually desitined for a war zone (Iraq, Afghanistan, etc.) was paid without questioning shipping charges. Over the past few years, these 2 women discovered the flaw, and started charging massive amounts of shipping fees, each growing over time and totalling over $20,000,000 that's 20 million dollars for what cost them $100 in shipping costs. These were things like machine screws, washers, and other small hardware items which mainly cost less than $1 and I would assume could be purchased at a local hardware shop. (read full story here)

Now that brings up many issues:

1 - The ethics of these 2 are staggaring, yes. But the GREED of these two is even worse. Imagine if you were so inclined to steal and found a good thing, would you not be thankful for the free money and charge just under what would be considered unsuspicious? Would you not think that maybe SOMEONE, even someone totally incompatent might suspect a $1,000,000 shipping charge for a bill totalling 38 cents? Sorry, but these two deserve to be tried as traders. (By the way, one has since died. I hope the burns from the flames hurt like the place your now living!)

2 - A perfect example of the staggering incompetancy of the government and further PROOF as to why the government should be limited to what they control and can do. As if the motor vehicle department wasn't proof enough, maybe Hillary should take a look at this before she embarks on one of her socialized medicine tantrams.

Wake up and smell the Starbucks people!!!! As a republican, I am all for making money and living a nice life with the money you earned. But remember those 7 deadly sins? Do we need a lesson? No, it isn't that America deserved to get attacked because of our greed, that is just stupidity! It is however we need to attack ourselves (no, not with planes Mr. and Mrs. conspiricy couple) by looking in the mirror, and smacking ourselves back to reality.

We need to:
  • see what we have and not what we have not
  • know what we need, and not what we want
  • hear what people mean, and not what they are saying
  • feel how others feel, and not only what we feel
  • wake up and smell the coffee, but don't drink it at $5 a cup!

Come back tomorrow, I will be talking about some of my favorite stories on this same theme.

In the meantime, go in peace, help others!

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

An Atheist and a Bear

And now since my graduation, I thought it appropriate for an atheist joke (sorry, I found it funny, but it probably says more about the "Christian than the atheist!) ;-)

An atheist was taking a walk through the woods, admiring all that evolution had
created.


"What majestic trees! What powerful rivers! What beautiful animals!", he said to himself. As he was walking along the river, he heard a rustling in the bushes behind him. When he turned to see what the casue was, he saw a 7-foot grizzly charging right towards him. He ran as fast as he could. He looked over his shoulder and saw that the bear was closing, He ran even faster, crying in fear. He looked over his shoulder again, and the bear was even closer.

His heart was pounding and he tried to run even faster.

He tripped and fell on the ground. He rolled over to pick himself up, but saw the bear right on top of him, reaching for him with his left paw and raising his right paw to strike him.

At that moment, the Atheist cried out "Oh my God!...." Time stopped. The bear froze. The forest was silent. Even the river stopped moving. As a bright light shone upon the man, a voice came out of the sky, "You deny my existence for all of these years; teach others I don''t exist; and even credit creation to a cosmic accident. Do you expect me to help you out of this predicament? Am I to count you as a believer?"

The atheist looked directly into the light "It would be hypocritical of me to suddenly ask You to treat me as Christian now, but perhaps could you make the bear a Christian?"

"Very well," said the voice.

The light went out. The river ran again. And the sounds of the forest resumed.
And then the bear dropped his right paw ..... brought both paws together...bowed his head and spoke: "Lord, for this food which I am about to receive, I am truly thankful."

Diakonia Graduation

On Saturday, June 23, 2007, I graduated from the ELCA's (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America) 2 year Diakonia Program. Now a diakonia graduate, I will do a 1 year internship as a church deacon in my local church, and then become "set aside" as a rostered synodical deacon.


Here are some pictures from the graduation ceremony including one of the Bishop and I.






Wednesday, May 30, 2007

The Ethics of Embryonic Stem Cell Research

(This was a paper I wrote for my Diakonia class on Christian Ethics, from an ELCA Lutheran standpoint)

The Ethics of Embryonic Stem Cell Research

One of the most popular TV shows today is a game show called Deal or No Deal. In it the player is offered various sums of money. All the person has to do is hit the button when he or she feels the offer is high enough to accept. Annoyingly, the people usually don’t have much money, are offered hundreds of thousands of dollars, and they turn it down in hopes of walking away with a million. Usually, the greedy individuals walk away with a few hundred or less.

But what does that have to do with the purpose of this paper? Absolutely nothing, other than it reminds me of one of my favorite episodes of the Twilight Zone.

In the episode, called Button, Button, a husband and wife were given, what else, but a button. They were told that they should keep the button for a week, and then the owner would return to pick it up. Should they press the button, they would receive $1,000,000 in cash, big money in those days. The catch, someone would die, someone they didn’t know, someone who had killed someone else and probably deserved to die. Immediately, the couple both refused to press the button, or even take the button. A life wasn’t worth $1,000,000, even one that had killed another. The owner left the button with them for a week anyway, just in case they changed their minds. As the days past, the button became more intriguing. They certainly needed the money, and the person did kill someone else. This reasoning went on for days. The husband, disgusted by his wife’s disregard for human life, threw the button out. The wife sneakily retrieved it, and eventually, I believe on the last day, finally pressed the button. After all, she didn’t know the person, how would that affect her life. I don’t remember her name, I just call her Eve!

This show made a huge impression on me, it had so many lessons I can’t even list them all. I won’t give away the ending, but if you ever get a chance to see it, do so.

Anyway, that got me thinking. What if you or I were given a button? What would we do? What if you were offered $10,000,000 or maybe more? What would it take for you to press the button? Let’s change it around a little bit. What if the prize was not cash, but life? What if by pressing the button, you still killed someone, but saved someone else? Let’s say, someone close to you, like a spouse, or child? Supposed this person was dying, had cancer or was paralyzed and by killing the person you don’t know, it would somehow save your spouse or child! Would you press the button now?

What if I told you the other person was going to die anyway, but by pressing the button, when he died, it would save the life of your spouse or child? How about if it was a fetus, say a few weeks old? Would you press the button to save your sick relative now? What if it was a fertized egg, say a 4 day old embryo, still merely a few cells? How about an unfertilized egg? Would you trade life for another? Would you trade the potential for life, for life? What if it was you who was sick or paralyzed or blind? When if ever would you hit that button?

In our Diakonia class I once made the mistake of trying to prove a point by separating myself into 2 people, one we will call secular John, the other Christian John. It was quickly pointed out that unless I was schizophrenic, the two John’s should really be one. Not entirely true according to Luther’s two kingdoms principle, but in any case, I was trying to make a point. Either I was a hypocrite, wanting one thing but preaching another, or I was very confused, perhaps even a bit schizophrenic. What it boiled down to is being a Christian in a secular society is not easy and nothing proves this more than the stem cell research debate.

I had heard Bush doesn’t want to fund stem cell research, I had heard Christopher Reeves would be alive and walking if it wasn’t for Bush’s illegalization of stem cell research, I had heard that stem cell research would kill babies, but I also heard, it would save lives. Most of what I heard of course was untrue or unfounded, but I don't want to turn this into a political debate. More importantly anyway, was what I didn’t hear. What I didn't hear was what stem cell research was exactly, and what the big deal was that it had extremists on either side screaming and yelling like we were debating Roe vs. Wade.

So I did some research about the research. In order to decide if something is ethical, you need to know what it is, why it would and wouldn’t be ethical, and what both sides have to say about the issue. You need to get down to the exact problem, so you know what facts to look for to back up your side of the debate or to make an informed decision. Here is what I found out.

Simplistically, Stem Cell Therapy is taking good healthy cells and injecting or otherwise implanting them into a body where bad cells exist. Hopefully, the good cells will replace the bad cells and the person would be cured of anything from blindness, paralysis, and other nerve related illnesses to cancer and other illnesses that destroy parts of your body. Surprisingly to me, Stem Cell Therapy already is in use and working in many countries, including the U.S.
The theory is that we all start out as an egg and a sperm. When fertilized, the egg then multiplies its cells into more cells. Like that old hair shampoo commercial, 2 becomes 4 becomes 8 becomes 16 and so on and so on until we become billions of cells. But not just one type of cell, those original cells have become other types of cells. Some liver, some kidney, some blood, some brain, etc… Since we know the original cells can become any other cell, in theory it is those cells we want.

Apparently, our success with using cells to heal illnesses works, but so far, only with “adult” cells. One example is using bone marrow to cure leukemia. Much progress is also being made with cord blood cells taken during delivery of a baby. As a matter of fact, so much so that cord blood banks are popping up all over the place so new parents can store their babies cord blood cells just in case they need them when they get older. Because it is there own, there is less chance of bodily rejection.

So far so good right? Well, not so fast.

See the adult cells can really only be used to help with a single type of cell replacement. For example, liver cells can be used primarily to cure liver disease. Another problem is they don’t multiply very well. They are sometimes too old. I know the feeling. So, scientists started focusing on cord blood cells. They are closer to the kind of cells they want to use because they can become many other types of cells, they are younger, healthier cells and they are in a simpler, more pliable form so to speak. They also multiply very easily.

Ultimately though, scientists want those original cells, the ones that can in theory, become anything. Those are called embryonic stem cells.

So now the problem, it means killing the embryo. It means, taking a 4 – 10 day old fertilized egg (embryo), and killing it for its cells. The cells are then taken and made to multiply, then injected into the diseased individual where the good new cells would “attack” the bad cells and replace them. Essentially, those who oppose this say you are trading one life for another. Others say it is merely cells, and still others use the term “potential for life”. Does this sound familiar?

The real problem of this ethical dilemma then is do we kill 4-10 day old embryos, babies, cells, whatever you want to call them, to cure a multitude of diseases for thousands of people? In simplistic terms trading life for life. At first I thought I had my answer, “Thou shall not kill!” It all boils down to that, and that is exactly how many feel. Perhaps that should be the end of it. But though this has many similarities to abortion, it did have some things that were different enough to warrant more thought and insight.

What really got me thinking was a conversation I had with a couple from my church, also friends of mine; at least they are still talking to me, for now. I knew their views on many topics. They are staunch, right wing, conservatives. Bring up homosexuality, and you may as well be talking about the apocalypse. What shocked me was the wife was pro-choice on the abortion issue. “It’s killing a baby!” she said, but then continued, “But it is her choice, it is between her and God!” I had to ask, “Isn’t homosexuality between those people and God?” “No” she said, “because that is an abomination and unnatural”. By the way, the husband didn’t know she was pro-choice after 30 years of marriage. He is still on the phone with his divorce lawyer.

So I asked her, what about stem cell research? She said she was against it. After cleaning my ears I asked again. “So let me understand. You are pro-choice when it comes to a woman aborting a baby or fetus, depending on your outlook, but not when it comes to saving lives by killing a 4 day old fertilized egg?” She explained, but I still don’t understand the answer in full to be honest. I did get one thing out of it however, “Life begins at conception!”

So there it was, right in front of me. Everyone agrees it is killing, what they don’t agree on is what they are killing. So the real problem is not is it okay to kill, but rather, when does life begin.

For Roman Catholics, life begins not only at conception, but prior to that, at the “potential for life.” This is the reason the Roman Catholic Church, (and I don’t mean the people that make up the church, but rather the hierarchy of the church) don’t allow for the use of contraception.
The ELCA website had no social statement on Embryonic Stem Cell Research. But considering they allow for abortion under certain circumstances, but don’t encourage it, and it should be a last resort, I figure they had to have a similar philosophy on this topic. They did have some “papers’ or articles on Stem Cell Research, and they made some great points in that direction. One in particular summarizes what may be my current feelings of when life begins. It stated that life may begin at conception, but human life is a gradual thing that happens after time as the fetus and mother bond. This does not happen in a test tube or Petri dish.

However, regardless of when life begins, the truth is, stem cell research using adult cells and cord blood are making great strides, and you don’t have to kill anyone or anything. People all over the world are being cured of all kinds of diseases and it certainly makes me thankful that the human body can only physically last 125 years according to the experts; I don’t think I could last much longer than that! With that said, Embryonic Stem Cell Research is all theory. There is not one case I could find in any country where it worked at all. Not in animals, and certainly not in humans. It is all theory, maybe a valid one, but theory none the less. At this point, why bother with all the fuss.

Embryonic Stem Cell Research should be a last resort. If adult cells and cord blood cells don’t work for certain things and embryonic cells are shown to at least have potential, then I think ethically, using a 4 day old embryo is ok. That is where I pressed my button, but I only would press it after I was sure it could work and nothing else would.

Sadly, there are many other issues that may come up with this topic in the future. One of which is this could lead to cloning, creating life for parts, and more. Some say we should use medical waste, embryos after an abortion, unused invitro fertilized eggs, and more. We need to be careful that one thing doesn’t lead to another and we start to make body parts factories by growing people or parts for the express purpose of selling them to save others or people getting pregnant to have an abortion to save a relative. These are some valid ethical issues that we are not ready to deal with, especially within the confines of this paper.

So on this topic alone of Embryonic Stem Cell Research, the bible says nothing about it. It does however touch on a few related topics. “Treat others as you would have them treat you!”, “Thou shall not murder!” and more. In order for them all to apply here, it all comes down to this. When do you think human life begins? When would you have pressed the button?



The American Red Cross