This feed contains pages in the “bts” category.
I’ll start teaching Confirmation Class at St. Paul in three weeks. More than in any previous year of teaching, I wonder what I’ll say. Every year I read more, study further, and separate further in my mind the beautiful liturgy with which I was raised and the truth about the world as I understand it. The more I read about the Bible and the history of the church, the more I come to doubt some things I know my students will believe. Here are a few things I believe:
I’ve seen a number of others commenting on this anniversary of the day Boston was shut down by a bomb scare. Here’s one example; you can find others in the Herald or statist blogs.
On this day last year, we had the Boston bomb scare. Harmless devices turned into a pretty good scare in Boston. The good thing is that police and other authorities responded as if the devices were IEDs.
They were up for over a week before police and other authorities responded. Had they been IEDs, we’d have been in serious trouble.
Boston authorities failed to do anything useful to solve the conjectured problem, but did spend piles of cash and reputation on a false positive. According to these articles, those piles were wasted: they’d spend them on a similar false positive today. That is, they’d waste resources acting without getting an expert to evaluate the devices quickly. They’d waste further resources persecuting the vandals responsible as if they were terrorists, prosecuting based on the city’s mistakes instead of the citizens’ crimes.
There’s nothing to complain about in the actions of the officers on the scene. They did hard jobs well. The real bomb hoax was perpetrated by their bosses and commanders back at City Hall.
The good thing is that many people learned not to be scared of the unusual. I hope for more mooninite signs and more blinky vests at the airport. I hope for a society that’s hard to scare. I hope Boston authorities will stop collaborating with terrorists.
Jack Nicholson can’t believe he’s still alive, so he’s remaking As Good as It Gets with Morgan Freeman playing Helen Hunt.
This article is a few months old, but Adams has an amusing perspective on his unsurprising inclusion on terrorist watch lists. This came to my attention because of the new TSA emphasis on pseudo-science "micro-expressions".
The Economist ran a correction on page 101 of the 3 November issue. I know they’re known to lean towards the Right—quite far in most cases, by standards that include Hugo Chavez in the mean. They lean blindly in a few cases, I suppose. But I had no idea that they were this conservative:
Apology: Augustus Caesar In our review last week of Lucien Polastron’s book on libraries we said that Augustus had destroyed the Alexandrian library in 48BC. Since the lad, then called Octavian, was only 15 at the time, he obviously didn’t. And Julius Caesar, who did, hadn’t actually meant to. We apologise to Mr Polastron, the many well-educated readers who have complained, and to Augustus, now divine.
No wonder they’re so suspicious of Christian influence in government. Clearly, they’ll throw us all to the lions, and are opposed to Christianity’s tax-heavy policies—after all, the founding prophet said "Give to Caesar!"
In High School, I spent a few very pleasant weekends at the Thayer Hotel on the campus of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. This past week let me revisit those old stomping grounds. All the stonework is the same, and the knickerbocker-clad Hudson Highlands are immortal. My goodness has the security posture changed, though. The highways of the last century were built for gates that no longer admit visitors.
Shamus Young, the author of the [just-finished] adaptation DM of the Rings, has started a new web comic. The first page of Chainmail Bikini had me skeptical at the beginning, then laughing out at the tag.
Jackie Chan is a tricky, tricky man. We just finished watching Operation Condor 2: The Armour of the Gods. It had far less Nazi gold than I’d remembered. Turns out I was remembering Armour of God II: Operation Condor. Whoops. They’re even closely titled in the original. Can you tell Fei ying gai wak from Long xiong hu di? Me neither. We watched the latter. The former has the Nazis, the wind tunnel, and the gold. The latter has monks and Miss Spain 1979.
If you think that’s bad, check out how many other "Operation Condor" movies are listed by IMDB.