Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

April 18, 2005

Metrosexual or Medieval?

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 9:00 am

An interesting list from Doug Giles:

You might be a metrosexual if …

  1. You use more than three words when ordering your Starbuck’s,
  2. You’re still into rollerblading,
  3. You put on cologne to go to the gym,
  4. You have an Armani Exchange or Banana Republic credit card,
  5. You Tivo Sex in the City and/or Will and Grace,
  6. You watch Friends with a note pad,
  7. You have panic attacks (look, either have a real heart attack or cut the crap. That feeling you’re feeling is not death; it’s called responsibility and most everybody feels it. So … suck it up, drink a Guinness and get a life),
  8. You shave any part of your body except your face or skull,
  9. You buy your shampoo at a salon instead of a grocery store,
  10. You take more than two, that’s two, minutes to fix your hair,
  11. You think Ben Affleck, Colin Farrell, and Orlando Bloom are really, really good actors,
  12. You think you have a feminine side to get in touch with, and/or
  13. You must have Evian and only Evian for hydration (Hey, thongmeister. What’s Evian spelled backwards? That’s what you are).

Who are Colin Farrell and Orlando Bloom?

Who needs more than five seconds to fix their hair? I can do it with a washcloth.

April 16, 2005

A Neo-Nazi in Corpus Christi

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:02 pm

Last October, the Islamic Society of Southern Texas released a statement denouncing violence in the name of Islam. Jim Lago had several members on his show, brought together and to Jim through Dr. Greg Silverman. Apparently, one of these gentlemen got in touch with Jim to seek some radio time for Dr. William H. Baker who founded Christians and Muslims for Peace. Baker is in town to speak.

Tuesday night Jim called me to ask if I’d like to come in and be on the show Saturday (today). He knows full well I play golf Saturday mornings, so it had to be something special. “I’m going to have a Nobel Prize nominee in here to talk about his organization and peace in the Middle East.”

Of course, I asked his name, and any information Jim might have so I could be adequately prepared to speak intelligently.

On Wednesday I had to take a trip to Houston for the day, then Thursday my daughter-in-law went into the hospital to deliver my granddaughter. So, I didn’t get any time to research prior to Friday morning. I was in for quite a shock when I started preparing.

The first indication of problems was when I did a Google search and found an article in the Orange County Weekly about him.

Though he was listed as “Dr. William Baker” in the conference program, Baker has no doctorate of any kind; officials of Oxford University in England disputed Baker’s claim that he did graduate work there. Baker claimed to have attended another graduate program that turned out to have been a six-unit freshman field trip.

In 1984, Baker was national chairman of Costa Mesa-based Holocaust denier Willis Carto’s Populist Party, whose platform called for the repeal of U.S. civil rights laws. Baker now states that, although he planned his party’s national convention, he had no knowledge of its platform or ideology.

He is also scheduled to speak at a banquet in Boca Raton the end of this month, and is hailed in the program as “one of the most outstanding figures in the Christian society.” It also claims he is part of Robert Schuller’s Crystal Cathedral–from whence he was banish several years ago.

Daniel Pipes keeps track of people like Baker through articles such as one in a Michigan newspaper:

Baker “began his 33-year career as a peacemaker after he was taken hostage by 11 men of the Hezbollah who blindfolded him and aimed their AK-47s at him. For three days, he and his captors talked about justice, oppression, innocence and guilt. He also pointed out to them that terrorism is not sanctioned by Quran or Islam.” All very interesting, but Hezbollah did not exist in 1971, nor for more than another decade. So either Baker is engaging in some Walter Mitty-like fantasies or the unnamed journalist at the Kalamazoo Gazette got it wrong. Either explanation is cause for concern but I suspect the former explanation is the right one.

More information about this shadowy man comes from Jonathan Calt Harris:

Baker also called himself “professor of ancient history and sacred literature” but all evidence suggested he only taught Christian subjects for three years after he graduated from Ozark Bible College in Joplin, Missouri.

There are many more such articles on the internet. What there isn’t is any substantiation of Baker’s claims to be what he says.

He claims to have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1997. Unfortunately, this is a convenient claim which cannot be verified. The Nobel Committee does not allow the names of nominees to be released for fifty years. I don’t doubt that he might have been nominated because anyone can be, and it requires a letter to the committee written by someone who is in academia. There are plenty of people who like what he says in our universities. That’s how he earns his living: Giving speeches to students at colleges, paid for by university funds. Nobody else seems to be interested in his anti-Israel, anti-Jew rhetoric.

I understand why Jim cancelled Baker’s appearance on the show. Personally, I was looking forward to the confrontation. I could never “win” an argument with someone like that, but I could certainly provide a vehicle for him to expose himself for what he is.

He is here this weekend, probably speaking to young people in Corpus Christi. He is surely telling them that Christians and Muslims must work together to rid the world of those in opposition to Christianity and Islam so that there can be peace. Who is he talking about?

Israel and Jews. I hope the youngsters listening to him understand that.

April 5, 2005

Robert The Counter

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 11:35 am

When I was a sophomore in high school, I spent many of my summer days at the swimming pool. On two days of each week I gave one or two of those hours to CHAP kids. Children Have Potential. All were physically or mentally handicapped in some way. I helped teach them to swim and enjoy the water, and their parents got to relax and watch as someone else paid attention to their children. And I don’t mean that the parents dumped them on us. They watched in joy seeing their children having fun with others in a way they seldom did.

Varifrank spent a summer as a camp counselor doing something similar. He expresses the lessons learned quite well while talking about Robert. The value of a single life.

Frank also links to other tales of one person’s reaching higher, and the effect is has on the whole world. Take the time to read his post, and all those he links to.

Each of these men made choices in their lives that bettered not only their lives, but our lives as well. As Benjamin Franklin once said, “ What is the worth of a new born babe?”

April 1, 2005

Sociology 101

Filed under: Golf,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:46 pm

Eighteen holes of match or medal play will teach you more about your foe than will 18 years of dealing with him across a desk. ~Grantland Rice

Duncan has learned that.

Funny thing about golf. It will also teach you about yourself.

The game is humbling. Even Tiger Woods hits bad shots. Recently. Several in a single round. And I don’t mean that they are simply bad shots compared to how he usually hits the ball. I mean they are bad shots even by the standards of weekend golfers.

What Tiger and other Tour pros miss out on is the exhilaration we duffers feel when we hit a really good shot–one that comes off the clubface with that unmistakable feel, and the precise trajectory we envisioned, landing just the way we wanted it to, exactly where we wanted it to land. Tour pros expect all that every time they swing the club. The rest of us simply hope for it.

That is why we learn about our playing partners. It is very difficult to keep your own thoughts and emotions hidden in such circumstances. I have never broken par, even for nine holes. But I’ve come close. And there have been many times when I shot one or two strokes over par on the front nine and then played the back ten over. Jekyll and Hyde. It is not an uncommon thing.

Think of the range of emotions in doing something like that. First there is the boost that comes with confidence in yourself. Then there can be the nagging doubts about whether it is actually happening. Then, a resignation that it will all soon end. Finally, it happens. I’ve seen PBS many, many times–Post-Birdie Syndrome. Someone finishes a hole with a tough birdie, then scores double-bogey, or worse, on the very next hole.

For those of you who don’t play the game, consider a night out on the town with your high school or college buddies. These are people you know well, or so you think. Until the drinking begins. Some drunks are passive, some are belligerent. Some get quiet, others get very vocal. Yet you will often see one or two that go through the entire cycle of personas.

That’s what you see on the golf course.

What you find, though, is that most people deal with the ups and downs quite well. Others throw things. Some joke about their own play. Some get very quiet when things are going well and some get very quiet when things are going poorly.

If you, like Grantland Rice, are a student of social interaction, I cannot think of a better place for research than the golf course.

(HT BogeyLounge)

Instapundit and Schiavo

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:30 am

Hatred is not a Christian virtue. If you hate, you are not following your religion. It is as simple as that. Regardless of your feelings about any situation, hatred is a sin.

Apparently Glenn Reynolds has recieved more than his share of hate mail. Today he posts an email from a true Christian, which makes him feel much better about things.

March 24, 2005

Neal Boortz

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 8:01 am

Neal Boortz is asked, “Why do you want Terri Schiavo to die?” He answers.

I have wondered the same thing.

Why is it that those of us who believe in an afterlife are so reluctant to leave this one?

Kids as Pawns

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 7:01 am

This makes me sick to my stomach.

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