Sunday, December 3, 2006
Holy Schnykies
Saturday, November 25, 2006
Thanksgiving Quotes
Bonnie: ...And Chris! Beating up on that poor 7 year old in fencing class!
Chris: No actually I found out he was 10!
Dad, looking at a male model's facial expression in a catalogue: Now see this really annoys me. This teenage hostility, this...
Me: Angst?
Dad: No, it doesn't rise to the level of angst. I refuse to dignify this with the word "angst." This is just rude.
Dad: Hahahahaha
Me: Come on, Dad, it wasn't THAT funny...
Dad: Hahahahahahahahaha
Mom: Jeb! What did you SAY?!
Dad: HAHAHAHAHAHA!!!
Me: Nothing! I just looked at him!
Dad: (Silent laughter, gasping for breath)
Aunt Rinda, entering the room: What in the...?
Dad: WOOOOOOO!
Me: Paris Hilton is a walking argument for the estate tax.
Everyone: GEAUX TIGERS!!!
Ok, to be fair, this picture is over a year old. Chris no longer looks QUITE this ridiculous, but I'm an older brother and I invoke my right of "Make fun of Chris whenever I feel like it"
Thursday, November 23, 2006
To Hell With Stephen Jay Gould
Sunday, November 12, 2006
New Account
Alright, fine... I'll put up some actual thoughts. I'm on an Andrew Sullivan kick at the moment. If you happen to have a spare hour, I highly recommend this discussion of his book, The Conservative Soul.
I think the big reason I'm interested in what he has to say right now is that his fundamental endeavor seems to be one of intellectual bridge-building. Sullivan is a conservative who has become disillusioned with recent leadership, and is trying to show his fellow conservatives why W and the gang are leading us astray. It's a fascinating discussion to observe from the outside. As someone who was never particularly illusioned (I'd like to think) with regard to neoconservatism, I'm intensely curious to get inside the heads of those who had high hopes for this administration. Sullivan is able to cut through a lot of the crap.
The reason intellectual bridge-building is so interesting to me right now is because of the intellectual climate I'm immersed in at the moment. Moving from Rice University to Beaumont has caused a bit of.... let's call it culture shock. It's amazing to me how monolithic the thought culture is here. I've encountered fundamentalism before in small doses, but it was always in a small dose whether temporally (certain youth group retreats) or in quantity (particular friends within a larger social network). Now it surrounds me. Solidly everyone I work with is conservative, but NEARLY everyone I work with is also a fundamentalist. This is not to say that they're nasty people (it says something about my upbringing that I think I have to make this clarification), in fact everyone is exceptionally warm and thoughtful. That said, for many of them it's never occurred to them that any sane person could not believe the Bible to be the literal word of God. I've been trying to figure out how to establish dialogue for the last year or so with varying degrees of success. That's why watching this conservative insider speaking so cogently to his ideological bedfellows seems so valuable. Anyway, watch the above discussion and tell me what you think.