Even the Infallible Make Mistakes

The Writer’s Almanac – APRIL 11 – 17, 2005

It was on this day in 1633 that Galileo was put on trial for publishing evidence that the sun and not the earth is the center of the solar system. He was a devout Catholic but didn’t believe his ideas should threaten the church. He wrote, the “Holy Sprit intended to teach us in the Bible how to go to Heaven, not how the heavens go.” …

So Galileo wrote a book in which three friends discuss whether the earth or the sun is the center of the solar system. The book presented the sun-centered argument as convincing and the earth-centered argument as idiotic, but at the very end, the three characters agree that no one really knows the truth. When it was published, the book became a best-seller.

The pope decided Galileo’s book had crossed a line, and mocked the church, and he ordered the printing stopped, all copies seized, and Galileo was put on trial for heresy. Galileo was sentenced to house arrest. …

It took more than 350 years for Pope John Paul II to declare, in 1992, that Galileo had been unjustly condemned by the Catholic Church.

If the trial were held today, how would Tom Delay and Duhbya vote? And if they managed to vote for truth over lies, how many of their supporters would rage at them? The Dark Ages are back. mjh

QOTD

Billmon

The image I get from watching the Christian right these days is of a race car driver at the starting line, ferociously revving the engine and waiting for the checkered flag to pop the clutch.

This is all about torque, in other words. Dobson and his fellow ayatollahs want to see their Bible feyadeen absolutely frothing at the mouth — mad enough to walk through fire, if that’s what it takes, to get at those tyrannical liberal judges.

Loud Mouth

Yesterday, as I entered the UNM Continuing Education building, I heard a very loud man talking. We’ve all encountered oblivious cell phone users, but this guy may be a prize-winner. He had positioned himself at the top of the atrium stairs so that his already loud voice echoed through the whole building. He projected over the voluminous entryway about something important to him. When I reached the top of the stairs, I had to pass close to him. I could actually hear the OTHER person, too.

So, maybe this is the nicest guy in the world. As far as I can tell, as a passing stranger, he’s a champion jackass. Remember this tale the next time you pick up your cellphone. mjh

transmission lines across the caldera

ABQjournal: Caldera Case Now in Fed CourtBy Adam Rankin

The energy company that wants to build a geothermal power plant in the heart of the Valles Caldera National Preserve is taking its case to federal court in an effort to gain access to geothermal wells drilled decades ago.

In an ongoing property rights conflict that has attracted the attention of Congress, GeoProducts of New Mexico filed the lawsuit on Thursday in federal court seeking to force the trust that manages the land to allow the company to use the wells it considers integral to its plan to develop the energy source.

“The trust has consistently claimed that we don’t have the right to use those wells, which is nonsense, we think,” said Ken Boren, president of GeoProducts of New Mexico. …

The trust is adamantly opposed to any energy development on the preserve and argues that building a power plant and associated transmission lines across the caldera would run counter to the intent of Congress, which paid $101 million in 2000 for 89,000 acres to establish the land as a working ranch and natural preserve. …

GeoProducts holds the lease on about 12.5 percent of the mineral rights beneath the caldera. Boren said unless the government agrees to what he and the mineral rights owners feel is a fair market price for their share of the minerals, GeoProducts plans to go ahead with its intention of building a full-scale power plant in the preserve’s southwest corner.

So, these folks are blackmailing you and me: give us $15 million for mineral rights or we’ll build a huge power plant and power lines in this beautiful area. Mineral rights they acquired for pennies from you and me. This kind of scam shames all capitalists. Have some decency, please.

Still, we must enjoy the irony that they will use “alternative energy” to screw everything up. mjh

Just How Liberal is UNM?

UNM women question equity – Daily Lobo – News by Karina Guzzi

There are about 300 female faculty members and 500 male faculty members at UNM. …

According to [The UNM Women’s Caucus’] findings, 58 percent of UNM’s undergraduates and 59 percent of UNM’s graduate students are women. Forty percent of deans are women, 26 percent are directors and 31 percent are chairs.

Two of the seven members on the board of regents are women. There are no women on the operations committee of the board. …

“Women make on average $10,000 less than men,” [Diane Marshall, a biology professor,] said. “There are more women in lesser ranks, but there is discrepancy in every rank as well.”

UNM needs to hire 200 conservative women post haste. mjh

mjh’s Blog: Liberals Want Your Children!

Best Wishes to the Groom and Groom from the GOP

The New York Times > Washington > G.O.P. Consultant Weds His Male Partner By ADAM NAGOURNEY

Arthur J. Finkelstein, a prominent Republican consultant who has directed a series of hard-edged political campaigns to elect conservatives in the United States and Israel over the last 25 years, said Friday that he had married his male partner in a civil ceremony at his home in Massachusetts.

Mr. Finkelstein, 59, who has made a practice of defeating Democrats by trying to demonize them as liberal, said in a brief interview that he had married his partner of 40 years to ensure that the couple had the same benefits available to married heterosexual couples.

“I believe that visitation rights, health care benefits and other human relationship contracts that are taken for granted by all married people should be available to partners,” he said. …

Mr. Finkelstein has regularly described himself as a libertarian who supports same-sex marriage and abortion rights while opposing big government. In an interview with Maariv, an Israeli newspaper, after the American elections last year, he criticized the Republican Party as growing too close to evangelical Christians, warning it could cause long-term damage to the party. …

Mr. Finkelstein live[s] with his partner and two children….

[S]ome conservative friends said Mr. Finkelstein’s marriage would roil conservatives and highlight divisions among them over the importance of social issues to their movement.

“In recent years, Arthur hasn’t pretended to be a social conservative,” said one longtime conservative associate, who cited Mr. Finkelstein’s aversion to publicity in declining to be identified. “But this is the same man who was the architect of Jesse Helms’s political rise.”

I’m not outing Finkelstein. I’m not even calling him a complete hypocrite. I’m highlighting this story to underscore my confusion over what “conservatives” want and what they are willing to do to get it. Like work closely with people who wish they were dead.

Note: they’ve been a couple for 40 years (since 1965!). How many conservatives have gotten multiple divorces in that time? mjh

[via dangerousmeta!]

Republicans who control Congress are pretty touchy

You recall that a week ago Domenici slapped down Richardson for lying about there being an energy bill (OK, Pete didn’t use the word “lie,” but he said there was no bill and Richardson didn’t know what he was talking about. Here’s an update. mjh

ABQjournal: Sparks Fly Between New Mexico Political Dynamos By Michael Coleman, Journal Washington Bureau

Actually, there was a draft bill floating around at the time, it just wasn’t Domenici’s.

House Republicans late last Thursday posted a draft of their energy bill on the Internet. It’s similar to a bill they pushed last Congress, so it was no surprise that Richardson and other Democrats would blast it.

It wasn’t introduced until Tuesday of this week.

Domenici and the Republicans who control Congress are pretty touchy about energy policy these days. They have tried and failed, repeatedly and for many reasons, including clumsy politics and internal squabbling, to get an energy bill to the president’s desk.

Domenici has called crafting energy legislation the most difficult task he has attempted in more than 30 years in Congress.

Richardson, who appears to be positioning himself for a presidential run in 2008, saw a wide opening to attack the GOP on a sensitive subject when gasoline prices are at a record high.

[Coco beat me to the post on this and the Payne vs Scarantino clash.]