who do you believe?

This is a bad scan of a panel from the comic I did this weekend for the January issue of the Ann Arbor Paper. If you can’t read the quote, or tell who it is saying it from my not-quite photo-realistic portrait, it’s something from Thomas Jefferson. Here’s what he said:

“Because religious belief, or non-belief, is such an important part of every person’s life, freedom of religion affects every individual. State churches that use government power to support themselves and force their views on persons of other faiths undermine all our civil rights. Moreover, state support of the church tends to make the clergy unresponsive to the people and leads to corruption within religion. Erecting the ‘wall of separation between church and state,’ therefore, is absolutely essential in a free society.”

Then, right across from it, in the comic, I reprint this 1985 quote from Chief Justice William Rehnquist, taken from the Dissenting Opinion in Wallace v. Jaffree:

“The ‘wall of separation between church and state’ is a metaphor based on bad history, a metaphor which has proved useless as a guide to judging. It should be frankly and explicitly abandoned.”

There’s lots of other stuff in the comic too, including references to the giant Jesus torso of Ohio, and the creationism museum, but this is how it ends.

Posted in Church and State | 7 Comments

we’ll just keep moving along as though nothing’s happened

I know there’s probably really good stuff on TV today, but if you have a free moment in between reruns of Dharma and Greg and The Golden Girls, you might want to drop a line to the folks at Mitofsky International, the group that did all of the exit polling for the networks on Election Day, and ask them to share the raw data they collected on the morning of November 2nd with Congressman John Conyers. (see contact information below)

Speaking of Conyers, here’s what he has to say about the less than enthusiastic reception his group has received in Ohio:

“We have now repeatedly seen election officials obstruct and stonewall this search for the truth. I am beginning to wonder what it is they are trying to hide.”

You’d think that people would welcome a US Congressional committee charged with protecting the sanctity of the individual American vote, but I guess that’s not the case. Who knows? Perhaps they really are worried about what an investigation will show.

One of the good things about Conyers, is that, in addition to getting after the truth, he’s also rousing John Kerry to get involved. Unfortunately, even with Jesse Jackson, Conyers, and Kerry working to delay the voting of Ohio’s Republican electors, and the new evidence surfacing about significant problems in Ohio, everything happened as scheduled, and the people of Ohio officially handed their electoral votes over the Bush/Cheney. (My hope is that the AP story is wrong, but, according to their telling of events, not one protestor showed up at the Capitol building to protest the Electoral College vote. (Their story also referred to people, like myself, who feel as though we should get to the bottom of the election irregularities before moving forward, as “dissidents.”))

Anyway, back to what I was saying at the beginning of the post… If you’d like to contact the folks at Mitofsky International and ask that they cooperate with John Conyers as he looks into the election, you can find them here:

mitofsky@mindspring.com
1776 Broadway – Suite 1708
New York, New York, 10019
(212) 980-3031
Fax (212)980-3107

Posted in Politics | Leave a comment

clementine, dexter, the tv in the bar

Posted in Photographs | 2 Comments

just found in my pocket

I just found a note that I must have written to myself sometime in the last week. It says, “prairie muffin abortion coupon fund.” I can’t recall what it was that I had in mind, but I suspect it would have led to many, many death threats.

Posted in Found Objects | 4 Comments

the state of journalism

Are American journalists a dying breed? And, if so, what does that mean for the future of democracy here?

A few weeks ago, I linked to the transcript of a brilliant speech delivered by Bill Moyers before the Society of Professional Journalists. The speech, entitled “Journalism Under Fire,” painted a pretty bleak picture. Over the course of the speech, Moyers touches on everything from the affects of media consolidation to the growing number of journalists around the world that are murdered each year. The image that Moyers sketches out isn’t encouraging. News departments are being squeezed, reporters aren’t being given the time and resources they need to conduct in-depth investigations, and, more often than not, the real news losing out to entertainment and propaganda in the battle for column inches.

So, today, as I’m catching up on old news, and reading about the most recent move by the EPA to further ease pollution restrictions, I begin wondering who, if anyone, will be reporting these stories in the coming years. No matter how you look at it, the trends don’t seem to be favoring journalists (or, by extension, the truth). On one hand, we have a government becoming more and more secretive, and, on the other, we have a media that is slowly consolidating into the hands of a few multinational corporations, who, it would stand to reason, would most likely underreport the news that isn’t in the best interest of their collective portfolio of companies.

It’s probably also worth mentioning that many institutions of higher education, like my alma mater, no longer offer degrees in journalism. (It’s probably also worth noting that the federal government is considering deep cuts to the Pell Grant program, which will make college even less of an option for students not pursuing programs which will land them lucrative jobs upon graduation. (While I’m on the subject, it seems to me as though the move to cut Pell Grants could be to help boost our military recruitment numbers, which have dropped off significantly over the past few years. Once you remove college as an alternative for bright, motivated students from poor families, you make the military the most attractive way to advance out of their circumstances.))

And then, just when you thought that things couldn’t get any worse, and that dissenting voices couldn’t be marginalized any further, out comes word that Fox News has signed an agreement with Clear Channel Communications to be their primary news provider. If this thought doesn’t send a little chill up your spine, you haven’t been paying attention.

OK, while we’re at it, did you happen to catch this story about the reporter being sentenced for not giving up his source on a government corruption story? Or, how about this one on the US military base that is banning reporters that are perceived as unfriendly? Or, while we’re at it, this old story about Cheney banning New York Times reporters from his campaign flights, in violation of long accepted practice?

I could go on and on, but I’ll just leave you with one more thought. This is from an op-ed in The Baltimore Sun. Here’s how it starts out:

People from all over Ukraine have gone to Kiev to protest dishonest vote counting in their presidential election. Exit polls, so trustworthy that they are used worldwide to uncover election fraud, showed the opposition candidate had won, and the people didn’t believe the news when it reported the government’s surprise victory.

To those of us who doubt President Bush won the election in the United States, the key differences between here and Ukraine are the methods of fraud and the passivity of the news media.

Here the party in power used unverifiable computerized voting to boost its totals and intimidation and misinformation to suppress the vote totals of its opponents, but the news media haven’t investigated it…

Bill Moyers will be missed.

Posted in Media | 5 Comments

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