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www.longdrivers.com WHEN: Local qualifying began in March 2007 and runs through May 2008 at 150+ qualifying sites across North America. The 2008 Exceptional Driver Championship finals will take place June 10 -14, 2008 in Mesquite, Nevada on the championship grid! WHO: The competition is open to any amateur golfer (by USGA definition) — male or female, adult or junior. Everyone who enters the 2007-08 Exceptional Driver Championship will compete in the same (one) division. HOW IT WORKS: This …

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Shine,Junkhouse,Tom Wilson,It’s just a matter of Time before We get to Shine,Times Up
We live around the hydro towers,Listen to them singing in the park

Wind our clock too tight, And all the radios are glowing in the dark

Mothers lie down in the day time, And dream about Hollywood

I know that they’d get there if they could

Chorus: It’s just a matter of time, Before we get to shine

It’s not a question of when, Or who does the crime

We show our skin through picture windows,Sit around cross legged on the

floor

Our living rooms electric, TVs, light bulbs, irons, cancer to the core

Out in our back yards waiting,For women in flying saucers

Under the stars and power lines

(Chorus)

The fans and the air conditioners, Runnin’ in movie houses,

The mother’s not coming home again

the mother is Lizzy and she is done..

Duration : 0:4:59

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Nov
02

To My Fellow Humans

Posted by Jeff Blanket

House Resolution 888 (theocracy looming):
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c110:H.RES.888:

The First Amendment of the US Constitution:
http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html#Am1

The ‘Lemon Test’:
http://blog.case.edu/singham/2007/11/16/from_scopes_to_dover19_the_lemon_test_for_the_establishment_clause
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemon_test#Lemon_test

More details:

http://atheistrevolution.blogspot.com/2008/01/h-res-888-rewrites-american-history-to.html
http://www.talk2action.org/story/2008/1/4/24725/53989/Front_Page/Think_the_quot_Christmas_Resolution_quot_was_Bad_Check_Out_H_Res_888

http://www.elasticheart.com/?p=834

To contact your representative, go here and enter your zip code:
http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home/

These are the resolutions co-sponsors:
Rep. Todd Akin [R-MO]
Rep. James Barrett [R-SC]
Rep. John Culberson [R-TX]
Rep. John Doolittle [R-CA]
Rep. Tom Feeney [R-FL]
Rep. John Gingrey [R-GA]
Rep. Louis Gohmert [R-TX]
Rep. Robin Hayes [R-NC]
Rep. Jeb Hensarling [R-TX]
Rep. Walter Herger [R-CA]
Rep. Walter Jones [R-NC]
Rep. Patrick Mchenry [R-NC]
Rep. Mike McIntyre [D-NC]
Rep. Marilyn Musgrave [R-CO]
Rep. Steven Pearce [R-NM]
Rep. Mike Pence [R-IN]
Rep. Joseph Pitts [R-PA]
Rep. Paul Ryan [R-WI]
Rep. Jean Schmidt [R-OH]
Rep. Timothy Walberg [R-MI]
Rep. Addison Wilson [R-SC]
Rep. Frank Wolf [R-VA]
Rep. Bill Young [R-FL]

Here is a form letter taken from:
http://www.freewebs.com/spadecaller/churchandstate.htm

Dear Representative______________,

I oppose H. Res 888 and call on you to uphold the constitutional mandate that calls for an absolute separation of church from state. There is an urgent need for Americans to become aware of this menacing force that opposes the basic principles for which this country was founded upon; and those are religious freedom, religious tolerance, and the absolute separation of church and state. Political fallout for those who defend the constitution should not be the excuse for a complicit congress. This is not, nor will it be, an issue that remains in the dark. I hope you choose to uphold our constitution and to resist those who care to establish an unholy alliance between religion and politics.

The line that once separated church from state is currently under attack by factions of the Christian right. Among them are Christian Fundamentalists, dominionists, and revisionists. Regardless of labels, these individuals comprised of religious leaders, heads of corporations, private citizens, politicians, and appointees in all branches of the government, must be confronted by those that we elect and hold accountable for protecting our constitution from enemies, foreign or domestic. In this case, it is a domestic enemy conspicuously organized to overthrow and to rewrite our constitution so that one religion, Christianity, becomes the dominating force in our government. This must be stopped.

Should any politician place their personal and religious affiliations above their oath of office, they are not fit to serve; and it is up to the electorate to prevent their re-election. Like many Americans, we will be watching how you vote in regards to H. Res 888. I hope you will consider my request and vote according to what is best for all religions and all Americans. Thank you.

Sincerely,

RA Anderson

to get a copy of this for uploading, right-click and save:
http://atheistunderground.org/hr888.flv

Daniel Dennett clip from:
http://www.thesciencenetwork.org

Duration : 0:6:33

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Nov
01

Americans Are Stupid, Well At Least 29% Are.

Posted by Jeff Blanket

I will almost guarantee you that those 29% are going to be voting in November. And we wonder why our country is slowly going down the toilet.

Dumb and Dumber: Are Americans Hostile to Knowledge?
By PATRICIA COHEN
Published: February 14, 2008

A popular video on YouTube shows Kellie Pickler, the adorable platinum blonde from “American Idol,” appearing on the Fox game show “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?” during celebrity week. Selected from a third-grade geography curriculum, the $25,000 question asked: “Budapest is the capital of what European country?”

Ms. Pickler threw up both hands and looked at the large blackboard perplexed. “I thought Europe was a country,” she said. Playing it safe, she chose to copy the answer offered by one of the genuine fifth graders: Hungary. “Hungry?” she said, eyes widening in disbelief. “That’s a country? I’ve heard of Turkey. But Hungry? I’ve never heard of it.”

Such, uh, lack of global awareness is the kind of thing that drives Susan Jacoby, author of “The Age of American Unreason,” up a wall. Ms. Jacoby is one of a number of writers with new books that bemoan the state of American culture.

Joining the circle of curmudgeons this season is Eric G. Wilson, whose “Against Happiness” warns that the “American obsession with happiness” could “well lead to a sudden extinction of the creative impulse, that could result in an extermination as horrible as those foreshadowed by global warming and environmental crisis and nuclear proliferation.”

Then there is Lee Siegel’s “Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob,” which inveighs against the Internet for encouraging solipsism, debased discourse and arrant commercialization. Mr. Siegel, one might remember, was suspended by The New Republic for using a fake online persona in order to trash critics of his blog (”you couldn’t tie Siegel’s shoelaces”) and to praise himself (”brave, brilliant”).

Ms. Jacoby, whose book came out on Tuesday, doesn’t zero in on a particular technology or emotion, but rather on what she feels is a generalized hostility to knowledge. She is well aware that some may tag her a crank. “I expect to get bashed,” said Ms. Jacoby, 62, either as an older person who upbraids the young for plummeting standards and values, or as a secularist whose defense of scientific rationalism is a way to disparage religion.

Ms. Jacoby, however, is quick to point out that her indictment is not limited by age or ideology. Yes, she knows that eggheads, nerds, bookworms, longhairs, pointy heads, highbrows and know-it-alls have been mocked and dismissed throughout American history. And liberal and conservative writers, from Richard Hofstadter to Allan Bloom, have regularly analyzed the phenomenon and offered advice.

T. J. Jackson Lears, a cultural historian who edits the quarterly review Raritan, said, “The tendency to this sort of lamentation is perennial in American history,” adding that in periods “when political problems seem intractable or somehow frozen, there is a turn toward cultural issues.”

But now, Ms. Jacoby said, something different is happening: anti-intellectualism (the attitude that “too much learning can be a dangerous thing”) and anti-rationalism (”the idea that there is no such things as evidence or fact, just opinion”) have fused in a particularly insidious way.

Not only are citizens ignorant about essential scientific, civic and cultural knowledge, she said, but they also don’t think it matters.

She pointed to a 2006 National Geographic poll that found nearly half of 18- to 24-year-olds don’t think it is necessary or important to know where countries in the news are located. So more than three years into the Iraq war, only 23 percent of those with some college could locate Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Israel on a map.

Ms. Jacoby, dressed in a bright red turtleneck with lipstick to match, was sitting, appropriately, in that temple of knowledge, the New York Public Library’s majestic Beaux Arts building on Fifth Avenue. The author of seven other books, she was a fellow at the library when she first got the idea for this book back in 2001, on 9/11.

Walking home to her Upper East Side apartment, she said, overwhelmed and confused, she stopped at a bar. As she sipped her bloody mary, she quietly listened to two men, neatly dressed in suits. For a second she thought they were going to compare that day’s horrifying attack to the Japanese bombing in 1941 that blew America into World War II:

“This is just like Pearl Harbor,” one of the men said.

The other asked, “What is Pearl Harbor?”

“That was when the Vietnamese dropped bombs in a harbor, and it started the Vietnam War,” the first man replied.

At that moment, Ms. Jacoby said, “I decided to write this book.”

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