Archive for September, 2009

Cornerstone 2009 Seminar Podcasts

Now that I’m old, I’m just as interested in the seminars at Cornerstone as I am in the music. The good news is I (and you) don’t have to camp in the mud for a week to hear them! There are a dozen seminars from 2009 available to download from iTunes or stream from the Cornerstone Blog with more to come. A lot of good thought-provoking stuff from leading voices from outside the christian mainstream.

[ posted by danhq @ September 30th, 2009 in Free Reads! ] >> [ 0 comments ] >> [ ]

Milwaukee Book Festival Oct. 9-19

Lots to see at the upcoming Milwaukee Book Festival. Two events I’d like to point out in particular:

  1. Wendell Berry @ Woodland Patterns, Saturday, Oct. 10 2p.m.
    Poet, farmer, pacifist, moralist. Not to put too morbid a point on it, but he’s 75 years old and part of a vanishing generation. Also a christian with a lot of interesting things to say about faith and God.
  2. Max Brooks @ UWM Union, Monday, Oct. 12 7p.m.
    I’m not too proud to say it: I loved World War Z. Yes, it’s a book about zombies, but it’s a very, very good book about zombies. Consider this talk “just in time for Halloween.”

Go Books!

[ posted by danhq @ September 30th, 2009 in Milwaukee ] >> [ 0 comments ] >> [ ]

Q: When is a Baby not a Baby?

A: When you don’t want it.

A lot of things enrage me about the abortion debate, which is why that alone of all social/cultural/ethical issues I have difficulty talking about without getting upset. Over the years I have heard many (self-identified) abortion advocates (or their spouses or friends) use the phrase “going to have a baby!” when they (or their spouses or friends) are pregnant. They use words like “life” and “baby” even in the first trimester, inexplicably not seeing the double standard. I think this is because they want that baby. They want her to grow and develop and be born and live a complicated, dramatic life. The National Organization for Women even uses the phrase “Every Child a Wanted Child” to describe its stance on birth control. But the second that life is not wanted, well then it’s not a baby anymore.

“Hey, Dan,” you might be thinking “what’s with all this right-wing ranting? I thought you were a socialist?” Well friend, in the last few months there have been two similar stories in the news — with drastically different outcomes — that have caught my attention. I direct you to this story about an American woman who was implanted with the wrong embryo. Long story short: she had the baby, not for herself, but for the baby’s biological parents. Essentially she went from “mom” to “surrogate” in the space of a few seconds. But she knew that someone else wanted that baby. Now I wouldn’t exactly call this woman a hero — she pulled some stuff along the way that I have real ethical problems with — but she made an impossibly hard choice to a horrifying dilemma. Contrast that with this other lady in the UK who made the opposite decision. She didn’t want someone else’s baby growing inside her so she aborted. When I first read this I was stunned. I can imagine few acts more selfish. And it’s not just western culture that destroys things it doesn’t want. In India there is an ongoing genocide of girls through gender selective abortions. But really, why should we be horrified by that? The “slippery-slope argument” that conservatives are so fond of doesn’t even apply here. There is no slippery slope: it’s already happened. All those baby girls growing “in their mother’s stomachs” aren’t wanted. So who are we to judge? “Hey, China! It’s totally cool. We get it: you don’t want any girls either!

I’ll let you decide  whether something the size of this period (.) is human. My point is more about the callousness of postnatal humanity. We live in an age where only the things we want are valued. And if we don’t want it, we destroy it. We live in a new Age of Imperialism where each of us is an empire of one. Like our forefathers who destroyed as many civilizations as they could get their hands on — whether it’s a forest or a whale or an embryo or a pre-modern hunter/gatherer society it must conform to our sovereign will. Once again we’ve proven our quality as a global community.

tagged thusly:

[ posted by danhq @ September 28th, 2009 in Free Reads! ] >> [ 0 comments ] >> [ ]

Unruly Music Fall Festival

Do you wish Milwaukee had more of a post-classical music scene (and who doesn’t)? If “contemporary trends in chamber music, improvisation, and electronic sound” is your bag, you’re in luck. Beginning Tuesday night (Sept. 8), the Unruly Music Festival rolls into town. You can attend all three avant-cool compositions for just $36.

[ posted by danhq @ September 7th, 2009 in Milwaukee, Music ] >> [ 0 comments ] >> [ ]

Dear God: It’s Over Between Us

It used to be a running joke: christian music was just regular music substituting the word “god” for “girls”. A lot of love songs, a lot of sentimentality, a lot of “praising” instead of “kissing”. David Bazan was never guilty of this. When he said God he meant God, and when he said girls he meant girls. As Pedro the Lion Bazan narrated the rawness of life, his songs populated with anonymous saints and sinners of all stripes. Their stories were our stories, but they weren’t directly his story. Bazan’s latest release is that most ancient of poetic convention: a personal break-up album. There are no tall tales or morality plays about others. This time, in no uncertain terms “Curse Your Branches” finds Bazan himself breaking up with God. Read the rest of this article…

[ posted by danhq @ September 4th, 2009 in Free Reads!, Music ] >> [ 0 comments ] >> [ ]