From the NYT: Americans’ Role Seen in Uganda Anti-Gay Push
Sullivan says:
The NYT has just discovered the Ugandan bill, inspired by key American Christianists, that will round up, jail and execute homosexuals. (Non-MSM readers would have been following this essential story for months on Box Turtle Bulletin). The multi-media page is superb. What's fascinating is that the rhetoric the Christianists use is the same in Africa as it is in America, but in Africa, the public consensus is so anti-gay already that the consequences of this demonization are felt much more immediately and brutally. Here's the American rhetoric:
For three days, according to participants and audio recordings, thousands of Ugandans, including police officers, teachers and national politicians, listened raptly to the Americans, who were presented as experts on homosexuality. The visitors discussed how to make gay people straight, how gay men often sodomized teenage boys and how “the gay movement is an evil institution” whose goal is “to defeat the marriage-based society and replace it with a culture of sexual promiscuity.”
If a movement is "evil" and trying to "defeat" all families, as evangelicals claim of gays (and Nazis and Communists said of gays), then of course some already predisposed against gays would believe it is essential to identify, round up, forcibly cure or execute this foul threat from within. And yet the Americans now claim they are shocked, shocked! by the results of their strategy. Maybe they are.
If so, they should have provided some smidgen of balance in their campaign to demonize a tiny minority of already persecuted people....
American Christianism In Africa
whoa...Rachel Maddow was ahead of the NYT.
Go, Rachel.
Suzi, I think you are describing This one which I also bought. I really wanted an emerald green and ended up with this.
I only paint my toenails at this point, but I always paint them. My fingernails? Never. My nails are too weak and prone to chipping and peeling. I might clear coat them. Maybe I should use a super light color and see if that helps them not chip.
OK, if anyone knows someone who says stuff like, "We have the best health care in the world here in America," try sending this to them and see what they say: an infographic comparing health care costs per person to life expectancy
(line thickness indicates the number of doctor visits per year).
Is it Russian Navy? I love that color. I wear it on my toes a lot.
I have Russian Navy on my toes right now, AIFG.
Actually, IFAwful, because it's just the chipped remnants of a pedicure I had back before Thanksgiving. Now that my ankle's mostly healed I'll have to do something about that.
Suzi, I think you are describing This one which I also bought.
Yep, that is the one I bought. I haven't tried it yet. Will see if I can find a store that stocks OPI so I can see if my current nail color is Russian Navy.
an infographic comparing health care costs per person to life expectancy
This diagram was redrawn on Five Thirty Eight:
A somewhat misleading (in my opinion) presentation of these numbers has been floating around on the web recently, and so I wanted to post this cleaner graph.
In third place was the first ever woman to be nominated for the award. Rosanne Tippett drove her moped into a flooded river, despite the warning signs.
She was rescued by police, but died after jumping back into the river in an attempt to recover the two-wheeler.
How did this one manage to live long enough to qualify for a moped license?
What's the difference between Christianity and Christianism?
What's the difference between Christianity and Christianism?
Christianism is the belief that all of society (including government) should be based on Christian principles.