Why Bush Isn't Impeached Yet
Salon.com explains the situation much better than I can:
http://www.salon.com/opinion/kamiya/2007/05/22/impeachment/?source=rss
Labels: george w. bush, impeachment
I blog...because the news is interesting.
Salon.com explains the situation much better than I can:
Labels: george w. bush, impeachment
The Washington Post just broke an article (see title link) quoting former President Jimmy Carter as saying Bush was "the worst in history" when it came to fostering international relations.
"Apparently, Sunday mornings in Plains for former President Carter includes hurling reckless accusations at your fellow man," said Amber Wilkerson, Republican National Committee spokeswoman. She said that it was hard to take Carter seriously because he also "challenged Ronald Reagan's strategy for the Cold War."
Labels: foreign policy, george w. bush, jimmy carter, republicans
A toddler aged 3-4 years has been left at a Japanese "baby hatch" aimed at mothers wanting to put their newborns up for adoption, reports say.
The child was said to be old enough to tell medics at the hospital in southern Japan that his father had left him.
The drop-off at Jikei Hospital, which opened last week, has been criticised by some, including the government.
The Catholic-run hospital has said it is aimed at helping new mothers who would otherwise resort to abortion.
Abortion rates are relatively high in Japan, while adoptions have traditionally been rare.
But the plans were heavily criticised by government officials, including Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who said parents must bring up children themselves.
Labels: abortion, adoption hutch, japan, pro-choice, pro-life
Regina Lynn, the Sex Drive columnist for Wired Magazine, put forth an interesting editorial on the idea and execution of sex crimes in the online gaming world. (The article is linked within the title).
Our laws say that an adult subjecting a teenager or child to sexual words, images or suggestions on the internet is preying on their mental and emotional state in a sexual way. Even if you never try to meet the minor in person, and even if you never touch them or expose your naked self to them, it is a crime to attempt to engage sexually with a minor.
If it is a criminal offense to sexually abuse a child on the internet, how can we say it is not possible to rape an adult online?
The truth is, anywhere people gather, we bring all of our potential with us -- for love, for sex, for community and creation, and for violence and destruction, too. That's why we still enjoy pondering whether cybersex is real sex and whether an online affair is more or less damaging to a relationship than a physical affair. It's a tacit acknowledgement that while the time-space continuum may change, people don't.
Rape is the ultimate perversion of sexual intimacy. Like sex, rape has mental and emotional elements that go beyond the body and the damage to the mind and spirit generally takes much longer to heal than the body.
But that doesn't make the psychological upheaval of virtual rape anywhere near the trauma of real rape. And I can't see us making virtual rape a matter for the real-life police.
It's a shitty thing to do to someone. But it's not a crime.
Labels: online games, second life, video games, virtual rape