It’s been painful, way down low, off and on for a couple of weeks and really bad for the last five days. The kids have had to help me with pretty much anything that involves bending forward without holding onto something. So I was really happy when I felt a lot better this morning (after the morning nap, not first thing.) I had a list – clean the ceiling fan blades, sanitize the stinky cat boxes, hang up some fabric, maybe even sew something – but first, we were really low on groceries. I made my dinner menus, compiled the grocery list, set off for the store. Got everything just fine, made sure to bend at the knees and all that, just to be safe. Got out to the van, loaded the bags in, carefully lifted the case of seltzer out of the cart and went to put it in the trunk when my back snapped. I saw stars. I yelled really loudly. Crap. Crapcrapcrap. Instead of getting stuff done, I took four advil, propped the heating pad on a bunch of pillows in the family room and watched a couple of hours of The Daily Show. The kids mostly made dinner, Audrey even served, and now I’m waiting for hubby to show up with some Naproxen Sodium because the advil isn’t doing squat, and the muscle pain and tension is running up my entire spine and giving me a headache. Ironic, too, that I slept through my chiro appointment this morning.
You’re Free to Practice Whatever Fundamentalist Christian Religion You Want!!
Daylight Atheism has a very disturbing post today about new legislation that puts us further on the road to an Evangelical Christian Government:
In a worrying development for every citizen concerned about protecting state-church separation, the so-called “Public Expression of Religion Act” passed the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this week on a largely party-line vote of 244 to 173. Sponsored by Republican representative John Hostettler, this bill’s purpose is to make it too expensive for private citizens and public interest groups to sue the government to compel it to cease actions which violate the Constitution.
With the law as it exists now, plaintiffs who sue the government for unconstitutionally establishing religion, and win in court, can force defendants to reimburse them for the costs of their attorneys’ fees. This is eminent common sense: American citizens who prove that the government has violated the law should not have to pay for the privilege. The burden of costs should be on the defendant who acted unconstitutionally. This is a sound and rational measure to discourage government officials from seeking to violate the Constitution and to encourage citizens to take an active role in safeguarding the law of the land. Furthermore, this is an important safeguard because litigation is expensive: a lengthy case can easily run into the hundreds of thousands or even the millions of dollars, especially with multiple rounds of appeals. For instance, the recent anti-intelligent design decision Kitzmiller v. Dover cost the plaintiffs over $2 million in attorneys’ fees, and this case was not even appealed to the Supreme Court.
Read the rest of the post here, and be very afraid. . .
Hurrah for Bill Clinton
Of course Fox News spun the interview with Chris Wallace as if Clinton was a raving maniac, but if you look at the actual interview, you can see that it’s just spin. I had forgotten all about the fact that when he was trying to get Bin Laden, the Republicans, who’d been trying to turn everything he did into a criminal, impeachable offense, accused him of wagging the dog. If you listen to what was said, a lot of pieces fall into place, and you start getting a clearer picture of how Republican neocons were trying to get into power not on their own merits, but by building a distrust of their opponents going way, way back. Foist on their own petard by now, it seems, because without any of the merits and qualities that make for good governance, their own reprehensible actions and attitudes are making them even less appealing than the most lustful and adulterous Democrat the party could ever put on the ticket. Things should be very interesting in November. Too bad it’s only November 2006. . .2008 can’t come soon enough.
Postscript – Another Alison suggested adding the link to Keith Olbermann’s Commentary on this. Thanks! I love this guy.
Post Postscript – Keith Olbermann again backing up Clinton’s statements – What the Bush Administration did about Al Qaeda in its first 8 months