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'jim shorts' on politics

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I write a weekly column for three newspapers.
It's extremely popular
. . . for packing dishes, lining bird cages, and housebreaking puppies.

Pic: Osama bin Laden hiding in northern Indiana!


last candidate standing
August 2003
The people I cheer for on reality TV never win. It all began when Richard, the self-described "fat, naked, gay guy" on the first "Survivor," won the million. Then last week, Dat Phan was crowned as, and I quote, "The Funniest Person In America" on "Last Comic Standing." He was good, but I have funnier relatives (some are even allowed to go out in public unattended).
At least it got me thinking that perhaps the 2004 Presidential election should be staged as the ultimate reality series: "The Amazing Political Race," "Who Wants to Marry a Politician," "Conservative Eye for the Liberal Guy," "Political Boxing," or "Survivor: The Electoral College."
[Overproduced theme music]
"Live from the nation's capital, 'The Amazing Dog Eat Dog Last Candidate Standing.' 52 weeks! 52 candidates!. But tonight, just ONE President elect of the United States."
Yep, let's put all the candidates for President in that "Big Brother" house in Hollywood--and then lock and bolt the doors until December 2004. Just kidding about bolting the door, but there would be some real advantages to elections as reality TV.
1. We'd only have to listen to their political pontifications one night a week! (The prospect of hearing the monotone whining of Joe Lieberman for over a year is enough to make me move to a remote island and survive on Madagascar Hissing Cockroaches.)
2. Candidates would have to successfully perform tasks to stay in the running: balancing a check book, finding a job for a homeless tech stock trader, and negotiating a win-win settlement in a messy divorce case. If they can't perform these tasks, what business do they have with the Federal budget, the job market, and keeping North Korea from nuking its neighbors.
Candidates, of course, would have to answer the requisite trivia questions:
What is the capital of Liberia?
Saddam Hussein loyalists belong to what political party: a) Bath, b) Shower, c) Dry Clean Only.
True/False: Latin Americans speak Latin
The best way to stimulate the economy is a) tax cuts, b) less government restrictions, c) amphetamines
Your stand on homosexual marriage is a) I'm for it, b) I'm against it, c) I can go either way (wink)
Next come the immunity challenges, After living off the government payroll and enjoying political perks, maybe a dose of "The Real World" would be the best thing for Presidential candidates. Let's see them live on off-brand macaroni and cheese with generic hot dogs. Which of them can survive the longest while eating stale pretzels sitting in coach section of a plane. How 'bout giving them each a $1,000 Social Security check and make them find decent housing, medical insurance, and an affordable long distance plan. The possibilities are endless!
3. Brooke Burns could host the show, since she already has experience with the "Dog Eat Dog" world of politics. Her show's premise, according to the official Web site, is for contestants to "play upon each other's strengths and weaknesses" and "use their knowledge of each other to gain the upper hand and emerge as 'top dog'." See, sounds like politics to me. And besides, the former "Baywatch" babe is certainly better looking (and less biased) than Dan Rather.
4. The weekly tribal council would whittle the number down to one Republican, one Democrat, and one independent "wildcard." Those who can out wit, out play, and out last would go on to the two-hour finale on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 2004.
5. Voters at home log-in on their computers and cast their ballots without those annoying "hanging chads" and Supreme Court rulings.
Then again, the people I want to win reality shows never do win which just goes to prove:
1. TV reality shows are not really "reality."
2. Contestants are conniving attention-deprived ego-maniacs who will do anything for the fame and fortune.
3. Some computer geek somewhere has figured out a way to vote three million times.
Okay, maybe "The Last Candidate Standing" isn't the best suggestion for election reform, but Dat Phan is welcomed to take my column. Please.
(c) 2004 James N. Watkins

Global bullies
October 2002
I'm confused. That's not exactly a news flash ("Columnist confused! Film at 11!") But would someone help me understand the following?
First, Madelyne Gorman Toogood, 25, has become infamous as the woman caught by a Kohl's security camera allegedly beating her 4-year-old daughter, Martha.
It's being reported that she lost her temper when the store wouldn't give her a cash refund. Toogood told reporters she hit her child in the head and back and pulled her hair -- but did not punch her.
Let me get this straight? There's a difference between "hitting" and "punching"?! That's not "Toogood" of a defense if you want my opinion.
Here's something else that confuses me.
As our country debates attacking Iraq, here's a March 4, 2002, report from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor of the U.S. State Department:
"The Government's human rights record throughout the year remained poor and the Government continued to commit numerous and serious abuses. Authorities still were quick to suppress any person or group, whether religious, political, or social, that they perceived to be a threat to government power . . .
"Abuses included instances of extrajudicial killings, torture and mistreatment of prisoners, forced confessions, arbitrary arrest and detention, lengthy incommunicado detention, and denial of due process. According to international press reports, over 200,000 persons are serving sentences, not subject to judicial review, in reeducation-through-labor camps.
"The Government continued to implement its sometimes coercive policy to restrict the number of children a family may have. Violence against women (including imposition of a sometimes coercive birth control policy, including instances of forced abortion and forced sterilization); prostitution; discrimination against women; abuse of children; and discrimination against persons with disabilities and minorities are all problems.
"Child labor exists and continues in rural areas as adult workers leave for better employment opportunities in urban areas. Trafficking in persons is a serious problem."
And guess what, this country has an estimated 2,000 nuclear weapons! It's not Iraq but China.
Help me explain why our government awards a ruthless regime owning tons of mega-tons with "Most Favored Trading Status" and sets up an embargo against a poor, second-rate country that reportedly doesn't currently have the ability to produce one nuclear bomb?
Perhaps it's the same reason that a 25-year-old adult will allegedly "hit" a 4-year old, rather than "punch" someone her own size at the customer service desk at a department store?
Could it be that our government is only interested in championing human rights in a country that it knows it can pummel in the parking lot? Is our government afraid to pick on someone its own size. We're boycotting third-world Communist Cuba, but encouraging trade with superpower (and nuclear-powered) Communist China. Why aren't we boycotting China?!
At least there has been an outcry over Toogood beating her child. Too bad, there's not the same concern about the millions men, women, and children brutalized in China, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and a dozen other oppressive countries.
Columnist confused! Film at 11!
(c) 2002 James N. Watkins
Guest Editorial: Tom Blodget asks WWJD about Iraq?



Pro life January 2002
“Critics are the unpaid guardians of our souls,” claimed Plato, a Greek philosopher not to be confused with that colorful modeling clay. (And I’m not sure he still believed that when critics
sentenced his friend and fellow philosopher, Socrates, to death!)
Critics were also waiting for the thousands of “Right to Life” advocates gathered in Washington D.C. to mark the 29th anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling that declared abortion legal. The day started off well when the President of the United States addressed the group:)
”Every life is valuable,” the President said. “Our society has a responsibility to defend the vulnerable and weak, the imperfect and even the unwanted.” (Applause) A generous society values all human life. A merciful society seeks to expand legal protection to every life . . . not just the healthy or the strong or the powerful. “ (More applause.)
But Ann Retman, an abortion advocate from Boston, Mass., followed the “pro-life” marchers from the mall to the Supreme Court building. “If they're so proud of living in a free nation, then there needs to be freedom," she said. "I'm sick of them pulling out their religion when it's convenient for them and then when they want to oppress people, the Bible doesn't come in anywhere."
So, would Plato consider Retman a “guardian” of the anti-abortionist’s souls? I think so. As one who considers himself “pro-life” (or “a “right-wing religious radical” if you prefer), I’m concerned that many in the “Right To Life” movement may not be as “pro” as they would like to think when it comes to “life.”
The President noted, “a generous society values all human life.” Capitalize, bold-face, and underline that word ALL.
It is tragic that 3,600 unborn babies are aborted every day in this land of freedom. That’s a million each year.
But did you know that 24,000 people worldwide die every day from starvation and malnutrition? That’s over 8 million each year. Three of four who die are younger than five years old.
Did you also know, that hunger relief groups estimate that it would take 13 billion dollars a year to end hunger for the Earth's poorest citizens? Wow, that is a lot of money, but did you know North Americans and Europeans spend 18 billion dollars a year on pet food?
Retman would probably have a fit, as well, to realize that many “pro-lifers” are pro-death penalty. I haven’t figured that one out, yet, either. It’s particularly disturbing when 381 death-row prisoners in the United States were declared “wrongly convicted” and had their sentences thrown out. In a scathing series of articles in the January 1999 issues of the Chicago Tribune, reporters found “With impunity, prosecutors across the country have violated their oaths and the law, committing the worst kinds of deception in the most serious of cases.”
And I’m not sure about the company we keep. In 2000, 88 percent of all known executions were carried out in China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the USA. According to Amnesty International, during that year 3,058 people were sentenced to death in 65 countries.
I do applaud the Justice Department and military for it’s “pro-life” treatment of terrorist “detainees.” It seems to me that moving suicidal maniacs who have lived in dark, dank caves with no sanitary facilities for the last several months to a sunny tropical climate with modern plumbing is actually a major improvement in their standard of living. (And I should remind Ms. Retman -- and the prolifers -- that Jesus commands his followers to love their enemies and to treat prisoners as they would treat him.)
And, speaking of Christ’s disciples, “More than 160,000 Christians were martyred in the last five years in a monumental escalation of religious persecution . . .” according to Dan Hodel, president of the Christian Coalition. “More Christians have been killed for their faith in the 20th Century than the first nineteen centuries combined!)
I’m probably being a bit self-serving in this “pro-life” stance since four journalists covering Afghanistan were captured and executed on the spot by Taliban soldiers. Twenty-four journalists were killed in 2000 and 34 in 1999. “Truth is the first casualty of war” and ten reporters covering the civil war in Sierra Leone were hunted down and murdered by rebel forces angry at the reporting of their human rights abuses.
And this doesn’t include those whose lives are in imminent danger.
Over 800,000,000 people in our world are seriously under-nourished with physical and cognitive consequences.
The United Nations estimates there are 20,000,000 “bonded laborers” worldwide.
Over 700,000 to 2,000,000 women and children are “trafficked” each year for forced labor and prostitution. Women and children sold or kidnapped into prostitution number up to 800,000 in Thailand, 200,000 in India, and 50,000 right here in the United States (Asian women “sell” for $16,000 each in North America).
So, what’s the solution?
How ‘bout for every bag of pet food we buy, we send a check for the same amount to World Hope, or other groups fighting hunger throughout the world? (No pets? Donate what you spend on snack foods.)
How ‘bout every time we’re waited on by a minimum wage server at a Chinese or Mexican restaurant, we send a comparable donation to organizations fighting forced labor in those countries such as the Salvation Army’s “Initiative Against Sexual Trafficking”?
How ‘bout every time we sing praises in our comfortable churches, we pray for our brothers and sisters who are imprisoned, tortured, and killed for their faith?
And how ‘bout being “pro” for all “life”?
(c) 2002 James N. Watkins

Euthanasia November 2001
Usually columnists receive letters to the editors. (Most of the mail I receive accuses me of being either a loony liberal or a cranky conservative, so I must be managing to find the middle, moderate ground by annoying my entire readership.) But today, I’d like to respond to a letter to the editor. Here’s the opening paragraph of “Euthanasia should be legalized.”
Picture this, if you can! Your favorite grandmother has just been diagnosed with an incurable disease. The doctors give her six months to live. However, during the six months she will constantly be in agonizing pain. Another option for her may be to end her life now and forego all the pain and suffering. But assisted suicide has been outlawed. I believe all terminally ill people should be given the right to choose their own means of demise.
My favorite grandmother died a slow, lingering death in January, so I understand the writer’s feelings. There were times when I thought killing her would be far more merciful than allowing her to live her last six months in a foster home with a constant case of diarrhea and bladder-control problems, congestive heart failure, mini strokes, and kidney failure. She couldn’t walk without assistance, so spent twelve hours in bed at night and twelve hours sitting in her LazyBoy recliner during the day watching game shows. (How much "Wheel of Fortune" can a person take?) And, she wanted to die.
But there are several points that were misrepresented in the lengthy letter.
Simply refusing "extraordinary" medical care is not euthanasia.
Joni Earekson Tada, who has been paralyzed from the neck down for most for life, asks "Does the medical treatment offered extend life, or simply prolong death?”
Good question when facing a terminal illness. Ron Sloan, a family practice physician, admits, “Part of my practice in helping people die, as well as helping people live. I don't put people on medications I know won't help them. I don't put people on ventilators who aren't doing to be helped by them.”
Severe pain is no longer a reason for euthanasia.
Euthanasia activists exploit that fear and imply that when a cure is no longer likely, there are only two alternatives: euthanasia or unbearable pain. However, today, pain control is available. I know pain; I’ve had a kidney stone. To understand the pain, lie in the parking lot and have your friends drive over your lower back . . . with a bus . . . with snow chains . . . filled with people on their way to a Weight Watchers meeting. It took three surgeries in two hospitals over one whole month to remove that stubborn stone.
However, once the doctors confirmed my kidney stone, they put me on a morphine pump with a "Jeopardy" style button I could push whenever I was in pain. "I'll take Demerol for $100, Alex." I was absolutely pain free. I'm so glad Dr. Kervorkian wasn't on call at the E.R. on November 15, 1991! Which brings up another issue . . .
No one can say for sure who is "terminal."
When I interviewed Dr. Sloan for The Why Files, he warned, “You can have a patient who has all the symptoms [of near death], and they'll walk out of the hospital a week later. You can have a cancer patient that you expect to live less than six months, and six years later you're still doing their annual examinations. Or worse, you tell someone they're perfectly healthy, and a few days later they're face up in a flowerbed from a fatal heart attack.”
Euthanasia is a permanent solution for what may be a temporary situation.
A request for assisted suicide is typically a cry for help. And it's usually temporary. Of those who attempt suicide but are stopped, less than 4 percent go on to kill themselves in the next five years; less than 11 percent will commit suicide over the next 35 years.
In another study, of the 24 percent of terminally ill patients who desired death, all had clinical depression that was treatable.
Here’s my point . . .
Twenty years earlier, my grandmother had been given six months to live with colon cancer. But she survived, thrived, and was able to see my children grow up as well as restore the relationship between her and her estranged daughter. If the euthanasia enthusiasts would have had their way in 1980, my grandmother and her family would have missed out on twenty birthday celebrations, Thanksgivings, Christmas mornings, and a whole litany of life.
Admittedly it’s an emotional and complex issue, but when in doubt, choose life.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins For a fuller discussion of this important issue, read Jim’s Indiana Wesleyan University lecture.
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'Big Brothers' November 2001
At the risk of appearing to be a yellow-bellied, ACLU-loving, pinko-Commie, liberal sack of Anthrax, I’m feeling just a bit uneasy about the current patriotic fervor. (Please address all hate mail, letter bombs, and rotting road kill to Jim Watkins in care of this paper.)
Let me explain.
First, didn’t we ratify the First Amendment way back in December of 1791?
Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The risk of contracting Anthrax or becoming the victim of a terrorist act (as terrible and terrifying as that is) is far less than winning your state’s lottery. But there IS a real risk that the freedoms we are attempting to preserve in our patriotic paranoia may actually be eroded by our zeal to protect them.
Aaron Sorkin, the left-wing creator of “The West Wing,” is worried that “America's surge in patriotism has a dark side: It has unleashed a ‘blacklist’ against those who dissent!” While this columnist believes Bill “Politically Incorrect” Maher’s comments about our military being “cowards” was a bone-headed blunder, Sorkin does point out that America’s military is fighting to preserve our freedoms, including the right to make just such bone-headed blunders. Just try being “politically incorrect” in Afghanistan!
Obviously, there are limits to freedom of speech: maliciously libeling someone in print or media, yelling “fire” in a public building, or selling military secrets. But if America is to remain free, don’t we need to allow for the “redress of grievances”? Remember our country was founded on the concept of majority rule, minority rights. And someday, you and I might be in the minority as politically incorrect.
Secondly, are we in danger of undermining the Fourth Amendment with “the war on terrorism”?
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
According to the Associated Press, Washington’s new anti-terrorism law is “. . . relying heavily on sophisticated technology, from software that automatically translates foreign communications on the Internet to a device that secretly captures every keystroke a suspect makes on his computer.”
Recently, top Justice Department lawyers in Washington e-mailed federal prosecutors around the country describing how they can use the government's high-tech tools in new ways. The AP quotes the email as saying, “. . . in rare cases police can now secretly search a person's house without telling the homeowner for up to three months” and install the “key-logger” device on the person’s computer.
The plans go well beyond the “Carnivore” e-mail-sniffing system that allows the FBI to search for and extract specific e-mails off the Internet. Prior to the September 11 attacks, privacy advocates and civil libertarians were having a Federal fit over it.
Right now, “Big Brother” could be tapped into my computer reading this column as I type it on to the computer screen. Just for fun, let’s see what happens.
Dear Uncle Osama, Our great and glorious campaign to disrupt the Satanist American communication infrastructure is succeeding well as our operatives clog the Internet with e-mail for home mortgages, Internet casinos, herbal Viagra, urban legends, and those annoying “Tag, You’re It!” forwards. Praise to Allah, Abdul Kareem Watkins.
Perhaps my fear of undermining our first and fourth amendment rights comes from visits overseas. While I was in India, the papers were filled with articles about the government openly censoring the media and movie studios being required to have scripts approved by the government. While in South Africa, which has one of the highest rates of AIDS, the government had earlier banned all books on sexuality. No wonder one of the myths in southern Africa is that AIDS can be cured by having sex with a virgin!
So, one of the risks we take living a free country is not preempting the plans of every immoral and murderous individual. Perhaps those who died in the September 11 attacks, died for freedom every bit as much as those who gave their lives in military battles throughout our history.
Freedom is risky, but I believe it’s worth the cost.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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Sharks and Sheiks September 2001
In our continuing effort to inform and enlighten the American public, here’s some context on two current events:
Sharks
Judging by the media feeding frenzy, you’d think that sharks were the number one cause of death in America. Two swimmers were killed by sharks over the Labor Day weekend off Virginia and North Carolina, and that is indeed tragic. But let’s put this in perspective before anyone cancels travel plans to the east coast.
On an average year one or two people are killed by shark attacks off U.S. shores. Worldwide, the annual average of shark fatalities over the past decade has been eight. And non-fatal shark attacks are down worldwide. Last year 51 shark attacks were reported in the United States. This year only 37 bites have been documented worldwide.
So, let’s compare annual shark fatalities with other causes of death. We’ll go with the high number of two for man-eating sharks in U.S. waters.
Automobiles take an average of 40,000 lives per year, so you’re 20,000 times more likely to be killed simply driving to the beach. And yet, we don’t see people running from parking lots screaming “Car! Car!”
In 1998 over 5,100 people were killed in their place of employment. In fact, the government claims that a worker is killed on the job every 103 minutes! So, you’re 2,500 times more likely to be killed at work than enjoying a day at the beach.
And the odds are worse if you work at home. Every 19 minutes a person is killed at home, with two-thirds of those being fatally injured in the bathroom! That’s 28,200 fatalities each year. Forget sharks, stay out of the shower!
But wait, there’s more. The National Safety Council warns that each year 40 people are killed in the 400 fires started by Christmas trees! You’re 20 times more likely to be killed by a blue spruce than a great white shark.
So, if you really want to be safe, quit your job and live at the beach. But be sure you walk there, and whatever you do, stay out of the bathroom!
Sheiks
Not only are sharks getting eaten alive by the media, delegates at the United Nations' World Conference Against Racism is calling the Jewish people “racists” for trying to defend their nation’s sovereignty. Let’s try to put that in perspective as well.
1. Israel became a nation in 1312 B.C..
For the next three thousand years, the Jews “Promised Land” has been overrun by Assyrians, Babylonians, Egyptians, Persians, Romans, and Arabs. In 586 B.C. Babylon destroyed the first Jewish temple and enslaved many Jews. Over the next 500 years the Jewish people returned and rebuilt the temple on what is known today as Temple Mount. (Israel as a nation predates the rise of Islam-and it’s claim to “The Dome of the Rock”--by two thousand years.)
In A.D. 70 the Roman Empire destroyed the second temple, but thousands of Jews remained in their homeland and attempted to rebuild their nation.
In A.D. 636 Arabs invaded the land. Turks chased out the Arabs and ruled the area from 1526 to 1923. That’s when British troops defeated the Turks and governed the area under the old League of Nations. In the 1920s and 30s Muslims aligned with the Nazi regime to incite massacres of the Jewish people. Six million Jews scattered throughout Europe were exterminated in what has become known as the Holocaust.
It wasn’t until 1948 that the United Nations declared Israel a sovereign nation and dispersed Jews began returning to their homeland.
2. There is no record of any ancient people called the Palestinians. “Palestine” was a name given to the region by the Romans and then resurrected as a public-relations campaign by the Arabs after Israel became a nation again in 1948.
3. Yasser Arafat, the champion of the Palestinian Liberation Movement, claims he was born in Jerusalem and was displaced by the Israelis in 1948. His critics claim he was born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1929. While his parents lived in what is now Israel for some time, Arafat was born, raised, and educated in Egypt.
Of course, to put all this in context, the Israelites and Arabs have been fighting since Father Abraham’s dysfunctional family feud in the book of Genesis. It won’t end, according to the book of Revelation, until all wars end.
Anyway, there are some things to discuss over the water cooler tomorrow.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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IRS Form 1040-A (Schedule 1) April 2001
If you’re one of the thousands of taxpayers who are frantically trying to complete your Form 1040 before tonight’s midnight deadline, here’s some helpful advice. Quit reading this column! Get to your local post office for the fifteen different forms you’ll need to send your checking account balance to Washington. Simpler yet, just send them your checkbook.
Actually, that display of tax forms at your local post office is just the tip of the IRS iceberg - there are over 1,000 forms, schedules, and publications!
For instance, if you made any money this year, start out with the 1040. If you made that money farming you’ll need 1040 Schedule F for profit and losses or perhaps 1049 Schedule J for farm income averaging. If you used ethanol fuel for your tractor, you should file Form 6478 for “Credit For Alcohol Used As Fuel.” But if your old John Deere is a gas-guzzler, you’ll need Form 6197 to report your “Gas Guzzler Tax.” (I’m not making these up. Just go to www.1040.com for a 50-page list of forms including the 1040-C for “Departing Aliens.”)
If you worked for tips, you’ll need to file Form 4136 for any unreported tip income. Did you make some money gambling? You’ll need to fill out Form 5754 and a W-26. If you made that money on the French Riviera, you’ll also need to file Form 2555 for foreign income but you may get some of your lost money back by filing a 1099 Form 730 to report “gambling taxes.”
And speaking of gambling, if you contributed to an Individual Retirement Account, you’ll need to file a Form 5304-SIMPLE, 5305, 5305-A, 5304-E, 5304-EA, 5305-R, 5305-RA, or 5305-SEP depending on what kind of account you have. If your checking accounts earned interest, you’ll also need the 1040-A (Schedule 1) and/or Form 1099-INT.
And don’t think that just because no money exchanged hands, you don’t have to file. If you bartered, brokered, or other wise exchanged any good or services, you’ll need to fill out Form 1099-B. (Our post office didn’t have a 1099-B, but I assume it reads something like “List number of chickens of Line 38A, then subtract bags of grain from Table G, then multiply by the fair market value of poultry on Line 76B of Table K divided by the square root of commodity index.)
If you know there’s no way in Washington you’ll make tonight’s deadline (we all get an extra day this year!), you can always file for an extension with the 2350, and then extend that extension with a 2678.
Although the government is promising to cut taxes and paperwork, my guess is that they will claim a 50 percent reduction by simply changing the name of Form 1040 to Form 520. But, it’s not that some legislators haven’t tried.
The National Retail Sales Tax Act of 1999 (H.R. 2001) was introduced in the House for the “repeal of the income tax, estate and gift taxes, and certain excise taxes. There is hereby imposed a tax of 15 percent on the gross payments for the use, consumption or enjoyment in the United States of any taxable property or service, whether produced or rendered within or without the United States.” (Fifteen percent is actually a reduction in the 18.9 percent that the average American is currently paying for federal taxes.)
A national sales tax would first of all eliminate the 3,458-page IRS Code (which is twice as thick as the Bible and harder to understand than the book of Revelation). It would also eliminate 100,000 IRS employees at a savings of $8,560,000,000.
Federal income taxes would no longer be withheld from your paycheck. In fact, the money you make would not be taxed at all. Put it in the bank or invest it in the stock market. You wouldn’t be taxed a dime--until you spent it. You would pay your taxes directly to the cash register of every store you shop in. Best of all, there would be absolutely no forms to fill out!
This way, everyone would pay their fair share of taxes, including the millions of illegal aliens and tax cheats. Edgar Feige, of the University of Wisconsin, estimates $800,000,000,000 (that’s eleven zeros or eight hundred billion dollars!) goes unreported! So everyone who gets paid in cash, from the junior-high babysitter to the big-time drug dealer, would be paying taxes on the latest Britney Spears CD or luxury auto.
Unfortunately, such a change would require a two-thirds of the House and Senate, and three-fourths of the states vote to repeal the 16th Amendment that created the Income Tax. (Congress cannot create a new national taxing authority without abolishing the existing one.)
But if they would took the vote tonight around 11 pm, as millions of tax payers are trying to understand what adjusted figure to multiply from what table on what line of what form, I think there would be a very good chance of tax reform passing!
See you at the Post Office.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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'Moses' and his 'rod'

Rx for gun control July 1999
As a red-blooded American, I love guns. And as a gray-haired arthritis sufferer, I love prescription painkillers.
The pharmacist keeps the drugs behind the counter until I hand over my prescription and taps away at his computer. (He's either running some kind of verification or finishing his electronic Solitaire game.) Anyway, in just a few minutes, I have my medication and am on my way.
Having certain categories of drugs as “prescription only” makes a lot of sense. The world is a safer place knowing that desperate drug addicts or teens at wild parties won't be celebrating with Celebrex.
And, it's really not that much of a hassle for law abiding, mentally-competent adults. People shouldn't be able to look through the classified ads, visit a trade show, or pay their friends to get prescription drugs. Are you still with me? Nod your head if that makes sense.
Why then, are products that are far more lethal than pain killers allowed to be sold through the newspapers, trade shows, and that shady looking character's car trunk?! I'm talking, of course, about guns.
Like I said, I love guns. But today, teens are 39% more likely to die from "lead poisoning" than from disease according to the Center for Disease Control. Maybe that's because a 1994 survey found that one in thirteen (7.4%) high school students took a gun for show and tell. (That number rises to one in five or 20% for inner city males who claim to be packing something other than their lunch at school.) One in five suburban male students owns a gun.
And, the United States, which prides itself in being Number One, is tops in gun deaths. We blow away Australia and Europe by a five to one margin and Asia by a 95 to one ratio.
But after all the posturing by politicians and lobbying by the National Rifle Association, Congress has failed to pass any reasonable gun control legislation following the national outcry for some sane safeguards.
Why not sell guns like prescription drugs are sold? Okay, okay, you wouldn't need a prescription. “Fire as needed for relief of anxiety and stress.” (Blasting away at tin cans is great therapy!)
First, guns could only be bought and sold at a licensed gun dealer or what I'd call “armacists.” No sales from the trunks of cars or unregulated trade shows.
Secondly, the armacist would check your ID to make sure you're 18 years of age and then tap away at his computer to make sure you're not listed as a convicted criminal, mental institution escapee, or international terrorist. In just a few moments, you're headed home with your weapon of choice.
As long as you buy a legal weapon, pass the quick background check, you can buy enough guns to arm the North Koreans.
It makes sense to me, but making sense has never been a government policy.
By having to buy and sell through a registered dealer, law-abiding members of the NRA won't have any more hassle than picking up their Viagra prescription. And the anti-gun lobby will have assurance that there are some reasonable regulations.
Of course, there will always be abuse. Kids sell their Ritalin on the junior high black market. Spouses borrow each others pain medications. The elderly often over medicate. But at least, by having some medications as "prescription only," there are some safeguards.
To be totally, completely fail-safe, you'd have to run down to the corner drug store for each dose of medicine, which the pharmacist would make sure you--and only you swallowed--right there at the counter. ThatÌs the kind of safeguards some of the anti-gun lobbyist want to impose! The NRA, on the other hand, seems to be advocating allowing everyone behind the counter at the neighborhood Walgreens.
It seems to make sense to me. But then again, my prescription warns I may become drowsy and cause a good deal of damage with heavy equipment, so maybe it's just the Celebrex talking.
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Impeachment January 1999
The Hill is alive with "The Sound of Monica"
Our team of investigative humor columnists has discovered that backers are being sought for a Broadway musical inspired by the impeachment proceedings against the President.
A reliable cleaning lady at an unidentified theater has provided us access to top secret lyrics for "The Sound of Monica." (A spokesperson for Rodgers and Hammerstein would neither confirm or deny their involvement in this revision of their popular musical, saying only "They're both dead.")
According to the source, the show opens with Diane Sawyer dancing a top the Hill as she sings . . .
The Hill is alive with the word impeachment,
A song it has sung only twice before,
The Hill is alive with the word impeachment,
But most of the country is already bored
Of Lewinsky and Tripp and their late night chats
and grand juries' sleazy details.
The polls show sixty percent couldn't care
If the law and real justice prevails.
Ken Starr then allegedly sings his version of "My Favorite Things."
Wire taps, subpoenas and stained dark blue dresses,
Grand juries, inquiries, stolen caresses,
News leaks that spread like the black plague with wings,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Our source has also produced lead sheets for "Climb Ev'ry Mountain . . . of Evidence" sung by a chorus of White House lawyers.
Mount ev'ry defense, cop ev'ry plea,
Answer ev'ry question with vague legalese.
A case that will try our ideals of justice,
A case to be won for the likes of just us.
According to our source, no one was found to sing the original song "I Must Have Done Something Good."
Also, the decision of who will sing "So Long, Farewell" in the final scene has not been made. Will it be the President? The First Lady? The lawyers? The media? The entire Congress?
Critics, who have also been leaked copies of the script, have panned the production because of its unfinished--and sure to be unsatisfying--ending. Unlike the original score, there are no clear winners (the good nuns) and losers (the bad Nazis). But perhaps, that is closer to real life than the theater. No one "wins" wars. One side simply loses less. And as the battle on the Hill escalates, there will be no winners either. The president, the Congress, the media and the voters are all losers as this long-running production continues in Washington.
So, let's all sing, "I simply remember my favorites things, and then I don't feel so bad." Or better, yet, pray for our President, the Congress, those disillusioned by the scandal, and especially for "that woman, Ms. Lewinky."
(c) 1999 James N. Watkins For more silly songs on serious issues, visit www.noblecan.org/~watkins.
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School
shootings April 1999
You've gotta
love a web site with the motto, "Save our planet; it's the only one
with chocolate." At blueroses.com,
I found some other great quotes from Luanne Oleas:
Home is where
you hang you @.
The e-mail of
the species is more deadly than the mail.
You can't teach
an old mouse new clicks.
Pentium wise;
pen and paper foolish.
The modem is
the message.
Too many clicks
spoil the browse.
The geek shall
inherit the earth.
Don't byte off
more than you can view.
Fax is stranger
than fiction.
What boots up
must come down.
Give a man a
fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the 'net and he won't
bother you for weeks.
Thanks, Luanne!
I needed a laugh after a week pock-marked with heated hostilities in the
Balkans and cold-blooded killings in the Rockies. Sometimes it's hard to
write a humor column when you feel like a deflated whoopee cushion.
Luanne's paraphrases
of popular proverbs, remind me of another computer caveat: GIGO (Garbage
in, garbage out).
Schools, and
society in general, have programmed our students' Central Processing Units
with a host of deadly viruses:
"You've
merely evolved from primordial ooze. You're a mutation that has survived
merely through natural selection."
"You deserve
to feel good about yourself." (Hey, you just told me I'm a cosmic
accident!)
"There is
no absolute truth. Moral values are based on what you and your referential
group decide they should be."
"I'm not
responsible for my behavior." (It takes a village to raise an idiot!)
"Judging
other's moral behavior is the highest crime against society."
Meanwhile the
media and our own government have convinced us that violence is the solution
for problems. Just check out the latest movie listings or latest briefing
on the NATO bombings.
"Might makes
right."
For instance,
try to name ten movies in which international crises are averted with diplomacy.
How 'bout five? One?! (I have to admit Xena: Princess Warrior is more entertaining
than the Secretary of State. Maybe Lucy Lawless could play the part of
Madeline Albright.)
Our government
seems to be operating on the "might makes right" philosophy with
its relentless bombing of Yugoslavia. Why aren't we bombing Peking where
Chinese leaders have killed more of its citizen in their version of "cleansing"
than Milosevic ever has? Because we're bigger and stronger than a country
the size of Kentucky. China would fight back! (Besides, most of our sneakers
come from China.)
The answer to
why two young men would shoot twelve students and a coach as well
as plan to blow up Columbine High School school seems fairly simple (at
least to this simple-minded columnist.) GIGO!
If you're merely
highly-evolved pond scum, why shouldn't I blow you away because you make
me feel badly about myself? After all, the concept of "murder"
is simply a part of your group's social contract--not my gothic philosophy
that death is cool. Besides, violence is the easiest way to resolve international--as
well as--interpersonal conflict. And who are you to judge me anyway?! My
moral code is just as valid as yours!
When our "computing"
of the value of life as well as our concepts of right and wrong have flawed
"disk sectors," we should expect more "fatal errors."
GIGO! The challenge--far greater than the Y2K bug--is to work to change
the flawed data before many more schools and Kosovo's are infected.
Let's save our
planet; it's the only one with chocolate--and human life.
(c) 1999 James
N. Watkins
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Viagra
and Southern Baptists June 1998
Viagra and the
Southern Baptist Convention have ignited fiery debate over sexual issues.
First, the popular
impotence pill has restored sexual power to many men.
Recently, the
Southern Baptists Convention declared that wives should "submit"
to their husbands--and, one could speculate, their Viagara-revitalized
desires. This has the National Organization of Women hotter than a burning
bra!
And so, in a
daring effort to bring harmony between feminists and fundamentalists, here
are some thoughts to consider. (If this actually works, this columnist
will next attempt to reconcile I.U. and Purdue fans. If it fails, please
address letters and death threats to "Sexist Heretic" in care
of this newspaper.)
God, in his infinite
wisdom, apparently foresaw this battle of the political sexes brewing,
so he created the first equal-opportunity organizational plan--both "male
and female" to "rule the earth" (Genesis 1:27-28). Hmmm?
Nothing about submission here, but apparently equal pay for equal work--and
"dress down day" every day.
Then Adam and
Eve rebelled against Management, were thrown out of the union and forced
to wear uncomfortable uniforms. As further punishment, all future Adam's
were given high-stress executive appointments, and all the Eve's condemned
to middle management positions.
After thousands
of years of labor disputes, strikes and a few plant closings in Sodom and
Gomorrah, the Boss's Son was sent to restructure the whole organization.
He taught women, which was prohibited by the first century culture. He
included women as his followers (Luke 8:3), which was prohibited by the
first century culture. And, he gave a woman, Mary Magdalene, the task of
breaking the news that he had risen from the dead, which was probably also
prohibited by the first century culture. (Women weren't allowed to testify
in courts at that time.)
The new Company
anti-discrimination policy declared there is "neither Jew nor Greek,
slave nor free, male nor female . . ." (Galatians 3:28), and furthermore,
men and women are to "submit to each other" (Ephesians 5:21)
out of respect and deference. (The word "submit" doesn't appear
in the original Greek rendering of Ephesians 5:22's famous translation
"wives, submit unto your own husbands.")
Saint Paul went
even further by writing that "The husband should fulfill his marital
duty to his wife, and likewise the wife to her husband. The wife's body
does not belong to her alone but also to her husband. In the same way,
the husband's body does not belong to him alone but also to his wife. (1
Corinthians 7:4-5). Before Masters and Johnson, women weren't believed
to have sexual needs!
And so, submitted
for your approval, a daring compromise . . .
NOW members,
if you'll read God's corporate policy manual, you may discover that He's
actually a supporter of equal rights. You'll find lots of liberated women
as entrepreneurs, prophets, church leaders and even a military leader!
And Southern
Baptist delegates, let's apply the command to submit to each other and
honor one another to both men and women. (No fair taking verses
out of context that were written to specific churches for specific problems.)
Remember, that God's original mission statement mandated that both men
and women were to rule the earth--and to be fruitful and to multiply.
Which brings
us right back to Viagra!
(c) 1998 James
N. Watkins
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Gun
control May 1998
During the sixties
many of my friends stayed in school simply to avoid being shot in Vietnam.
Thirty years later, 148 young people were killed in the Gulf War while,
that same year, 4,200 high school students were killed by guns. "The
times, they are a changin'."
Today, teens
are 39% more likely to die from "lead poisoning" than from disease
according to the Center for Disease Control. Maybe that's because a 1994
survey found that one in thirteen (7.4%) high school students took a gun
for show and tell. (That number rises to one in five or 20% for inner city
males who claim to be packing something other than their lunch at school.)
One in five suburban male students owns a gun.
And, the United
States, which prides itself in being Number One, is tops in gun deaths
blowing away Australia and Europe by a five to one margin and Asia by a
95 to one.
So, what's turning
our schools into killing fields, while Vietnam is now relatively peaceful?
I could say the
problem is guns. But, hey, I have enough self-preservation than to make
that claim in a county where gun racks come as "standard equipment"
on pick up trucks!
Now, someone--but
not me--could possibly draw the conclusion that maybe, just maybe, 40 million
guns in the United States might just contribute somewhat to the problem.
So, it would make sense that Japan, where gun ownership is rare, would
have one of the lowest rates of death by guns. It does!
But in defense
of all the readers with NRA bumper stickers, I must admit that guns don't
kill people. I own a handgun, four rifles, and a shotgun and they've never
killed anything with a pulse (I have wasted my share of targets and tin
cans). But, gun lovers have to admit, guns make killing people a lot more
efficient and effective than, say, a big stick. That's why my guns are
stored in one location and the ammo locked and hidden in another location.
Parents have
also drawn fire for raising tiny terrorists! I just can't win. When I was
in high school, all of society's problems--from drugs and sex to really
ugly fashion--were blamed on young people. Now that I've joined the ranks
of parents, we're the ones being blamed for raising drug-crazed psychotic
killers. Many of my peers--so as not to "repress" their children--have
allowed them to grow up with no rules, responsibilities or respect for
themselves or others.
Then there's
TV violence, movie massacres, and graphic video games with triple-digit
body counts to take the blame for inspiring school yard shootouts. When's
the last time you heard an action-adventure hero say, "I sense a lot
of suppressed hostility. Let's talk about this"?
And how 'bout
toy guns? Mattel doesn't make toy atomic bombs and Fisher Price doesn't
make pre-school-sized electric chairs. So, why make toys out of objects
designed to kill? If that seems like a silly question, ask yourself, when
was the last time you saw toddlers playing target practice? Nope, it's
"Bang! Bang! You're dead!" Did the middle school boys in Jonesboro,
Arkansas, really comprehend that their school mates wouldn't get back up
after playing their deadly game?
School also make
an easy target when spreading blame. When kids are taught that they've
merely evolved from pond scum and that there are no moral absolutes, can
we expect students to treat others any different than pond scum with no
thought of whether it's right or wrong?
Finally, there
are the gun-toting tots themselves. Society, schools, peers, the media,
and parents certainly have an influence, but there is also something called
personal responsibility.
A society can't
depend on police officers to maintain order. Each citizen must have an
internal cop called a conscience that shouts "Freeze" when thoughts
of doing bodily harm creep from the back alleys of his or her brain. Unfortunately,
for many children and teens, the internal police officers are sitting at
Dunkin' Doughnuts with their radios turned off.
And if there
are no cops in our consciences, all the external police officers, metal
detectors, conflict resolution courses, and gun control laws will not prevent
more cafeteria massacres!
Parents, teachers,
churches, schools, the media, manufacturers--and even the NRA--need to
work together to put that internal police officer on the beat of each of
our souls and psyches.
Guns don't kill
people. People without consciences and self-control kill people.
(c) 1998 James
N. Watkins
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last candidate standing
August 2003
The people I cheer for on reality TV never win. It all began when Richard, the self-described "fat, naked, gay guy" on the first "Survivor," won the million. Then last week, Dat Phan was crowned as, and I quote, "The Funniest Person In America" on "Last Comic Standing." He was good, but I have funnier relatives (some are even allowed to go out in public unattended).
At least it got me thinking that perhaps the 2004 Presidential election should be staged as the ultimate reality series: "The Amazing Political Race," "Who Wants to Marry a Politician," "Conservative Eye for the Liberal Guy," "Political Boxing," or "Survivor: The Electoral College."
[Overproduced theme music]
"Live from the nation's capital, 'The Amazing Dog Eat Dog Last Candidate Standing.' 52 weeks! 52 candidates!. But tonight, just ONE President elect of the United States."
Yep, let's put all the candidates for President in that "Big Brother" house in Hollywood--and then lock and bolt the doors until December 2004. Just kidding about bolting the door, but there would be some real advantages to elections as reality TV.
1. We'd only have to listen to their political pontifications one night a week! (The prospect of hearing the monotone whining of Joe Lieberman for over a year is enough to make me move to a remote island and survive on Madagascar Hissing Cockroaches.)
2. Candidates would have to successfully perform tasks to stay in the running: balancing a check book, finding a job for a homeless tech stock trader, and negotiating a win-win settlement in a messy divorce case. If they can't perform these tasks, what business do they have with the Federal budget, the job market, and keeping North Korea from nuking its neighbors.
Candidates, of course, would have to answer the requisite trivia questions:
What is the capital of Liberia?
Saddam Hussein loyalists belong to what political party: a) Bath, b) Shower, c) Dry Clean Only.
True/False: Latin Americans speak Latin
The best way to stimulate the economy is a) tax cuts, b) less government restrictions, c) amphetamines
Your stand on homosexual marriage is a) I'm for it, b) I'm against it, c) I can go either way (wink)
Next come the immunity challenges, After living off the government payroll and enjoying political perks, maybe a dose of "The Real World" would be the best thing for Presidential candidates. Let's see them live on off-brand macaroni and cheese with generic hot dogs. Which of them can survive the longest while eating stale pretzels sitting in coach section of a plane. How 'bout giving them each a $1,000 Social Security check and make them find decent housing, medical insurance, and an affordable long distance plan. The possibilities are endless!
3. Brooke Burns could host the show, since she already has experience with the "Dog Eat Dog" world of politics. Her show's premise, according to the official Web site, is for contestants to "play upon each other's strengths and weaknesses" and "use their knowledge of each other to gain the upper hand and emerge as 'top dog'." See, sounds like politics to me. And besides, the former "Baywatch" babe is certainly better looking (and less biased) than Dan Rather.
4. The weekly tribal council would whittle the number down to one Republican, one Democrat, and one independent "wildcard." Those who can out wit, out play, and out last would go on to the two-hour finale on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 2004.
5. Voters at home log-in on their computers and cast their ballots without those annoying "hanging chads" and Supreme Court rulings.
Then again, the people I want to win reality shows never do win which just goes to prove:
1. TV reality shows are not really "reality."
2. Contestants are conniving attention-deprived ego-maniacs who will do anything for the fame and fortune.
3. Some computer geek somewhere has figured out a way to vote three million times.
Okay, maybe "The Last Candidate Standing" isn't the best suggestion for election reform, but Dat Phan is welcomed to take my column. Please.
(c) 2004 James N. Watkins

Global bullies
October 2002
I'm confused. That's not exactly a news flash ("Columnist confused! Film at 11!") But would someone help me understand the following?
First, Madelyne Gorman Toogood, 25, has become infamous as the woman caught by a Kohl's security camera allegedly beating her 4-year-old daughter, Martha.
It's being reported that she lost her temper when the store wouldn't give her a cash refund. Toogood told reporters she hit her child in the head and back and pulled her hair -- but did not punch her.
Let me get this straight? There's a difference between "hitting" and "punching"?! That's not "Toogood" of a defense if you want my opinion.
Here's something else that confuses me.
As our country debates attacking Iraq, here's a March 4, 2002, report from the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor of the U.S. State Department:
"The Government's human rights record throughout the year remained poor and the Government continued to commit numerous and serious abuses. Authorities still were quick to suppress any person or group, whether religious, political, or social, that they perceived to be a threat to government power . . .
"Abuses included instances of extrajudicial killings, torture and mistreatment of prisoners, forced confessions, arbitrary arrest and detention, lengthy incommunicado detention, and denial of due process. According to international press reports, over 200,000 persons are serving sentences, not subject to judicial review, in reeducation-through-labor camps.
"The Government continued to implement its sometimes coercive policy to restrict the number of children a family may have. Violence against women (including imposition of a sometimes coercive birth control policy, including instances of forced abortion and forced sterilization); prostitution; discrimination against women; abuse of children; and discrimination against persons with disabilities and minorities are all problems.
"Child labor exists and continues in rural areas as adult workers leave for better employment opportunities in urban areas. Trafficking in persons is a serious problem."
And guess what, this country has an estimated 2,000 nuclear weapons! It's not Iraq but China.
Help me explain why our government awards a ruthless regime owning tons of mega-tons with "Most Favored Trading Status" and sets up an embargo against a poor, second-rate country that reportedly doesn't currently have the ability to produce one nuclear bomb?
Perhaps it's the same reason that a 25-year-old adult will allegedly "hit" a 4-year old, rather than "punch" someone her own size at the customer service desk at a department store?
Could it be that our government is only interested in championing human rights in a country that it knows it can pummel in the parking lot? Is our government afraid to pick on someone its own size. We're boycotting third-world Communist Cuba, but encouraging trade with superpower (and nuclear-powered) Communist China. Why aren't we boycotting China?!
At least there has been an outcry over Toogood beating her child. Too bad, there's not the same concern about the millions men, women, and children brutalized in China, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and a dozen other oppressive countries.
Columnist confused! Film at 11!
(c) 2002 James N. Watkins
Guest Editorial: Tom Blodget asks WWJD about Iraq?



Pro life January 2002
“Critics are the unpaid guardians of our souls,” claimed Plato, a Greek philosopher not to be confused with that colorful modeling clay. (And I’m not sure he still believed that when critics
sentenced his friend and fellow philosopher, Socrates, to death!)
Critics were also waiting for the thousands of “Right to Life” advocates gathered in Washington D.C. to mark the 29th anniversary of the Supreme Court ruling that declared abortion legal. The day started off well when the President of the United States addressed the group:)
”Every life is valuable,” the President said. “Our society has a responsibility to defend the vulnerable and weak, the imperfect and even the unwanted.” (Applause) A generous society values all human life. A merciful society seeks to expand legal protection to every life . . . not just the healthy or the strong or the powerful. “ (More applause.)
But Ann Retman, an abortion advocate from Boston, Mass., followed the “pro-life” marchers from the mall to the Supreme Court building. “If they're so proud of living in a free nation, then there needs to be freedom," she said. "I'm sick of them pulling out their religion when it's convenient for them and then when they want to oppress people, the Bible doesn't come in anywhere."
So, would Plato consider Retman a “guardian” of the anti-abortionist’s souls? I think so. As one who considers himself “pro-life” (or “a “right-wing religious radical” if you prefer), I’m concerned that many in the “Right To Life” movement may not be as “pro” as they would like to think when it comes to “life.”
The President noted, “a generous society values all human life.” Capitalize, bold-face, and underline that word ALL.
It is tragic that 3,600 unborn babies are aborted every day in this land of freedom. That’s a million each year.
But did you know that 24,000 people worldwide die every day from starvation and malnutrition? That’s over 8 million each year. Three of four who die are younger than five years old.
Did you also know, that hunger relief groups estimate that it would take 13 billion dollars a year to end hunger for the Earth's poorest citizens? Wow, that is a lot of money, but did you know North Americans and Europeans spend 18 billion dollars a year on pet food?
Retman would probably have a fit, as well, to realize that many “pro-lifers” are pro-death penalty. I haven’t figured that one out, yet, either. It’s particularly disturbing when 381 death-row prisoners in the United States were declared “wrongly convicted” and had their sentences thrown out. In a scathing series of articles in the January 1999 issues of the Chicago Tribune, reporters found “With impunity, prosecutors across the country have violated their oaths and the law, committing the worst kinds of deception in the most serious of cases.”
And I’m not sure about the company we keep. In 2000, 88 percent of all known executions were carried out in China, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the USA. According to Amnesty International, during that year 3,058 people were sentenced to death in 65 countries.
I do applaud the Justice Department and military for it’s “pro-life” treatment of terrorist “detainees.” It seems to me that moving suicidal maniacs who have lived in dark, dank caves with no sanitary facilities for the last several months to a sunny tropical climate with modern plumbing is actually a major improvement in their standard of living. (And I should remind Ms. Retman -- and the prolifers -- that Jesus commands his followers to love their enemies and to treat prisoners as they would treat him.)
And, speaking of Christ’s disciples, “More than 160,000 Christians were martyred in the last five years in a monumental escalation of religious persecution . . .” according to Dan Hodel, president of the Christian Coalition. “More Christians have been killed for their faith in the 20th Century than the first nineteen centuries combined!)
I’m probably being a bit self-serving in this “pro-life” stance since four journalists covering Afghanistan were captured and executed on the spot by Taliban soldiers. Twenty-four journalists were killed in 2000 and 34 in 1999. “Truth is the first casualty of war” and ten reporters covering the civil war in Sierra Leone were hunted down and murdered by rebel forces angry at the reporting of their human rights abuses.
And this doesn’t include those whose lives are in imminent danger.
Over 800,000,000 people in our world are seriously under-nourished with physical and cognitive consequences.
The United Nations estimates there are 20,000,000 “bonded laborers” worldwide.
Over 700,000 to 2,000,000 women and children are “trafficked” each year for forced labor and prostitution. Women and children sold or kidnapped into prostitution number up to 800,000 in Thailand, 200,000 in India, and 50,000 right here in the United States (Asian women “sell” for $16,000 each in North America).
So, what’s the solution?
How ‘bout for every bag of pet food we buy, we send a check for the same amount to World Hope, or other groups fighting hunger throughout the world? (No pets? Donate what you spend on snack foods.)
How ‘bout every time we’re waited on by a minimum wage server at a Chinese or Mexican restaurant, we send a comparable donation to organizations fighting forced labor in those countries such as the Salvation Army’s “Initiative Against Sexual Trafficking”?
How ‘bout every time we sing praises in our comfortable churches, we pray for our brothers and sisters who are imprisoned, tortured, and killed for their faith?
And how ‘bout being “pro” for all “life”?
(c) 2002 James N. Watkins

Euthanasia November 2001
Usually columnists receive letters to the editors. (Most of the mail I receive accuses me of being either a loony liberal or a cranky conservative, so I must be managing to find the middle, moderate ground by annoying my entire readership.) But today, I’d like to respond to a letter to the editor. Here’s the opening paragraph of “Euthanasia should be legalized.”
Picture this, if you can! Your favorite grandmother has just been diagnosed with an incurable disease. The doctors give her six months to live. However, during the six months she will constantly be in agonizing pain. Another option for her may be to end her life now and forego all the pain and suffering. But assisted suicide has been outlawed. I believe all terminally ill people should be given the right to choose their own means of demise.
My favorite grandmother died a slow, lingering death in January, so I understand the writer’s feelings. There were times when I thought killing her would be far more merciful than allowing her to live her last six months in a foster home with a constant case of diarrhea and bladder-control problems, congestive heart failure, mini strokes, and kidney failure. She couldn’t walk without assistance, so spent twelve hours in bed at night and twelve hours sitting in her LazyBoy recliner during the day watching game shows. (How much "Wheel of Fortune" can a person take?) And, she wanted to die.
But there are several points that were misrepresented in the lengthy letter.
Simply refusing "extraordinary" medical care is not euthanasia.
Joni Earekson Tada, who has been paralyzed from the neck down for most for life, asks "Does the medical treatment offered extend life, or simply prolong death?”
Good question when facing a terminal illness. Ron Sloan, a family practice physician, admits, “Part of my practice in helping people die, as well as helping people live. I don't put people on medications I know won't help them. I don't put people on ventilators who aren't doing to be helped by them.”
Severe pain is no longer a reason for euthanasia.
Euthanasia activists exploit that fear and imply that when a cure is no longer likely, there are only two alternatives: euthanasia or unbearable pain. However, today, pain control is available. I know pain; I’ve had a kidney stone. To understand the pain, lie in the parking lot and have your friends drive over your lower back . . . with a bus . . . with snow chains . . . filled with people on their way to a Weight Watchers meeting. It took three surgeries in two hospitals over one whole month to remove that stubborn stone.
However, once the doctors confirmed my kidney stone, they put me on a morphine pump with a "Jeopardy" style button I could push whenever I was in pain. "I'll take Demerol for $100, Alex." I was absolutely pain free. I'm so glad Dr. Kervorkian wasn't on call at the E.R. on November 15, 1991! Which brings up another issue . . .
No one can say for sure who is "terminal."
When I interviewed Dr. Sloan for The Why Files, he warned, “You can have a patient who has all the symptoms [of near death], and they'll walk out of the hospital a week later. You can have a cancer patient that you expect to live less than six months, and six years later you're still doing their annual examinations. Or worse, you tell someone they're perfectly healthy, and a few days later they're face up in a flowerbed from a fatal heart attack.”
Euthanasia is a permanent solution for what may be a temporary situation.
A request for assisted suicide is typically a cry for help. And it's usually temporary. Of those who attempt suicide but are stopped, less than 4 percent go on to kill themselves in the next five years; less than 11 percent will commit suicide over the next 35 years.
In another study, of the 24 percent of terminally ill patients who desired death, all had clinical depression that was treatable.
Here’s my point . . .
Twenty years earlier, my grandmother had been given six months to live with colon cancer. But she survived, thrived, and was able to see my children grow up as well as restore the relationship between her and her estranged daughter. If the euthanasia enthusiasts would have had their way in 1980, my grandmother and her family would have missed out on twenty birthday celebrations, Thanksgivings, Christmas mornings, and a whole litany of life.
Admittedly it’s an emotional and complex issue, but when in doubt, choose life.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins For a fuller discussion of this important issue, read Jim’s Indiana Wesleyan University lecture.
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'Big Brothers' November 2001
At the risk of appearing to be a yellow-bellied, ACLU-loving, pinko-Commie, liberal sack of Anthrax, I’m feeling just a bit uneasy about the current patriotic fervor. (Please address all hate mail, letter bombs, and rotting road kill to Jim Watkins in care of this paper.)
Let me explain.
First, didn’t we ratify the First Amendment way back in December of 1791?
Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The risk of contracting Anthrax or becoming the victim of a terrorist act (as terrible and terrifying as that is) is far less than winning your state’s lottery. But there IS a real risk that the freedoms we are attempting to preserve in our patriotic paranoia may actually be eroded by our zeal to protect them.
Aaron Sorkin, the left-wing creator of “The West Wing,” is worried that “America's surge in patriotism has a dark side: It has unleashed a ‘blacklist’ against those who dissent!” While this columnist believes Bill “Politically Incorrect” Maher’s comments about our military being “cowards” was a bone-headed blunder, Sorkin does point out that America’s military is fighting to preserve our freedoms, including the right to make just such bone-headed blunders. Just try being “politically incorrect” in Afghanistan!
Obviously, there are limits to freedom of speech: maliciously libeling someone in print or media, yelling “fire” in a public building, or selling military secrets. But if America is to remain free, don’t we need to allow for the “redress of grievances”? Remember our country was founded on the concept of majority rule, minority rights. And someday, you and I might be in the minority as politically incorrect.
Secondly, are we in danger of undermining the Fourth Amendment with “the war on terrorism”?
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
According to the Associated Press, Washington’s new anti-terrorism law is “. . . relying heavily on sophisticated technology, from software that automatically translates foreign communications on the Internet to a device that secretly captures every keystroke a suspect makes on his computer.”
Recently, top Justice Department lawyers in Washington e-mailed federal prosecutors around the country describing how they can use the government's high-tech tools in new ways. The AP quotes the email as saying, “. . . in rare cases police can now secretly search a person's house without telling the homeowner for up to three months” and install the “key-logger” device on the person’s computer.
The plans go well beyond the “Carnivore” e-mail-sniffing system that allows the FBI to search for and extract specific e-mails off the Internet. Prior to the September 11 attacks, privacy advocates and civil libertarians were having a Federal fit over it.
Right now, “Big Brother” could be tapped into my computer reading this column as I type it on to the computer screen. Just for fun, let’s see what happens.
Dear Uncle Osama, Our great and glorious campaign to disrupt the Satanist American communication infrastructure is succeeding well as our operatives clog the Internet with e-mail for home mortgages, Internet casinos, herbal Viagra, urban legends, and those annoying “Tag, You’re It!” forwards. Praise to Allah, Abdul Kareem Watkins.
Perhaps my fear of undermining our first and fourth amendment rights comes from visits overseas. While I was in India, the papers were filled with articles about the government openly censoring the media and movie studios being required to have scripts approved by the government. While in South Africa, which has one of the highest rates of AIDS, the government had earlier banned all books on sexuality. No wonder one of the myths in southern Africa is that AIDS can be cured by having sex with a virgin!
So, one of the risks we take living a free country is not preempting the plans of every immoral and murderous individual. Perhaps those who died in the September 11 attacks, died for freedom every bit as much as those who gave their lives in military battles throughout our history.
Freedom is risky, but I believe it’s worth the cost.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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Sharks and Sheiks September 2001
In our continuing effort to inform and enlighten the American public, here’s some context on two current events:
Sharks
Judging by the media feeding frenzy, you’d think that sharks were the number one cause of death in America. Two swimmers were killed by sharks over the Labor Day weekend off Virginia and North Carolina, and that is indeed tragic. But let’s put this in perspective before anyone cancels travel plans to the east coast.
On an average year one or two people are killed by shark attacks off U.S. shores. Worldwide, the annual average of shark fatalities over the past decade has been eight. And non-fatal shark attacks are down worldwide. Last year 51 shark attacks were reported in the United States. This year only 37 bites have been documented worldwide.
So, let’s compare annual shark fatalities with other causes of death. We’ll go with the high number of two for man-eating sharks in U.S. waters.
Automobiles take an average of 40,000 lives per year, so you’re 20,000 times more likely to be killed simply driving to the beach. And yet, we don’t see people running from parking lots screaming “Car! Car!”
In 1998 over 5,100 people were killed in their place of employment. In fact, the government claims that a worker is killed on the job every 103 minutes! So, you’re 2,500 times more likely to be killed at work than enjoying a day at the beach.
And the odds are worse if you work at home. Every 19 minutes a person is killed at home, with two-thirds of those being fatally injured in the bathroom! That’s 28,200 fatalities each year. Forget sharks, stay out of the shower!
But wait, there’s more. The National Safety Council warns that each year 40 people are killed in the 400 fires started by Christmas trees! You’re 20 times more likely to be killed by a blue spruce than a great white shark.
So, if you really want to be safe, quit your job and live at the beach. But be sure you walk there, and whatever you do, stay out of the bathroom!
Sheiks
Not only are sharks getting eaten alive by the media, delegates at the United Nations' World Conference Against Racism is calling the Jewish people “racists” for trying to defend their nation’s sovereignty. Let’s try to put that in perspective as well.
1. Israel became a nation in 1312 B.C..
For the next three thousand years, the Jews “Promised Land” has been overrun by Assyrians, Babylonians, Egyptians, Persians, Romans, and Arabs. In 586 B.C. Babylon destroyed the first Jewish temple and enslaved many Jews. Over the next 500 years the Jewish people returned and rebuilt the temple on what is known today as Temple Mount. (Israel as a nation predates the rise of Islam-and it’s claim to “The Dome of the Rock”--by two thousand years.)
In A.D. 70 the Roman Empire destroyed the second temple, but thousands of Jews remained in their homeland and attempted to rebuild their nation.
In A.D. 636 Arabs invaded the land. Turks chased out the Arabs and ruled the area from 1526 to 1923. That’s when British troops defeated the Turks and governed the area under the old League of Nations. In the 1920s and 30s Muslims aligned with the Nazi regime to incite massacres of the Jewish people. Six million Jews scattered throughout Europe were exterminated in what has become known as the Holocaust.
It wasn’t until 1948 that the United Nations declared Israel a sovereign nation and dispersed Jews began returning to their homeland.
2. There is no record of any ancient people called the Palestinians. “Palestine” was a name given to the region by the Romans and then resurrected as a public-relations campaign by the Arabs after Israel became a nation again in 1948.
3. Yasser Arafat, the champion of the Palestinian Liberation Movement, claims he was born in Jerusalem and was displaced by the Israelis in 1948. His critics claim he was born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1929. While his parents lived in what is now Israel for some time, Arafat was born, raised, and educated in Egypt.
Of course, to put all this in context, the Israelites and Arabs have been fighting since Father Abraham’s dysfunctional family feud in the book of Genesis. It won’t end, according to the book of Revelation, until all wars end.
Anyway, there are some things to discuss over the water cooler tomorrow.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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IRS Form 1040-A (Schedule 1) April 2001
If you’re one of the thousands of taxpayers who are frantically trying to complete your Form 1040 before tonight’s midnight deadline, here’s some helpful advice. Quit reading this column! Get to your local post office for the fifteen different forms you’ll need to send your checking account balance to Washington. Simpler yet, just send them your checkbook.
Actually, that display of tax forms at your local post office is just the tip of the IRS iceberg - there are over 1,000 forms, schedules, and publications!
For instance, if you made any money this year, start out with the 1040. If you made that money farming you’ll need 1040 Schedule F for profit and losses or perhaps 1049 Schedule J for farm income averaging. If you used ethanol fuel for your tractor, you should file Form 6478 for “Credit For Alcohol Used As Fuel.” But if your old John Deere is a gas-guzzler, you’ll need Form 6197 to report your “Gas Guzzler Tax.” (I’m not making these up. Just go to www.1040.com for a 50-page list of forms including the 1040-C for “Departing Aliens.”)
If you worked for tips, you’ll need to file Form 4136 for any unreported tip income. Did you make some money gambling? You’ll need to fill out Form 5754 and a W-26. If you made that money on the French Riviera, you’ll also need to file Form 2555 for foreign income but you may get some of your lost money back by filing a 1099 Form 730 to report “gambling taxes.”
And speaking of gambling, if you contributed to an Individual Retirement Account, you’ll need to file a Form 5304-SIMPLE, 5305, 5305-A, 5304-E, 5304-EA, 5305-R, 5305-RA, or 5305-SEP depending on what kind of account you have. If your checking accounts earned interest, you’ll also need the 1040-A (Schedule 1) and/or Form 1099-INT.
And don’t think that just because no money exchanged hands, you don’t have to file. If you bartered, brokered, or other wise exchanged any good or services, you’ll need to fill out Form 1099-B. (Our post office didn’t have a 1099-B, but I assume it reads something like “List number of chickens of Line 38A, then subtract bags of grain from Table G, then multiply by the fair market value of poultry on Line 76B of Table K divided by the square root of commodity index.)
If you know there’s no way in Washington you’ll make tonight’s deadline (we all get an extra day this year!), you can always file for an extension with the 2350, and then extend that extension with a 2678.
Although the government is promising to cut taxes and paperwork, my guess is that they will claim a 50 percent reduction by simply changing the name of Form 1040 to Form 520. But, it’s not that some legislators haven’t tried.
The National Retail Sales Tax Act of 1999 (H.R. 2001) was introduced in the House for the “repeal of the income tax, estate and gift taxes, and certain excise taxes. There is hereby imposed a tax of 15 percent on the gross payments for the use, consumption or enjoyment in the United States of any taxable property or service, whether produced or rendered within or without the United States.” (Fifteen percent is actually a reduction in the 18.9 percent that the average American is currently paying for federal taxes.)
A national sales tax would first of all eliminate the 3,458-page IRS Code (which is twice as thick as the Bible and harder to understand than the book of Revelation). It would also eliminate 100,000 IRS employees at a savings of $8,560,000,000.
Federal income taxes would no longer be withheld from your paycheck. In fact, the money you make would not be taxed at all. Put it in the bank or invest it in the stock market. You wouldn’t be taxed a dime--until you spent it. You would pay your taxes directly to the cash register of every store you shop in. Best of all, there would be absolutely no forms to fill out!
This way, everyone would pay their fair share of taxes, including the millions of illegal aliens and tax cheats. Edgar Feige, of the University of Wisconsin, estimates $800,000,000,000 (that’s eleven zeros or eight hundred billion dollars!) goes unreported! So everyone who gets paid in cash, from the junior-high babysitter to the big-time drug dealer, would be paying taxes on the latest Britney Spears CD or luxury auto.
Unfortunately, such a change would require a two-thirds of the House and Senate, and three-fourths of the states vote to repeal the 16th Amendment that created the Income Tax. (Congress cannot create a new national taxing authority without abolishing the existing one.)
But if they would took the vote tonight around 11 pm, as millions of tax payers are trying to understand what adjusted figure to multiply from what table on what line of what form, I think there would be a very good chance of tax reform passing!
See you at the Post Office.
(c) 2001 James N. Watkins
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'Moses' and his 'rod'

Rx for gun control July 1999
As a red-blooded American, I love guns. And as a gray-haired arthritis sufferer, I love prescription painkillers.
The pharmacist keeps the drugs behind the counter until I hand over my prescription and taps away at his computer. (He's either running some kind of verification or finishing his electronic Solitaire game.) Anyway, in just a few minutes, I have my medication and am on my way.
Having certain categories of drugs as “prescription only” makes a lot of sense. The world is a safer place knowing that desperate drug addicts or teens at wild parties won't be celebrating with Celebrex.
And, it's really not that much of a hassle for law abiding, mentally-competent adults. People shouldn't be able to look through the classified ads, visit a trade show, or pay their friends to get prescription drugs. Are you still with me? Nod your head if that makes sense.
Why then, are products that are far more lethal than pain killers allowed to be sold through the newspapers, trade shows, and that shady looking character's car trunk?! I'm talking, of course, about guns.
Like I said, I love guns. But today, teens are 39% more likely to die from "lead poisoning" than from disease according to the Center for Disease Control. Maybe that's because a 1994 survey found that one in thirteen (7.4%) high school students took a gun for show and tell. (That number rises to one in five or 20% for inner city males who claim to be packing something other than their lunch at school.) One in five suburban male students owns a gun.
And, the United States, which prides itself in being Number One, is tops in gun deaths. We blow away Australia and Europe by a five to one margin and Asia by a 95 to one ratio.
But after all the posturing by politicians and lobbying by the National Rifle Association, Congress has failed to pass any reasonable gun control legislation following the national outcry for some sane safeguards.
Why not sell guns like prescription drugs are sold? Okay, okay, you wouldn't need a prescription. “Fire as needed for relief of anxiety and stress.” (Blasting away at tin cans is great therapy!)
First, guns could only be bought and sold at a licensed gun dealer or what I'd call “armacists.” No sales from the trunks of cars or unregulated trade shows.
Secondly, the armacist would check your ID to make sure you're 18 years of age and then tap away at his computer to make sure you're not listed as a convicted criminal, mental institution escapee, or international terrorist. In just a few moments, you're headed home with your weapon of choice.
As long as you buy a legal weapon, pass the quick background check, you can buy enough guns to arm the North Koreans.
It makes sense to me, but making sense has never been a government policy.
By having to buy and sell through a registered dealer, law-abiding members of the NRA won't have any more hassle than picking up their Viagra prescription. And the anti-gun lobby will have assurance that there are some reasonable regulations.
Of course, there will always be abuse. Kids sell their Ritalin on the junior high black market. Spouses borrow each others pain medications. The elderly often over medicate. But at least, by having some medications as "prescription only," there are some safeguards.
To be totally, completely fail-safe, you'd have to run down to the corner drug store for each dose of medicine, which the pharmacist would make sure you--and only you swallowed--right there at the counter. ThatÌs the kind of safeguards some of the anti-gun lobbyist want to impose! The NRA, on the other hand, seems to be advocating allowing everyone behind the counter at the neighborhood Walgreens.
It seems to make sense to me. But then again, my prescription warns I may become drowsy and cause a good deal of damage with heavy equipment, so maybe it's just the Celebrex talking.
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Impeachment January 1999
The Hill is alive with "The Sound of Monica"
Our team of investigative humor columnists has discovered that backers are being sought for a Broadway musical inspired by the impeachment proceedings against the President.
A reliable cleaning lady at an unidentified theater has provided us access to top secret lyrics for "The Sound of Monica." (A spokesperson for Rodgers and Hammerstein would neither confirm or deny their involvement in this revision of their popular musical, saying only "They're both dead.")
According to the source, the show opens with Diane Sawyer dancing a top the Hill as she sings . . .
The Hill is alive with the word impeachment,
A song it has sung only twice before,
The Hill is alive with the word impeachment,
But most of the country is already bored
Of Lewinsky and Tripp and their late night chats
and grand juries' sleazy details.
The polls show sixty percent couldn't care
If the law and real justice prevails.
Ken Starr then allegedly sings his version of "My Favorite Things."
Wire taps, subpoenas and stained dark blue dresses,
Grand juries, inquiries, stolen caresses,
News leaks that spread like the black plague with wings,
These are a few of my favorite things.
Our source has also produced lead sheets for "Climb Ev'ry Mountain . . . of Evidence" sung by a chorus of White House lawyers.
Mount ev'ry defense, cop ev'ry plea,
Answer ev'ry question with vague legalese.
A case that will try our ideals of justice,
A case to be won for the likes of just us.
According to our source, no one was found to sing the original song "I Must Have Done Something Good."
Also, the decision of who will sing "So Long, Farewell" in the final scene has not been made. Will it be the President? The First Lady? The lawyers? The media? The entire Congress?
Critics, who have also been leaked copies of the script, have panned the production because of its unfinished--and sure to be unsatisfying--ending. Unlike the original score, there are no clear winners (the good nuns) and losers (the bad Nazis). But perhaps, that is closer to real life than the theater. No one "wins" wars. One side simply loses less. And as the battle on the Hill escalates, there will be no winners either. The president, the Congress, the media and the voters are all losers as this long-running production continues in Washington.
So, let's all sing, "I simply remember my favorites things, and then I don't feel so bad." Or better, yet, pray for our President, the Congress, those disillusioned by the scandal, and especially for "that woman, Ms. Lewinky."
(c) 1999 James N. Watkins For more silly songs on serious issues, visit www.noblecan.org/~watkins.
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School
shootings April 1999
You've gotta
love a web site with the motto, "Save our planet; it's the only one
with chocolate." At blueroses.com,
I found some other great quotes from Luanne Oleas:
Home is where
you hang you @.
The e-mail of
the species is more deadly than the mail.
You can't teach
an old mouse new clicks.
Pentium wise;
pen and paper foolish.
The modem is
the message.
Too many clicks
spoil the browse.
The geek shall
inherit the earth.
Don't byte off
more than you can view.
Fax is stranger
than fiction.
What boots up
must come down.
Give a man a
fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the 'net and he won't
bother you for weeks.
Thanks, Luanne!
I needed a laugh after a week pock-marked with heated hostilities in the
Balkans and cold-blooded killings in the Rockies. Sometimes it's hard to
write a humor column when you feel like a deflated whoopee cushion.
Luanne's paraphrases
of popular proverbs, remind me of another computer caveat: GIGO (Garbage
in, garbage out).
Schools, and
society in general, have programmed our students' Central Processing Units
with a host of deadly viruses:
"You've
merely evolved from primordial ooze. You're a mutation that has survived
merely through natural selection."
"You deserve
to feel good about yourself." (Hey, you just told me I'm a cosmic
accident!)
"There is
no absolute truth. Moral values are based on what you and your referential
group decide they should be."
"I'm not
responsible for my behavior." (It takes a village to raise an idiot!)
"Judging
other's moral behavior is the highest crime against society."
Meanwhile the
media and our own government have convinced us that violence is the solution
for problems. Just check out the latest movie listings or latest briefing
on the NATO bombings.
"Might makes
right."
For instance,
try to name ten movies in which international crises are averted with diplomacy.
How 'bout five? One?! (I have to admit Xena: Princess Warrior is more entertaining
than the Secretary of State. Maybe Lucy Lawless could play the part of
Madeline Albright.)
Our government
seems to be operating on the "might makes right" philosophy with
its relentless bombing of Yugoslavia. Why aren't we bombing Peking where
Chinese leaders have killed more of its citizen in their version of "cleansing"
than Milosevic ever has? Because we're bigger and stronger than a country
the size of Kentucky. China would fight back! (Besides, most of our sneakers
come from China.)
The answer to
why two young men would shoot twelve students and a coach as well
as plan to blow up Columbine High School school seems fairly simple (at
least to this simple-minded columnist.) GIGO!
If you're merely
highly-evolved pond scum, why shouldn't I blow you away because you make
me feel badly about myself? After all, the concept of "murder"
is simply a part of your group's social contract--not my gothic philosophy
that death is cool. Besides, violence is the easiest way to resolve international--as
well as--interpersonal conflict. And who are you to judge me anyway?! My
moral code is just as valid as yours!
When our "computing"
of the value of life as well as our concepts of right and wrong have flawed
"disk sectors," we should expect more "fatal errors."
GIGO! The challenge--far greater than the Y2K bug--is to work to change
the flawed data before many more schools and Kosovo's are infected.
Let's save our
planet; it's the only one with chocolate--and human life.
(c) 1999 James
N. Watkins
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Viagra
and Southern Baptists June 1998
Viagra and the
Southern Baptist Convention have ignited fiery debate over sexual issues.
First, the popular
impotence pill has restored sexual power to many men.
Recently, the
Southern Baptists Convention declared that wives should "submit"
to their husbands--and, one could speculate, their Viagara-revitalized
desires. This has the National Organization of Women hotter than a burning
bra!
And so, in a
daring effort to bring harmony between feminists and fundamentalists, here
are some thoughts to consider. (If this actually works, this columnist
will next attempt to reconcile I.U. and Purdue fans. If it fails, please
address letters and death threats to "Sexist Heretic" in care
of this newspaper.)
God, in his infinite
wisdom, apparently foresaw this battle of the political sexes brewing,
so he created the first equal-opportunity organizational plan--both "male
and female" to "rule the earth" (Genesis 1:27-28). Hmmm?
Nothing about submission here, but apparently equal pay for equal work--and
"dress down day" every day.
Then Adam and
Eve rebelled against Management, were thrown out of the union and forced
to wear uncomfortable uniforms. As further punishment, all future Adam's
were given high-stress executive appointments, and all the Eve's condemned
to middle management positions.
After thousands
of years of labor disputes, strikes and a few plant closings in Sodom and
Gomorrah, the Boss's Son was sent to restructure the whole organization.
He taught women, which was prohibited by the first century culture. He
included women as his followers (Luke 8:3), which was prohibited by the
first century culture. And, he gave a woman, Mary Magdalene, the task of
breaking the news that he had risen from the dead, which was probably also
prohibited by the first century culture. (Women weren't allowed to testify
in courts at that time.)
The new Company
anti-discrimination policy declared there is "neither Jew nor Greek,
slave nor free, male nor female . . ." (Galatians 3:28), and furthermore,
men and women are to "submit to each other" (Ephesians 5:21)
out of respect and deference. (The word "submit" doesn't appear
in the original Greek rendering of Ephesians 5:22's famous translation
"wives, submit unto your own husbands.")
Saint Paul went
even further by writing that "The husband should fulfill his marital
duty to his wife, and likewise the wife to her husband. The wife's body
does not belong to her alone but also to her husband. In the same way,
the husband's body does not belong to him alone but also to his wife. (1
Corinthians 7:4-5). Before Masters and Johnson, women weren't believed
to have sexual needs!
And so, submitted
for your approval, a daring compromise . . .
NOW members,
if you'll read God's corporate policy manual, you may discover that He's
actually a supporter of equal rights. You'll find lots of liberated women
as entrepreneurs, prophets, church leaders and even a military leader!
And Southern
Baptist delegates, let's apply the command to submit to each other and
honor one another to both men and women. (No fair taking verses
out of context that were written to specific churches for specific problems.)
Remember, that God's original mission statement mandated that both men
and women were to rule the earth--and to be fruitful and to multiply.
Which brings
us right back to Viagra!
(c) 1998 James
N. Watkins
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Gun
control May 1998
During the sixties
many of my friends stayed in school simply to avoid being shot in Vietnam.
Thirty years later, 148 young people were killed in the Gulf War while,
that same year, 4,200 high school students were killed by guns. "The
times, they are a changin'."
Today, teens
are 39% more likely to die from "lead poisoning" than from disease
according to the Center for Disease Control. Maybe that's because a 1994
survey found that one in thirteen (7.4%) high school students took a gun
for show and tell. (That number rises to one in five or 20% for inner city
males who claim to be packing something other than their lunch at school.)
One in five suburban male students owns a gun.
And, the United
States, which prides itself in being Number One, is tops in gun deaths
blowing away Australia and Europe by a five to one margin and Asia by a
95 to one.
So, what's turning
our schools into killing fields, while Vietnam is now relatively peaceful?
I could say the
problem is guns. But, hey, I have enough self-preservation than to make
that claim in a county where gun racks come as "standard equipment"
on pick up trucks!
Now, someone--but
not me--could possibly draw the conclusion that maybe, just maybe, 40 million
guns in the United States might just contribute somewhat to the problem.
So, it would make sense that Japan, where gun ownership is rare, would
have one of the lowest rates of death by guns. It does!
But in defense
of all the readers with NRA bumper stickers, I must admit that guns don't
kill people. I own a handgun, four rifles, and a shotgun and they've never
killed anything with a pulse (I have wasted my share of targets and tin
cans). But, gun lovers have to admit, guns make killing people a lot more
efficient and effective than, say, a big stick. That's why my guns are
stored in one location and the ammo locked and hidden in another location.
Parents have
also drawn fire for raising tiny terrorists! I just can't win. When I was
in high school, all of society's problems--from drugs and sex to really
ugly fashion--were blamed on young people. Now that I've joined the ranks
of parents, we're the ones being blamed for raising drug-crazed psychotic
killers. Many of my peers--so as not to "repress" their children--have
allowed them to grow up with no rules, responsibilities or respect for
themselves or others.
Then there's
TV violence, movie massacres, and graphic video games with triple-digit
body counts to take the blame for inspiring school yard shootouts. When's
the last time you heard an action-adventure hero say, "I sense a lot
of suppressed hostility. Let's talk about this"?
And how 'b | |