Killer Dachsunds, Zombie Christmas Trees
The Mind Bomber emailed us to let us know that the server still won't let him post comments. As we told him earlier, we're sorry about it, but Attorney General Ashcroft must have his reasons. (Seriously, I don't know why this is happening to a few of you, but I will ask the nonexistant customer support people at Radio UserLand for help, and see if they offer any ideas.)
But hey, let's share MB's email with everybody because we're tired and don't want to have to write our own content:
Well, damn. As far as the comment server is concerned, I'm still about as welcome...
(channeling Doug Giles)
..as Jesus at a meeting of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State.
Speaking of Doug, I just thought it was interesting that one of his metaphors referenced a 117-lb. Dachsund. Digby at Hullabaloo just posted something yesterday about James Dobson relating the story - in a book called "The Strong-Willed Child" - of how he beat the hell out of a 12-lb. Dachsund with a belt for growling at him once. [Ed note: here's a link to the post, which is entitled "Raising the Future Fascists of America."] Apparently this relates in some way to advice on raising Godly children. Didn't you post something not too long ago about another fundie nutcase who did some awful stuff to her kids? The woman who played Blair on "The Facts of Life", maybe?
Anyway, in my rejected post, I just expressed a wish to see Dobson try that with Doug's heavyweight Dachsund.
Excellent thought, MB. I too would like to see a giant dachsund rip out Dobson's throat for hitting it with a belt just because it wouldn't mind him.
Anyway, MB's email reminded us of our old friend Lisa Whelchel, the author of Creative Correction, the book that taught the Bush Administration that the line between "correction" and "torture" is all in the mind of the person administering the corrections or doing the interrogation.
And that reminds us of Lisa's seasonal book, The ADVENTure of Christmas. Let's enjoy an excerpt, won't we?

The Christmas Tree
It is said that in the seventh century a zealous young English missionary was the first person to use the evergreen tree as a symbol for God. Winfrid, who would later become known as Saint Boniface, used the tree as an object lesson. He taught that each point on the triangular-shaped tree represented a different Person of the Holy Trinity – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Legend has it that one day Winfrid came upon a group of men offering a sacrifice to an oak tree as an act of worship. So angered was he by this idolatry that Winfrid swung his ax and felled the oak tree with one mighty blow. According to the tale, a fir tree eventually grew from the stump of the oak. Struck by this occurrence, the missionary proclaimed that the tiny new tree represented Jesus' victory over death on the cross and the eternal life made available to us by the King of kings.
Or else it shows that the pine tree was some kind of zombie tree that fed on the body of the dead oak stump. I hope that doesn't say anything at all about Jesus.
And wasn't it kind of juvenile for Winfrid to get mad at the oak tree? I mean, geez, if he had seen some Ba'al worshippers about to sacrifice a baby, would he have cleaved the baby with one mighty blow to teach them a lesson about worshipping the wrong god?
The Christmas tree is a beautiful reminder of why Jesus was born in the first place – to die for you and me.
Well, I always thought that the atonement and the teaching and stuff were the key points, but ...
As we put up the Christmas tree in our homes, it can only deepen our joy if we remember His Death at this time of His birth.
Yeah, remembering painful deaths always adds to my joy.
Have you ever noticed that the boughs of your tree extend out like the arms of Jesus stretched upon the cross as He offered His life to anyone who would come to Him in faith?
Eww, no! Now I feel kind of weird putting tinsel and twinkling lights on the body of Jesus while he's suffering on the cross.
And your Christmas tree is very definitely pointing toward heaven and, as Jesus did with His words and His actions, drawing our attention to the Father who loves us.
Well, didn't the oak tree point toward heaven too, and look what happened to it?
So when you stand before your Christmas tree, stand tall, as the tree does, and be a witness for Jesus.
"Hey, Billy, this is the Christmas tree. Stand up straight or I'm telling Jesus on you."
Let it direct your attention to the Father above. Fix your eyes on Jesus, then open your arms wide to touch others with His Spirit of love.
Of course, if you keep your eyes fixed on Jesus as you walk down the street with your arms wide to touch people, you might end up touching them in inappropriate places and get arrested for sexual assault.
Then you, too, will be pointing people toward heaven – and to life beyond the power of death.
Um, right.
Anyway, here's a bit from James Dobson's book The New Strong-Willed Child, courtesy of ChristianBook.com:
Shaping the Will
The young mother of a defiant three-year-old girl once approached me in Kansas City to thank me for my books and tapes. She told me that a few months earlier her little daughter had become increasingly defiant and had managed to buffalo her frustrated mom and dad. They knew she was manipulating them but couldn't seem to regain control. Then one day they were in a books store and happened upon a copy of my first book, Dare to Discipline. They bought a copy and learned that it is appropriate, from my perspective, to spank a child under certain well-defined circumstances. My recommendations made sense to these harassed parents, who promptly used that technique the next time their daughter gave them reason to do so. But the little girl was just bright enough to figure out where they had picked up the new idea. When the mother awoke the next morning, she found her copy of Dare to Discipline in the toilet! The darling little girl had done her best to send my book off to the sewer where it belonged.
He has more stories about how children hate his books, which must prove that the little demons are just bright enough to recognize their holy nemesis. Here's another one of them:
A little eight-year-old girl mailed me this note:
Dear Dobson,
You are a mean and crule thing. You and your dumb sayings won't take you to heaven .
Kristy P.
P.S. Kids don't like wippens.
But who cares what kids like?
I like to think that after the nuclear Game Boy apocolypse, when feral kids have their own societies (and also have eerie Village of the Damned /Children of the Corn powers) that Dobson will wander into one of children's enclaves -- and then the darling 3-year-old and her comrades will flush Dobson himself down the toilet.
Just a thought.
Anyway, he follows up with a delightful anecdote taken from Lisa's Creative Correction about the time when she threatened her son with a beating in the bathroom, and he shaped up fast -- thus showing us that there's only one-degree of separation in fundie child dictator circles. I would share it with you, but the fine folks at ChristianBook.com don't allow you to copy text, and I'm tired of typing. And to all a good night!
5:02:01 AM
|