My wife and I wish a blessed Christmas to everyone, and especially to regular readers
of this blog. Don’t forget there are still ten days left in the Christmas season.
In the midst of the so-called War on Christmas, it’s easy to forget that receiving
gifts and being merry are nice, but giving love and being thankful are far superior.
Author Archives: Funky Dung
Eternal Mysteries Appearing Veiled Under Inauspicious Terms
"…[T]he Mass is very much like the events of the Gospel itself. That is, in those events we saw ternal mysteries veiled under the inauspicious terms, not only of our world, but of the most unlikely crannies of our world. Nazareth: the ultimate small town. A stable: dung and straw for the child born to the purple. Crucifixion: the worst that our malice could arrange. And yet in all of these the eye of faith sees glory. It finds at these points what T.S. Elliot called ‘the point of intersection of the timeless with time’."
"Likewise with the Mass. To all intents and purposes, it is 8:00 A.M/ on Tuesday, June 13, A.D. 304, or A.D. 1995, in Lyons or Peoria. But we have stepped, the way the shepherds did, into the precincts of the eternal. No straw, no dung, no braying ass, that does not belong here. Belong here? Surely the mystery is to be perceived in spite of all that noisome stuff?"
"No. Belongs here. This is where, and how, the Most High prepared and set the scene for his advent. Let the straw stay; let the straw be acclaimed even, since in it all straw is touched with the dignity of proffering something to the Most High. If the asses are what they truly are, made by this Most High, then their very dung testifies to the odd and cyclic harmony that characterizes his creation. The Incarnate One will not draw fastitious skirts away from this that marks his beloved asses. No: he will be found, quite helpless, right here"
– Thomas Howard, On Being Catholic
, pp. 83-84
Can You Hear Me? Then Get Off My Phone!
"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 probablecause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." – Fourth Amendment
Was Bush (Congress, the NSA, whomever) wrong to employ the kinds of wiretaps he did? Did he violate Constitutional law? I don’t know. Just because a certain power is not forbidden to the federal government by the Constitution, doesn’t mean it’s licit.
Don’t Blame Me, I Voted For Ales Rarus!
It was rigged! I demand a recount! I’m taking this to the Supreme Court!
Not. 😉
I’d like to thank everyone who voted for this blog in the 2005 Wizbang Weblog Awards. We didn’t win, but we made a good showing. Maybe next year we’ll take home the trophy. 😉
I’d also like to thank all of my guest bloggers, frequent commenters, and lurking readers, without whom this blog would just be cranky ol’ me pontificating to crickets.
Be sure to visit my worthy competitors. Also, check out Radical Civility. The blogger there has been reviewing the finalists for Best Religious Blog.
Stay tuned for the 2006 Catholic Blog Awards in January…
Dean Gray Tuesday…er…Wednesday
I didn’t get around to posting this yesterday, so I’ll tell folks about it now. Actually, I’ll let BoingBoing explain.
Today is Dean Gray Tuesday, a net-wide day of protest over Warner Brothers attempt to censor a stupendous noncommercial mashup album called American Edit that remixes Green Day’s album American Idiot.
For today, websites across the Internet are mirroring the American Edit album and/or turning their page-backgrounds grey. Mashup albums don’t hurt the sales of the albums they sample — at worst, they have no effect on sales, at best they can promote them. Artists who are signed to major labels can avail themselves of labels’ legal departments when they want to remix others’ work and get their samples cleared. Indie artists, hobbyists and fans don’t get legal assistance from labels’ high-priced fixers. This is pure patronage: in the old days you couldn’t make art unless the King or some bishop granted you permission; today you need permission from a studio executive.
The labels admit this. Last year, EMI made headlines by censoring DJ Danger Mouse’s Grey Album, which remixed the Beatles’ White Album and Jay-Z’s Black Album. I raised this with an EMI representative at London’s Creative Economy conference and she shrugged it off: "What’s the problem? We later hired Danger Mouse to make a mashup album for us."
The problem is that copyright law is supposed to decentralize the process of making art, moving the power to authorize art from royalty to the marketplace. Labels have no business setting themselves up as arbiters of what art can and can’t be made.
Happy Dean Grey Tuesday. Up yours, Warners. Link
Update: Matt cooked up this sweet Dalek/Warner lawyer graphic in honor of the day.
Here are a three more cool mashups for your listening pleasure. 🙂
The Kleptones – A Night at the Hip Hopera
Various Artisits – llegal Art
Various DJs – Flip the Swtich (Chemical Brothers Remixed)
I’ve added a button to my left sidebar with a link pointing to Banned Music. They have links to other mashups (like the infamous "Grey Album"). Check it out.
Today is Dean Gray Tuesday, a net-wide day of protest over
Update: Matt cooked up