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“Mindful eating, mindless sex”

March 25, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

A creative thesis in this article here. With subheadings like “Broccoli, Pornography, and Kant” how could you not read it? She’s asking an interesting question:

…What happens when, for the first time in history — at least in theory, and at least in the advanced nations — adult human beings are more or less free to have all the sex and food they want? This question opens the door to a real paradox. For given how closely connected the two appetites appear to be, it would be natural to expect that people would do the same kinds of things with both appetites — that they would pursue both with equal ardor when finally allowed to do so, for example, or with equal abandon for consequence; or conversely, with similar degrees of discipline in the consumption of each.

In fact, though, evidence from the advanced West suggests that nearly the opposite seems to be true. The answer appears to be that when many people are faced with these possibilities for the very first time, they end up doing very different things — things we might signal by shorthand as mindful eating, and mindless sex. This essay is both an exploration of that curious dynamic, and a speculation about what is driving it.

This does seem to raise one of the great ironies, and it’s one I encounter often enough. Many will watch very closely what they consume when it comes to food (organic, naturopathic, special diets, etc.) but show less concern for who they sleep with. (Then again there are those who just consume a whole lot of both–maintaining consistency, at least.)

This came up on Roadkill Radio last night too, where I talked about People for the Ethical Treatment of People (buy a shirt)–the irony that many will maintain a high level of concern for eating organic, but not think too much about the invasive and destructive surgery called abortion.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: food, Hudson Institute, Mary Eberstadt, Roadkill Radio, sex, vegetarian

Beware religious dogma in Africa

March 24, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

And when I say religious dogma, I mean the secular kind. Recall the controversy over the Pope’s comments on AIDS and condoms? At least one Harvard academic is saying the immortal gods of science prove the Pope right:

A senior Harvard research scientist confirmed that Pope Benedict XVI, who endured heavy criticism for declaring that condom distribution programs worsen the AIDS epidemic in Africa, was actually correct. Dr. Edward C. Green, director of the AIDS Prevention Research Project at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, told National Review Online last week that despite AIDS activists and media outlets pounding the pope for downplaying the effectiveness of condoms, the science actually supports the Catholic leader’s claim.

(cross-posted to The Shotgun)

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: Africa, AIDS, condoms, Dr. Edward C. Green, Harvard, Pope

Make Monday the best day of the week

March 23, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

By ordering your very own People for the Ethical Treatment of People T-shirt. (I’ll be reminding about these periodically.)

Filed Under: All Posts

How I got four knives through airport security

March 21, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 6 Comments

So this morning I went through airport security with a gift for my niece; a beautiful toy tea set in a basket, with napkins, plates and cutlery. She’s two. The gift goes through the X-ray machine, the security guard wants to take a look. I, not wanting to unwrap the gift, explain that yes, there are four knives in there (and four spoons, and four forks) but it’s a tea set for a two-year-old, and they are one inch long. He asks, “are they sharp?” To repeat: it’s a tea set for a two-year-old. He turned out to be really nice, has a daughter with whom he also has tea. They waved me through, tea set and all. 

What could have been another ridiculous security-at-the-airport story has a good ending. Most unusual.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: airports, Feminist nonsense

Take that, André Lalonde

March 20, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 4 Comments

Remember this? That classy Dr. Lalonde, worrying Sarah Palin might cause fewer abortions? Well, this might too, and that’s why I gladly post it. (Sarah Palin address for the 2009 Idaho Special Olympics.)

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izn63SHXPMw]

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Rebecca adds: What incredible grace. I understand how people can disagree with her politics. What I can’t fathom is the intense personal hostility so many expressed towards a woman who lives her values, no matter how difficult they may be, no matter how much easier a quick “solution” to a baby with DS or a pregnant teenage daughter would be. That’s admirable in anybody. If the Obamas or Bidens or any other big-government, post-modern squishy politicians on the left bore equal burdens with equal grace, I hope I would respect them for it, no matter how much I might abhor their political agenda.

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Andrea adds: Some disagreed with her politics, and on fair terms. Others had a visceral hostility because she made them feel bad (for being stronger). All those women who abort because of Downs–she tells them “you were wrong” without saying it. One last point–it is strong women who don’t abort, but I’d wager that most every woman can be that strong. Just one more reason why I think people working in abortion clinics are preying on a moment of despair and fear.

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Brigitte says: Joe Biden lost his wife and baby daughter in 1972 (car accident). He then raised his sons as a single dad, commuting every day from Washington D.C. to be with them as much as possible, for a few years before marrying Jill Tracy Jacobs in 1977. I am not a fan of Joe Biden, not at all. I dislike his politics, and I find him phoney and ridiculous (FDR on television after the Crash, remember that one?). But he didn’t give up even though he was tempted, and raised his children as best he could.

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The humour police

March 20, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

Since when are we all this easily offended? Far be it from me to act in President Obama’s defence, but I am not offended by this:

President Obama, in his taping with Jay Leno Thursday afternoon, attempted to yuk it up with the funnyman, and ended up insulting the disabled. Towards the end of his approximately 40-minute appearance, the president talked about how he’s gotten better at bowling and has been practicing in the White House bowling alley. He bowled a 129, the president said. “That’s very good, Mr. President,” Leno said sarcastically. It’s “like the Special Olympics or something,” the president said.

Call me callous, but here’s why. Though I remain unsure as to why our political leaders should show up on comedy shows–something about prepping funny lines doesn’t go with, oh say, staving off terrorist attack–once on a show with someone like Jay Leno, it’s bound to be all about the banter, and we can’t assess each quip behind steely politically-correct visors, brandishing our laser beams to strike at the first offence.

Then there’s the fact that I hardly think Obama meant anything at all by it, other than to be self-deprecating. I am quite sure a Special Olympian can bowl much better than I, but if I made the comparison, it would be to make fun of myself, not a disabled person. And if we can’t make fun of ourselves, then what can we do?

The Special Olympics are important. And the people who compete–valuable and important. But what about “throwing like a girl” jokes? Are those out too? (I, er, throw like a girl. But swim like Michael Phelps!–in my mind…)

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Patricia adds: Sorry, Andrea. I have to disagree with you again. I don’t know how “offended” I am by Barack Obama’s facile humour. “I am offended” is an over-used complaint. And the fact is that, as a pro-life mother of a child with Down Syndrome, I don’t have high expectations of Obama, so what he has to say is unlikely to affect my feelings one way or another. But making jokes at the expense of the marginalized is uncharitable, to say the least. Actually “marginalization” is over-used as well, but in this case, boy, does it apply! As I’ve pointed out before (I know, a few times) 8 out of 10 children diagnosed with Down Syndrome are aborted. (That’s a conservative estimate.) I can’t think of any form of discrimination harsher than that. Of course, if you’re radically pro-abortion, this is not a form of discrimination that you accept as real.

But what about radically diminished access to life-saving health care for children with disabilities? Surely that is a form of discrimination most people would be willing to acknowledge as such. Here’s a telling little anecdote for you: “Nine-year-old Daisy [born with a “broken” 21st chromosome and severe disabilities] entered hospital in 2005 with a tooth infection, which turned septic. The hospital failed to supply the most basic medical care, giving Daisy neither food nor liquid in sufficient quantities. When she began gasping for breath the hospital told the parents that she would be transferred to intensive care, but this never happened.” Daisy subsequently died of a pulmonary haemorrhage. (From The Sunday Times, rch 1, 2009, “Ivan Cameron and the meaning of life” by Dominic Lawson; the whole article is well worth reading.)

Despite the best efforts of organizations like the Special Olympics, people with disabilities still live in a brave new world that is not interested in the less than perfect. To make that same group the butt of idle banter intended to bolster the “cool” factor of a politician is contemptible. And for that, Barrack Obama should be called on the carpet.

I know that he apologized almost immediately and I am trying to accept that at face value,  but it seems to me that gaffes like this are a result of a complete failure of imagination.  If you’ve ever imagined that you would be a parent of a child with special needs, you probably don’t find yourself making off-hand comments like this.   But I suspect that in Barack Obama’s world, only people like Sarah Palin find themselves actually cheering on their children at the Special Olympics.

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Brigitte just wonders: What do you think would have happened if George W. Bush had made the same “joke”?

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Tanya adds: Had Obama made the comment, “I throw like a girl,” he would not be living it down too easily right now.  I’m not one to get up in arms about this sort of thing, but if you’re going to be a politician (president of the US, no less) you should at least be able to manage basic political correctness.

He might swear in the privacy of his home, but it’s doubtful he’d ever let slip an F-sharp on TV.  Obama doesn’t have a solid enough respect for the mentally challenged to hold his tongue when a joke like that comes to mind.  Offended-shmoffended.  But it’s telling.  Very telling.

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Andrea again: Surely, had a Republican made this comment, a thousand angry commentators would have swooped down like buzzards. Look, I don’t desire to be calculating and compass-less like Obama. But I also don’t want want to be like those infernally wounded politically correct types–tsking tsking at every word.  I believe we’ve hit a point in this culture where whether you can “play politically correct” matters more than what you do. (Of course, for Obama what he does and what he says appear to match. And that’s not a compliment.)

Filed Under: All Posts

Preying on the fearful

March 20, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

Planned Parenthood–wow, they sure do offer choices–especially in a bad economy:

Family planning centers and clinics where abortions are performed see firsthand the effects of the economy on women in all age groups and income levels. Some noticed greater numbers seeking help in January.

Yes it is scary to lose your job and figure out you are pregnant. No, offering an abortion is not helpful, sensitive, or appropriate.

We don’t kill to solve our problems. (Or do we?)

Filed Under: All Posts

On seal pups, people and compassion in The Post

March 19, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 5 Comments

Read more about People for the Ethical Treatment of People in the National Post Full Comment online, here:

Seal pups. Cute, cuddly, fluffy things with black eyes staring forlornly at us from a patch of ice that’s probably melting due to global warming, hoping to avoid the hunter’s club. We can’t help feel compassion. Over at ProWomanProLife, we want to know why such compassion does not extent to people.

In the hope of extending compassion all the way to our own species, today we launched a new T-shirt campaign to draw attention to the plight of women and children, “People for the Ethical Treatment of People.” Because we believe people are, well, people too.

Filed Under: All Posts

ProWomanProLife on 580 CFRA tonight

March 19, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

I’ll be chatting with John Counsell about People for the Ethical Treatment of People (while wearing my shirt, of course) on 580 CFRA tonight at ten pm. Should you like to tune in…

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Brigitte adds: And we’ll be able to watch, too… (you didn’t know there was a camera in that studio, did you?)

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Andrea adds: For the love of the saints, Brigitte, no, I didn’t know there was a camera in there. I have become slightly OK, over time, with doing radio. The nervous anxiety no longer keeps me up at night. Not so with television, not so. So. When I can’t sleep tonight, I’ll call you!

Filed Under: All Posts

Launching People for the Ethical Treatment of People

March 19, 2009 by Andrea Mrozek 7 Comments

ProWomanProLife is proud to introduce a brand new line of T-shirts:

People for the Ethical Treatment of People

Read our press release, here. 

And buy a shirt, here.

These comfortable, cotton, ladies’ tees are ready for the ordering; a subtle pro-life message that hammers home our main point without ever saying the dreaded “A-word”.  

The story: At some point I realized our culture has a higher level of sympathy for animals and the environment than we do for women and babies. And at a different point I realized I would wear a T-shirt in defence of women and life, but there were none on the market I’d even consider. ProWomanProLife has now rectified this egregious situation.

Buy a T-shirt for 25 dollars, taxes and shipping included, and make a pro-woman, pro-life statement without saying a word.

A note for men: Yes, these are ladies tees. However, drop us a line/send us a comment if you are interested and we’ll be quick to launch PET-P T-shirts (spoken as if you were saying “pet-peeve”) for men.

Filed Under: All Posts Tagged With: People for the Ethical Treatment of People

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