This is awesome. I've been searching for the theme song to Villa Alegre for nearly 20 years. It was a T.V. show I really loved when I was very little.
Finally someone found a recording and put it online:
http://www.myspace.com/villaalegre
and
http://www.myspace.com/villaalegremusic
Thank you internet!!!!!!
I haven't heard this song in over 30 years...and it seems slower than I remember it being. But this is definitely the song! The theme song to Speed Racer also seems much slower than I remember from when I was little. I guess my memory somehow speeds up songs over time. :)
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Friday, August 10, 2007
Children of faith
In "The God Delusion", Richard Dawkins attacks the notion of children being labeled with the faith of their parents.
"There is no such thing as a Christian child, there is only a child of Christian parents. Whenever you hear the phrase Christian child or Muslim child or Protestant child or Catholic child, the phrase should grate like fingernails on a blackboard" -- Dawkins
Dawkins is a brilliant writer, and I agree with many of his positions. But on this point, I couldn't disagree with him more.
We absolutely SHOULD refer to a child of Christian parents as a "Christian child". This is the reality of the situation, and it serves as compelling evidence that religion is a subjective cultural phenomenon and not an objective discretionary phenomenon.
In reality, an overwhelming majority of children adopt the religion of their parents for the entirety of their lives. A child may choose for himself a wide array of personal interests and goals, but he or she will almost certainly follow a religion that is not significantly distant from that in which he or she was raised. And why is that? It's because all other choices in life can be made objectively, logically and honestly. Religion is immune to such influences and we must remind people of that fact at every opportunity.
Your religion is every bit as culturally indoctrinated as the language you speak, and yet we would consider it ridiculous to claim that God would send people to hell based on the language they spoke. Why is it ANY less ridiculous to claim that God would punish people for any other cultural influence such as faith?
This is a glaring discrepancy within religion that goes right to the heart of the faulty premise that any significant understanding of our world can be obtained through faith. By removing the label of faith from our children, we only serve to support the delusion that faith is somehow largely a matter of personal choice, as if a child could choose a faith as thoughtfully as they choose their first car.
Would Mr. Dawkins also object to referring to a child of French speaking parents as a "French speaking child?" Surely not! Yet I defy anyone to show how religion and language are different in terms of relative cultural indoctrination.
I understand the desire to break the strangle hold of religious labeling, but at the same time these labels can be used to draw attention to the ridiculous reasons behind the assumptions.
My heart goes out to all children of faith in the world. Their lives will be profoundly shaped and limited by thoughts and ideas that will necessarily elude rational examination. They will be deprived of the ability to make a reasoned and objective choice of religion, and yet they will be held eternally accountable for their choice.
I will continue to refer to these children using the label of their affliction, for we should all be reminded at all times what is being done to them.
Monday, August 6, 2007
Purple America
This is just a neat map that I like to look at sometimes. (Click on the picture for a larger view).
The rough trend I see here is that people in high-density population areas are more liberal than people in more rural areas. So, the more contact you have with a wider variety of people, the more open-minded you become. What a surprise.
The Pardox of Choice
This is a video I saw a few months ago. I thought it was just interesting at the time, but the more I think about it, the more I think it is profoundly true. Every day, I see more and more examples of dissatisfaction that comes from having too much choice.
Paradox of Choice
Here is a longer version of this talk
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