From “Issues, etc.” to an entire radio network

The folks that are bringing you “Issues, Etc.” are working to bring you a whole online radio network! Look what else Pirate Christian Radio is planning:

Issues, Etc. - Weekdays 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM (Pacific Time)

Fighting for the Faith - Weekdays 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM (Pacific Time)

White Horse Inn Classics - Weekdays 4:00 PM (Pacific Time)

Tabletalk Radio - To Be Announced

Sermons From Holy Trinity - To Be Announced

God Whisperers - To Be Announced

The Gift: Sermons from Faith Lutheran - To Be Announced

Grace Alone - To Be Announced

The Feast - To Be Announced

Christ For Us - To Be Announced

Higher Things - To Be Announced

St. Paul’s on the Air - To Be Announced

SOCO - To Be Announced

Closed communion in the news

Did you hear about how non-Catholic, apparently non-Christian took Communion at Tim Russert’s funeral?

Last Wednesday at Tim’s funeral mass at [Holy]Trinity Church in Georgetown (Jack Kennedy’s church), communion was offered. I had only taken communion once in my life, at an evangelical church. It was soon after I had started “On Faith” and I wanted to see what it was like. Oddly I had a slightly nauseated sensation after I took it, knowing that in some way it represented the body and blood of Jesus Christ. Last Wednesday I was determined to take it for Tim, transubstantiation notwithstanding. I’m so glad I did. It made me feel closer to him.

When Catholics objected, Quinn was so presumptuous as to defend what she did. Read this for the uproar her gesture rightly caused.

A study in media bias

In an extraordinary spectacle, a number of Barack Obama supporters attack John McCain’s military service. It ranges from Gen. Wesley Clark saying that a pilot locked up in a North Vietnamese cage for five years doesn’t have executive military experinece like generals at their desks to the 1960s peaceniks who revive the “baby-killer” libel against Vietnam Vets. That’s news, right? An example of going negative on an issue that McCain supporters assumed would be one of his strengths?

So the Washington Post covers this controvery in the last few paragraphs of a frontpage story about Obama defending HIS patriotism! Read Obama Fiercely Defends His Patriotism and be astounded at the way professional journalists are doing of campaigners’ job of spin doctoring.

Here is a tip for identifying media bias, one that comes from the study of literature: Notice the POINT OF VIEW of a story; that is, not just the ideas as such, but, as in literature, the character through whose mind everything is presented. Who is the “us” and who is the “them”?

Turning water into wine

Yes, we’ve got financial problems, but we really have it good. Notice how we nearly all are willing to pay considerable money for bottled water, which tests have shown is no different from ordinary tap water. Now people are attempting to turn different brands of water (all of which is essentially the same) into ever more expensive status symbols. Water is the new wine. From What’s Colorless and Tasteless And Smells Like . . . Money?:

In Tokyo and Paris, you can now spend $5 a glass on special beverages selected by a professional sommelier.

Nothing surprising there, except the beverages being served are different brands of bottled water — with various “flavors” supposedly matched to different foods.

Desalinated seawater from Hawaii, meanwhile, is being sold as “concentrated water” — at $33.50 for a two-ounce bottle. Like any concentrated beverage, it is supposed to be diluted before drinking, except that in this case, that means adding water to . . . water.

And from Tennessee, a company named BlingH2O — whose marketing imagery features a mostly nude model improbably balancing a bottle of water between her heel and her hip — is retailing its water at $40 for 750 milliliters, with special-edition bottles going for $480 — more than a million times the price of the liquid that comes from your tap.

The push to turn water into the new wine is a marketing phenomenon: The bottled-water industry is engaged in an intense effort to convince Americans that the stuff in bottles is substantially different from the stuff out of the tap.

But empirical tests have repeatedly shown that they are generally the same. In blind taste tests, many people who swear they can differentiate between bottled-water brands and tap water fail to spot the differences, and studies have shown that both are fine to drink, and both occasionally can have quality problems.

Not only that:

The supply of clean drinking water across America and in many other countries is an underappreciated scientific and technological achievement that in many ways rivals putting a man on the moon. Trillions of dollars have been spent to get clean drinking water to people at virtually no cost — and it is people in precisely these countries who seem willing to pay premiums of 1,000 percent to 10,000 percent for bottled water.

As the wealthiest billion people on the planet increasingly turn to bottled water, moreover, the poorest billion have no little or access to clean water.

For example, one designer water we Westerns like to guzzle comes from Fiji. But the people of Fiji often lack drinkable water.