12 July 2006
=Blogger Lorraine=
I finally got a round tuit and wrote a post for my Blogger account.
Perhaps it will be the first of many and perhaps it will be the only
one for some time. Since blogging has gotten a reputation for
opinionation, I'll use the present message for the purpose of
clarifying my opinion system. In this context, opinion system
is to opinion as belief system is to belief.
It is my belief/opinion that belief and opinion are simply two words
denoting the same thing. Henceforth in the present message I shall
use the terms interchangeably, and probably use "opinion" more often,
since it generally connotes less gravitas and therefore should be more
accessible and less intimidating to others.
While I don't generally endorse the idea of America's "Founding
Fathers" as inerrant or otherwise uniquely qualified to set the human
rights or legal reform agenda of American or other people on a
"forever" basis, I do generally admire their ideas and the expression
of those ideas in some of their most well-known documents. One true
stroke of genius in the Bill of Rights is the first amendment. I
myself would have worded the part about freedom of religion more
explicitly, perhaps stating "wall of separation" instead of the
seemingly deliberately contentious "nonestablishment clause."
Nevertheless, perhaps one can forgive the 18th century bourgeoisie for
using stilted 18th century language. The real stroke of genius in the
American Constitution is the devotion of one amendment (not more, not
less) to (in essence) "freedom of belief/opinion." While the present
generation is torn end-to-end on whether the relationship between
church and state is characterized by "non-establishment" or (as I
would strongly prefer) a "wall of separation," at least we aren't
plagued by controversies over whether a given exercise of (expletive
deleted) authority is unconstitutional on mth amendment grounds
(for violating "freedom of religion") or nth amendment grounds
(because people are entitled to their opinions).
I have decided that the present blog will be yet another opinion blog.
This is, of course, not because the world needs another opinion blog.
It is probably the same reason "opinion" and "blog" are largely
synonymous in much of the blogosphere:
* I need a "containment bucket" to contain my opinions, so that other
online resources that I use for samizdat (or samizdat lite) purposes
will contain less opinion and be less opinionated.
* Being naturally vain, I like having a modest informational space
(thank you Blogger) where I can map out my constellation of opinions
for comparison and contrast with other maps, many of which are well
established online and especially in the blogosphere.
Readers, if any, will hopefully forgive my amateurish and sometimes
jarring text formatting. I am a vagrant netizen, so simply learning
yet another interactive web site's markup language can take multiple
library visits, which can amount to more than a month in meattime.
I finally got a round tuit and wrote a post for my Blogger account.
Perhaps it will be the first of many and perhaps it will be the only
one for some time. Since blogging has gotten a reputation for
opinionation, I'll use the present message for the purpose of
clarifying my opinion system. In this context, opinion system
is to opinion as belief system is to belief.
It is my belief/opinion that belief and opinion are simply two words
denoting the same thing. Henceforth in the present message I shall
use the terms interchangeably, and probably use "opinion" more often,
since it generally connotes less gravitas and therefore should be more
accessible and less intimidating to others.
While I don't generally endorse the idea of America's "Founding
Fathers" as inerrant or otherwise uniquely qualified to set the human
rights or legal reform agenda of American or other people on a
"forever" basis, I do generally admire their ideas and the expression
of those ideas in some of their most well-known documents. One true
stroke of genius in the Bill of Rights is the first amendment. I
myself would have worded the part about freedom of religion more
explicitly, perhaps stating "wall of separation" instead of the
seemingly deliberately contentious "nonestablishment clause."
Nevertheless, perhaps one can forgive the 18th century bourgeoisie for
using stilted 18th century language. The real stroke of genius in the
American Constitution is the devotion of one amendment (not more, not
less) to (in essence) "freedom of belief/opinion." While the present
generation is torn end-to-end on whether the relationship between
church and state is characterized by "non-establishment" or (as I
would strongly prefer) a "wall of separation," at least we aren't
plagued by controversies over whether a given exercise of (expletive
deleted) authority is unconstitutional on mth amendment grounds
(for violating "freedom of religion") or nth amendment grounds
(because people are entitled to their opinions).
I have decided that the present blog will be yet another opinion blog.
This is, of course, not because the world needs another opinion blog.
It is probably the same reason "opinion" and "blog" are largely
synonymous in much of the blogosphere:
* I need a "containment bucket" to contain my opinions, so that other
online resources that I use for samizdat (or samizdat lite) purposes
will contain less opinion and be less opinionated.
* Being naturally vain, I like having a modest informational space
(thank you Blogger) where I can map out my constellation of opinions
for comparison and contrast with other maps, many of which are well
established online and especially in the blogosphere.
Readers, if any, will hopefully forgive my amateurish and sometimes
jarring text formatting. I am a vagrant netizen, so simply learning
yet another interactive web site's markup language can take multiple
library visits, which can amount to more than a month in meattime.
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