Innocence by Dissociation

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Irrelevencies

There is this great Imgur album that makes me smile and is a fun reference for when you need to explain why an argument doesn’t work.

Ed Hochuli throwing flags at your logical fallacies.

Just makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside for some reason, and I don’t even really like Ed Hochuli.  Anyway, I want to point your attention to this image:

fsi99rn

I’ve thought about this for much of this election cycle.  There has been a lot of talk about how two candidates in particular are not part of a large machine, blindingly condemning all the other candidates awful because they are part of the machine.

Maybe I should be railing against that, too, but I see a more egregious problem.  And also, just because somethings is a logical fallacy doesn’t not mean the evidence won’t prove it.  Thoughts for another day.

The problem I see is another fallacy that isn’t “officially” a logical fallacy but seems to happen quite regularly right now: the belief that someone is innocent simply because they are dissociated with the problem group.

“Donald Trump is not a politician, so obviously he isn’t the problem.”  “Bernie Sanders is an outspoken independent and truly radical so he’s the only good option.”  Do you see how they both are lifted up by the dissociation from mainline politics?  Has nothing to do with their politics, just that they aren’t obedient cogs in the political machine.

Dissociation is not proof of innocence.  I’m not saying anything about the guilt or innocence of anyone, just that this is not proof of anything.

The frustrating thing with logical fallacies is that they preclude something from being used as proof but don’t actually prove something untrue.  It may be quite true that Donald Trump is going to do something good because he isn’t beholden to anyone, or that Bernie Sanders radicalism is the cure to all the county’s ills*.  Just because the conclusion is come to through a logical fallacy doesn’t make the conclusion untrue.

Am I the only one that sees the problems rising here?  Do you see how broken our political system is that outsiders are lifted up as messiahs?  I realize Christ was an outsider, and a radical, but his actions were chosen by being correct, not by what would make him radical or different.

That’s my problem.  I took me writing this whole thing to figure this out.  We are voting for people because they are outsiders or radicals and judging them solely based on that.  Or also because they are doing things that we want, not what would actually be best for the country and all the people.

Just…stop choosing politicians like a 19-year-old rebel and start choosing them like hiring managers and call committees.  Who is actually qualified to do the job?  Who will seek to serve the will of the people and the needs of the people?  Who will actually serve the country and the world instead of serving themselves?  And who will do that in a way that is effective?

I don’t see an answer yet, and maybe that’s just me.

Breathe in, breathe out, lunch time!

Peace,
– Robby

* Please, in the name of all that is good and holy, do not read this to say I actually believe either of these things – I don’t – but an example of how logical fallacies actually work in terms of proof.  The answer: they literally prove nothing without additional work.  No accusing me of being a Trump/Sanders 2016 ticket support….

Exactly (Oculto)

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beer

Imagine what you think and want this beer to taste like:

“Blue Agave Infused [Pilsner] Aged on Tequila Barrel Staves.”

You’re wrong.  With the knowldge that it’s 6.6% ABV, imagine what it should taste like.  Not what you might expect, not what other beers aged in barrels taste like, but that description, and ABV, should taste like.  Like, exactly what it should taste like, oddly exactly what it should taste like.

That’s Oculto.

Oculto 1

I was…really weirded out by how not what I expected it is and yet how that’s exactly what it is supposed to taste like.


Oculto

Appearance: It looks like a pilsner – golden, white head, your standard beer – only a bit darker.  It looks like you poured me a standard beer.

Oculto 4

CLEAR BOTTLE THOUGH?  REALLY?

Scent: Agave.  I think.  It’s fruity and sweet.  It doesn’t smell like beer, really.

Taste: It’s exactly what it should be, even if my small mind can’t wrap itself around the flavor.  You mostly taste agave, maybe a hint of tequilla, and an undertone of bitter pilsner, but not much of one.  It tastes like beer, mostly.

But here is an interesting thing: it is probably the smoothest beer that I’ve ever drank that actually had flavor.  It goes down super-easy and I could drink a lot of these quite quickly.

Quality: What are we judging here?  I honestly am torn between, “This is cheap drivel” and “It’s actually really nice, if odd and not traditional at all.”  I don’t know; I honestly can’t judge.  I checked beer advocate and…yeah, way to snobby to judge this beer.  It doesn’t taste like corn syrup, it doesn’t smell awful and cheap, it’s just different.

Drinkability: It goes down smooth unless you’re too good for it.  Now, you might not like it, it might not suit your taste, but it is smooth.

Overall: I like it, I think.  Maybe.  I don’t know…it’s too damn confusing…

Unbiased: Throw a dart at the board…B.  C.  B-.  B+.  I guess.  Maybe.  This beer is so damn confusing…

Biased: I’m not even going to try to give a biased grade on it.  One drink I want more, one drink I wonder what demon created it.  I’ve become a teenage girl; I can’t even.


Here’s ABInBev’s website for Oculto, for what it is.

To all the snobs out there: don’t buy it.  You’ll hate it, you’ll call everyone who enjoys it a plebeian, and I don’t want to hear about how evil ABInBev is.  If you want something smooth and just freaking odd, try it.

Oh, and adding lime juice makes it worse.  Almost instant regret.

To lacking self-control,
– Robby

Frank Preaching: Sermon on Luke 19:28-40

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jesus

Sermon podcast is done for the week, and here it is:

This week’s intro and outro were at a point that I just had to say, “I’m okay with that,” becuase I’m forgetful and as I was leavin the church on Sunday, I thought to myself, “I’ll leave the TRRS adapters here so I have them on Sunday…”

After church my forethought and intelligence are…strained, I suppose it a nice way to put that.

I’m still figured out the best way to record given the systems that we have in the churches, and this week was better audio-quality wise than previous weeks.  I guess we’ll keep going in the direction I’m going and see what happens.

Like last week, I put a painting up on the PowerPoint during the sermon, and I enjoyed this one a lot.  I’m not sure it matches the sermon, but it’s a great painting by Evan Yegon of the Triumphal Entry:

yegonizer-palm-sunday

(His page on True African Art where you can buy things!)  Again, I reuploaded so that it doesn’t burn anyone else’s bandwidth.

If you are a pastor and think this might be something you might want to do (or think this is the dumbest thing ever), drop me a note and let me know.  We could have a great number of sermons each week available to anyone, including your parishioners that can’t get to church but have access to the internet.  Just a thought.

With that, reflect on Christ’s sacrifice this week, and look forward to the celebration of his ressurection this Sunday.

Peace,
– Robert

P.S.:  Linky Goodness for the podcast:
iTunesSoundCloud – RSS: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:100096522/sounds.rss

Frank Preaching: Sermon on Luke 22:39-46

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jesus

Hey, it’s another episode of the Frank Preaching podcast!

Something I didn’t mention in the podcast but thought would be a nice fit here is the painting I displayed while I was preaching.  It’s a painting by Michael O’Brien (his website gallery) depicting Christ in prayer in the garden.

christ-in-gethsemane-p(I uploaded so I wouldn’t burn his bandwidth for my blog.)  Just something about the regular paintings that have Jesus praying all angelically seem wrong given the context of the prayer.  This painting actually show the despair and pain that Jesus is experiencing and expressing in that moment.

No Jesus marker, no glowing, just a man who is in pain.

Make sure you subscribe if you are interested, let me know if you like it.

Peace,
– Robby

Preaching Podcast

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jesus

I started back up my preaching podcast (now called “Frank Preaching”) and I have 3 new episodes up now!  I’ll add these to the podcast archive that I have on this here website, and of course on this posting:





So I know this isn’t for everyone, and I’m self-deprecating humble enough to know that my preaching isn’t the end all, but I think this could be a thing, and I would love if other pastors would join in!  If you think this might be a thing you’d be interested in, let me know!  I can put it together if I have just the raw audio of your sermons (or a video with pretty decent audio).  Comment, message me on twitter, e-mail me, just let me know that you might be interested.

Oh, and yes, I’m working on the audio.  I’m in a weird state of trying to figure that part of this out.

Peace,
– Robby

P.S. Edit: Oh yeah, links would be handy:
iTunes – SoundCloud

RSS: http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:100096522/sounds.rss