This is our 101st post, so we've reached some kind of mile stone here. Yay!
On another note, its a sad day for me. I know that I am truly growing up. I deleted the first blog I ever started checking from my Google Reader. Crooks and Liars.com let me ode to you:
No, never mind.
Anyway, Crooks and Liars was the first blog I started checking, and the first blog that got me into all this blog stuff, back when I was a young high strung college pup, furious about what I thought was injustice in our political system. And it was, politicians are evil crooks and lying liars. But after years of reading about their hi jinx and getting out raged and annoyed it started to dawn on me that politics is always going to be full of crooks and liars, you're never going to cleans the system by blogging about it, and no amount of activism is going to change things, short of a revolution.
Over the years I started checking blogs that actually made me smile and laugh and every time I would see something on Crooks and Liars I would shun it and probably click "mark all as read" instead of sift through the tons of post that would accumulated during a day.
So today, I removed it. I had waited to do it out of sentimental value, but it just wasn't worth it. I figure that my Reader should be full of things I want to read not things I want to delete.
So happy 100 post! I hope you've found the things on this blog enjoyable. I will try and keep that up.
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
I Think We're Suppose to Celebrate
by Jeph Porter at 11:29 AM 0 comments
Friday, November 16, 2007
And then there's this guy....
While noodling around for videos for my last post (I won't link to it, it's literally just below this one(okay fine)), I found this video:
I think this man makes a very compelling argument, a compelling argument for euthanasia and eugenics.
by Jeph Porter at 3:11 PM 1 comments
Don't be Afraid of Dinosaurs! AKA Let the WGA have their way!
So the big news I guess going around the circles I choose to pay attention to is the Writer's Guild of America's strike against the studios. The forecast is all doom and gloom (No more Heroes! Whatever, I stopped watching that show last season, I'm way too good for it now.).
But really, the effects can already be seen. The Daily Show and The Colbert Report have both stopped airing new episodes, as well as Late night television such as Conan O'Brian. This I will say for most of my demograph, is truly devastating. Here's a quick summary of the issues:
Basically writer's want to be paid for the work they do. Hard to disagree with that. Of course I don't know the studio's side of it, but my preconceived leanings tell me that they are just trying to squeeze and pinch every dollar they can out of their products, because they're a, you know, business. But then again, this is why unions exist. So I lend my full ideological support to the WGA and its members, which means beyond blogging about it I'll probably tell some people at a party that I support the WGA whilst reciting the above video to make me look cool and maybe get laid.
But the part that really interest me about this whole thing is the very thing which the debate centers around, the prominence of online media. The writers are sensing a shift in the distribution of content much like writers did when the television was new and are trying to align themselves in a position of not getting screwed over again. But at the same time its not just the medium that is changing, its the very nature of ownership that is changing.
While I support the writers (have I said that enough to be cool?), I think what they are doing is just bracing for a fall. They represent big media, with lots of money and production value put into their content. But if you saw Transformers, or any other Michael Bay/Jerry Bruckheimer/whomever movie you know that money plus a talent for making things look pretty, is not equal to good content.
YouTube and other such sites have told us that you can make something entertaining to watch (and something that can generate revenue) with hardly any money and it doesn't have to look pretty, sans unions and sans studios.
Creative Commons licensing has also shook up the idea of what can be done with media. Now under a CCL someone can share another's work and post it online with the same CCL and there wouldn't be any way of paying the creator for that. So in a CC environment a writer would get paid for the original incarnation of the work and any subsequent varieties produced by the source of the work and that would be all. But if that work is downloaded and spread virally, mashed up with other videos or simply shown to a large group of people (subject to the CCL terms of course) then the writer won't be making any money off it. There would be no one to regulate that, and that doesn't even matter. Content is generating revenue without regulation or restriction. The natural flow of ideas is supporting that very same stream of creativity. Seems like it would make sense right?
And you can tell that the WGA members a bursting at the seems with creativity and suffering under the lack of a medium to express it in currently by the small crop of independent videos they are making.
"Not the Daily Show"
From the writers of the Daily Show
Videologblog from the writers of the Colbert Report
I think there will always be a place for big media content, after all we all like to see well produced shows that have the money to attract talented writers/actors/directors/producers/the whole lot to create some of the best content out there. But if the studios won't pay the writers someone will! And the Internet is the haps baby that's not going to change save apocalyptic meltdown of society. And there's money to be made, as the above Daily Show video shows. In reality the studios need to be begging the writers to come back with open arms full of cash money. They are brining themselves closer to death with this old world attempt to control.
I often think of the quote from Jurassic Park by Malcolm where he says something about life finding a way and then he's right and the dinosaurs switch sexes and star breeding. Well creativity is like the dinosaurs, and studios and regulations are like the scientist trying to regulate. Life will find a way.
by Jeph Porter at 2:07 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Irving Renquist - Ghost Hunter
The age of internet entertainment is obviously upon us. I've been looking and waiting for someone to take a hold of this new medium and actually use it for its full potential. Why should TV be the only place where episodic fictional shows are? Granted there have been few already, but they lack compelling stories, or quality production, all the things that make TV shows so good.
Well now there is Irving Renquist, Ghost Hunter. A show put together by what appears to be some people from a Chicago suburb (hometown proud!). They have had two episodes so far, and I've watched both with excitement and anticipation. What they are doing is making what I have seen as the first attempt at a genuine show with investable characters. And that I commend, if only for the effort.
However I don't feel that Renquist represents where iTainment can go. This show still suffers under the burden of being a low budget production. The acting and the writing seem to take second place to their graphic and music department. Not enough time is invested in the development of the stories and the actual production of the show. This is of course why TV shows look better because they can afford to pay the best people out there to make their shows look good. And that has always been the problem with low budget productions. Not only does your project suffer from an inability to acquire very talented people but it also suffers under the concept of having a writer/director/producer who has to split his/her time between too many task.
I'm not knocking Irving Renquist, I like what they are doing, but I do feel it needs a bit more work before it could be considered a serious contender in the world of iTainment. Clean up the sound and the picture so it can be watched comfortability on any computer and for god's sake trim some of that annoying baggage off the story. At points I half expect Irving and his new girlfriend Dotty to start fucking on camera with all the faux sexual tension they spew, that seem stolen from a porn script. To much sex and not enough ghost hunting!
I'll keep watching though, before long I might get hooked.
by Jeph Porter at 11:38 AM 2 comments
Monday, October 29, 2007
A Toothless Life - Back Stage Boogie Band - Dir. Jeph Porter
A Toothless Life
The Ways I'm Going Blind
Back Stage Boogie Band
Dir. Jeph Porter
by Jeph Porter at 2:31 AM 1 comments
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Why does this excite me?
Because it's the first step in the creation of a death ray! I knew those scientist couldn't be trusted! You heard it here first!
by Jeph Porter at 8:14 PM 1 comments
Friday, October 26, 2007
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Happy Halloween!
What is everyone going to be? I haven't decided.
Here's a skull you can make for yourself.
by Jeph Porter at 9:45 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Clean 'dem dishes...

A while pack I did a post featuring my friend Lauren Adams and her photography. And while checking my Google Reader (which if you haven't used, it is amazing) I saw that she kindly linked to my other blog The Strange Case. So I figured I'd do her one back and write something up on her page.
DirtyDishes... is a look into the everyday life and mind of Lauren. See her sleep, drive, and work and find out what she likes to do from day to day. She's pretty good at keeping it updated so if your hankering for some voyeurism this should do the job. I honestly think I see her more online then I do in real life. But at least its something.
Anyway, check it out, subscribe to it and keep up to date. She needs to figure out how to allow comments though because some of these things are just begging for it.
by Jeph Porter at 4:22 PM 0 comments
Labels: Blogs, Jeph, Shout Outs
Reptiles on the loose!
Probably one of the funniest things ever. Amazing what people will believe if they want to.
by Jeph Porter at 4:16 PM 0 comments
Labels: Conspiracy, Jeph
Friday, October 19, 2007
2012 stuff
I have a friend who interviewed Daniel Pinchbeck for a documentary he is working on. The impression he left me with was that all the book selling and stuff went to his head and now he's sort of a douche. But then again I would be too if a bunch of hippies liked my book.
by Jeph Porter at 5:31 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Atlas Shrugged a book in review
So I finally made it through the brick that is Atlas Shrugged. And after one thousand one hundred and sixty eight pages in my centennial edition I’m wondering how I feel about it all.
I read The Fountainhead at the end of this summer and I was so floored by the philosophy set down in that book that I wanted to continue it into Atlas Shrugged. And it does continue as Ayn Rand herself says on the first page of the book:
“To all readers who discovered The Fountainhead and asked me many questions about the wider application of its ideas, I want to say that I am answering these questions in the present novel and that The Fountainhead was only an overture to Atlas Shrugged.”
Beautiful, an overture, I love music. And I did discover The Fountainhead and I was asking “many questions about the wider application of its ideas”! How could I go wrong with Atlas Shrugged?
Well I think the problem is, I don’t like her “wider applications.” See to me The Fountainhead was and is much more philosophical in nature and Atlas Shrugged is much more political and economical, hence the application. Just like Marx was a philosopher and Lenin and Stalin where politicians, the same can be said of these two books; my apologies however for using a communist analogy when discussing the works of Ayn Rand.
Because if you are not familiar with Rand you should know that she hates Communism. I suspect this has a lot to do with her being born in Russia in 1905 during those revolutionary years that lead to the cold war Russia we all know and love. And seeing what that particular form of Communism did to Russia, her homeland, I’m sure no one can blame her for taking such a disliking to it. But I think that is a very important part of the narrative of her life that one must consider when interpreting the ideas she lays down in Atlas Shrugged.
The overall message being summed up in the oath the central characters take:
“I swear, by my life and my love of it, that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine.”
But women, they can do whatever the hell they want.
And that is the basics of her philosophy that she introduces in The Fountainhead and “applies” in Atlas Shrugged. She is a champion of the ego and a believer in selfishness. Not that one should take as much as one can for oneself, but rather that one should take pride in ones work and one should not compromise for anything but the fulfillment of ones desires.
After reading The Fountainhead my first question was: Wasn’t Hitler fulfilling his desires? Aren’t people that rob and steal attempting to fulfill a desire to rob and steal? Where is the line? Well Atlas Shrugged has the answers, apparently.
The application of her philosophy is nothing more then controlled Fascism. She paints a picture of strong almost god-like characters who are above and beyond the normal person, or “second-raters” or “looters” as she chooses to call them, and they adhere to a code of conduct that includes such rules as: No violence is to be used unless used against them first (Which is so horribly broken at the end of Atlas Shrugged when one of the characters kills an innocent man, his only crime being that he is a victim of society and thus in Rand’s point of view not worthy of his life). Two, no one should “give” anyone anything without proper value exchange (i.e. cold hard cash). And there are a few of other loose ideas they claim to follow, but of course can be broken whenever their superior intellect sees fit to change the rules. So basically you have Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and a bit of current U.S. politics tossed into a room and told they can’t kill anyone unless they have a really good reason. And of course Hitler says the Jews are breaking the economy and starts killing them, Mussolini says something similar and starts killing poor people and The White House just shoots the first brown person is sees and claims they had a bomb.
In short Rand is painting the exact opposite of Socialism, which we all know is Fascism, that’s why the German’s and the Russian’s didn’t get along during WWII. But once you’re knee deep in Atlas Shrugged it doesn’t appear that way, thus making it very effective propaganda. I’m no friend of stupid people or people that don’t want to work or think for themselves and just want to steal other people’s money, but at the same time she makes me feel like I should go knock on the door of Exxon Mobil and cuddle up with their CEO and tell him I still love him.
The thing that makes her arguments so strong in fact is the major flaw of her work. These god-like characters she presents do not exist, no matter how hard she tries to tell you that they do.
“I trust that no one will tell me that men such as I write about don’t exist. That this book has been written, and published, is my proof that they do”
What? A bunch of dedicated industrialist who are out there producing their little heads off with no concern whatsoever of anyone else but themselves published this book, even helped you write it? If these people do exist what the hell do they care if your book gets published or not? What the hell do they care if your message gets spread or not?
“My personal life,” says Ayn Rand, “is a postscript to my novels; it consists of the sentence: ‘And I mean it.’ I have always lived by the philosophy I present in my books – and it has worked for me, as it works for my characters. The concretes differ, the abstractions are the same.”
And this is the second paradox that I find in Ayn Rand’s work, of which she hasn’t provided an answer yet. If her philosophy states that we should only be concerned with our own selfish desires and do nothing to compromise that how then does she explain her desire to spread her message to the masses? I understand she got money in exchange for it, but in exchange for what an abstract idea? That’s hardly metal or rock like her characters exchange.
I find it interesting that she only have one abstract artist in all of her books that is portrayed in a good light. Most are seen as sniveling intellects who talk out of their asses as a way of getting out of doing real hard labor. The one respectable artist is a composer who claims that he only gives concerts for people who truly appreciate his music, as if that is the value he exchanges, well that and a lump of gold. But is he endowed with some super human power to be able to detect who is appreciating his music and who isn’t?
Answer: yes.
Or worse, are industrialist AKA rich people the only people worthy of hearing beautiful music?
Answer: yes.
Never mind the idea that art inspires people to action or inspires them to a level they never through possible before they experienced that piece of art. O wait, that’s the fucking reason she wrote the God Damn books! She wrote the books and the following non-fiction ones, and spent eighteen years traveling around promoting her philosophy for second raters, for the looters, for the very people her philosophy teaches us to hate in an effort to inspire them.
That’s very nice of her but it’s an important contradiction to point out.
When I first read The Fountainhead, I was inspired by the possibility of my own greatness. A flame was reignited in me that had begun to dwindle. I felt the power in believing in my own ability to feel power. And to me that is the single greatest lesson to be taught by Ayn Rand. The point of the rant above and the lesson I learned in Atlas Shrugged is that Ayn Rand is not a god-like person as much as she wishes. The point is, no one is. And you can’t expect people to be that perfect or you fall into the same trap religion falls into.
Man is not a god, and if he thinks he is that is arrogance and it will lead to destruction. I have said here before that I believe man has the potential to be great and I still believe that, but it is important to remember that we are still on that path and until we get there we shouldn’t act as if we are there.
Atlas Shrugged, presents the idea that man is god, well some of us anyway, and that everyone else should submit to these god-men. I disagree. There is value in helping your fellow humans. The value is the overall wellbeing of mankind. However Rand's philosophy provides a check on that by reminding us that there is a difference between helping and giving. Are we helping the genocide in Darfur by giving them aid that is just stolen by the mercenaries? Or would we be helping them if we sent in troops and stopped the slaughter? Right now I feel like we are ignoring them because we adhere to closely to Rand’s philosophy. Our interests are in Middle East oil, so that’s why we are there. Although I can’t help but wonder what Rand’s take would be on the Bush administration. Would it not be of benefit to look beyond the here and now and help our fellow humans?
Just like any philosophy it should be considered with the plethora of other philosophies that one can read and digest into their own personal philosophy. And in a way, Rand’s philosophy supports this, almost a philosophy of philosophy in the idea that one should form ones own world view of selfish interest to ones own desires. What if you selfishly want to help your friends? What if it is your desire to give your money to the poor and needy? Rand would probably claim you are lying to yourself, but how would she really know?
Overall I think there are very valuable lessons to be learned from Rand and her books. I for one have learned many lessons that have and are going to profoundly affect the way I live my life. But just like anything else it should be considered critically and you shouldn’t live by it just for Ayn Rand’s sake, I don’t think she’d like that anyway.
by Jeph Porter at 12:39 PM 0 comments
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Doing some updates...
I'm trying to make this blog a little more comprehensive so you'll have to deal with some seemingly out of context post. They are just things that will go in the top bar eventually and they need to be on here so they can be linked to.
by Jeph Porter at 11:31 AM 0 comments
Sunday, October 07, 2007
Late Night Links
by Jeph Porter at 9:22 PM 0 comments
Labels: Jeph
Saturday, October 06, 2007
Would Ayn Rand Tip?
I've been reading Atlas Shrugged right on the heels of finishing The Fountainhead, which is an amazing book that really reaffirmed a lot of things I think I always thought about life but didn't know it. (if that makes sense) And being so shaken by it I quickly picked up Atlas Shrugged, well slowly; its a pretty hefty book rounding out at about 1400 pages. However I'm not as impressed with it as I was with the Fountainhead. Atlas is much more about politics then it is about philosophy. Of course politics is a form of philosophy, but it isn't the same and I think it cheapens whatever was so powerful about The Fountainhead. But that's a tangent I don't want to go on, mostly because I've still got about 300 pages left to read and I don't want to condemn the book just yet. But I do have some thoughts after burning a thousand pages so far.
Would Ayn Rand tip? I thought about this the other day as I wrote down a small tip on my credit card receipt and thought briefly about what it meant. Rand stresses the notion that it is important to never give anything. Everything must be exchanged for compensation. And yes, a tip is in gratitude for service, but isn't the waitress getting a pay check? I'm not paying her directly for her service, that's what the business does. And some say that it is expected for you to tip because the waitress doesn't make enough money to live on her check alone. But why is that my responsibility. I'm already paying the owner money for the food and service why do I need to give this waitress anymore?
Now before I look like a dick I want to say, I do tip. I think its important because waiters and waitresses do get paid shit for the most part and rely on their tips for a lot of things. Which is sad, because its almost got to the point some places where waitresses literally don't make minimum wage and instead get a tip share that makes up the rest; putting the burden of half of their check on us. But even in a perfect world its right to tip and that is exactly my point which leads me to my main issue with Ayn Rand's philosophy on this level.
Last night I spent an amazing evening with some friends, two I have known for years and two that I had just met that evening. We went to the new people's house and I experienced some of the best hospitality I have ever experienced. They made us food, showed us their art, listened to things that mattered to us (and where actually interested) and played a game of cards with us. I left with such an amazing feeling, that I haven't felt in a long time. And it struck me that whatever is at the heart of that feeling is what Rand is missing. We could live in a society where everything is exchanged for value and perhaps things would proceed more smoothly, however I think there is value in giving. There is selfishness in selflessness. And one step further, there is no such thing as selflessness.
Rand seems to advocate a cold world where the only human interaction is the exchange of money (and lots and lots of sex, which no one seems to pay for ironically). Sure she talks about other forms of value, often in cryptic passages that probably lead to her books being mammoth. But she makes no bones about the fact that their must be an exchange and paints those who don't engage in that as "looters" or "second raters". Well I will argue that she is wrong based on the fact that we can't help being selfish. If someone is looting from you or not fulfilling their potential its because thats what they want to do, maybe not consciously and maybe at the manipulation of someone else but there is a choice that has to be made there and they are doing the choosing.
So, we've selfishly decided that its right to tip, and that its right to give food to your company because we are exchanging something of value, good company. And perhaps that's what Rand's trying to say but I feel like it gets clouded by the hard economic stance she takes in Atlas.
Again, I haven't read Atlas Shrugged all the way through yet, so there is a good chance she'll still surprise me, I'll let you know.
by Jeph Porter at 2:44 PM 2 comments
Labels: Jeph
Tuesday, October 02, 2007
The Potential Man (cross post)
This was origionlly posted at The Strange Case my other Blog that focuses on the nature of belief. 
A couple of weeks ago Nathan and I had lunch at Small Bar on Division. It was a warm Sunday afternoon and we met for a fellowship. The purpose was not to discuss religion or God, but being that this was the first time we had seen each other since the start of this blog it was an inevitable topic.
I don’t remember the specifics of a lot of our conversation because most of it was a slow dance down to the point of contention in our belief systems. I believe it sprang from a discussion about Nathan’s post on science and my response. Which was more or less defining the aims of science verses the aims of religion. And it is my flaw to unfairly associate belief in a higher power (God) with religion. I don’t know if I see it as a flaw though, because in my point of view the two are inseparable, a veritable chicken and the egg. But other’s will tell you, Nathan perhaps, that they can be taken apart. And that point of contention eventually lead us down an interesting path, at least from my point of view.
As you do when talking abstract philosophy you tend to walk on stilts that look ridiculous to anyone not in the conversation so I hope that by diving into this you can follow.
We where talking about what the idea of God does for humankind. And I’m going to obviously rely on my impressions and ideas mostly because I honestly can’t remember much of Nathan’s. Sorry buddy but I’m more important to me then you are. Anyway, he can fill in the gaps in the comments. Okay, enough wasted time here I go.
In my opinion the purpose of God (one of perhaps, I have a lot longer to live so this list might grow) is to provide an example of good for humans to live up to. An almighty Father, both vengeful and just who practices unconditional love but simultaneously holds a hard line for the rules is the general picture of God I was taught to believe in. Of course this is the “character of God”, as Nathan calls it and not the God of the Bible, which in that case this description is sugar coated, and can be contradicted by actually reading the Bible, but then again that’s by opinion. So the character of God is the perfect example we should all strive for.
And I agree, depending on your definition of the character of God. I was telling Nathan, as I’ve told other people, and alluded to in previous comments, that I can have a conversation with a believer such as Nathan and understand their concepts as long as I view the word god as the power within me that allows me to experience the character of god. (Note the lower case) And that is a lot of reasons why this blog exist. I recognize similar feelings and experience without God that many ascribe to God. Thus leading me to think there is something else at work there.
And that’s where my head was as I sat over a pizza that that stupid ignorant Christian Nathan so kindly bought and shared with me in a time when I was broke and hungry. And it made me think, what is it that I am living for? I’ve long given up on the idea of a meaning to life, but should I rethink that?
The meaning of life is a term that expects and answer from an outside point of view I think. It almost demands a deity to hand us a card as in Monty Python’s The Meaning of Life, and read the answer like a talk show host would. I would argue it is the desire to transfer responsibility that springs this way of thinking. But science and reason has told us that every experience is derived from the mind, so why not the meaning of life? So it dawned on me that the meaning of life is for us to choose. That’s why there can be no one answer, and why the giant computer in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy chose 42. Isn’t it just like a machine to chose a number? And on that note, the question is probably up to us as well, but I’ll let the philosophical implications of that go for now.
But moving even beyond that we talked further about God as the ultimate good example. And the crux of our difference in opinion was exposed. See Nathan accepts that a Father God created us and watches us with love and awe. And we as his children are to be like him and to serve him. In a nutshell anyway, sorry if the mushy language mucks it up. And I believe that that ultimate good example is our own potential as individuals and as a species. I argued that by having the examples of history we can project our potential into the future and thus live our present lives to bring about the best possible version of that. Nathan however argues that it is necessary to have a separate God and thus a solid definition of good, and as a result evil. But I would go further and say that our definition of good has never been solid. In fact if you take the Ten Commandments I’m sure you can find examples in cultures around the world where each one is consider the antonym of the stated law in the Bible. (Wouldn’t that be a fun challenge?)
And even if it can be shown to be universally accepted as wrong to covet your neighbors donkey it still doesn’t diminish the fact that morality is created by community. How many times have we seen small groups commit strange acts that seem perfectly normal to them?
Now in theory the idea of an unfixed good is a good idea (is it? Ha!). But this goes back to the basics, no evidence for a God has been shown. I, and others like me, cannot rely on lack of evidence. But can a Christian really even claim an unfixed God? Hasn’t the morality of God changed over time? Even by rejecting the dogma of religion and forming your own individual view of God aren’t you shifting the morality of God? The same God that the majority would claim to this day was sending all homosexuals to hell? It is very clear that the morality of God is changing with our times. That’s why women can wear pants!
So overall, my point is the potential of humankind being our beacon in the distance. And at various times in history the ship we have sailed towards the beacon is the ship of God and religion. But as we get closer to the point in the distance we need to realize that that ship is ours and the point of light is not the kingdom of God, but our own kingdom here on Earth.
Did you follow that analogy? Well I want to say it again anyway. I think it can be shown that everyone strives for the potential of humankind even if they claim that they are striving to be like God. The harm comes in when people sacrifice what’s best for a fictional God over what’s best for humankind. It leads to stagnation and back peddling. The power of the mind to create, explore, love and express ideas is not the product of God but the product of our minds.
Okay, I’m going to stop being preachy, but I can’t help getting excited about my own personal potential and how it contributes to our race. And conversely getting frustrated by snags along the way.
So let me know what you think. Do you agree? Am I way off base? Am I standing on stilts still? Is this just a form of humanist dogma? I don’t know, let me know.
by Jeph Porter at 9:40 PM 0 comments
Labels: Jeph
Friday, September 28, 2007
O Jesus
How could this be any more funny?
This is how:
Christ, I love how they have to describe it in detail. I'm sure the author probably knows about these things because he has to do a particular amount of "research" working for the Christian Wire. Just like Pete Townsend was "researching" child porn for a book.This year, "Perverts Without Morals" chose to deliberately mock Jesus Christ, Christians and The Last Supper, by depicting half naked homosexuals, leather men and women as the 12 Apostles, and display sex toys in place of the bread and wine.
A bloody fist can be seen in front of the central figure portraying Jesus Christ, possibly representing the vile sex act of "fisting" - where one's fist is fully inserted into another individual's anal cavity. (emphasis added)
O wait, this may be just as funny.
by Jeph Porter at 7:14 AM 0 comments
Labels: Jeph
More stuff to read!
Skeptic's Circle # 70 There are some good pieces in this one. Check out Greta Christina's drunk blogging about seeing Jesus on drugs and Skeptico's rant on alternative medicine.
by Jeph Porter at 6:42 AM 0 comments
Labels: Jeph

