Saturday, December 02, 2006

And A Cairn By Every Runway


Here are some definitions of a cairn, according to Wikkipedia:

  • To mark a burial site, and/or to memorialize the dead.
  • To mark the summit of a mountain.
  • Placed at regular intervals they indicate a path across stony or barren terrain, across glaciers, or a bad-weather navigation route.
As cairns are somewhat of a feature in many pagan faiths, what could be more appropriate to place beside every runway, into which pagan travellers can meditate beside before embarking on their journeys? Some can even be buildt to allow for entrance of one or more travellers for the purpose of private meditation.

I've even discovered a stone artisan, Dave Cudworth, who might be prevailed upon to build them, in the event a pagan builder can not be found.

Not only are they appropriate for Celtic Pagans, but also for Hellenic Pagans such as myself, who identify them with Hermes, God of Travellers.

After all, since some Muslim activists are now demanding private prayer chambers in airports, surely they would not presume to think they should be afforded this special privilege all to themselves.

Yeah, right. No doubt they will also insist it should be buildt in such a way that those who kneel within should face Mecca. If accedded to, this would probably lead to demands that toilets in all bathroom facilities should face either toward the north or the south (neither toward nor away from Mecca), and most importantly, that a resident Muslim chaplain be installed in all airports to sound the Muslim call to prayer five times a day.

Frankly, I'm past caring even if they insist on a star and crescent be the predominant view above the airport control towers. Just give me my fucking cairn.

I don't agree with Ann Coulter very often, though I almost always think she is hilarious, but when she wrote this particular editorial, it struck me as not only funny, but one hundred percent correct.

As you may recall, a recent controversy erupted when six imams were removed from a flight in Arizona due to complaints by concerned passengers. They had been praying in a loud fashion, in addition to complaining about American foreign policy. Upon entering the plane, they demanded seperate seating, and though none were obese, insisted on seat belt extensions.

At least three of them purchased one way tickets, and had no checked baggage, which ever since 9/11 have been two standard red flags in airport scurity matters. This, in addition to their generally boorish, obnoxous, and provocative manner and actions, seemed almost calculated to insure a reaction, and a confrontation.

Naturally, they have been ardently defended by the so-called Left. Surprise, surprise!

Coulter hit the nail right on the head when she pointed out, in reaction to the Immams call for all Muslims to boycott the airline in question:

"The idea that a Muslim boycott against US Airways would hurt the airline proves that Arabs are utterly tone-deaf. This is roughly the equivalent of Cindy Sheehan taking a vow of silence. How can we hope to deal with people with no sense of irony? The next thing you know, New York City cab drivers will be threatening to bathe."

Exactly. If the truth were known, one of the first things most Americans at least subconscously take note of when they get on any plane is the presence, or lack thereof, of anyone with even a vaquely Middle Eastern appearrance.

The most insulting thing a Muslim could possibly be confronted with should be the waves of overwhelming relief collectively exhibitd by the majority of airline customers at the news that this boycott would soon take effect. But they just don't seem to get it.

Coulter even wonders if the entire story isn't a fictional advertisng scheme. As she puts it:


"Come to think of it, the whole affair may have been a madcap advertising scheme cooked up by US Airways."

Ouch.

And, as she points out, it is not only the immams who have no sense of irony, but their leftist supporters and defenders, many of who are still high from the fumes breathed in from the last Democratic victory, and as such may be sufferring from altered states of conscousness-and perception of reality. But they don't know, or maybe just don't care, that, as Coulter puts it

"But now, on the eve of the busiest travel day in America, these "scholars" have ginned up America's PC victim machinery to intimidate airlines and passengers from noticing six imams chanting "Allah" before boarding a commercial jet."

As if all of this isn't enough, she points out the history of one of the immams in such a manner as to make anybody want to stick with Greyhound.


"Shahin's own "scholarship" consisted of continuing to deny Muslims were behind 9/11 nearly two months after the attacks. On Nov. 4, 2001, the Arizona Republic cited Shahin's "skepticism that Muslims or bin Laden carried out attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon." Shahin complained that the government was "focusing on the Arabs, the Muslims. And all the evidence shows that the Muslims are not involved in this terrorist act."

To which I personally thank Mr. Shahin for his, I am sure, qualified interpretation of terrorist evidence.

I'm still waiting for Richard Reid, the notorious shoe-bomber, to be released from prison, his prior conviction appealled for lack of evidence. After all, what proof do we have really that he intended to blow up the plane he was in? Because he lit a match to his shoelaces. Hell, what if he is sufferring from some kind of rare, debilitating condition that causes his feet to get excruciatingly cold? Maybe he is forced to heat them periodically. With matches.

Maybe the so-called bomb in his shoe was some kind of experiemental device that is supposed to aid in this affliction, only it wasn't working properly. Just because he was a Muslim, why do we assume the worse?

I'll be waiting for the building of my fucking cairns at all godamned airport runways.

I will probably be waiting until motherfucking Ragnarok.

9 comments:

Webmaster Melody said...

Dude, all I can tell you is this: If I believed in evil, Ann Coulter just might be it. I really don't understand why everyone on both sides gets so huffy about this racial profiling deal. I happen to know and be fond of many arab-types, so I can see their gripe, but the other end has a point, too. The solution is so obvious to me. YOU JUST SEARCH EVERYONE. So what if air travel becomes a little more inconvenient. We all know flying is difficult and inconvenient no matter what. Adding this little bit more is not going to make matters substantially worse. Arming the pilots isn't a bad idea, either. They are already in control of the plane, a weapon can't make it worse. It wouldn't be so freaky if people call out Allah, if we know everyone has been damn near strip-searched, and EVERYONE has been heavily questioned about one way, no baggage travel. Fucking gov't just wants to be cheap about paying and training security.

SecondComingOfBast said...

Wel, it wasn't so much the praying as it was that in combination with everything else I described. I personally think they were purposely trying to be provocative in order to get a reaction. Well, they got it, so now they are complaining, as they intended to all along.

Coulter has her faults, she is obviously a shill. But she does it well, and she is funny. It's just on this issue, I do agree with her.

If they have to search every single person, by the way, it would be fine with me, as I never fly. But I have an idea the expense would be such that I would soon be joined by many others who would suddenly decide they could live without it as well.

The obvious answer is to focus on those groups that pose the most obvious risks. Ninety nine percent of the time, at least, that will be the Arab and Muslim community.

Not to say they are all bad, just to say that the vast majority of the people that pose a significant threat does happen to come from that community.

SecondComingOfBast said...

Danielle-glad you liked the bit aout the cairn. Since you and Sou requested more pagan oriented stuff, I've been wanting to do more. Unfortunately, there's a scarcity of material I can do that would be practical or apprpriate, or that hasn't already been done to death.

As for the other, I know that I would never get on board a plane if I saw a Muslim, or anybody that looked like they might be one, getting on that wasn't checked out throughly. Especially if security passed them by and then made a big show of checking out people like eighty year old grandmother types and eight year olds, as if they want to make the impression they are being dilligent to a fault.

I would refuse to board out of protest, to make a statement more than anything else.

All these people that are concerned about Muslims being mistreated can't seem to fathom that at least the more vocal of them are demanding special rights. To give in to them one iota is to invite more and more demands from them.

It's time to bring an end to the era of special rights, not only for Muslims, but for all special interest groups.

SecondComingOfBast said...

Sounds to me like he was purposely fucking with people. What makes me think that is he was obviously holding the book at what would ordinarily be an uncomfortable level, high enough so you could see the title, with a part of it covered. Like he was wanting you to see just that one part of the title.

Also, who just has to rush to the bathroom-and toward the cockpit- the second they get on a plane? Very unusual.

Like you said, it might have been innocent, and you might have just been paranoid. But, by the same token, it is a fact that people are understandably paranoid. Yet, we are expected to suck it up.

Suddenly, our real and understandable concerns are to be discarded, laughed at,criticized, scorned even, and shown no sensitivity whatsoever, yet we are expected to exhibit the utmost patience and sensitivity to people that seem to go out of their way to be as strident and obnoxous as they can possibly be.

That's why people need to stop flying any more than they absolutely have to. That would get the message across, in spades.

Tom Accuosti said...

Suddenly, our real and understandable concerns are to be discarded, laughed at,criticized, scorned even, and shown no sensitivity whatsoever, yet we are expected to exhibit the utmost patience and sensitivity to people that seem to go out of their way to be as strident and obnoxous as they can possibly be.

Well said, PT! And this goes for so many other aspects of our lives, as well.

Tom Accuosti
The Tao of Masonry

Lemuel Calhoon said...

"As cairns are somewhat of a feature in many pagan faiths"

Not only pagans. Before the construction of the tent of meeting with its brass alter in Exodus the Hebrews were commanded to sacrifice upon a cairn of uncut stones.

Lemuel Calhoon said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
SecondComingOfBast said...

Lemuel-I had never heard it referred to as a cairn before, but I guess you are right, that is technically what it would have been. It seems to have had something to do with the Hebrews belief in approaching God in a state of purity, much like using unleavened bread at Passover, or removing your shoes when standing on sacred ground.

MR said...

great post--thanks...don't know if you've seen this video of Ann Coulter, but it's pretty classic:
www.minor-ripper.blogspot.com