Archive for May, 2009

Photo365: May 11, 2009

Monday, May 11th, 2009

A dreary gloomy rainy day spent in a library doing genealogy research. Not a lot of photographic opportunities… but wait! My hosts had these interesting bathroom lights…

Let there be light...

Let there be light...

Photo365: May 10, 2009

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

Mother’s Day 2009. I stopped off to see my mother’s oldest sister, my Aunt Cladyne, who was born in 1921, on my way to North Carolina. Everything about the trip reminded me that we have all seen better days.

The old barn near Ferncliff has surely seen better days.

Better days: barn

Better days: barn

And the outbuilding across from Sheridan’s at Kents Store has too…

Better days: outbuilding

Better days: outbuilding

But you know… even if she has seen better days, when was the last time you saw the grace and strength and courage of a face like this?

Aunt Cladyne at nearly 88

Aunt Cladyne at nearly 88

Photo365: May 9, 2009

Saturday, May 9th, 2009

There were some terrific cloud formations on the drive down from NJ to Virginia, but no nice place to pull off and shoot until I was almost at my brother’s home. I remembered the winery on the road to his house, pulled up its driveway and voila!

Light against the light

Light against the light

Photo365: May 8, 2009

Friday, May 8th, 2009

Had some new visitors to the backyard feeders on May 8th (couldn’t post the images then because my internet connection was down)… A male and female brown-headed cowbird!

ale brown-headed cowbird

Male brown-headed cowbird

Female brown-headed cowbird

Female brown-headed cowbird

Photo365: May 7, 2009

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Talk about a bird with an attitude!!!

Bird with a tude

Bird with a 'tude

Photo365: May 6, 2009

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

For the life of me, I can’t decide whether I like these shots of a dogwood petal or not…

Dogwood petal

Dogwood petal

Dogwood petal

Dogwood petal

Photo365: May 5, 2009

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

With some advice from other bird photographers on the photography forum where I hang out, I think I did a little better using the flash today despite it being another gloomy grey rainy day.

Male northern cardinal

Male northern cardinal

Photo365: May 4, 2009

Monday, May 4th, 2009

I am tired tired tired of rain every day. It’s hard to watch my poor backyard birdies when they’re dripping and the light is horrible. So I had to scrounge around for something to shoot today, and came up with this:

Workplace power

Workplace power

Photo365: May 3, 2009

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

My poor little mourning doves (and all the other backyard birds) were hunkered down against the driving rain today. I used flash for these shots and, even wioth flash compensation, I don’t like ’em all that much compared to natural light.

Soggy mourning dove

Soggy mourning dove

Mourning dove in the rain

Mourning dove in the rain

Towards a more civil union

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

There’s a report today on MSNBC: “A Quinnipiac University poll released last week found that a majority of people questioned, by a 55-38 percent margin, oppose gay marriage. But it also found that people, by a 57-38 percent margin, support civil unions that would provide marriage-like rights for same-sex couples…”

This and other similar reports have long suggested to me that the call for gay marriage rights — a call that was used very effectively by the right-wing in past elections to damage the Democratic Party and its candidates and to greatly disadvantage the gay community — is simply the wrong call. Wrong for gays, wrong for the Democratic Party, wrong for the country.

The bottom line here is that marriage, as that word has traditionally been used, is at its very center a religious sacrament. And, quite frankly, in this secular country founded on the notion of separation of church and state, government in all its forms and permutations has simply no business recognizing, supporting or in any way being involved in a religious sacrament. It isn’t just that it shouldn’t recognize gay marriage; it shouldn’t recognize anyone’s marriage (or other religious sacrament). In other words, government shouldn’t be in the marriage business at all.

The only union government has any business recognizing is a civil union — a union that by definition creates civil rights and imposes civil responsibilities. Whether that’s a civil union of heterosexuals or homosexuals is insignificant; the key for government is that it is civil, not sacramental — secular, not religious.

If people then want to get their civil union blessed by whatever religious entity they happen to belong to, that’s all well and good. But it should be irrelevant to the institutions of government whether they do or don’t get themselves “married” by their churches. The First Amendment to the Constitution is quite clear: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…” Confining certain civil rights (all of the civil benefits that flow from the married state) to those whose unions are acceptable to the religious community is surely a “law respecting an establishment of religion” and I can — at least for purposes of argument — buy the religious community’s argument that forcing it to recognize unions it considers abhorrent as sacramentally valid would “prohibit… the free exercise” of their religion. So fine. Get “marriage” out of government and government out of “marriage.”

Forget gay “marriage”. Civil unions for all.