Springing Into Action

The pastor of our church is a trained and certified Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), which is pretty cool if you ask me. After church this morning, I and several other churchgoers gathered for a Staff-Parish Relations Committee meeting (we’re sorta like the church’s HR department). Afterward, as we were headed out to our cars, we heard a God-awful crash from the nearby intersection of Fairfax County Parkway and Franklin Farm Road.

Almost before it even registered with me that I had just heard a car accident, Pastor Rob was in his car heading over to check it out. I ran over myself on the off-chance that I could render some useful assistance (I couldn’t—Rob already had it well under control—but I did get to answer Rob’s cell phone for him while he was occupied, lol!).

A woman in a Jeep Grand Cherokee making a left turn from Franklin Farm Road onto the Parkway had been t-boned by Toyota Corolla going straight on Franklin Farm in the opposite direction. Both drivers gave conflicting reports to the police—the woman in the Jeep said she had a green arrow, while the man in the Toyota claimed he had a green light. No witnesses who actually saw the accident bothered to stop, so I couldn’t tell you who was lying. The man in the Toyota had a minor burn on his arm from the airbag deployment, but he was otherwise just fine. The woman in the Jeep seemed to be pretty much okay too, but I think they took her to the hospital to be sure (I’m not sure about this, since I left before they did).

COFUMC—’08 Annual Conference Report

For the fifth time, I had the honor of representing this congregation as one of your lay delegates to the Virginia Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. The conference—which is an annual gathering of United Methodist clergy and laity from throughout the conference for mission, worship, policy-making, administration, and fellowship—was held in Roanoke from June 15th through the 18th. It was presided over by our bishop, Bishop Charlene Kammerer.

Following up on last year’s theme of ‘Let’s Get Growing’, which put a focus on making disciples of Jesus Christ and establishing 250 new faith communities over the next 30 years, this year’s Annual Conference theme was ‘More Young People’. It is an unfortunate fact that Methodism in Virginia is being affected by a trend that is also affecting the broader Christian movement in the United States: the average age of our congregations is going up, and the number of youth and young adults participating in church life is dropping.

But you wouldn’t have known it at Annual Conference.

Shall Not Be Infringed . . .

There are times when a victory can be nearly as disheartening as a defeat. I felt this way in May when the United Methodist Church’s General Conference voted to uphold the status quo—with which I generally agree—in regard to the church’s stance on homosexuality. My ‘side’, if you can call it that, won. But it concerned me greatly (and still does) that, on an issue about which the Biblical teaching is crystal clear, 45 percent of the delegates at the conference voted to change the text to something ambiguous that made no moral statement whatsoever.

I feel very similarly about the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller upholding the right to keep and bear arms. While I don’t think the ruling went quite far enough and it leaves many forms of gun control I consider unconstitutional intact, I generally agree with the sentiments of the decision and think it is a definite, concrete step in the right direction. What concerns me is not the actual outcome, but rather—like the UMC decision on homosexuality—how close we came to losing. Only five of the nine justices (about 56 percent) interpreted the words “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed” to mean . . . well . . . ”the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

Supreme Court Strikes Down DC Gun Ban

The U.S. Supreme Court has issued a ruling upholding the individual right to bear arms under the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, striking down the Washington, DC, handgun ban that has been in effect since 1976 and potentially affecting other such bans across the country.

The Court stated unequivocally in its 5-4 ruling that the Second Amendment guarantees individuals, not just a formal militia, the right to own weapons and use them for self defense in the home and for other legal purposes. The court did not, however, find the right to bear arms to be unlimited. States and jurisdictions are still permitted to regulate gun sales, to limit the carrying of concealed weapons, to require licensing or other legal restriction on ownership of firearms, to prohibit carrying weapons in sensitive buildings like schools and courthouses, and limit gun ownership by felons and the mentally retarded.

From the ruling:

Undoubtedly some think that the Second Amendment is outmoded in a society where our standing army is the pride of our Nation, where well-trained police forces provide personal security, and where gun violence is a serious problem. That is perhaps debatable, but what is not debatable is that it is not the role of this Court to pronounce the Second Amendment extinct.

Read on for additional excerpts from the text of the ruling (PDF link).

Expanding Usage of the V-Chip

Driving home from work yesterday, I ended up behind a truck with a large, bright, orange label attached to the back stating “THIS TRAILER MONITORED BY V CHIP TECHNOLOGY.” This struck me as odd, since the V-Chip is the name of the parental control technology included by law in all televisions manufactured since 2000. The V-Chip, which was introduced along side all those stupid TV ratings (e.g., TV-MA), allows parents to censor what their children see—you know, since the best way to prepare children for the harsh realities of life is to shelter them from those realities.

Regardless, the federally-mandated V-Chip included in every TV since 2000 is rarely used, since most parents don’t know it exists and those who do either don’t understand how to use it or don’t want to. Perhaps, in an effort to put all that tax money to better use, the federal government is going to be mandating that V-Chips be added to trucks. The chip will prevent those trucks from driving down any highways that include offensive billboards or suggestive lane markings, filter bad language from the CB radio, and prevent drivers from listening to Paul McCartney or looking at Janet Jackson’s nipple.

Scott Bradford is a writer and technologist who has been putting his opinions online since 1995. He believes in three inviolable human rights: life, liberty, and property. He is a Catholic Christian who worships the trinitarian God described in the Nicene Creed. Scott is a husband, nerd, pet lover, and AMC/Jeep enthusiast with a B.S. degree in public administration from George Mason University.