Posted by momto6 on 2 April 2007
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, in dissenting opinion regarding the case Massachusetts et al vs. EPA et al, said “No matter how important the underlying policy issues at stake, this court has no business substituting its own desired outcome for the reasoned judgment of the responsible agency.” He and the other four conservative justices, including Chief Justice Roberts, did not feel that the state of Massachusetts had a legal right to bring the action.
How anyone with a thread of intelligence could think that the state of Massachusetts doesn’t have a legal right to bring action against EPA boggles my mind. Every state in the US should have a right to bring action against EPA as it was abdicating its responsibility to protect the health and welfare of the citizens of the US. Massachusetts, with coastline, has an interest in the increasing height of oceans and the massive change in weather as witnessed by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in recent years.
The fact that EPA stated that to regulate auto emissions would hurt the economy and was not in the best interest of the administration does not mean that EPA does not have a mandate to do so. EPA is suppose to be an independent agency that protects. It is not to be a tool to be manipulated.
I applaud the Supreme Court ruling and the five forward seeing justices who, in the assenting to the opinion of the Court, found that EPA should set regulations for auto emissions.
Posted in Just my Thoughts, Politics | No Comments »
Posted by momto6 on 2 April 2007
Okay, so I am told by the news, that opening day has happened. I use to love baseball. I can remember watching games - any games - as a teenager and keeping box scores in a notebook. That all changed in 94 due to the “work stoppage.”
I am one of those baseball fans that found other things to do after a bunch of spoiled, multi-million dollar players and owners fought over who was getting a raw deal. Top that off with a rising scandal involving steroids and baseball, at least at the major league level, holds no glory or interest for me.
I do still watch some minor league ball. A nearby city is the AAA Mets affiliate. Many players who now play in NYC were once in Binghamton. My 12 year old son loves to go to the ball game. While opening day is this week, I think the snow will keep me from getting tickets but I will consider a trip to the ball park the next week if the weather holds.
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Posted by momto6 on 1 April 2007
Today starts what is arguably the most important week of the Christian year. Palm Sunday marks the beginning of Holy Week. As Christians are a people of the risen Christ, Easter and His resurrection are the most important time of the church year.
Palm Sunday marks Jesus’s triumphant ride into Jerusalem. At this time as Christians around the world celebrate, this year so do our Jewish brothers and sisters as Passover begins at sundown tomorrow.
Thursday is one of my favorite services of the church year - the celebration of the last supper or the first eucharist. Christianity is like that a last is actually a first in a lot of ways. While this marks the anniversary of the last time Jesus would be with His disciples in this life, it marked the first time He would share His body and blood with them also. This is a basic tenet of Catholicism and a special weekly celebration in the church. There is no time like Holy Thursday, often in other sects of Christianity called Maundy Thursday, to celebrate before the horrible acts of the following day.
Good Friday is a complex day. I have often wondered how a day where the world lost, and yet also gained, its Saviour could be called good. The horrible things that happened on Good Friday are to always be remembered because they led to the wonderful resurrection. Jesus had truly done no harm. I am sure as a child, teen and young man He had annoyed those older than He but He had not done anything wrong. Yet, those people who did not know better, who did not believe sentenced Him to death.
As a young person who was raised an Episcopalian, I can remember Good Friday services. They were long. They started at noon and went until three o’clock. The significance was brought out in the readings done that day. Now, as an adult Catholic - a convert during those searching years of college, I attend a communion service and veneration of the cross at 3 pm on Friday. Then, my church - which hosts Stations of the Cross every Friday in Lent - holds a special Stations of the Cross at 7 or 7:30 pm. This time the stations are done Mary’s way. I did the readings for this one year. They are very hard to read as they are very much from a mother’s point of view. I still have a hard time just listening to them. These stations, not only done from Mary’s point of view, are also done backwards - from Christ’s death on the cross to his sentencing to death.
The celebration of light and life at the Easter Vigil Mass is the most wonderful mass of the entire year. First, as a convert, this mass holds special meaning as it is when new converts become Catholic. Second, it holds that special confirmation that we are a people of the risen Christ. It embodies all we believe in as Christians.
My next favorite mass will be Sunday, Easter morning. The children’s choir will celebrate in a more youthful manner. The church will be decked out in balloons and other symbols - mostly of new life - that children enjoy and understand. There will be butterflies and the children will sing at mass.
My thoughts and prayers, of course, will be with all my family and friends as we enter this glorious week.
Posted in Just my Thoughts, Religion | Tagged: catholicism, easter, goodfriday, holythursday, holyweek, stationsofthecross | No Comments »