Posted on 10/26/2006 11:33:11 AM PDT by RileyD, nwJ
"Church of the Apostates" - well noted, indeed.
I have not seen over the years - decades - any indication that Strickland is carrying out ministerial duties or functions, particularly of the United Methodist Church, in any shape or form.
Seems like someone might ask him what church he regularly attends - or does he attend any?
His public bio shows no ministerial functions or aspects after he returned to school to get an advanced degree in psychology.
I have seen no outward expression of his religious beliefs, whatever these may be. He is pleasant enough in person. But he is assuredly a politician and a liberal, and of course takes delight in announcing any programs that his office can claim he had a hand in - he doesn't really seemed to have generated many.
He has strong allegiance to the Party and to organized labor. He will be an absolutely strong proponent of the OEA - the (very) powerful teachers' union - and almost assuredly anti - charter and anti - home schooling; but will go at the latter two indirectly.
He has visited an Unitarian church in s. e. Ohio on occasion, apparently to be a guest lay speaker. Maybe he has gone to other churches - I never heard about it.
Thanks. Had lost the link to the study.
I do not believe this man deserves your defense. He never spoke out against the conclusions of this studay. Never. Instead he chose to speak out against those who did speak out against the study.
As an analyst I am always interested in the details - the actual data. But at the same time I am very aware how data can all to often be sorted/sifted/adjusted to fit a desired conclusion.
There is a link elsewhere in the postings to this study. Read it. It is not a study. It is a self serving attempt to normalize adult-child sex. Nothing more. Nothing less.
It is not even a study. It is a discussion among those willing to discuss the possibility of adult-child sex being a positive experience. Consider who would participate in such a discussion.
This discussion was/is morally repugnant. Only someone without a moral foundation would find this to be anything close to a 'scientific study'.
Granted, most of those of voted for the resolution probably had not read the so-called scientific study. However, it is most likely someone on their staff had read it and could without question recommend supporting the resolution condemning the study.
This could have been regulated to the dusty bins of what often pretends to be science in psychology. Examples? Alien abduction therapy. Past life therapy. Recovered memory therapy. These represent only 3 of the over 400 various psychotherapies on the market today. On the market. To understand the market mentality of psychotherapy see the book "MANUFACTURING VICTIMS: What the Psychology Industry is Doing to People" by Dr. Tana Dineen.
Bottom line: Something is missing from Ted Strickland. That something appears to be a moral compass.
Cheers!
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