(Pagan) News of Note
My semi-regular round-up of articles, essays, and opinions of note for discerning Pagans and Heathens.
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reports on the wide array of weddings of Eureka Springs, “Wedding Capital of the South”. This includes weddings with Pagan elements.
“Eureka Springs supports both a hippie community and a strong conservative Christian population. The town simultaneously boasts weekly gay and lesbian events and a museum dedicated to creationism…Lewis tells of a half-Christian, half-pagan wedding performed by a nondenominational minister that ended with a pagan broom-jumping. Other couples forgo throwing rice, instead tossing fish food into the transparent lagoon, while some couples release butterflies.”
The Rocky Mountain News reports that two people died at the recent Pagan festival Dragonfest in Colorado.
“Two people died during a “neo-pagan” festival near Wellington Lake in rural Jefferson County during the weekend, apparently of natural causes, authorities said Monday…One woman in her 50s died of a heart attack on Saturday, according to the Jefferson County Coroner’s Office. A man was discovered dead on Monday morning, also of apparent natural causes, authorities said.”
How can you tell that same-sex marriage proponents are full of “resentment” towards traditional couples and shouldn’t be supported? Well one reason for American Spectator writer Mark Tooley is the Pagans.
“In fact, they [conservatives] suspect, the ultimate goal is to set aside marriage altogether as a repressive and patriarchal anachronism. In its absence, all consensual sexual arrangements will be legitimate. The suspicions will find confirmation in a new statement from a coalition of sexual pioneers…the several hundred signatories include a predictable list of homosexual rights advocates, sexologists, self-professed pagans, and practitioners of polyamory…”
Wired News looks at piezoelectrics (electrical energy from applied pressure to crystals) and pokes fun at some of the “New Age” elements that have become advocates for it.
“It’s a subject that attracts its fair share of New Age cranks. The message board on acid-fried neo-pagan rock star Julian Cope’s site, for instance, speculates, with parapsychologist Paul Deveraux, that Megalithic monuments may have been located near fault lines because seismic activity causes piezoelectric crystals to flash and glow. Some even think the mysterious lights at Marfa, Texas, may be due to piezo activity.”
In a final note, for those interested in following the ongoing conversation about the future of Reclaiming check out recent posts (and comments) at M. Macha NightMare’s blog and Deborah Oak’s blog.
Have a good day!
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