H'rumphs

Ed Spivey Jr. 1-01-2005
I'm the one usually throwing things at the TV.
Ed Spivey Jr. 12-01-2004
I'd miss the good old days, but they were before my time.
Ed Spivey Jr. 11-01-2004
We'll miss much about the election season. Or not.
Ed Spivey Jr. 10-01-2004
I've always wanted a lawyer. I have a plumber, but it's not the same.
Ed Spivey Jr. 9-01-2004
Funerals need to be a little more balanced, with time for rebuttal.
Ed Spivey Jr. 8-01-2004
It's that special season again.
Ed Spivey Jr. 7-01-2004

Being a resident of our country's last colony, Washington, D.C. ("Doesn't Count"), it's hard to approach this political season with anything but a jaded, albeit cynical, pessimism. Like most Iraqis, I am waiting for self-rule to be established in my hometown, and to experience "democracy," this new thing I keep hearing about where citizens have, like, a vote.

Fortunately, there are other benefits to living in the nation's capital, although I can't think of any right now because I'm too busy not drinking the water, which you shouldn't, on account of the lead, which there's too much of. (Of all the things I've taught my children, it's irony that I'm most proud of. For example, my youngest just came home from Central America, and when she got back to D.C. I had to warn her not to drink the water here.)

To compensate for an absence of meaningful political participation, I have for years taken an interest in the congressional district of my youth in Indiana (motto: One Man, One Gun). I watch with jealousy as voters in my former district, after first receiving instructions from the Republican Party, exercise their right to vote. Hoosiers, as they are called - there's a story to that name, but it's really boring - are a devoutly conservative lot who, for example, believe the only foreign aid we give should be shipments of bootstraps so recipients can...well, you know.

The 8th District of Indiana, where I spent my formative years, is currently represented by Rep. John Hostettler, a fine Republican who was recently detained at an airport. Details are sketchy, so I'm not sure whether it was his laptop computer, his cell phone, or the loaded 9 mm semiautomatic handgun in his briefcase that caused concern among the security personnel.

Ed Spivey Jr. 6-01-2004
Having recently been diagnosed with a rare and troubling medical condition-

Having recently been diagnosed with a rare and troubling medical condition—late-onset maturity—it has become unavoidable that I begin to take the world and its woes more seriously.

Ed Spivey Jr. 5-01-2004
I pulled dramatically into the office parking lot, turned off the ignition and coasted to a stop, the powerful engine reluctantly emitting its final throaty rumble.
Ed Spivey Jr. 4-01-2004

As we enter the heart of the political season and brace ourselves for the spectacle of two grown men competing for the favor of a nation...

Ed Spivey Jr. 3-01-2004

This being our special issue on the environment, I must preface my remarks about wanting to strangle the squirrel in my bedroom wall...

Ed Spivey Jr. 2-01-2004
The Bible has one problem: They left out half the good stuff.
Ed Spivey Jr. 1-01-2004

As I begin my 30th year at Sojourners, it seems appropriate to take a modest look back at the enormous impact I have had on the magazine...

Ed Spivey Jr. 11-01-2003

Without guns, one cannot shoot things, where would that leave us?

Ed Spivey Jr. 9-01-2003
'Set small goals, and then put them off for as long as you can.'
Ed Spivey Jr. 7-01-2003

It's morning in Iraq, or, depending on your time zone, afternoon. Then again, it could be late at night, and you're wondering where the day went.

Ed Spivey Jr. 5-01-2003
What would Jesus do? Turn the police horses into bunnies.
Ed Spivey Jr. 3-01-2003

Remember the TV commercial where a man is walking down a dark city street and nervously glances back at two shadowy figures?

Ed Spivey Jr. 1-01-2003

As our nation prepares for war against—depending on the mood of the president—al Qaeda, Iraq, or unnecessarily big words (such as "civil liberties"), it is a sober time in America.

Ed Spivey Jr. 11-01-2002

Why can't really scary diseases have really scary and obvious symptoms?