PRK lawmakers gets stupider by the day

Status
Not open for further replies.

Desertdog

Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2002
Messages
1,980
Location
Ridgecrest Ca
Friday, January 16, 2004

YOUR GOVERNMENT AT WORK
Lawmaker: Put feng shui in building code
Californian wants state commission to push ancient Chinese practice
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=36619
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: January 16, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Ron Strom

© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
A Democratic California legislator has introduced a resolution that would urge state officials to include the principles of feng shui in the California Building Standards Code, which is used in the design of public buildings.

The legislation, ACR 144, was introduced last week by Assemblyman Leland Y. Yee of San Francisco.

Feng shui is an ancient Chinese practice that encourages the correct design of living spaces so people can experience "a positive energy environment," according to the bill. The legislation would urge the California Building Standards Commission to adopt building standards that "promote feng shui principles and publish these standards in the California Building Standards Code."

While detractors of feng shui link it to the New Age movement and spirituality, supports claim it is strictly a science.

The website of the American Feng Shui Institute states: "Feng shui is not related to any religion or belief system. It is a scientific discipline based on the analysis of energy."

The Skeptic's Dictionary's Robert Todd Carroll criticizes the practice.

"Feng shui has become a kind of architectural acupuncture: Wizards and magi insert themselves into buildings or landscapes and use their metaphysical sensors to detect the flow of good and bad 'energy,'" Carroll writes. "These masters for hire declare where bathrooms should go, which way doorways should face, where mirrors should hang, which room needs green plants and which one needs red flowers, which direction the head of the bed should face, etc. They decide these things on the basis of their feel for the flow of chi (universal life force), electromagnetic fields or whatever other form of energy the client will worry about."

Stating the practice began with the royal families of China thousands of years ago, Yee's resolution claims "feng shui advocates living in harmony with the Earth's environment and its energy lines, so that there is a proper balance between the forces of nature."

The text of the legislation says several designers and companies have used feng shui principles, including Citibank, N.M. Rothschild, Shell and Sime Darby.

"The structure of a building can affect a person's mood," states the proposed legislation, "which can influence a person's behavior, which, in turn, can determine the success of a person's personal and professional relationships. … The aim of feng shui architecture is to study how the environment in which people live may affect their lives and influence their quality of life."

Adam Keigwin, press secretary for Yee, emphasized the bill is simply a "recommendation" to the California Building Standards Commission, not a directive.

Keigwin says the benefits of feng shui have been "scientifically proven."

"We’ve seen evidence that it creates a more productive work environment," Keigwin told WND.

The spokesman said he wasn't aware of any religious connections to feng shui, saying it was "more the architectural aspects" that Yee is interested in promoting.

Keigwin predicts that since the legislation is only a recommendation in resolution form, it will not "get much debate" in the California Assembly.

Yee's website features a photo of the assemblyman and feng shui expert Jian Jun Lee.

A colleague of Yee had a good laugh when asked about the resolution.

"This is California. What can you say?" said Assemblyman Ray Haynes, R-Temecula, after an extended chuckle.

"I love Leland Yee; he's a nice guy," Haynes told WND. "But he's really stepped out there on this one."

Haynes said downplaying the impact of the legislation by saying it is only a "recommendation" is disingenuous.

"[The California Building Standards Commission] ignores our request at their own peril," he said, noting the Legislature is the "boss" of the panel.

"The purpose of building codes is to promote public safety and public health," he said. "Whether or not someone follows the principles of feng shui should be an individual choice and not the subject of regulation."

Marcia Montenegro believes feng shui has a strong spiritual component and warns Christians about the practice on the website Christian Answers for the New Age:

"Feng shui operates entirely on the belief in balancing yin and yang and in the belief of chi. To seek harmony through a balance of yin and yang energies is at odds with trusting Christ and with the peace we have through Christ. To accept chi, one must discard the Christian God who is a personal God, not an impersonal force. There is no biblical evidence for a force permeating the universe. It is entirely inconsistent with Christianity to believe that harmony and balance result through the manipulation and channeling of a force based on the placement of objects, or through any other method. In fact, techniques to manipulate or channel such a force belong to the world of sorcery."

Other Christians are less concerned about feng shui. Writer Julie McGuinness says Christians can use the "practical hints" offered by the philosophy.

"Finding ways to bring order and harmony into our surroundings can certainly help us to express our God-given creativity. Through a beautiful and thoughtfully arranged home we can offer a welcoming and peaceful place for others to enjoy," McGuiness writes in Woman Alive magazine.

Haynes mentioned he puts together "Nosey Awards" each year, "honoring" what he sees as the most intrusive legislation introduced in California. He says Yee's resolution is "vying for the most intrusive bill this year."

Concluded Haynes, "This makes California look like a bunch of flakes to the rest of the nation."
 
Yes, this is pretty stupid.

"Feng shui is not related to any religion or belief system. It is a scientific discipline based on the analysis of energy."

That statement in particular is pretty funny.


My wife has a blackbelt in home decor and I have picked up a few things from her.

What feels "right" to one person may feel totally wrong to another. We just hate the new houses the build in most places with rooms that run together. They seem to think that everyone is beggin for "open floor plans" but we prefer discrete rooms.

Design, decor and fashion are highly subjective subject matters that have much to do with culture and history and very little to do with science.

Oh, and how is this gun related?

I think we should all just stipulate that PRK lawmakers are "dummer'n rocks" and be done with it.
 
I was so peeved I shot this email.

Hi Mr. Yee,

I would like to express my dissapointment in your duty as Assemblyman, you clearly have gone too far with this idiotic piece of legislation (ACR144), I will be sure that your name stands out on my ballot next election so that I can vote for someone else. We dont need more politicians wasting money on meaningless issues.
 
Oh yes, I forgot.

Unfortunately, I am probably going to be moving back to CA.

I like the homes in Texas much better.

Besides getting twice the home for half the money, they seem less enamored with the whole "open floor plan" concept.

They still got it, but to less of an extreme...


We hated the floor plan in our CA home - but one agent told us his client thought we had EXCELLENT Feng Shuei (sp) - he came this close to buying it...


We like the classic styles - Tudors, Victorians, Classic Farmhouse, etc - something with some mill work and detail.
 
Requiring Feng Shui in your building code is NO sillier than specifying how many cartridges are allowed in a spring loaded box.. :rolleyes:
 
"The purpose of building codes is to promote public safety and public health," he said. "Whether or not someone follows the principles of feng shui should be an individual choice and not the subject of regulation."

The building code already goes too far. This would take it over the edge.

Requiring Feng Shui in your building code is NO sillier than specifying how many cartridges are allowed in a spring loaded box.

Very good :)
 
Uh, it actually IS sillier.

If you set a 10 round mag limit, anyone can tell when you are in our out of compliance.

If you require "feng sheui" in a building, who decides when you are in our out of compliance?

Do you bring out someone to "scientifically" "analyze" the "energy" ?

:rolleyes:
 
Silly? No, not at all.

And we should import a few thousand People's Republic of China of inspectors to make sure California is in compliance. Sounds as if it has true national potential. Another gesture to our friends abroad to show we are a "welcoming nation."

In a few years I firmly expect the National Hanging Flower Basket Act to prove to our southern neighbors that we know good friends when we see them.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top