Saturday, August 31, 2013

#626 (8/31) Is Our Most Pro-Abortion President Actually the Most PRO-LIFE Catalyst Ever?

URGENT PRAYER REQUEST: "Syrian Christians Brace for Strike, Ask for Prayer," - by Gary Lane, August 31, http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/Syrian-Christians-Brace-for-Strike-Ask-for-Prayer/"As Syrians brace themselves for a possible U.S. military attack, many of the county's Christians are praying for divine intervention. They say military action against the Assad regime will only bring them greater hardship and suffering and they're asking Christians worldwide to pray that God intervenes to bring peace to their nation. They believe the collective prayers of Christians around the world could reverse an escalating conflict..."      

SPECIAL PRAYER REQUEST: Do you recall the difficulty of trying to share your faith with a loved one? Well, a friend of mine, David, hopes to do so sometime over the next few days with his widowed elderly Mom. Would you please take a moment and pray for David?  Thank you. - Stan]

URGENT PRAYER REQUEST- Update on Kenneth Bae: "US Ready to Bargain with N. Korea for Bae's Release,"-  CBNNews.com,  Aug 14, 2013  http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/S-Ready-to-Bargain-with-N-Korea-for-Baes-Release/  - The United States is willing to engage North Korea to secure the release of imprisoned American Christian Kenneth Bae. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States is "willing to consider a number of different options" to bring him home.In a video recently released by a North Korean newspaper, Bae requested the United States send a high-ranking official to North Korea to seek his pardon. It is unclear if he spoke of his own volition in the video. Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for sharing his faith. He suffers health problems such as diabetes and is currently hospitalized.[PRAY for 1) God's healing of and presence with Pastor Bae, 2) His earliest release by the North Korean government, and 3) God's comfort for his family and friends.] 

UPDATE: Iran Rejects Saeed's Appeal, Family 'Devastated' , CBNNews.com, August 27, 2013   http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/Iran-Rejects-Saeeds-Appeal-Family-Devastated/ "By keeping the 8-year prison sentence in place, Pastor Saeed, now potentially faces additional beatings and abuse inside Evin Prison -- treatment that has significantly weakened him during his first year in prison,"....{
Abandoned” For Christ" - Graham Calls On White House To Support Abedini - By Dr. Tom Askew, Aug.8,  http://www.presidentialprayerteam.com/opinion

Franklin Graham is the latest to join the chorus of voices calling for U.S. State Department and White House officials to take a more vocal role in protesting the Iranian imprisonment of American pastor Saeed Abedini. September 26 will mark the one year anniversary of Abedini’s imprisonment for allegedly “endangering the national security” of Iran.

Graham pointed out that, in contrast to Iranian accusations, “Pastor Saeed was in Iran trying to help children. With the permission of Iran’s government, he was working to build an orphanage. But his humanitarian mission led to an arrest on bogus charges and nearly a year of inhumane treatment, simply because he loves Jesus Christ.”...

Behind the scenes, more than 600,000 people around the world have signed a petition sponsored by ACLJ in support of pastor Abedini. A concerted movement this past May brought together Christians from many nations to set aside Pentecost to pray for Abedini. On June 13, demonstrations were held at Iranian embassies in at least six countries to protest Abedini’s treatment. And, on July 29, Arizona Republican Representative Trent Franks spoke on the floor of the House to urge other Congressmen to join him in “adopting” Pastor Abedini through the bipartisan Defending Freedoms Project.

Saeed’s response…and yours - Through his family living in Iran, Pastor Abedini has been made aware of these efforts on his behalf, and is grateful. “I heard that the persecution, my arrest and imprisonment has united churches from different denominations, from different cities and countries. That the churches have united together in prayer to put one request (my freedom) on one day (Pentecost) before God,” he wrote in a letter.

The story of Saeed Abedini, the jihad against Syrian Christians, the attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, and the ongoing desecration of churches in Nigeria and India should cause every American to reflect on the blessings of freedom still enjoyed in this nation.
PRAY: - For comfort and peace for Saeed’s wife and children here in the U.S.
- For a strong witness and testimony from Pastor Abedini in the prison where God has placed him
- For Christians around the world who are being persecuted for their faith in Christ
- BOLDly (Beside Our Leaders Daily) for leadership from the White House and State Department in defending the freedoms of Abedini and other Americans
Go to SaveSaeed.org to sign a petition over 600,000 others asking for his immediate release.
----------------------------------------------------------------
"Obama’s Legacy: Pro-Abortion President or Catalyst for Pro-Life Action?,"by Susan Michelle Tyrrell |LifeNews.com | 8/29/13;  http://www.lifenews.com/2013/08/29/obamas-legacy-pro-abortion-president-or-catalyst-for-pro-life-action/[AS I SEE IT - In President Obama, I hear again what God said through Joseph: "You [Satan] intended to harm me [the unborn], but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives."(Gen. 50:20) Join me in PRAYING even now, that as a result of next year's elections, we will have a solidly pro-life US Senate and after the election of 2016, a passionately pro-life President. If all of that results in just ONE less baby being murdered through abortion in America, than it will have been well worth seeing happen. - Stan]

Remember those times Barack Obama was elected as president of the United States and a bunch of pro-lifers insisted that abortion would expand under his hands and it was the end of the world? Yeah. That didn’t happen.

Make no mistake: His abortion record speaks for itself and it’s not a very pretty picture. His affection toward Planned Parenthood is almost embarrassing, and his support for abortion rights is unlike any president we have seen. But the thing about extremists is that they tend to prick the consciences of others — in both directions — and in this case, history will show that electing a pro-abortion president probably helped the cause of the pro-life movement more than if we hadn’t.

The Huffington Post reports on this phenomena in this article, entitled, “Anti-Abortion Laws Take Dramatic Toll On Clinics Nationwide,” which details the increased number of abortion clinic closing “since a heavy wave of legislative attacks on providers began in 2010, according to The Huffington Post’s nationwide survey of state health departments, abortion clinics and local abortion-focused advocacy groups.”

The story reports: "At least 54 abortion providers across 27 states have shut down or ended their abortion services in the past three years, and several more clinics are only still open because judges have temporarily blocked legislation that would make it difficult for them to continue to operate."

And even the abortion industry says this isn’t the usual ebb and flow of business: “This kind of change is incredibly dramatic,” said Elizabeth Nash, state issues manager at the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive health research organization. “What we’ve been seeing since 1982 was a slow decline, but this kind of change … [is] so different from what’s happened in the past.”

Indeed, this dramatic decrease in abortion facilities, is such a tragedy to the abortion industry that NARAL, one of the most vocal abortion rights groups n the nation, thinks it’s having a very bad dream.“This has turned into a nightmare,” said Kat Sabine, executive director of NARAL’s Arizona affiliate. “The kind of efforts the women have to take to get family planning or abortion services are just incredible, and you can only get care if you can get out of the community to do it. If you’re on a reservation or rural part of the state, unless you have reliable transportation, you’re not going to get care.” The report continues to detail other alleged problems like the (very reasonable in all other aspects of medicine) norm of waiting periods between an abortion consultation and an abortion, noting 26 states require at least 24 hour waiting periods. But abortion advocates call the access to abortion a problem of equality for woman too, saying some women can afford to take off work, have reliable cars to travel to get abortions, and have other access to some lofty “abortion privilege.”

The reality is that the abortion industry wants an “all abortion all the time” clause so that every woman who even has a passing thought about abortion can be hustle to a corner clinic and kill the baby before the mom has time to actually ponder her decision. In no other industry is an impulsive life-altering decisions encouraged but in abortion. It’s a shame to us as a culture that we have come to encourage such things without thought or reflection, as if we have become a nation of abortion automatons.

When President Obama was elected the first time in 2008, pro-lifers reacted swiftly, and by the 2010 midterm elections, hope and change had actually come in the form of pro-lifers fighting for the rights of the unborn and enacting legislation that would battle the new president’s abortion support.

Only history will tell of the ultimate outcome, but so far the winner of the 2008 and 2012 elections was actually the unborn, some of whom got to live because sleepy people woke up from the reality that we had just elected someone who supported virtually all abortion.

While we long for pro-life leaders who help work with us to shape laws rather than those against whom we have to work to create new laws, we must realize that sometimes what seems to be the end is just the beginning. We have an opportunity to continue working so that after 2016 we will look back and see that, indeed, the nation’s most pro-life years post-Roe. V. Wade were actually the 8 years we were led by a man who supported abortion in all forms.

[bold and italics emphasis mine]

NOTE: Susan Michelle Tyrrell is the editor of Bound4Life’s blog. This column originally appeared at Live Action News.

"Planned Parenthood Abortion Business Has Closed 24 Clinics in 2013,"by Cheryl Sullenger | Washington, DC | LifeNews.com | 8/23/13  http://www.lifenews.com/2013/08/23/planned-parenthood-abortion-business-has-closed-23-clinics-in-2013/ "Planned Parenthood offices across the nation have closed this year at a record rate, according to data compiled by Operation Rescue. At least 24 Planned Parenthood sites have closed in so far in 2013. This number includes 3 surgical abortion clinics, 3 clinics that dispensed abortion pills, and 19 offices that referred for abortions...."

Friday, August 30, 2013

#625 (8/30) Why The Talk About the U.S. Attacking Syria, and Why Launching Missles Is A Bad Idea

SPECIAL PRAYER REQUEST: Do you recall the difficulty of trying to share your faith with a loved one? Well, a friend of mine, David, hopes to do so sometime over the next few days with his widowed elderly Mom. Would you please take a moment and pray for David?  Thank you. - Stan]

URGENT PRAYER REQUEST- Update on Kenneth Bae: "US Ready to Bargain with N. Korea for Bae's Release,"-  CBNNews.com,  Aug 14, 2013  http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/S-Ready-to-Bargain-with-N-Korea-for-Baes-Release/  - The United States is willing to engage North Korea to secure the release of imprisoned American Christian Kenneth Bae. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States is "willing to consider a number of different options" to bring him home.In a video recently released by a North Korean newspaper, Bae requested the United States send a high-ranking official to North Korea to seek his pardon. It is unclear if he spoke of his own volition in the video. Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for sharing his faith. He suffers health problems such as diabetes and is currently hospitalized.[PRAY for 1) God's healing of and presence with Pastor Bae, 2) His earliest release by the North Korean government, and 3) God's comfort for his family and friends.] 

UPDATE: Iran Rejects Saeed's Appeal, Family 'Devastated' , CBNNews.com, August 27, 2013   http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/Iran-Rejects-Saeeds-Appeal-Family-Devastated/ "By keeping the 8-year prison sentence in place, Pastor Saeed, now potentially faces additional beatings and abuse inside Evin Prison -- treatment that has significantly weakened him during his first year in prison,"....{
Abandoned” For Christ" - Graham Calls On White House To Support Abedini - By Dr. Tom Askew, Aug.8,  http://www.presidentialprayerteam.com/opinion

Franklin Graham is the latest to join the chorus of voices calling for U.S. State Department and White House officials to take a more vocal role in protesting the Iranian imprisonment of American pastor Saeed Abedini. September 26 will mark the one year anniversary of Abedini’s imprisonment for allegedly “endangering the national security” of Iran.

Graham pointed out that, in contrast to Iranian accusations, “Pastor Saeed was in Iran trying to help children. With the permission of Iran’s government, he was working to build an orphanage. But his humanitarian mission led to an arrest on bogus charges and nearly a year of inhumane treatment, simply because he loves Jesus Christ.”...

Behind the scenes, more than 600,000 people around the world have signed a petition sponsored by ACLJ in support of pastor Abedini. A concerted movement this past May brought together Christians from many nations to set aside Pentecost to pray for Abedini. On June 13, demonstrations were held at Iranian embassies in at least six countries to protest Abedini’s treatment. And, on July 29, Arizona Republican Representative Trent Franks spoke on the floor of the House to urge other Congressmen to join him in “adopting” Pastor Abedini through the bipartisan Defending Freedoms Project.

Saeed’s response…and yours - Through his family living in Iran, Pastor Abedini has been made aware of these efforts on his behalf, and is grateful. “I heard that the persecution, my arrest and imprisonment has united churches from different denominations, from different cities and countries. That the churches have united together in prayer to put one request (my freedom) on one day (Pentecost) before God,” he wrote in a letter.

The story of Saeed Abedini, the jihad against Syrian Christians, the attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, and the ongoing desecration of churches in Nigeria and India should cause every American to reflect on the blessings of freedom still enjoyed in this nation.
PRAY: - For comfort and peace for Saeed’s wife and children here in the U.S.
- For a strong witness and testimony from Pastor Abedini in the prison where God has placed him
- For Christians around the world who are being persecuted for their faith in Christ
- BOLDly (Beside Our Leaders Daily) for leadership from the White House and State Department in defending the freedoms of Abedini and other Americans
Go to SaveSaeed.org to sign a petition over 600,000 others asking for his immediate release.
----------------------------------------------------------------

"What to Do in Syria," - By Amy Payne, August 29, 2013 
Reports are rampant that the Obama Administration will call for U.S. missile strikes against the regime in Syria at any time now. That country is embroiled in a civil war, with opposition forces fighting dictator Bashar al-Assad. The U.S. has interests to protect in the region, but becoming directly involved in this civil war isn’t the answer [1], Heritage experts say. And the question of what to do in the conflict isn’t as simple as giving aid to the Syrian people, because Islamist terrorist groups are blending with the opposition and jockeying for power.

Heritage Middle East expert James Phillips has called the Obama Administration’s policy on Syria “a strategic and moral failure [2].” Here, Phillips and Heritage’s E. W. Richardson Fellow, James Carafano, answer some key questions about the Obama Administration’s current decision point.

Why is President Obama talking about using U.S. military force in Syria?
Assad has reportedly used chemical weapons against his own people, killing hundreds in an August 21 attack. This attack came a year after President Obama stated that chemical weapons use would be a “red line” that would trigger more active U.S. involvement.

Since Assad reportedly crossed the “red line,” what is happening now?
Reports of chemical attacks in December [3] and March [4] indicated that the Assad regime was testing the Administration’s red line, but the White House slow-walked [5] its investigation into the attacks to buy time to formulate a response. Now, Assad has defiantly called Obama’s bluff. Boxed in by the President’s statements on the red line, the Administration has struggled to respond.
The fact that the Administration remains in disarray about how to respond more than a year after the President laid down his parameters is a disturbing sign that does not inspire confidence. The National Security Council staff should have hammered out a response plan before the President put his own credibility—and that of the United States—on the line.

What should America be doing?
We should not be doing missile strikes [1], as many reports have indicated could be a possibility.
Al-Qaeda and other Islamist groups have been the principal beneficiaries of Obama’s passive, “hands-off” approach to the worsening Syria crisis. The Obama Administration urgently needs to develop a strategy [2] not only to counter Assad’s use of chemical weapons but prevent those weapons from falling into the hands of al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, or other Islamist terrorist groups that have flocked to Syria. Rather than attempting to intervene directly in the conflict, the U.S. should be working with other countries in the region to hasten the end of the Assad regime and deal with the refugee crisis and terrorist strongholds..

[portions above only in bold my emphasis]

Article printed from The Foundry: Conservative Policy News Blog from The Heritage Foundation: http://blog.heritage.org; URL to article: http://blog.heritage.org/2013/08/29/morning-bell-what-to-do-in-syria/

URLs in this post:
[1] becoming directly involved in this civil war isn’t the answer: http://blog.heritage.org/2013/08/25/top-5-reasons-not-to-use-missile-strikes-in-syria/
[2] a strategic and moral failure: http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2013/05/syria-s-chemical-weapons-us-should-engage-syria-s-opposition-to-defuse-threat
[3] December: http://blog.heritage.org/2012/12/05/syrian-crisis-escalates-amid-renewed-concern-over-chemical-weapons/
[4] March: http://blog.heritage.org/2013/03/20/new-report-of-syrian-chemical-weapons-attack-as-president-obama-lands-in-israel/
[5] slow-walked: http://blog.heritage.org/2013/06/09/syria-obama-administration-slow-walks-decision-on-chemical-weapons/
[6] Heritage Libertad: http://www.libertad.org/
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Top 5 Reasons Not to Use Missile Strikes in Syria," - by James Carafano On August 25, 2013 

There are press reports that the White House is considering missile strikes on the Assad regime in Syria to punish it for the use of chemical weapons. That is a bad idea for five reasons.

1. The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine is not adequate justification for direct military intervention. This dangerous doctrine, promoted at the United Nations, undermines U.S. sovereignty by arguing for an obligation of nations to intervene. As Heritage’s legal expert on sovereignty matters, Steve Groves, explains [1]: ''a doctrine that compels the United States to act to prevent atrocities occurring in other countries would be risky and imprudent. U.S. independence—hard won by the Founders and successive generations of Americans—would be compromised if the United States consented to be legally bound by the R2P doctrine. The United States needs to preserve its national sovereignty by maintaining a monopoly on the decision to deploy diplomatic pressure, economic sanctions, political coercion, and especially its military forces.

2. A vital U.S. interest is not at stake. The U.S. does have an interest in the resolution of the conflict, but military force should be reserved for areas where the U.S. has a compelling need to act in defense of its own interests. There are other and more prudent options [2] for advancing U.S. interests to help resolve the conflict.

3. It would not be a wise use of military force. Military force should be used only if there is a clear, achievable, realistic purpose. Missile strikes are unlikely to deter the Assad regime and prevent further abuses. Rather, the U.S. risks escalating its involvement in the crisis.

4. Missile attacks would only make President Obama look weaker. Much like President Clinton’s ineffective cruise missile strikes on Osama bin Laden’s terrorist camps, strikes would only be seen as a sign that the U.S. is lacking a clear, decisive course of action. The Middle East would see this as another effort from the Obama Administration to look for an “easy button” and lead from behind rather than exercise real, constructive leadership.

5. It would distract from what the U.S. should be doing. Rather than attempting to intervene directly in the conflict, the U.S. should be working in a concerted manner with other countries in the region to hasten the end of the Assad regime and deal with the refugee crisis, the resurgence of al-Qaeda, and the destabilizing efforts of Iran and Hezbollah.

[all portions in bold alone my emphasis]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Article printed from The Foundry: Conservative Policy News Blog from The Heritage Foundation: http://blog.heritage.org; URL to article: http://blog.heritage.org/2013/08/25/top-5-reasons-not-to-use-missile-strikes-in-syria/

URLs in this post:
[1] explains: http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2008/05/the-us-should-reject-the-un-
responsibility-to-protect-doctrine
[2] other and more prudent options: http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2012/01/us-policy-for-a-post-assad-syria

Thursday, August 29, 2013

#624 (8/29) Post-MLK's Speech: "The New Great American Divide"

SPECIAL PRAYER REQUEST: Do you recall the difficulty of trying to share your faith with a loved one? Well, a friend of mine, David, hopes to do so sometime over the next few days with his widowed elderly Mom. Would you please take a moment and pray for David?  Thank you. - Stan]

URGENT PRAYER REQUEST- Update on Kenneth Bae: "US Ready to Bargain with N. Korea for Bae's Release,"-  CBNNews.com,  Aug 14, 2013  http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/S-Ready-to-Bargain-with-N-Korea-for-Baes-Release/  - The United States is willing to engage North Korea to secure the release of imprisoned American Christian Kenneth Bae. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States is "willing to consider a number of different options" to bring him home.In a video recently released by a North Korean newspaper, Bae requested the United States send a high-ranking official to North Korea to seek his pardon. It is unclear if he spoke of his own volition in the video. Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for sharing his faith. He suffers health problems such as diabetes and is currently hospitalized.[PRAY for 1) God's healing of and presence with Pastor Bae, 2) His earliest release by the North Korean government, and 3) God's comfort for his family and friends.] 

UPDATE: Iran Rejects Saeed's Appeal, Family 'Devastated' , CBNNews.com, August 27, 2013   http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/Iran-Rejects-Saeeds-Appeal-Family-Devastated/ "By keeping the 8-year prison sentence in place, Pastor Saeed, now potentially faces additional beatings and abuse inside Evin Prison -- treatment that has significantly weakened him during his first year in prison,"....{
Abandoned” For Christ" - Graham Calls On White House To Support Abedini - By Dr. Tom Askew, Aug.8,  http://www.presidentialprayerteam.com/opinion

Franklin Graham is the latest to join the chorus of voices calling for U.S. State Department and White House officials to take a more vocal role in protesting the Iranian imprisonment of American pastor Saeed Abedini. September 26 will mark the one year anniversary of Abedini’s imprisonment for allegedly “endangering the national security” of Iran.

Graham pointed out that, in contrast to Iranian accusations, “Pastor Saeed was in Iran trying to help children. With the permission of Iran’s government, he was working to build an orphanage. But his humanitarian mission led to an arrest on bogus charges and nearly a year of inhumane treatment, simply because he loves Jesus Christ.”...

Behind the scenes, more than 600,000 people around the world have signed a petition sponsored by ACLJ in support of pastor Abedini. A concerted movement this past May brought together Christians from many nations to set aside Pentecost to pray for Abedini. On June 13, demonstrations were held at Iranian embassies in at least six countries to protest Abedini’s treatment. And, on July 29, Arizona Republican Representative Trent Franks spoke on the floor of the House to urge other Congressmen to join him in “adopting” Pastor Abedini through the bipartisan Defending Freedoms Project.

Saeed’s response…and yours - Through his family living in Iran, Pastor Abedini has been made aware of these efforts on his behalf, and is grateful. “I heard that the persecution, my arrest and imprisonment has united churches from different denominations, from different cities and countries. That the churches have united together in prayer to put one request (my freedom) on one day (Pentecost) before God,” he wrote in a letter.

The story of Saeed Abedini, the jihad against Syrian Christians, the attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, and the ongoing desecration of churches in Nigeria and India should cause every American to reflect on the blessings of freedom still enjoyed in this nation.
PRAY: - For comfort and peace for Saeed’s wife and children here in the U.S.
- For a strong witness and testimony from Pastor Abedini in the prison where God has placed him
- For Christians around the world who are being persecuted for their faith in Christ
- BOLDly (Beside Our Leaders Daily) for leadership from the White House and State Department in defending the freedoms of Abedini and other Americans
Go to SaveSaeed.org to sign a petition over 600,000 others asking for his immediate release.
----------------------------------------------------------------
"The New Great American Divide," -by MIKE GONZALEZ, August 28, 2013 http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/the_new_great_american_divide_UPEFbcBFF3JioOP1nx0LIM?roi=echo3-16718065190-14427641-9f3be98000251b5e7205c1171a17ec41&utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Morning%2BBell

Here’s one thing that’s not getting a lot of attention this week as we mark the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington: a growing social and economic division that’s hurting minorities. This divide that has more to do with education, values and morals, the cohesion of the family, determination and work ethic than with notions of race that biologists always discounted anyway. These attributes do not respect skin color. 

Mind you, our nation has gone a long way toward meeting the central demand in Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Today we do judge people much more by the content of their character than by the color of their skin. This is an unalloyed good, one we should celebrate.

Set against that this grim fact: Social and economic mobility is stickier today for those starting at the bottom than any time in recent memory. The reasons, however, have more to do with class than with race. Class is the new race.

First a word about definitions: Inequality and economic mobility are related but not the same. We can argue all day whether a fair system increases or reduces inequality. Yet most people along the political spectrum agree that a society is better off when mobility reflects talent. The only people who object to meritocratic mobility are those who are both privileged and untalented.

Yet a major study from the Pew Charitable Trusts’ Economic Mobility Project (which tracks what others have observed) tells us that Americans are more likely than not to stay roughly within the economic segments in which they were raised. This is true at the top, but especially true, and most alarming, for those at the bottom. People raised by parents in the lowest fifth of income are 43 percent likely to stay there; another 27 percent will only move up to the second-lowest fifth. Only 4 percent of those raised at the bottom make it to the top fifth. Many other institutions are looking at the issue of mobility. At The Heritage Foundation we have Stuart Butler, who heads a task force on promoting mobility. The American Enterprise Institute’s Charles Murray is a pioneer on this issue; Robert Putnam at Harvard is also focusing on these worrying trends.

What they’re all finding is that America now has a hardening class system – something more in line with what we think of in Latin America and Europe, not what we think of ourselves. And our situation indeed is different. Unlike in those countries, where government helps the well-born and connected remain entrenched in their privilege, here the government works at the other end: It helps keep people at the bottom trapped there.

Butler lays part of the blame on the 1960s-vintage Great Society programs that began growing the scope of government. The intent was to create a needed safety net for people in dire poverty, but the programs contributed to destroying the human and social capital that people need to build financial capital. Adding to this is the breakdown of our public schools and the collapse of the once-pervasive culture of savings.

As Butler wrote for National Affairs earlier this year, “The programs’ design created perverse incentives, actually discouraging people from taking jobs or getting married—thereby accelerating the disintegration (and discouraging the formation) of married households among the poor.” African-Americans and Hispanics, the intended “beneficiaries” of such programs, have suffered most from the unintended consequences: Their out-of-wedlock-birthrates are now, respectively, 72 percent and 53 percent.

But as Murray’s masterpiece “Coming Apart” showed last year, there are no race barriers at either end of the economic spectrum. Working-class, non-Hispanic whites are also falling victim to the vicious circle of government dependency and family breakup.

We’ve made great advances against racial discrimination in the past half century. Government-ordained racism — the laws that generally went under the heading of “Jim Crow” — has completely stopped, a huge advance we now take for granted. Americans are also much more tolerant of each other than they were before the Civil Rights Movement. (The only exception being schools that practice “affirmative action” and admit people based on race or ethnicity.)

As we mark the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s speech, however, we should note the sad irony of this state of affairs. Instead, we will talk about issues pertinent to a half century ago.

Mike Gonzalez is VP of communications at The Heritage Foundation and a member of its mobility task force. He’s writing a book on Hispanics and mobility.

"I Have a Dream - Who Inspired Martin Luther King, Jr.?,"- by: John Stonestreet;| Breakpoint.org, August 28, 2013  http://www.breakpoint.org/bpcommentaries/breakpoint-commentaries-archive/entry/13/23192?spMailingID=6839915&spUserID=MTMyMjM2ODE5OQS2&spJobID=85774008&spReportId=ODU3NzQwMDgS1



Wednesday, August 28, 2013

#623 (8/28) Remembering the Faith of MLK; Recalling the Historical Context of His Great Speech

SPECIAL PRAYER REQUEST: Do you recall the difficulty of trying to share your faith with a loved one? Well, a friend of mine, David, hopes to do so sometime over the next few days with his widowed elderly Mom. Would you please take a moment and pray for him?  Thank you. - Stan]

URGENT PRAYER REQUEST- Update on Kenneth Bae: "US Ready to Bargain with N. Korea for Bae's Release,"-  CBNNews.com,  Aug 14, 2013  http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/S-Ready-to-Bargain-with-N-Korea-for-Baes-Release/  - The United States is willing to engage North Korea to secure the release of imprisoned American Christian Kenneth Bae. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States is "willing to consider a number of different options" to bring him home.In a video recently released by a North Korean newspaper, Bae requested the United States send a high-ranking official to North Korea to seek his pardon. It is unclear if he spoke of his own volition in the video. Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for sharing his faith. He suffers health problems such as diabetes and is currently hospitalized.[PRAY for 1) God's healing of and presence with Pastor Bae, 2) His earliest release by the North Korean government, and 3) God's comfort for his family and friends.] 

UPDATE: Iran Rejects Saeed's Appeal, Family 'Devastated'CBNNews.com, August 27, 2013   http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/Iran-Rejects-Saeeds-Appeal-Family-Devastated/ "By keeping the 8-year prison sentence in place, Pastor Saeed, now potentially faces additional beatings and abuse inside Evin Prison -- treatment that has significantly weakened him during his first year in prison,"....{
Abandoned” For Christ" - Graham Calls On White House To Support Abedini - By Dr. Tom Askew, Aug.8,  http://www.presidentialprayerteam.com/opinion

Franklin Graham is the latest to join the chorus of voices calling for U.S. State Department and White House officials to take a more vocal role in protesting the Iranian imprisonment of American pastor Saeed Abedini. September 26 will mark the one year anniversary of Abedini’s imprisonment for allegedly “endangering the national security” of Iran.

Graham pointed out that, in contrast to Iranian accusations, “Pastor Saeed was in Iran trying to help children. With the permission of Iran’s government, he was working to build an orphanage. But his humanitarian mission led to an arrest on bogus charges and nearly a year of inhumane treatment, simply because he loves Jesus Christ.”...

Behind the scenes, more than 600,000 people around the world have signed a petition sponsored by ACLJ in support of pastor Abedini. A concerted movement this past May brought together Christians from many nations to set aside Pentecost to pray for Abedini. On June 13, demonstrations were held at Iranian embassies in at least six countries to protest Abedini’s treatment. And, on July 29, Arizona Republican Representative Trent Franks spoke on the floor of the House to urge other Congressmen to join him in “adopting” Pastor Abedini through the bipartisan Defending Freedoms Project.

Saeed’s response…and yours - Through his family living in Iran, Pastor Abedini has been made aware of these efforts on his behalf, and is grateful. “I heard that the persecution, my arrest and imprisonment has united churches from different denominations, from different cities and countries. That the churches have united together in prayer to put one request (my freedom) on one day (Pentecost) before God,” he wrote in a letter.

The story of Saeed Abedini, the jihad against Syrian Christians, the attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, and the ongoing desecration of churches in Nigeria and India should cause every American to reflect on the blessings of freedom still enjoyed in this nation.
PRAY: - For comfort and peace for Saeed’s wife and children here in the U.S.
- For a strong witness and testimony from Pastor Abedini in the prison where God has placed him
- For Christians around the world who are being persecuted for their faith in Christ
- BOLDly (Beside Our Leaders Daily) for leadership from the White House and State Department in defending the freedoms of Abedini and other Americans
Go to SaveSaeed.org to sign a petition over 600,000 others asking for his immediate release.
----------------------------------------------------------------
"Faith in God inspired Martin Luther King, Jr" .  John A. Murray, August 13, 2013 http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013/08/13/martin-luther-king-march-washington-god-column/2650743/ {John A. Murray is headmaster of Fourth Presbyterian School in Potomac, Md.}

[NOTE: Please also read the fascinating article that follows entitled: "King's Speech Impact Less Than Remembered" as it looks at the little recalled historical context of the speech.]

In preparation for the 50th anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, the National Park Service is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to remove a controversial quote on the side of the King Memorial: "I was a drum major for justice, peace and righteousness." Though the inscription was paraphrased from a sermon King delivered in Atlanta, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar endorsed the change after critics denounced it. "The quote makes Dr. Martin Luther King look like an arrogant twit," proclaimed poet Maya Angelou.

If King were alive, would he be less concerned about being called a drum major than he'd be by the omission of any reference to God? Curiously, when the 14 quotes on the inscription wall were chosen for King's memorial, not one mentioned the Inspirer of his faith and courage to challenge the nation's racial injustice of his generation. Can you imagine a Lincoln Memorial without such references as, "With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right"?

What a blessing it would be to include a reference to the Father that motivated not only the King, but the lives of so many men and women He has inspired over the years as well. For me the point is particularly serious, considering the impact the "I Have A Dream" speech had on one of my educational mentors, Chuck Johnston.

As a young teacher in Atlanta's segregated schools, Johnston's original purpose in viewing the 1963 march was not to hear King but instead Peter, Paul, and Mary's performance of Blowin' in the Wind.
Providentially, it would be King's words that would leave the greatest impression on Johnston: "I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood." This proposition stirred the heart of the Georgia native, the great-grandson of a former Mississippi slave owner, who began his teaching career in the 1960s and worked hard to bring about racial reconciliation in the schools he led. I witnessed this firsthand when we served together in the late 1990s, as Johnston diversified the administration, faculty and student body. As a matter of fact, when President Obama recently weighed in on the Trayvon Martin verdict and the need to "bolster and reinforce our African-American boys," I couldn't help but think of Johnston's vision and work.

Johnston answered the president's question — "Is there more that we can do to give them the sense that their country cares about them and values them and is willing to invest in them?" — when he assumed the role as executive director of the Atlanta Youth Academy (AYA) in 2001. Seeking to give underprivileged, inner-city children the opportunity to overcome a difficult upbringing, Johnston shepherded the graduation of nine AYA eighth-grade classes by his retirement in 2012 — none of the students has dropped out of high school, with many matriculating on to college.

Instead of putting God Almighty to the side, Johnston placed Him at the center — embodying St. John's charge, "See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God." And given the August anniversary of the March on Washington, rather than modifying the "drum major" quote, I would recommend one from King's powerful 1963 speech that not only touched the life of Johnston but so many to follow:

"I have a dream … when all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, 'Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!' For that is a Gospel worth etching not only on a memorial but also the hearts of all God's children today.

[bold and italics emphasis mine]


"King's Speech Impact Less Than Remembered":by Philip Klinkner, August 17, 2013; http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013/08/17/king-march-washington-have-dream-column/2657701/

The March on Washington was indeed an influential moment, but not in the way most Americans have come to believe.

This month we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington. Americans have come to see the march as a turning point in our history when, inspired by the eloquence and moral urgency of Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, our nation set out to make racial equality a reality for all Americans. Few of us would remember that at the time an August 1963 Gallup poll found that 60 percent of Americans either disapproved of the march or didn't think it would accomplish anything.

The March on Washington was indeed an influential moment, but not in the way that most Americans have come to believe. It, along with other protests and demonstrations at the time, pushed white Americans to support civil rights, not as much out of a sense of justice as much as out of a desperate desire to prevent disorder and to help win the Cold War. After all, how could America win the hearts and minds of people in Africa and Asia when non-whites at home were marching to obtain freedom and democracy for themselves?

At the time, most white Americans saw the March on Washington as a profoundly disruptive, even dangerous event, coming in the midst of an unprecedented level of racial conflict. Beginning in Birmingham, Ala. where white authorities used police dogs and fire hoses against peaceful black protesters, the summer of 1963 saw protests, riots, and demonstrations throughout the United States. According to journalist Theodore White, in the 10 weeks following the Birmingham uprising, the Department of Justice counted 758 demonstrations across the nation; during the course of the summer, there were 13,786 arrests of demonstrators in 75 cities of the 11 Southern states alone.

White Americans began to realize that blacks would no longer tolerate the status quo and were coming ever closer to the violent "fire next time" described by writer James Baldwin. Time magazine illustrated these fears with a drawing of a phalanx of angry blacks marching toward the reader. The caption read, "June 1963 -- The moment seems to be now." With this in mind, most white Americans were wary of the march.

President John F. Kennedy shared these worries. He called for Congress to pass civil rights legislation in order to meet "a rising tide of discontent that threatens the public safety." Even worse, this unrest threatened social peace at home at a time when the nation faced grave Cold War threats. According to President Kennedy, "Rancor, violence, disunity and national shame can only hamper our national standing and security."

Hoping to avoid trouble, President Kennedy met with civil rights leaders to get them to call off the march. If Kennedy had hoped that the authority of his office might help him get his way, he failed to account for the presence of A. Philip Randolph. As head of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, Randolph had been at the forefront of the civil rights struggle for over 40 years and was not one to be intimidated by presidents. If anything, he intimidated them. In 1941 he used the threat of a march on Washington to pressure Franklin Roosevelt to establish a fair employment practices committee to fight discrimination in defense industries.In 1948 his threat to organize draft boycott by blacks helped push Harry Truman to desegregate the armed forces. "There will be a march," he declared to Kennedy.

With the march going on as planned, the Kennedy administration worked with civil rights leaders to make it as orderly and peaceful as possible. Nonetheless, the administration deployed thousands of troops to the city with even more on alert nearby. Most businesses shut down, the city banned liquor sales and put every available police officer on the street. The Washington Senators cancelled two of their games.

Although there was no violence and the march's most lasting impression was the uplifting moral vision offered by Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech, it probably failed to persuade many Americans of the morality of civil rights. In September 1963, 50% of Americans said that the Kennedy administration was pushing civil rights too fast, exactly the same percentage as before the march.

Still, white Americans also knew that King was right when he told the marchers, "Those who hope that the Negro needed to blow off steam and will now be content will have a rude awakening if the nation returns to business as usual." Eventually, America passed historic civil rights legislation but less out of a commitment to American ideals than out of a desire to maintain social stability. Over the last 50 years, America has made amazing progress toward racial equality, but it has yet to fully realize Rev. King's dream. Now as then, progress will require not just words, but constant pressure and struggle.

[bold and italics emphasis mine]
John A. Murray is headmaster of Fourth Presbyterian School in Potomac, Md.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

#622 (8/27) "15 Pictures of Ridiculous Government Spending Guaranteed to Make You Mad"

REMINDER: Check out this week's broadcast of ''Truth That Transforms'' at .http://www.truthinaction.org/index.php/truth-that-transforms/ This week’s sermon is about how each of us is called to be SALT in a corrupted world and the feature looks at how Christians can have a transformative influence on their communities.

PRAYER REQUESTS: ["To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against the disorder of the world." - Karl Barth]


URGENT PRAYER REQUEST- Update on Kenneth Bae: "US Ready to Bargain with N. Korea for Bae's Release,"-  CBNNews.com,  Aug 14, 2013  http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/world/2013/August/S-Ready-to-Bargain-with-N-Korea-for-Baes-Release/  - The United States is willing to engage North Korea to secure the release of imprisoned American Christian Kenneth Bae. State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said the United States is "willing to consider a number of different options" to bring him home.In a video recently released by a North Korean newspaper, Bae requested the United States send a high-ranking official to North Korea to seek his pardon. It is unclear if he spoke of his own volition in the video. Bae, 45, was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for sharing his faith. He suffers health problems such as diabetes and is currently hospitalized.[PRAY for 1) God's healing of and presence with Pastor Bae, 2) His earliest release by the North Korean government, and 3) God's comfort for his family and friends.] 

Abandoned” For Christ" - Graham Calls On White House To Support Abedini - By Dr. Tom Askew, Aug.8,  http://www.presidentialprayerteam.com/opinion

Franklin Graham is the latest to join the chorus of voices calling for U.S. State Department and White House officials to take a more vocal role in protesting the Iranian imprisonment of American pastor Saeed Abedini. September 26 will mark the one year anniversary of Abedini’s imprisonment for allegedly “endangering the national security” of Iran.

Graham pointed out that, in contrast to Iranian accusations, “Pastor Saeed was in Iran trying to help children. With the permission of Iran’s government, he was working to build an orphanage. But his humanitarian mission led to an arrest on bogus charges and nearly a year of inhumane treatment, simply because he loves Jesus Christ.”...

Behind the scenes, more than 600,000 people around the world have signed a petition sponsored by ACLJ in support of pastor Abedini. A concerted movement this past May brought together Christians from many nations to set aside Pentecost to pray for Abedini. On June 13, demonstrations were held at Iranian embassies in at least six countries to protest Abedini’s treatment. And, on July 29, Arizona Republican Representative Trent Franks spoke on the floor of the House to urge other Congressmen to join him in “adopting” Pastor Abedini through the bipartisan Defending Freedoms Project.

Saeed’s response…and yours - Through his family living in Iran, Pastor Abedini has been made aware of these efforts on his behalf, and is grateful. “I heard that the persecution, my arrest and imprisonment has united churches from different denominations, from different cities and countries. That the churches have united together in prayer to put one request (my freedom) on one day (Pentecost) before God,” he wrote in a letter.

The story of Saeed Abedini, the jihad against Syrian Christians, the attacks on Coptic Christians in Egypt, and the ongoing desecration of churches in Nigeria and India should cause every American to reflect on the blessings of freedom still enjoyed in this nation.
PRAY: - For comfort and peace for Saeed’s wife and children here in the U.S.
- For a strong witness and testimony from Pastor Abedini in the prison where God has placed him
- For Christians around the world who are being persecuted for their faith in Christ
- BOLDly (Beside Our Leaders Daily) for leadership from the White House and State Department in defending the freedoms of Abedini and other Americans
Go to SaveSaeed.org to sign a petition over 600,000 others asking for his immediate release.
----------------------------------------------------------------

"15 Pictures of Ridiculous Government Spending Guaranteed to Make You Mad,"  - 08/20/2013  http://blog.heritage.org/2013/08/20/morning-bell-15-pictures-of-ridiculous-government-spending-guaranteed-to-make-you-mad/


In 2013, federal spending approached $3.5 trillion. Now that’s hard to wrap your brain around. It’s about $27,700 for every American household.

All across America, families balance their budgets, rein in spending, and pay down their debts. If Americans can do it, why can’t the federal government?

Instead, they’re wasting your taxpayer dollars on programs like the ones below. We’ve compiled just 15 examples of the ridiculous spending that is driving America toward a $17 trillion national debt.

WastefulSpending_1

1. GATHERING DUST: The Transportation Security Administration let 5,700 pieces of unused security equipment worth $184 million sit in storage in a Dallas, Texas, warehouse, which costs $3.5 million annually to lease and manage. Taxpayers lost another $23 million in depreciation costs, because most of the 472 carry-on baggage screening machines had been housed there for nine months or more. That’s a lot of money!


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2. DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY: The National Science Foundation used part of a half-million dollar grant to develop a video game that simulates a high school prom.


wastefulspending_3

3. BIRD IS THE WORD: The U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research spent$300,000 on a study that concluded the first bird on Earth probably had black feathers.


WastefulSpending_4

4. CAFÉ CAR: Taxpayer-funded Amtrak recovered only 44 cents of every dollar of its food and beverage costs on long-distance routes, which already annually lose money.

WastefulSpending_5

5. SO MUCH FOR ROBOT NANNIES: The Office of Naval Research spent $450,000 on a study that determined unintelligent robots do not have the ability to maintain a baby’s attention.


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6. RENOVATIONS ON A PRESIDENTIAL SCALE: The Oval Office is getting a facelift. While it’s out of commission, the President will need a pseudo-Oval Office, right? $376 million will go to an Oval Office renovation and plans to construct a second office for the President to use during the renovation.


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7. FELLAS, GET YOUR GUNS: Do you think this guy appears taller, stronger, and manlier? The U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research spent $681,387 on a study to confirm that he does—when he’s carrying a firearm.


wastefulspending_8

8. THAT’S ILLOGICAL, CAPTAIN: The Internal Revenue Service spent $4.1 million on a lavish conference in 2010 for 2,609 of its employees in Anaheim, California. Expenses included $50,000 for line-dancing and “Star Trek” parody videos, $135,350 for outside speakers, $64,000 in conference “swag” for the employees, plus free meals, cocktails, and hotel suite upgrades.




9. DOUBLE DIPPERS: In 2010, 117,000 people who double-dipped into Social Security’s disability insurance program and the federal unemployment insurance program received $850 million in cash benefits.


WastefulSpending_10

10. GET IN THE HOLE! Did you know that golfers who imagine that the hole is bigger boost their confidence and accuracy? Thanks to the National Science Foundation, Purdue University, and $350,000 in taxpayer money, now you do.


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11. MORE THAN POTATOES: In 2012, the U.S. Department of Agriculture spent$300,000 on activities promoting caviar produced in Idaho.


WastefulSpending_12

12. IT’S THE UNLIMITED ICE CREAM: The U.S. Department of Agriculture awarded a$149,992 grant to researchers at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey who are trying to eliminate the infamous “freshman 15” by studying college students’ on-campus dining selections.


WastefulSpending_13

13. GIRL POWER? A $100,000 grant from the National Endowment of the Arts funded a video game that depicts a female superhero sent to save planet Earth from climate changes allegedly caused by social issues that affect women.


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14. SO THAT’S WHAT “TRANSPARENCY” MEANS: Have you ever visitedUSASpending.gov? It’s a website dedicated to unveiling government spending. The Department of Health and Human Services failed to report $800 billion in spending on time. So much for “government transparency.”


wastefulspending_15

15. WELL, THEY CAN’T WORK…: 1,000 prisoners like these in Pennsylvania collected weekly unemployment benefits over a four-month period, costing taxpayers $7 million. Thank you, poor oversight!