Friday, November 30, 2018

#2506 (11/30) "Saudi Arabia and the Politics of Famine - The Death of the Yemenis"



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"SAUDI ARABIA AND THE POLITICS OF FAMINE - THE DEATH OF THE YEMENIS"by Eric Metaxas and  Roberto Rivera, Breakpoint.org, November 30, 2018; http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/11/breakpoint-saudi-arabia-and-the-politics-of-famine/ [AS I SEE IT: Until I read this article, I was not aware of the tragedy going on in Yemen. As someone who finds much to applaud President Trump for, I find myself siding with those who want him to do more to stop this senseless killing of innocent civilians. Whatever the economic costs, America needs to do what is right and the Saudi actions here are clearly wrong. Let's PRAY that the President will relent and speak out against the Saudis.- Stan]
       A humanitarian crisis unlike any we’ve seen in decades is unfolding in Yemen. And it’s being caused by an “ally” of the U.S.

    The assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi has shone a spotlight on the brutality of the Saudi regime. In particular, it has caused people to revisit their high opinion of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, also known as “MbS.” But as bad as the assassination of Khashoggi was, there’s a much greater reason for the world, and especially the United States, to rethink its relationship with the House of Saud: I’m talking specifically about eight million Yemenis who are waiting to perish from starvation or some less-humane fate.

   In 2015, Saudi Arabia intervened in what, until then, had been your standard-issue civil war.
What drove the Saudis was the role of the Houthis, a group MbS and others viewed as an Iranian proxy. As my friend Roberto Rivera pointed out a year ago, reality isn’t that tidy. While most Houthis are Shia Muslims like the Iranians, not all Houthis are.

  But even if their ties with Iran were as close as the Saudis believe, it wouldn’t come close to justifying what is being done to the people of Yemen. Since 2015, the Saudis and their allies have “bombarded Yemen’s cities, blockaded Yemen’s ports, and prevented humanitarian aid from reaching millions in need.” Their targets have included “schools, hospitals, homes, markets, factories, roads, farms, and even historical sites.” As a result, “tens of thousands of civilians, including thousands of children, have been killed or maimed by Saudi airstrikes.”

   That’s the “red horse.” The “pale horse” is cholera, which has infected an estimated 1.2 million and killed more than 2,500.

   Then there’s the “black horse,” famine. As I said at the top, eight million Yemenis are at risk for starvation. As the Financial Times put it a year ago, “without a change of heart [on the Saudis’ part], Yemenis will starve on a scale the 21st century has yet to see.”

As Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen and philosopher John Gray have argued, famine in the modern world is inextricably tied to politics. It’s not a lack of food. According to a 2017 Johns Hopkins study, the amount of food Americans waste every year alone could easily feed 250 million people. What turns a bad harvest into a humanitarian catastrophe is the actions of governments—when hunger is deployed as a weapon of war, as in the Soviet Union in the 1930s and in Ethiopia in the 1980s.

And in Yemen today.
   Making matters worse is American complicity in the suffering of the Yemeni people. The United States has supported the Saudi-led coalition with intelligence sharing, logistical support, and facilitating billions of dollars in arms sales, including a laser-guided bomb that killed forty children on a school bus in August. While the administration announced it would no longer provide in-flight air refueling, this will “likely have little impact on Saudi capabilities,” according to the Military Times.

    So what can the average American Christian do? A lot, actually. First, we pray for those who are suffering. Then we can demand that our government lean on the Saudis, who need the U.S. more than we need them, to allow relief supplies to enter the country without impediment. And we can support efforts in Congress to pull the plug on fueling the Saudis’ war against Yemeni civilians.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES
"How The U.S. Fueled The Saudi War In Yemen [Infographic]" - Niall McCarthy | Forbes.com | November 21, 2018; https://www.forbes.com/sites/niallmccarthy/2018/11/21/how-the-u-s-fueled-the-saudi-war-in-yemen-infographic/#711cf8261c68
"Rebuking Trump, senators back effort to suspend U.S. support for Saudi-led war in Yemen" - 
Karoun Demirjian, Carol Morello, John Hudson Washington Post November 28, 2018; https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/pompeo-mattis-to-brief-senate-on-saudi-arabia-khashoggi-and-yemen/2018/11/27/ee4e36c0-f28a-11e8-bc79-68604ed88993_story.html?utm_term=.fe9b9d051c1c
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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 30 | SOUTHERN PHILIPPINES - Pray with young missionaries in the southern Philippines that have committed their lives to serving the Lord in very dangerous areas of [very Muslim] Mindanao, the second-largest island. 
*Name has been changed to protect identity.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

#2405 (11/29)" Debunking 3 Myths About Trump Border Enforcement"

"DEBUNKING 3 MYTHS ABOUT TRUMP BORDER ENFORCEMENT"Fred Lucas / @FredLucasWH / November 27, 2018 /  https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/11/27/debunking-3-myths-about-trump-border-enforcement/
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          The mainstream media and Democrats have criticized the Trump administration’s response to the migrant caravans storming the nation’s southern border. However, many of the critiques either don’t provide full context or are factually incorrect, based on information released Tuesday by the Department of Homeland Security.

Here are three narratives that the Department of Homeland Security is pushing back against:

1. Separating Myth From Fact on Child Separation
     The long-running narrative has been that Border Patrol officials are separating children from parents. However, that doesn’t take into account fraudulent families, DHS spokeswoman Katie Waldman noted in a statement. From April 19 to Sept. 30, the government separated a total of 507 illegal immigrants within “family units” that weren’t legitimate, meaning the adults were not parents or guardians of the children, Waldman said. A total of 170 family units were separated based on lack of family relation, she said, including 197 adults and 139 juveniles.  Another 87 family units, including 171 adults, were separated based on a child determined to be over 18.
    The Rio Grande Valley in Texas had the highest number of reported fraudulent cases. “In response to the misreporting from multiple outlets, I wanted to highlight the rampant fraud taking place at our Southern border,” Waldman said in the statement. “Aliens know that if they bring any minor with them, they will be apprehended by Border Patrol and released into the interior of the United States.”
   She clarified, however, that the department isn’t claiming all cases are fraudulent. “This data does not show, nor does DHS assert, that all minors apprehended as part of a family unit are illegitimate, but it does indicate that there is a significant problem that provides DHS the needed authority to protect the best interests and welfare of all children,” Waldman said.

    The separation policy was based on a culmination of court decisions and legislation since the 1990s. In 1997, the Clinton administration entered into something called the Flores Settlement Agreement, which ended a class-action lawsuit first brought in the 1980s. 
The settlement established a policy that the federal government would release unaccompanied minors from custody to their parents, relatives, or other caretakers after no more than 20 days, or, alternatively, determine the “least restrictive” setting for the child.
    In a separate development, in 2008, a Democrat-controlled Congress approved bipartisan legislation to combat human trafficking, and President George W. Bush, a Republican, signed it into law. Section 235(g) of that law, the William Wilberforce Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, states that unaccompanied minors entering the United States must be transferred to the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Refugee Resettlement, rather than to the Department of Homeland Security. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit expanded the Flores settlement in 2016 to include children brought to the country illegally by their parents.

2. Tear-Gassing Children
    The caravan still moving toward the U.S.-Mexico border includes 8,500 migrants, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Media outlets and Democratic politicians seized on children being among the migrants bearing the brunt of tear gas deployed Sunday along the California border, when hundreds of the migrants rushed the border.
    However, the Obama administration used tear gas at the border on a monthly basis, The Washington Times reported. Also, the Obama administration used pepper spray when a far smaller contingent of only 100 immigrants charged the border in 2013, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said in a statement Monday that the current violent rush on the border eclipsed prior problems. “First, the violence we saw at the border was entirely predictable. This caravan, unlike previous caravans, had already entered #Mexico violently and attacked border police in two other countries,” the secretary said in a Facebook post. I refuse to believe that anyone honestly maintains that attacking law enforcement with rocks and projectiles is acceptable. It is shocking that I have to explain this, but officers can be seriously or fatally injured in such attacks. Self-defense isn’t debatable for most law-abiding Americans.” She added: “[T]he caravan is far larger and more organized than previous ones. There are 8,500 caravan members in Tijuana and Mexicali. There are reports of additional caravans on their way.”

3. Not Legal Asylum-Seekers
     Critics of the Trump administration contend the migrants have a legal right to seek asylum in the United States. However, Nielsen pushed back, noting that many of the migrants in the caravan do not legally qualify for asylum. Meanwhile, most are not women and children.
     The homeland security secretary wrote: "Historically, less than 10% of those who claim asylum from #Guatemala, #Honduras, and #ElSalvador are found eligible by a federal judge. 90% are not eligible. Most of these migrants are seeking jobs or to join family who are already in the U.S. They have all refused multiple opportunities to seek protection in Mexico or with the UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency. 
     She also said “the caravan members are predominantly male.” “It appears in some cases that the limited number of women and children in the caravan are being used by the organizers as ‘human shields’ when they confront law enforcement,” Nielsen wrote. “They are being put at risk by the caravan organizers, as we saw at the Mexico-Guatemala border. This is putting vulnerable people in harm’s way,” Nielsen said.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]



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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 29 | BHUTAN - In Bhutan, Open Doors works through partners to help nurture the relationships of Christian couples so they might have greater chances of enduring persecution. Pray that couples who received the training will strengthen their relationship with each other and with God.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

#2504 (11/28) "President Trump, Grant Asylum to Asia Bibi - #AsylumforBibi"

"PRESIDENT TRUMP, GRANT ASYLUM TO ASIA BIBI - #ASYLUMFORBIBI"by John Stonestreet and David Carlson, Breakpoint.org, Nov 28, 2018; http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/11/breakpoint-president-trump-grant-asylum-to-asia-bibi/ [AS I SEE IT: I also don't understand what has kept the Trump Administration from going ahead and granting asylum to Asia Bibi, but I think we need to remain hopeful based on this President's many efforts  to not just speak up but act on behalf of the persecuted. Note the many examples of this in the article below AND how can we so soon forget the effort he put into recently to see that Pastor Brunson was released in Turkey, a situation that was far more complicated! For sure, let's continue praying that she and her family will finally find asylum and be kept safe meanwhile. - Stan]
     Today, please join me, Ed Stetzer, and thousands of Christians in petitioning President Trump to grant asylum to Asia Bibi and her family.

     On Wednesday, the day before Thanksgiving, reports surfaced that Islamic radicals in Pakistan were “hunting house to house” for Pakistani Christian Asia Bibi. Her story should be painfully familiar by now.
    Bibi has been in hiding since Pakistan’s supreme court acquitted her of blasphemy charges–this after a 9 year imprisonment and legal battle that left at least two of her supporters dead. She now faces a vigilante campaign for her execution, the execution of her family, and the three high court judges that rendered the verdict. Her attorney has already fled the country.

    A few countries, including Canada and Australia, seem to be working with Pakistan to grant her asylum, but so far the United States has remained silent. This should . . . not . . . be.

   On Friday, my BreakPoint This Week co-host Ed Stetzer and I, using the social media hashtag #AsylumforBibi, called on President Donald Trump to fulfill recent promises made by his administration to persecuted Christians and to grant asylum to Asia Bibi and her family;  and to pro-actively work with Pakistani officials to ensure safe transport to the United States. Please join us in petitioning the President to act now.

   So far, the response to #AsylumforBibi has been strong, but Asia Bibi and her family need you to not only help raise social media awareness, but to also send a letter to your congressman, senators, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Our colleague Roberto Rivera has provided a sample letter that you can find at BreakPoint.org.

   Now, as I have said often on BreakPoint, the Trump Administration has, for the most part, been a stout defender of religious freedom at home and abroad. The appointment of Sen. Sam Brownback as America’s Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom, and hosting the first-ever State Department Ministerial to Advance Religious Freedom are both great things. And, the rhetoric has been strong. Both President Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence are on record that America needs to do more to aid Christian refugees.

   So why the silence now, when Asia Bibi’s life is so clearly in danger? Asia Bibi and her family fit perfectly with the U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services definition of refugees eligible for asylum. Let me quote from their website: “Refugee status or asylum may be granted to people who have been persecuted or fear they will be persecuted on account of race, religion, nationality, and/or membership in a particular social group or political opinion.”
   So far, so good. Reading on, the USCIS says, “Refugee status is a form of protection that may be granted to people who meet the definition of refugee and who are of special humanitarian concern to the United States. Refugees are generally people outside of their country who are unable or unwilling to return home because they fear serious harm.”
   There should be absolutely no legal reason not to offer refugee status and offer asylum to Asia Bibi. And, there is every humanitarian and moral reason to do so.

   Of course, the attention of the administration—and certainly the media—is focused on the crisis at our southern border. Even under calm conditions, hundreds or thousands of people applying en masse for asylum would overwhelm the system. We’ve reached the point where the Administration felt, rightly or wrongly, that it had to close the busiest border crossing between the U.S. and Mexico. Even so, closing our borders and our hearts to Asia Bibi and her family forfeits our moral leadership and is unacceptable.

President Trump, please, offer asylum for Asia Bibi.
   Christian friends, pray for her and her family. Check out the sample letter at BreakPoint.org. And join our social media campaign, #AsylumforBibi.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES
''Asia Bibi Vindicated—But Still in Danger: Pray for All Believers in Pakistan'' - John Stonestreet | BreakPoint.org | November 1, 2018; http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/11/breakpoint-asia-bibi-vindicated-and-still-in-danger/
"Save Asia Bibi, sample letter" - Roberto Rivera | BreakPoint.org | November 13, 2018; http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/11/save-asia-bibi/


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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 28 | VIETNAM - Pray for the government of Vietnam. Despite being Communist, it
is becoming increasingly more BuddhistPray that Christians will stand firm.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

#2503 (11/27) "4 Problems With the New Climate Change Report"

"4 PROBLEMS WITH THE NEW CLIMATE CHANGE REPORT" - Nicolas Loris / @NiconomistLoris / November 26, 2018 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/11/26/4-problems-with-the-new-climate-change-report [AS I SEE IT: The not-unexpected media spin on the report issued by the government last Friday made it obvious that we needed to stop and take a deep breath before accepting the conclusions. As this article points out, there are obvious problems with the report. Further, as you'll note in the article referenced afterwards, there is definitely reason to question the most controversial conclusion when we note the source of that portion of the study. May the uproar over this study remind us that when we hear of things coming out of Washington, D.C., it's always a good thing to wait till the dust settles before drawing our own conclusions. - Stan]
     The National Climate Assessment claimed that the worst climate scenario could cost the U.S. 10 percent of its gross domestic product by 2100. (Photo: kapukdodds/Getty Images)

    If you’re like me, you’re happy the White House released the latest version of the National Climate Assessment on Black Friday. Publishing the 1,700-page report the day after Thanksgiving saved me from unwanted dinner conversations about our planet’s impending climate doom.

    But if your aunt calls you up this week spouting claims of mass deaths, global food shortages, economic destruction, and national security risks resulting from climate change, here’s what you need to know about this report.

1. It wildly exaggerates economic costs.
     One statistic that media outlets have seized upon is that the worst climate scenario could cost the U.S. 10 percent of its gross domestic product by 2100.  The 10 percent loss projection is more than twice the percentage that was lost during the Great Recession. The study, funded in part by climate warrior Tom Steyer’s organization, calculates these costs on the assumption that the world will be 15 degrees Fahrenheit warmer. That temperature projection is even higher than the worst-case scenario predicted by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In other words, it is completely unrealistic.

2. It assumes the most extreme (and least likely)climate scenario.
     The scary projections in the National Climate Assessment rely on a theoretical climate trajectory that is known as Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5. In estimating impacts on climate change, climatologists use four representative such trajectories to project different greenhouse gas concentrations. To put it plainly, Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 assumes a combination of bad factors that are not likely to all coincide. It assumes “the fastest population growth (a doubling of Earth’s population to 12 billion), the lowest rate of technology development, slow GDP growth, a massive increase in world poverty, plus high energy use and emissions.”
    Despite what the National Climate Assessment says, Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 is not a likely scenario. It estimates nearly impossible levels of coal consumption, fails to take into account the massive increase in natural gas production from the shale revolution, and ignores technological innovations that continue to occur in nuclear and renewable technologies.
    When taking a more realistic view of the future of conventional fuel use and increased greenhouse gas emissions, the doomsday scenarios vanish. Climatologist Judith Curry recently wrote, “Many ‘catastrophic’ impacts of climate change don’t really kick at the lower CO2 concentrations, and [Representative Concentration Pathway] then becomes useful as a ‘scare’ tactic.”

3. It cherry-picks science on extreme weather and misrepresents timelines and causality.
    A central feature of the National Climate Assessment is that the costs of climate are here now, and they are only going to get worse. We’re going to see more hurricanes and floods. Global warming has worsened heat waves and wildfires.
     But last year’s National Climate Assessment on extreme weather tells a different story. As University of Colorado Boulder professor Roger Pielke Jr. pointed out in a Twitter thread in August 2017, there were no increases in drought, no increases in frequency or magnitude of floods, no trends in frequency or intensity of hurricanes, and “low confidence for a detectable human climate change contribution in the Western United States based on existing studies.
    It’s hard to imagine all of that could be flipped on its head in a matter of a year.

    Another sleight of hand in the National Climate Assessment is where certain graph timelines begin and end. For example, the framing of heat wave data from the 1960s to today makes it appear that there have been more heat waves in recent years. Framing wildfire data from 1985 until today makes it appear as though wildfires have been increasing in number.
    But going back further tells a different story on both counts, as Pielke Jr. has explained in testimony.
   Moreover, correlation is not causality. Western wildfires have been particularly bad over the past decade, but it’s hard to say to what extent these are directly owing to hotter and drier temperatures. It’s even more difficult to pin down how much man-made warming is to blame.
    Yet the narrative of the National Climate Assessment is that climate change is directly responsible for the increase in economic and environmental destruction of western wildfires. Dismissing the complexity of factors that contribute to a changing climate and how they affect certain areas of the country is irresponsible.

4. Energy taxes are a costly non-solution.
   The National Climate Assessment stresses that this report “was created to inform policy-makers and makes no specific recommendations on how to remedy the problem.” Yet the takeaway was clear: The costs pf action (10 percent of America’s GDP) dwarf the costs of any climate policy.
   The reality, however, is that policies endorsed to combat climate change would carry significant costs and would do nothing to mitigate warming, even if there were a looming catastrophe like the National Climate Association says.
   Just last month, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change proposed a carbon tax of between $135 and $5,500 by the year 2030. An energy tax of that magnitude would bankrupt families and businesses, and undoubtedly catapult the world into economic despair.
   These policies would simply divert resources away from more valuable use, such as investing in more robust infrastructure to protect against natural disasters or investing in new technologies that make Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 even more of an afterthought than it already should be.

The Trump administration is coming under criticism for publishing the report on Black Friday. To the extent that was a conscious strategy, it certainly isn’t a new tactic. The Obama administration had frequent Friday night document dumps in responding to congressional inquiries about Solyndra and the Department of Energy’s taxpayer-funded failures in the loan portfolio. The Environmental Protection Agency even released its Tier 3 gas regulations, which increased the price at the pump, on Good Friday.

    No matter what party is in charge, the opposite party will complain about their burying the story. Regardless, the American public would be better served by enjoying the holiday season and shopping, rather than worrying about an alarmist report. 

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

Nicolas Loris, an economist, focuses on energy, environmental and regulatory issues as the Herbert and Joyce Morgan fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Read his research.
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"Research From Latest US Climate Report Tied to 2 Major Democratic Donors" Michael Bastasch / @MikeBastasch / November 26, 2018; https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/11/26/research-from-latest-us-climate-report-tied-to-2-major-democratic-donors
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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 27 | INDIA Pray with a persecuted family in northeast India that is currently
under house arrest. Until now, nobody has been able to reach them because of the strong opposition from fundamentalist Hindu groups in their village. Pray that God will open a way.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.

Monday, November 26, 2018

#2502 (11/26)"A Lesson in Racial Politics from Florida"

"A LESSON IN RACIAL POLITICS FROM FLORIDA" Star Parker: Nov 21, 2018; https://townhall.com/columnists/starparker/2018/11/21/a-lesson-in-racial-politics-from-florida-n2536285 [AS I SEE IT: Of course, no one will no for sure what led to the margin of victory for Gov.-elect DeSantis. While the following may just be speculation, it makes a valid - and intriguing -  point that conservatives need to be consider as they look to the elections of 2020. - Stan]
     Now that, finally, the elections in Florida have reached a conclusion, there are lessons worth learning. One is on the subject of race.

     There was a fateful anomaly in racial voting in the governor's race between Democrat Andrew Gillum and Republican Rick DeSantis, now Florida's governor-elect. Given that Gillum, formerly mayor of Tallahassee, was running to become the first black governor of Florida, we might have expected black enthusiasm for his candidacy on the order of the waves of black enthusiasm for the presidential candidacy of Barack Obama. But it didn't happen. 

     Gillum received a lower percentage of the black vote than did Democrat Senator Bill Nelson, who lost to Rick Scott in the senate race. White Democrat Nelson got 90 percent of the black vote and Republican Scott got 10 percent.

    In the governor's race, black Democrat Gillum got 86 percent of the black vote, four percentage points less than Nelson, against Republican DeSantis' 14 percent. Given the razor-thin margins, that difference in black support meant a lot.

    When Gillum finally conceded the election, he was behind by 33,683 votes. Each 1 percent of the black vote equated to about 10,000 votes. So if Gillum had received 90 percent of the black vote, as did Bill Nelson, rather than 86 percent, he could well have had another 40,000 votes, which would have been his margin of victory. Forty thousand votes is about 35 percent of the 112,911 votes by which Donald Trump won Florida in 2016. It's 55 percent of the 73,189 votes by which Barack Obama won Florida in 2012.

    So understanding why Gillum received 4 percentage points less of the black vote than Nelson, and why DeSantis received 4 percentage points more of the black vote than Scott could make all the difference in what presidential candidate wins Florida in 2020. 

   Adding to the puzzle is the fact that racial politics played a high profile and nasty role in the Gillum-DeSantis contest. Gillum was aggressive in his allegations of racism against DeSantis. "Now, I'm not calling Mr. DeSantis a racist, I'm simply saying the racists believe he is racist," he said. He accused DeSantis of getting financial support from white supremacist groups and speaking at their events.

    DeSantis, a conservative former Republican congressman, made his support of Trump a centerpiece of his campaign, and President Trump campaigned for him in Florida.
So how does this all compute?

   One convincing line of speculation is that DeSantis campaigned aggressively on parental choice in education and keeping in place and expanding the tax-credit scholarship program enacted under Governor Jeb BushGillum campaigned on closing down the program, which empowers parents to use these funds to send their children to charter and private schools.

   Polls consistently show that blacks support parental choice in educationAnd for good reason. Black children are disproportionately trapped in failing, violent public schools. Black parents want alternatives for their kids. Gillum took the left-wing party line on education choice, against the sentiments of black constituents. This could have made all the difference.

   The lesson here is that blacks care about issues more than they care about skin color.
    It's an important lesson for Republicans going forward. They need to tune in to black concerns, which often are not the same as those of whites, and explain how the best solutions for those concerns are the conservative solutions. 
    In addition to education, this means addressing issues such as housing, urban violence and prison reform.

   The governor's race in Florida gives us good reason to believe that a more aggressive, targeted effort by Republicans in reaching out to minority communities could make all the difference in the outcome of the presidential election in 2020.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]
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"DeSantis Gets Unexpected Boost From African-American ‘School-Choice Moms’"John Haughey / @JFHaughey58 / November 28, 2018; https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/11/28/desantis-gets-unexpected-boost-from-african-american-school-choice-moms
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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 26 | HORN OF AFRICA - Please pray for sister A, fighting for custody of her 11-year-old son. The boy lived with her ex-husband, but he was exposed to immorality, alcohol and drugs. He begged to live with his mom, and now the two of them are in hiding. The husband is threatening both of them if she does not return him.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.

Sunday, November 25, 2018

#2501 (11/25) SUNDAY SPECIAL: ""Thanksgiving: A Time to Nourish Body and Soul"



"THANKSGIVING: A TIME TO NOUISH BODY AND SOUL"By Dan Hart, FRC’s Managing Editor of PublicationsNovember 21, 2018; https://www.frc.org/get.cfm?i=WA18K37&f=WU18K12



When the Pilgrims reaped a bountiful harvest in the fall of 1621 after having first landed in the New World the year before, they instinctually desired to give thanks to God for their blessings by sharing a feast with the Native people. Our country has carried on that tradition ever since, with millions of American families and friends sitting down together to share this symbolic meal every third week in November.

    But why is a meal the focal point of Thanksgiving? What makes a meal so meaningful to our human nature? When our stomachs rumble, is it just food that we are hungry for -- or are our hearts also hungry?

   Sharing a meal with others has become one of our most basic human traditions. It’s no accident that when we host friends in our homes or go out to celebrate a special occasion, the event is almost always centered around food. Food is an important and intimate part of our lives, not only because we need it to survive, but also because of how often we have an appetite -- it has naturally become a daily ritual to share meals with family and friends for the two-fold benefit of food and fellowship.

    When we dig a little deeper, we discover an integral relationship between food and how God designed us to relate to others. As John Cuddeback has written, “The table is a place to be present to one another, in and through our eating.” Cooking, he goes on to say, is the means by which this takes place, and therefore takes on a supernatural meaning: “…to cook is to take care of others; it is to serve them, to give them life, and to love them.” To put this in perspective: our hunger leads to food, food leads to meals, meals lead to friendship, and friendship leads to communion with one another. Not coincidentally, God in His essence is communion itself -- the communion of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. When we partake in authentic communion with each other, we are imaging the Trinity.

    In the gospels, it is clear that food is a central theme of Christ’s mission. This is illustrated most dramatically when He miraculously fed the 5,000 with five barley loaves and two fish, and most meaningfully when He shared the Last Supper with His disciples before His Passion. We also find Jesus continually sharing meals with those He encounters. In the Gospel of Luke alone, there are 10 instances of Christ dining with others. He knows how fundamental and central the meal is to the human race, and He therefore enters into this ritual in order to teach us about His and our own nature: we hunger for food, but we also hunger for more.

    We truly hunger for eating to becoming dining -- to be spiritually filled by making Christ present in and through our meal. Jesus dines with tax collectors, sinners, and uninvited hangers on, teaching us that everyone deserves a place at our table -- we should consider no one an “outsider.” Not only does Jesus share meals with the marginalized, He also elevates the meal by asking probing questions and using parables to help people better understand the mysteries of the faith (Luke 14:1-24). This is a great reminder for us that our mealtimes with others can become an occasion to build each other up in fellowship and encouragement through meaningful conversation, prayers of gratitude, and stories shared of truths and lessons learned.

    When we see the divine importance of the meal in Scripture and in our daily lives, Thanksgiving is filled with a whole new meaning. To share a special feast of the bounty of the harvest with our loved ones should strike a chord with our divine call as human beings: to make Christ present at our Thanksgiving table. May this year’s Thanksgiving nourish not only our bodies, but also our souls.

On behalf of all of us here at FRC, I wish you and your loved ones a blessed and fruitful Thanksgiving.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 25 | BANGLADESH - Pray with Rijina, a believer and widow with one son who lives in dire poverty and is often harassed by her Muslim community. Despite the struggles, Rijina, 35, remains committed to Jesus.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.



Saturday, November 24, 2018

#2500! (11/24) PRO-LIFE SAT: "She Deserves to Be a Choice:"

"SHE DESERVES TO BE A CHOICE - ABORTION ADS DEFEND THE INDEFENSIBLE"by John Stonestreet and G. Shane Morris, Nov. 21, 2018;http://www.breakpoint.org/2018/11/breakpoint-she-deserves-to-be-a-choice



     The abortion industry has a public-relations problem. Make no mistake: in this case, it’s not the medium, it’s the message.

    It’s hard to tug on people’s heartstrings when your business is stopping hearts. In spite of this, abortion providers like Planned Parenthood have made a number of disastrous attempts to pull this off. There was the commercial last year by “Avengers” director Joss Whedon that suggested if your local Planned Parenthood clinic closed down, women would die, lose their jobs, and not be able to go to college.     Before that, there was a series of city-sponsored ads in New York Subways featuring grouchy-looking babies with captions like, “Got a good job? I cost thousands of dollars each year.”

     But I think the most tone-deaf and openly anti-baby pro-abortion ad ever made showed up on social media earlier this month. The video, which was actually produced a couple of years ago by a left-wing political group called “The Agenda Project,” features a cooing baby girl serenaded by a Brahms lullaby, accompanied by the captions: “She deserves to be loved. She deserves to be wanted. She deserves to be a choice.”
  
   Apparently, I wasn’t the only one who immediately thought that this video must be satire. But it’s not. The Agenda Project is a real organization that has influenced national politics in the past with over-the-top ads. Remember that bizarre, disturbing commercial from 2011 that featured a Paul Ryan lookalike throwing a wheelchair-bound grandmother off a cliff?

   Many have mistakenly concluded that the “she deserves to be a choice” ad was sponsored by Planned Parenthood, since it closes with “#StandwithPP.” To be clear, Planned Parenthood wasn’t involved in the production. Still, the video is in line with a long tradition of gruesome, outrageous, and downright self-destructive messaging by abortion-rights activists.

  For example, comedian Sarah Silverman’s remark earlier this year that pro-life laws make her want to eat an aborted fetus. Mary Elizabeth Williams’ Salon article entitled “So what if abortion ends life?” and the “Shout Your Abortion” campaign, which aims to normalize abortion by encouraging women to proudly tell their stories.

     This isn’t what we at BreakPoint call “nut-picking” (you know, seeking out only the craziest examples from the fringe of the pro-choice movement). As we’ve pointed out before, there’s been a marked and discernible shift in abortion rights rhetoric from treating abortion as something that ought to be “safe, legal, and rare,” to promoting and even celebrating it in the most in-your-face ways possible. I’ve even wondered aloud if there’s a pro-life troll running Planned Parenthood’s Twitter feed, given their blindly ironic tweets.

   What I think we’re seeing is an increasingly desperate and embattled pro-abortion movement. And it makes sense… Imaging technology is ever-improving; neonatal and prenatal medicine are breaking new frontiers almost daily. High-profile cases like Kermit Gosnell’s “house of horrors” reveal what the abortion industry has become.

    In light of all this, it’s increasingly difficult to buy the tired old pro-abortion lines that the unborn are “clumps of tissue,” and that abortion is “women’s healthcare.” In our age of 3-D ultrasounds, we know exactly what abortion is and whom it kills.

     The kind of unwitting honesty revealed by the revolting messaging coming from modern abortion defenders these days needs to be shared, widely. They must now make their case to a public more aware than ever of the humanity of the unborn. When scare tactics and bad comedy don’t work, we see the deadly logic of abortion: a beautiful, giggling baby that, we are told without a trace of remorse, “deserves to be a choice.”

    No, she deserves to live. But a movement that tries to make death look and sound like a loving choice, deserves to die.

[italics and colored emhasis mine]

RESOURCES
"This pro-abortion ad is the most ghoulish thing you'll see today"  Nicole Russell | Washington Examiner | November 12, 2018;https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/this-pro-abortion-ad-is-the-most-ghoulish-thing-youll-see-today
The Case for Life: Equipping Christians to Engage the Culture - Scott Klusendorf | Crossway Publishers | 2009;https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/this-pro-abortion-ad-is-the-most-ghoulish-thing-youll-see-today

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Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:To learn more, please go to -https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Focus for November: Praying for Pakistan -It is No. 5 on the 2018 World Watch List and has almost 4 million believers (out of a general population of 197 million). Converts who gather for worship face great risk. They are followed and monitored, and anyone who meets with them is investigated as well. Throughout November, Open Doors is focusing on strengthening our persecuted family in Pakistan.
November 24 | VIETNAM - In some remote villages of Vietnam, women are participating in
trainings that help them establish their faith and affirm their worth in Christ. But sometimes poverty prevents them from attending. Pray with these women.
*Name has been changed to protect identity.