Rocky, Rambo, Indiana...McCain




An interesting phenomena has hit the box office in the last year or so - the 'thirty something' to 'forty something' virile, kick butt, male action star returns as a 'sixty something' still virile, kick butt, male action star.

Sylvester Stallone headed back to the boxing ring in Rocky Balboa to go the distance with a young whippersnapper in his prime. Sly also graced the screen as Rambo and was still able to outmaneuver, outwit and outfire the bad guys just like the Rambo of twenty years ago.
Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones tops my list of favorite action heroes and he also returned this last month as our favorite archaeologist/adventurer in Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull. Our beloved Indy managed to jump from one moving vehicle to the next and use his whip to swing Tarzan style through the air.

One aspect of the films that I noted is that these characters were still believable. It didn't seem like a particular stretch that these characters would still be doing what they always did best. Sure they were a little rough for wear and had more lines on their face but they were still essentially the same characters with the same drives and passions. Though remarks or even jokes were made by the heroes themselves about their age, it was clear that age in and of itself would not slow them down or keep them from pursuing what they perceived as their prize, treasure, or appointed mission.

This trend of older heroes should not be surprising given the aging baby boomers as well as the upper end of Gen X. Once you've hit forty, fifty doesn't seem nearly as ancient as it once did. The same is true once you've hit fifty and sixty. In fact, we even have a slogan descriptive of this new perception. "Forty is the new thirty!" or "Fifty is the new forty!" is the triumphant mantra.

In many ways, the mantra is a true reflection of reality. People are waiting till later to get married, to have children. It is not uncommon to see kids in their mid or even late twenties move back in with mom and dad while they go back to graduate school. Everything seems to be pushed further into the future. As for 'getting older' many are pushing the concept off their radar entirely. Commercials for financial investment firms targeted toward baby boomers entering retirement depict people in action - hang gliding, scuba diving, traveling, starting a new business based on a hobby or passion they love.

In light of this current era of perpetual youth despite the calendar years, I find the reaction to John McCain's presidential candidacy curious. Suddenly his detractors are deeming him as old, old, OLD! Unfit for the oval office, McCain might just as well go play checkers on a porch somewhere with other senior citizens.

So let's get this straight. Sylvester Stallone turns 62 this month and Harrison Ford is 66. It's okay and even reasonable that they continue along the hero path but McCain (who isn't much older at 71) should just be put out to pasture? And remember it's not as if McCain is looking to wield a machine gun or go trampling through the jungle. He's not looking to be Tarzan. He is looking to lead this country as Commander-In-Chief and given his experience and background as a real life hero and patriot, he is the candidate most suited for the role.

I suspect that McCain's opponents feel threatened by the whole John McCain story and so supporters of the opposition are trying to change the narrative. Forget that McCain has the character to withstand five years of torture in service to his country. Let us just repeat, "He's too old to be President" enough times and maybe it will stick.

I don't think it will stick. The strategy goes too much against the grain of the 'anything is possible at any age' philosophy our current culture has adopted. If fifty is the new forty, then seventy is the new sixty.

If McCain loses the general election, it will be due to a variety of factors but it won't be because of age. McCain still has too much of the tough guy persona. He is a survivor like Rambo, he is disciplined like Rocky and has the maverick spirit of Indiana Jones. Sure he is a little rough for wear (funny how life as a POW takes it's toll) and has more lines on his face but he is still essentially the same character with the same drives and passions.

The smart democrats know this and though they won't admit it, they fear this.


Blown Away In The Windy City

About ten years ago I had the opportunity to visit Barack Obama's stomping ground, Chicago. We lived in Ann Arbor where my husband was working at the corporate office for Border's Books and when he had to go to Naperville (near Chicago) for a conference, I jumped at the chance to tag along. Knowing I would be on my own during the days, I resolved to do my own exploring. This was before the era of online travel guides so I decided to just wing it as I looked for things to do in Chicago. Big mistake. If I had a brain cell in my head I would have checked with a place such as Trusted Tours & Attractions.

But apparently I was lacking that crucial brain cell. My free spirit, roam at will, philosophy of sightseeing did not serve me well. I spent several hours sitting in my rental car in horrible standstill traffic, only to arrive in the city and spend more time in the rental car either lost or searching in vain for a place to park. Finally, after striking out on foot I developed miserable blisters on the back of my ankles and discovered that I had parked in a rather unseemly neighborhood.

I did manage to find a few great restaurants and obtained tickets at the Chicago Theatre for my husband and I to see Beauty And The Beast (though I probably overpaid). However, I was unable to see a lot of the landmarks I wanted to see and my overall frustration made it hard to enjoy the landmarks I did see. In my effort to be an independent tourist and relish the flavor of the city, I just ended up with a bad taste in my mouth. The next time I visit a large city I'll know better. When I'm looking for things to do in New York, I will definitely find a tour guide so that I won't miss out on that trip to Yankee Stadium or Madame Tussauds.

If you are still contemplating a summer vacation, sign up for the Trusted Travels enewsletter and enter to win a handheld GPS. Offer ends June 30, 2008.


Wesley Clark Sticks Army Boot In Mouth

Retired Gen. and Barack Obama supporter Wesley Clark, said Sunday on Face The Nation that John McCain's military service does not automatically qualify him to be commander in chief.

Clark has made such grumblings for several weeks and finally had a national audience in which he could officially stick his military boot in his mouth.


"In the matters of national security policy making, it's a matter of understanding risk," he told Bob Schieffer on CBS' "Face the Nation." "It's a matter of gauging your opponents and it's a matter of being held accountable. John McCain's never done any of that in his official positions. I certainly honor his service as a prisoner of war. He was a hero to me and to hundreds of thousands and millions of others in the armed forces, as a prisoner of war.


"He has been a voice on the Senate Armed Services Committee and he has traveled all over the world, but he hasn't held executive responsibility," Clark said. "That large squadron in the Navy that he commanded _ that wasn't a wartime squadron."


And what praytell, does Obama have in the way of experience at this level? What executive responsibility has he had? For whom has he been 'held accountable'? Which large Navy squadron did Barack Obama command during wartime or any other time? Toy boats in the bathtub don't count.


Wesley Clark did not help Obama's case. The only thing he accomplished (besides looking like a fool) was to remind voters again of the vast gulf in the way of experience between Obama and McCain.





Disturbing Legal Scenarios

My husband and I watched the movie Michael Clayton last night. I can't say that I was really entertained -- in fact, I found it disturbing. Nevertheless, I do think it was beneficial in that it reinforced my perception of the justice system as a place where one simply must have the very best possible representation.

Our readers in California who find themselves in a disturbing real-life legal situation may want to check out the Criminal Defense Attorneys at Kestenbaum Eisner & Gorin LLP. They are former prosecutors who specialize in criminal defense in the Southern California courts.


Los Angeles Criminal Lawyers | California Criminal, DUI Defense


Fred Thompson Book Recommendation

Fred Thompson has recently started writing for Townhall Magazine. I disagree with Fred about many things, and wonder if he may not have cost the Republicans the election this year by undercutting Mike Huckabee in South Carolina and setting up the John McCain nomination. Nevertheless, I do appreciate his convictions and his straightforwardness. He has a unique Federalist perspective and I like reading what he has to say even when I don't agree with it.

He recently recommended Andrew McCarthy's book Willful Blindness. He said this about it, "Andrew McCarthy's Willful Blindness book is an important wake-up call to all Americans. The world changed forever on September 11, 2001 yet so many politicians and academics want us to bury our heads in the sand, ignore the enemy [who is] motivated by fanaticism, martyrdom -- and wish ourselves back to September 10th."

Sounds like a book we all need to read. Anyone want to share your thoughts about the book?


Taming The Beast Within

On a road trip I once got into a theological discussion with my six year old daughter about what it means 'to covet'. Knowing that I have a tendency to over-explain (or so my husband tells me) I tried to keep it simple. But as soon as I gave the standard definition of "wanting or desiring what someone else has", I knew that wouldn't be sufficient. She asked, "But what if you really like what someone else has, like a toy, and you just wished you had one too but you're not mad at them or anything because they have it...is that still coveting?"

Good question. At that point we talked about the difference between coveting and simply admiring. There are undoubtedly all sorts of things we may admire in the world, some of which belong to other people. The neighbor's garden, your classmate's silky hair, a friend's singing voice, your teammate's athletic ability, or those of a more material nature such as cars, homes, clothes or the latest techno-gadget or toy. I believe admiration can lead to covetousness but it is not necessary that one follows the other. It all depends on the condition of the heart. Do you begrudge the other person for what they have? Do you feel a bitterness that you don't have it as well, or that they have it instead of you?

These are the sort of questions we must constantly quiz ourselves about, whether we are six or sixty. We all tend to have our weak areas where our desires are the strongest. We must guard against letting natural and proper admiration turn into covetousness.

When I was twenty, I discovered a potential pitfall of covetousness. Another single female friend and I used to go to an event in our city called, The Parade of Homes. It was a tour of a lot of wealthy people's homes especially decorated for the Christmas season. Not only were these huge mansions but virtually every room was exquisitely decorated. We jaunted from home to home, admiring and continually picking our jaw off the floor as one seemed to outdo the one before. We dreamed, maybe someday..., then laughed as we went back to our little apartment and plopped on our garage sale sofa. It seemed a harmless kick but looking back, I believe the seed of a particular kind of covetousness was born in my heart. To this day I have a real weakness for beautiful things, particularly of an artistic nature.

I tell myself I am just an admirer. Truth be told, I sometimes cross over the line. When I see someone's home where they have exquisite china displayed on their table, in contrast to the mismatched plastic tableware that is more practical for my family made up of accident prone toddlers, I sense the beast rising within. When I see homes with beautiful tapestries and Persian rugs that in my home would no doubt see all kinds of spills and smudge marks, I sense the beast getting stronger.

Recently, I came across a website with such beautiful items I almost had to say to the covetous beast, "Down boy!" It's called handblownglass.net and offers some of the most beautiful Hand Blown Glass you will find anywhere. They have everything from traditional pieces like fluted bowls and vases, to non-traditional pieces such as wall art and one of a kind sculptures. The colors are vibrant and the detail is incredible. Each hand blown glass piece is also hand signed by the artist and comes with a certificate of authenticity from the studio.

So like my single self of twenty years ago used to sigh, "someday..." after going through the Parade Of Homes, my mom self today is looking forward to my kids getting old enough that I too can display such beautiful art. Someday...


A Time To Mourn

When Tim Russert died a few weeks ago, I made mention of something Brit Hume said on Fox News about how Russert had consoled Hume on the sudden death of Hume's son. Russert had advised Hume not to grieve for the years he would not have with his son, but celebrate the years he did have.

Now that the initial shock is wearing off, perhaps the Russert family can also come to a point of thankfulness amidst their grief of the years they did have with Tim.

Along these same lines is a story from The Talmudic Anthology:

While Rabbi Meir was holding his weekly discourse on Sabbath afternoon, his two beloved sons died suddenly at home. Their mother covered them with a sheet, and forbore to mourn on the sacred day. When Rabbi Meir returned after the evening Services, he asked for his sons, whom he had not seen in the synagogue. She asked him to recite the Habdalah and gave him his evening meal. Then she said: "I have a question to ask thee. A friend once gave me jewels to keep for him; now he wishes them again. Shall I return them?"
"Beyond doubt thou must," said Rabbi Meir.
His wife took him by the hand, led him to the bed and drew back the sheet. Rabbi Meir burst into bitter weeping, and his wife said: "They were entrusted to us for a time; now their Master has taken back his very own."

When we lose someone dear to us, we may mourn in different ways. We have our individual 'stages of grief'. Though the loss is intensely painful to our heart, we can still find joy in the knowledge that we were able to share and take part in their life while they were here. As a believer, we can also take comfort in the fact that our loved ones, our jewels, have safely been returned to the Master and that we will yet enjoy them again one day.


Job Loss, Job Creation, and Job Transitions

Many of the battleground states in this year's presidential election are going to be areas where changing economic trends have resulted in the loss of many industrial jobs. Quote statistics all you want about the number of jobs created during the time George Bush has been in the White House, but those who have lost the source of income for supporting their families are hurting, and hurting people will look for relief from wherever it might come.

One thing to remember is that despite all of the political rhetoric government does not create jobs. Effective government can put in place those things which facilitate economic growth and job expansion but ultimately it is the private sector which is responsible for the creation of jobs.

Rather than look to a political party, some of those who are transitioning into new vocational pursuits should take a look into construction. Employment in the construction field, especially in the operation of heavy equipment, is expected to increase as population and business growth create a need for new houses, industrial facilities, schools, hospitals, offices, and other structures. More construction equipment operators also will be needed as a result of expected growth in highway, bridge, and street construction.

Those who have been forced to inquire into new job possibilities can take advantage of the expected growth in the construction field by preparing to move into this vocational area. At the present time American Training Services (ATS) is offering free online training. ATS is America's oldest and largest heavy equipment operator school. There is no obligation and no money required for you to participate in this online training program. Check it out.


North Korea Off The Hook?

North Korea might not be off the hook yet, but if they hold up their end of the bargain, they will be removed from the United States terrorism blacklist. Today, President Bush said he will lift key trade sanctions against North Korea under the Trading With the Enemy Act and notify Congress that in 45 days, it intends to take North Korea off the State Department list of nations that sponsor terrorism.

Whatever happened to North Korea as part of the 'axis of evil'?

Apparently North Korea is coming clean (or closer to clean) regarding its nuclear work, fulfilling a key step in the denuclearization process. The announcement came after North Korea handed over a long-awaited accounting of its nuclear work to Chinese officials on Thursday, fulfilling a key step in the denuclearization process.

To demonstrate that it is serious, North Korea is planning the televised destruction of a 65 foot tall cooling tower at its main nuclear reactor at Yongbyon. Since the cooling tower has already been disabled, blowing it up is meant to send a visual and emotional message to the world.

Bush's words still sound a ring of wary optimism. "We will trust you only to the extent you fulfill your promises," Bush said in the Rose Garden. "I'm pleased with the progress. I'm under no illusions. This is the first step. This isn't the end of the process. It is the beginning of the process."

One listens to Bush's announcement and almost hears the echo of Bill Clinton, who so wanted to believe that Kim Jong-Il's regime had also turned over a new leaf. Time will tell if North Korea has truly resolved to end it's highly enriched uranium and proliferation activities.

One ironic twist is that on this day in 1950, Harry S. Truman ordered the Air Force and the Navy into the Korean War.



I Wanna Hold Your Hand

Christian singles often have a hard time these days meeting their 'would be' soulmate. Even in this time when everyone tends to put off marriage until much later than our parents and grandparents, committed Christians are still more open to finding Mr. or Miss Right, rather than Mr. or Miss Right Now. Consequently, Christians often start dating their future spouse during the college years. For those who graduate and are not in a serious relationship, the pool of prospects suddenly seems to shrink.

Christian singles are then left with two major areas in which to meet other singles - the workplace and church. The workplace is fraught with problems for obvious reasons. There could be a conflict of interest, some employers even have rules barring office dating, or at the least there is the inevitable awkwardness that ensues if the relationship fizzles.

The church would seem to be a much more likely place to find someone with your beliefs and values, however the church also carries a certain amount of awkwardness. I had one single friend who felt it necessary to switch churches every time she dated someone and the relationship ended. She found it was too weird or even painful to continue to see them at church, particularly when they started bringing their newest love on their arm.

Another avenue many singles are exploring is an Online Dating Affiliate. Once upon a time there was a bit of a stigma attached to people looking for love via personal ads but not so with the brave new world of online dating services. One intriguing aspect is the niche dating sites where you can find someone who shares your interests and hobbies and if you are Christian, someone who shares your faith.

Perhaps if Ruth and Boaz lived in the twenty first century, they too would have found each other online.


Phillip Johnson Sounds Off At Shepherd's Seminar

A few months ago Politics & Christianity conducted an interview with Phillip Johnson, executive Director of Grace to You, a Christian tape and radio ministry featuring the preaching ministry of John MacArthur. We have long admired Phil not only for his theological insight, but also for his approach to society and culture from a biblical worldview.

In a recent seminar speech, "Politically Incorrect? How To Shepherd Your Congregation In An Election Year", Johnson provides thoughtful analysis and historical context for the Christian's place in the world of politics. How is the believer best able to make truth known? What are the consequences of lobbying, lawmaking, and moralizing taking the place of Christ and the Gospel message? What is the healthy balance of political activism and the Christian servant's duty to serve the Kingdom?

These are important questions which Phillip Johnson answers with wisdom and clarity. In this election year, consider it must reading.

*****

Politically Incorrect?
How to Shepherd Your Congregation in an Election Year

If you came thinking I’m going to tell you how to vote this year, or suggest ways to mobilize your people to sway elections in your home town, you are probably going to be disappointed. In fact, those of you who know anything about me might be surprised that I’m even dealing with a topic like this one. I was frankly surprised when the guys who organize these seminars assigned me this session. Election-year politics are not really my cup of tea. And I don’t mean I’m not interested in the subject. I mean that I purposely try to keep my distance from it.

There’s a good reason for that. Before I became a Christian, I was a hard-core, obsessive political activist. Throughout my high-school years, I thought I wanted to be either a politician or a newspaper pundit when I grew up. That was my highest worldly aspiration, and the political power-struggle was the single, central, driving interest of my life. But when I became a Christian, I gave that passion up for something infinitely better—something of eternal value: the gospel of Christ.

I won’t give you my whole testimony about that. It’s on an audio-recording of one of my sermons somewhere downloadable from the Internet. But the short version is that from the night of my conversion until today, I have deliberately steered clear of partisan politics in the same way most of you would try to steer clear of pornography or recreational drugs. Because in my own experience as an unregenerate person, party politics represented that same kind of addiction. In fact, it was the very first worldly fixation I set aside when I became a Christian—because it struck me almost from the outset that an obsession with earthly power and political ideology is basically an addiction to the wisdom of this world, which is foolishness with God.

That’s not to suggest that I’m naturally apathetic about politics. To this day, I know that if I listened to a steady diet of Rush Limbaugh or Ann Coulter, I would begin to feel rising fits of those same old political passions. But political activism was so much of an idol in my old, pre-Christian life that today I think of it in pretty much the same way the apostle Paul said he regarded his former life as a Pharisee: I count it as dung. I’ve relegated those passions to the rubbish heap of things I count as loss, “In order that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which comes through faith in Christ, the righteousness from God that depends on faith.”

Some of you are probably already thinking that sounds pretty harsh. If you are inclined to be a political activist yourself, you no doubt think I’m terribly short-sighted, or too much of an isolationist. I hasten to say that I’m not suggesting there’s anything inherently sinful about holding electoral office or doing public service. If it’s your calling to be mayor of your town or a congressman from your district, you’ll get nothing but encouragement from me as long as you seek to fulfill that task to the glory of Christ. But you need to do that not merely by flexing your power, but mainly by being a consistent example of Christlike service and humility. Of course, that’s just what every Christian in the secular workplace should endeavor to do. In the words of 1 Timothy 4:12, “in speech, conduct, love, faith and purity, show yourself an example of those who believe.”

I thank God for Christians whose vocation is to serve faithfully in our government—including those elected officials who are devoted Christians. But let’s be clear, here: that’s a different vocation from the calling of a pastor. And I am speaking to you as pastors and church leaders: It’s well-nigh impossible to be a good pastor full time if you also fancy yourself a political lobbyist.

We need to remember that political clout has nothing whatsoever to do with spiritual power. Study the priorities for the church in the New Testament; look at the duties Scripture outlines for shepherds of the flock. You’ll find no mandate to press the government for legislation on moral issues. In fact, what you’ll see is that jockeying for political clout is one of the very strategies Jesus named as worldly methods that are not to characterize leadership in His kingdom. He said His kingdom is permanently set apart from every earthly dominion because Christ’s kingdom is advanced by humble service rather than through the kind of political strategies that depend on the exercise of human authority.

I’ll show you that in a moment, but first I want to stress this: Nothing in the past half century has done more damage to the evangelical cause than the notion that the best way for Christians to influence society is by wielding our collective political clout. If you think the most important answer to the ills of our society is a legislative remedy; if you imagine that political activism is the most effective way for the church to influence culture; or if you suppose the church is going to win the world for Christ by lobbying in the halls of Congress and by rallying Christians to vote for this or that type of legislation—then both your trust and your priorities are misplaced.

Personally, I think the tendency to seek legislative remedies for every social ill is one of the absolute worst tendencies of contemporary secular society, and it disturbs me greatly to see Christians more or less follow that pattern blindly. To borrow a thought from the title of John MacArthur’s least-popular book ever, Government Cannot Save Us. The only power that can truly and permanently rescue human society from its own spiritual ills is the transforming power of gospel of Jesus Christ. And that happens through the regeneration of individual human hearts, right? We need to remind ourselves of that fact often, and put more of our energies into the task of evangelism.

We are pastors and church leaders who formally and confessionally recognize the authority of Scripture. Practically the worst kind of spiritual treason we could ever commit would be to supplant the gospel message with a different message, or to allow an earthly agenda to crowd out our spiritual duties. That is exactly the risk we take when we pour money and resources into political and legislative remedies for our society’s spiritual problems.

At the moment, America is in the throes of one of the most hotly contested presidential elections ever. For the first time in more than two decades, the so-called religious right has no clear-cut favorite candidate in the race. None of the likely nominees from either party has credibly expressed any distinctly evangelical convictions. In fact, I think it would be fair to say that the leading candidates on both sides are essentially secular humanists. The candidate who it now appears will be the Republican nominee is a man who has been wobbly on the issues of abortion and same-sex unions, and he has repeatedly made it clear that he doesn’t share the passions of evangelical voters. He once referred to evangelical Republicans as “agents of intolerance.”

Now, consider the bitter irony of this: For more than two decades the number-one issue on the agenda of the evangelical wing of the religious right has been abortion. The number-one legislative goal of evangelical political activists has been to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the Supreme Court ruling that effectively legalized abortion. Politically-active evangelicals have been instrumental—in fact, they have been the decisive factor—in the election of every Republican president from Ronald Reagan until now. And yet not only have they failed to achieve their single most-coveted political goal, but they are now approaching a presidential election without a single viable candidate who shares their views.

And meanwhile, if anything, America’s moral decline has accelerated dramatically since evangelicals became politically aggressive in the late 1970s. Although by most accounts evangelicals constitute the largest single voting bloc in America, they have been remarkably ineffective when it comes to using politics to reverse America’s moral and spiritual decline. In fact, if you measure their success or failure according to their own stated political ambitions, evangelicals have failed spectacularly in America’s political arena. Over the past quarter-century, they have not accomplished any of their long-term legislative or constitutional goals.

Worst of all, during that same period of time, the evangelical movement has completely lost its spiritual influence, because the evangelical segment of the church has grown increasingly worldly. Evangelicals have become accustomed to compromise. They have abandoned (or else are in the process of abandoning) virtually all the doctrinal distinctives that made them distinct from Roman Catholics and nominal Christians whose faith amounts to a kind of civil religion. Evangelicals have pretty much forfeited whatever real moral and spiritual authority their movement ever had.

Consider the fact that almost no one in the evangelical world had more political savvy than Ted Haggard, the now-discredited president of the National Association of Evangelicals. He actually advised the White House on evangelical issues. Before his fall from grace, The Wall Street Journal called him “one of the nation’s most politically influential” ministers in America, and Harper’s Magazine said this about him: “No pastor in America holds more sway over the political direction of evangelicalism than does Pastor Ted.” But whatever his accomplishments in the political arena, by his own admission Ted Haggard was a liar and a fraud in his private life.

I’m not suggesting that political activism is what made Ted Haggard a hypocrite, nor am I saying that he is typical of everyone in the mainstream of evangelical politics. I certainly hope he was a singular case.

But I am suggesting that any religious organization that’s more concerned with political expediency than with biblical truth is by definition following the error of the Pharisees and will breed the grossest kind of hypocrisy. (I’m also suggesting that if the National Association of Evangelicals had been more concerned about their leaders’ spiritual qualifications and less enamored with worldly skills like personal charisma and political shrewdness, they would never have had Ted Haggard as their president. He had never really distinguished himself in any of the biblical categories the apostle Paul outlined as qualifications for an elder. His one qualification was his mastery of the political process.)

And let’s face it, brethren: Whether we like it or not, in the eyes of an observant world, Ted Haggard seems like a perfect mascot for the evangelical right.

Despite our outspokenness on selected issues in the political realm, American evangelicals have sent a mixed and often flatly contradictory message to anyone who looks at the big picture. Evangelical pulpits are notoriously weak and shallow. Evangelical churches are lukewarm and worldly. Evangelical people as a community tend to be increasingly unholy and are now virtually indistinguishable in lifestyle and behavior from their non-Christian neighbors. Evangelical leaders on the whole seem more concerned with being stylish and admired than with being clear and consistent.

For more than a decade now we have been hearing poll data that suggest people who identify themselves as evangelicals are just as susceptible to divorce and alcohol addiction as their unbelieving neighbors—which can only mean that our church rolls are filled with unconverted people. In fact, just about the only significant difference remaining between evangelicals and unbelievers is how we vote. (And certain forces in the Emerging Church are doing all they can to bring the church in line with the world on that front, too.) No wonder the world hasn’t taken the evangelical wing of the religious right seriously. The evangelical movement hasn’t shown itself serious about what we profess to believe.

How did the evangelical movement get so far off track? I wouldn’t suggest that evangelicalism’s recent obsession with political activism is the only factor, but I do think it’s a major one. If the same energies and resources that were poured into failed political efforts had been channeled into evangelism instead, I’m convinced that would have been instrumental in producing more spiritual good and hindering more of society’s evils than all our lobbying, demonstrating, and voting combined.

READ MORE...


Pack For Success

Political analysts who discuss John McCain's victory in the Republican primary, often speak of how it was only this time last year that he was seen carrying his own luggage through the airports. I wonder, did journalists take a good look at McCain's luggage? I guarantee that if it had been ratty and in need of replacement, there would have been all sorts of negative press.

Of course presidential candidates are not the only ones scrutinized in such manner. One's image as a businessman or even as a clergyman is often determined by not only their dress but by the quality of their luggage.

Even families where image is not of primary concern still needs to take stock of their luggage needs from time to time. My nine year old son recently returned from church camp. As I helped him get ready and pack for his five day sojourn away from home, we had to transfer all of his belongings into three separate pieces of baggage. At first we tried a large duffel sized bag but then decided we needed more separate pockets for shampoo, suntan lotion, insect spray just in case anything leaked. We went to another large duffel bag that had plenty of outside pockets but it was still too small. Finally I broke out our only 'big' suitcase. It was a good thing my husband didn't have a business trip planned for that week or we would have really been facing a luggage shortage dilemna.

It is funny how the need for new luggage suddenly comes upon you. For me it is the realization that not only my son but my other kids have more and bigger stuff. Clunky tennis shoes take up more space than baby booties. My daughter's large array of 'must takes' for a long weekend at Grandma's will not fit in her little pink Barbie suitcase.

As I am hoping and planning on taking many trips over the next decade I am looking to invest in not just Carry-On Luggage but also Wheeled Luggage. I think the key to finding the best deal is to go online to sites such as hartmann.com where you can really find the quality and style you are looking for. They have an especially impressive line of Leather Luggage

If you don't plan ahead, you might find yourself making a last minute dash to Target or Sears the day before a big trip.


Child Rape - Cruel & Unusual?

The Supreme Court on Wednesday outlawed executions of people convicted of raping a child.

In a 5-4 vote, the court said the Louisiana law allowing the death penalty to be imposed in such cases violates the Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

"The death penalty is not a proportional punishment for the rape of a child," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion. His four liberal colleagues joined him, while the four more conservative justices dissented.


Pardon me Justice Kennedy but isn't the rape of a child cruel and unusual? Perhaps Justice Kennedy should consult the five year old girl in Caddo Parrish, Louisiana if she felt the REPEATED rapes she suffered from rapist, Richard Davis, was cruel and unusual. Davis was sentenced to death in December and I believe local prosecutor Lea Hall had the correct assessment when she told jurors: "Execute this man. Justice has a sword and this sword needs to swing today."


Likewise, The Louisiana Supreme Court upheld the death sentence of Patrick Kennedy who was convicted of raping his eight year old stepdaughter in her own home. The court noted that "short of first-degree murder, we can think of no other non-homicide crime more deserving" of the death penalty.


Had these horrible and violent rapes been perpetrated upon the children or grandchildren of Justice Kennedy and the four justices who sided with him, I suspect they too would agree that such crimes fall under the cruel and unusual category. For such unspeakable horrors which child rapists tend to repeat over and over, sometimes over the span of decades, I cannot think of a more fitting punishment than the death penalty.


Jesus said...But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea. (Matthew 18:6)


Software Information On The Cheap

Former U.S. Vice President Thomas R. Marshall is said to have remarked to a U.S. Senate clerk, “What this country needs is a good five-cent cigar.” There is no such thing as a good five-cent cigar. And, there is no such thing as cheap software. Or, is there? Whether you need to purchase Microsoft Office 2007 pro, or hundreds of other products, one of your first steps should be to check out the Software Supply software blog. You don't have to know everything about computing, or software, or the current marketplace if you know the right place to go to get the information you need. Check them out. (But, I don't think they review cigars.)


Congress Plays 'Mighty Mouse' To Strapped Homeowners

Remember the introduction to the super rodent of yesteryear, Mighty Mouse? Mister Trouble never hangs around when he hears his mighty sound. "Here I come to save the day!" That means that Mighty Mouse is on his way. Yes sir, when there is a wrong to right, Mighty Mouse will join the fight. On the sea or on the land, He gets the situation well in hand.

One of our many Mister Troubles plaguing the country is the large number of families losing their homes to foreclosure. A combination of loose lending, overextension on the part of borrowers, adjustable rate mortgages that have spiked (sometimes causing the monthly payment to increase by $1000 per month) and a general sluggish economy in which many are underemployed and can barely fill their gas tank, have all collided to create a real crisis in the housing market.


After months of discussion, Congress is swooping in to save the day. According to the AP, a massive foreclosure rescue bill cleared a key Senate test Tuesday by an overwhelming margin, with Democrats and Republicans both eager to claim election-year credit for helping hard-pressed homeowners.


The mortgage aid plan would let the Federal Housing Administration back $300 billion in new, cheaper home loans for an estimated 400,000 distressed borrowers who otherwise would be considered too financially risky to qualify for government-insured, fixed-rate loans.


An 83-9 vote put the plan on track for Senate passage as early as Wednesday, but President Bush is threatening a veto, and Democrats are fighting each other over key details. Those challenges will probably delay any final deal until mid-July.


The bill advanced as separate reports underscored rising economic anxiety: Consumer confidence slid to its lowest level in more than 16 years, and closely watched indices showed a continuing decline in home values.


At the Capitol, Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D-Conn., the Banking Committee chairman, said the lending measure "would allow us to begin to put a tourniquet on the hemorrhaging of foreclosures in this country."


Congress might not be saving the day, but many homeowners might just live to see another one.


Proverbs 31 Woman Goes Shopping

I am always humbled when I read of the Proverbs 31 woman. So industrious, so hardworking - Her lamp does not go out at night and yet, She rises while it is yet night and provides food for her household and portions for her maidens. She considers a field and buys it; with the fruit of her hands she plants a vineyard.

When does this woman sleep? All this sewing, making linen garments and selling them, buying real estate, working in the vinyard...whew! Doesn't leave much room for kicking back in the recliner and watching an episode of Tyra Banks, does it? That would probably go under the heading of 'eating the bread of idleness'.

This idea of bringing the Proverbs 31 woman into the twenty first century does cause me to wonder about a few things. Would she clip coupons, shop on e-bay? Would she blog? And what about the line where it says, she makes bed coverings? From where would she get the bedroom furniture on which to place her bed coverings? What about living room furniture or the nursery? If her husband is busy sitting among the elders at the city gates (or in modern terms, sitting in front of a laptop in his 20th floor office) then he probably doesn't have time to handcarve a baby crib, rocking chair, or round pedesatal table.

I submit that the wise Proverbs 31 woman of today would go shopping online. With all of her various household and business interests, would it not make sense that she use her time efficiently by utilizing the web to purchase the best quality furniture at the lowest price? Furniture From Home has a great motto - Where Quality Meets Convenience. As a modern day Proverbs 31 woman who is honing the art of multi-tasking, I plan on shopping there myself. Though I hope my husband has full confidence in me, if he questions any purchases I'll just tell him I was trying to be biblical.


Dobson Claims Obama Distorts The Bible

John McCain isn't the only presidential candidate with whom James Dobson has some problems. In an airing on Tuesday of Focus On The Family, Dr. Dobson will take Barack Obama to task for distorting the Bible and pushing a "fruitcake interpretation" of the Constitution.

Focus On The Family provided The Associated Press with an advance copy of the pre-taped radio segment, which runs 18 minutes and highlights excerpts of a speech Obama gave in June 2006 to the liberal Christian group Call to Renewal. Obama mentions Dobson in the speech.

"Even if we did have only Christians in our midst, if we expelled every non-Christian from the United States of America, whose Christianity would we teach in the schools?" Obama said. "Would we go with James Dobson's or Al Sharpton's?" referring to the civil rights leader.


Dobson took aim at examples Obama cited in asking which Biblical passages should guide public policy — chapters like Leviticus, which Obama said suggests slavery is OK and eating shellfish is an abomination, or Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, "a passage that is so radical that it's doubtful that our own Defense Department would survive its application."


"Folks haven't been reading their Bibles," Obama said.


Dobson accused Obama of wrongly equating Old Testament texts and dietary codes that no longer apply to Jesus' teachings in the New Testament.


"I think he's deliberately distorting the traditional understanding of the Bible to fit his own worldview, his own confused theology," Dobson said.


"... He is dragging biblical understanding through the gutter."


Dobson will also criticize Obama for his views on abortion, which Dobson and his listener base have long condemned as the taking of innocent life. Obama claimed that the religiously motivated must frame debates over issues like abortion not just in their own religion's terms but in arguments accessible to all people.


Dobson says Obama is trying to govern by the "lowest common denominator of morality," labeling it "a fruitcake interpretation of the Constitution."


"Am I required in a democracy to conform my efforts in the political arena to his bloody notion of what is right with regard to the lives of tiny babies?" Dobson said. "What he's trying to say here is unless everybody agrees, we have no right to fight for what we believe."


It appears that Dobson has run out of presidential candidates whom he could support. If the Libertarians can get Bob Barr on the ballot in Colorado, that will give Dobson one last (though unlikely) option.


Newsweek Poll Shows Presidency Might Be 'Mission Impossible' For McCain

Since Barack Obama managed to wrestle the Democratic nomination from Hillary Clinton, there has been much speculation as to why the presidential race remained so tight. After all, this is an election year that everyone agrees should favor the Democrats. President Bush's approval ratings are in the tank and a majority of Americans are unhappy with the direction the country is going, giving the opposing party a definite edge. Yet for weeks Obama and McCain have remained within about three points of one another.

Until now. Newsweek came out with a new poll that shows Obama has a substantial double-digit lead, 51 percent to 36 percent, over McCain among registered voters nationwide. Ouch! Of course this is only one poll and the coming weeks will surely render more polls to determine if this is an accurate reflection of the country's mood. But for the time being, it appears that Obama is stepping on the gas and leaving McCain coughing in the dust.

So what can John McCain do? According to many political pundits, there is not a whole lot he can do. As Matthew Dowd and many others have commented, this is an election that John McCain can't win but Obama can lose. In other words, this year it's all about Obama. To the extent that Obama can quell the fears that voters have regarding his candidacy - his lack of experience, his suspicious circle of friends, and especially questions relating to national security - then he will win in a landslide. If he fails to lay aside those concerns, then McCain still has a fighting chance.

The key word here is fighting chance. I diverge somewhat from the pundits because I think there is a lot McCain can do. I think he needs to become a scrapper. We know he has it in him, looking not just at his record as a senator but going back to his time as a POW. He needs to go back to the well and draw from that source of strength, courage and spunk that helped him survive and ultimately get out of that cage in Vietnam.

McCain needs to take a NO FEAR attitude. You've surely seen the popular sports clothing line with the catchy slogans. No Fear is passionate about sports and the lessons and values they instill in the people who live for them, celebrating the human and competitive spirit. This isn't to say McCain has to show up at his next townhall wearing muscle t-shirts, hats, or Motocross gear. But he would do well to adopt the No Fear attitude, to set the tone henceforth that he is out to WIN.

McCain must show he is not going to be pushed around by some punk, greenhorn senator who is practiced at reading a teleprompter. The courage and accomplishments of someone who suffered and put his life on the line repeatedly for his country and has served as a senator for over two decades trumps someone who touts his accomplishment as a 'community organizer'.

Yes, in many ways this is Obama's election to lose. On the other hand, McCain has been given his assignment and chosen to accept it. If he practices a No Fear attitude, it doesn't have to be 'Mission Impossible'. If he wimps out, he will self-destruct.


'Speed' To The Presidency

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The other night I was watching the movie, Speed. As part of the introduction before the movie started, an executive from Twentieth Century Fox discussed what makes a 'hit'. A lot of it has to do with marketing. After all, if a studio makes a great movie but it is not marketed well then no one will see it. He concluded there were three categories that made for a marketable, and hopefully a hit movie.

First, there is the movie with star power. Forest Gump is a good example. Patrons at the theater might tell the person working the ticket booth they want to see that new Tom Hanks movie. Similarly, people who saw Erin Brockavich went to see the latest Julia Roberts film.

Second, there is the movie with a well known storyline. X-Men and Spiderman already had a huge following of fans before the film version ever came out. The Devil Wears Prada was a bestselling book so there was a ready made audience. Such films may or may not have major movie stars playing the roles. It is not dependent on star power to be a success.

Third, there is the movie with a Big Idea. Speed was a great movie because it had a big idea. We have all seen action movies with bombs and chase scenes before, but Speed was unique in that it had an original, big concept - a madman/former cop is up against a good cop (Keanu Reeves) as he sets a bomb to go off on a city bus if it drops below 50 mph. When the busdriver accidently gets shot, a pretty female passenger (Sandra Bullock) has to drive the bus as Reeves and the police try to outwit and capture the bad guy. Adding to the tension is the setting, Los Angeles, one of the biggest traffic nightmares in the country.

Because Speed was a Big Idea movie, it wasn't reliant on major star power. Reeves and Bullock were not very well known at the time, though they both proved excellent in their roles. It was the Big Idea that propelled the film and made it a hit.

As I thought about these three categories, I couldn't help but to consider the presidential election. In which category would we place Barack Obama? Is the success of his campaign driven by star power, the candidate himself or does he have Big Ideas which the voters find compelling? I believe Obama fits in the first category. He has undeniable charisma and eloquence which attracts huge crowds. However, his ideas for the country don't strike me as particularly 'big' or even original. In fact parallels have been drawn between him and Jimmy Carter - many of Obama's positions appear to be warmed over from the 70's Carter administration, though articulated with more zest and optimism than Carter was ever able to deliver.

What of John McCain? In which category does he fit? Though he has a great, personal hero story, his personality does not exactly bring to mind 'star power'. Neither do I think he has any particularly Big Ideas of what he would do as president, notwithstanding his commitment to win in Iraq and ultimately to win the war on terror.

Supporters of McCain do so mostly for the reasons we find in category two. McCain is a known storyline. His conservative vision of lower taxes, a strong national defense and limited government already had a throng of loyal fans. McCain currently has the lead role in a film with a ready made audience. That is why it is not as important that he be the most sizzling speaker to ever seek the White House, though it would have been helpful.

In contrast, listen to the ardent fans of Obama. When asked what they think Obama would do for the country specifically in the way of policy, they are usually vague (as the candidate oftentimes is himself) or they have no answer at all. Though the constant slogan of 'change' would cause one to think he is running a Big Idea campaign, he is not. People want Obama because they just like and are drawn to the man himself. Pure star power.

A known storyline versus star power - which will prove to be the biggest hit? I suppose we shall see when the voters go to the box office in November.


When Mary Fell

Several months ago I saw a news story about a woman (I'll call her Mary) who lost control of her car and plunged down an embankment. Though it was a well traveled road, she was not readily visible to other drivers as her car was covered in brush far below. Her family was panicked when she did not return home and for days she was listed as a missing person.

When Mary was finally found and rescued she was unconscious and remained in a coma for some time. She eventually came out of the coma, received treatment for her injuries and was deemed well enough for discharge from the hospital. Yet another surprise awaited her. The hospital bill was in excess of a million dollars. That's right...a MILLION DOLLARS!

Hard to fathom, right? In today's world, health care costs have risen to such an extreme that any unexpected illness or emergency can spell financial disaster for those who are uninsured. In this case, the woman and her husband had not been married very long and were not insured. It was sad to see her young husband say how he dreaded breaking the news to Mary about their newly acquired financial hardship.

This is the kind of story that Democrat candidate's speeches thrive on. No one should be faced with this kind of healthcare cost, on top of the personal trauma of the accident and recovery. All the more reason for healthcare to be taken over by the federal government.

That the federal government could do a better job of keeping down healthcare costs, provide the kind of quality Americans expect and do it more efficiently is a questionable claim to be sure. Republicans are quick to point out the many faults with government run healthcare.

While the politicians wrangle over this issue, one lesson we can learn from this story is the need for everyone to obtain health insurance. When we are young and healthy it is easy to believe we don't really need it. When we are underemployed or unemployed we can't afford it. However, everyone should make every effort to keep themselves covered under some kind of plan. kaiser insurance for example has many options to choose from. Whether you are single, married or have children there is a plan designed for your needs. They are flexible and best of all, affordable.

When the Democrats hold their convention in the coming months, look for more healthcare horror stories. John McCain had also better pay attention and have some ready responses and solutions to offer. There are more Marys in the world than many Republicans want to admit.


Transgender Activists Go Topless In Massachusetts

So much for a quiet stroll out with the kids, at least in Northhampton, Massachusetts.

Transgender activists marched down the main street in Northampton last week, carrying signs demanding the passage of new laws to end discrimination against transsexuals.

Both male and female marchers, at various stages of hormone treatments and surgical alteration to change their appearance from male to female or vice versa, decided to boldly strip off their shirts and walk down the street topless. More than just seeking to show off their anatomical wares, the activists were seeking approval of the increasingly demanding transgender agenda.

"The activists knew they had a critical mass of people in Northampton that wouldn't object to women without shirts," said Amy Contrada, a leader in the Massachusetts pro-family movement, MassResistance. "This is what we're going to start seeing all over the nation. This was a trial balloon for the transgender movement."

Contrada cited Northampton as one of three cities in Massachusetts that have ordinances forbidding discrimination against transsexuals. The city, according to Contrada, has become a magnet for the radical lesbian and transgender movement, making it an ideal place for staging a topless march that might be restricted elsewhere.

"With anti-discrimination ordinances in place, there's no way a policeman would arrest a woman for being shirtless, because she could say she's not a woman, and under the ordinance, she gets to determine whether she's female or not," Contrada said.

__________

RELATED

Protesting Nude Protesters

Barack Obama's Plan For Kindergarten Sex Education


Resorting To Violins

During the primaries there was a candidate who argued for education reform to include music and the arts. Mike Huckabee voiced the following;

"I want to provide our children what I call the "Weapons of Mass Instruction" - art and music - the secret, effective weapons that will help us to be competitive and creative. It is crucial that children flex both the left and right sides of the brain. We all know the cliché of thinking outside the box: I want our children to be so creative that they think outside the cardboard factory. Art and music are as important as math and science because the dreamers and visionaries among us take the rough straw of an idea and spin it into the gold of new businesses and jobs. It is as important to identify and encourage children with artistic talent as it is those with athletic ability. Our future economy depends on a creative generation."


Huckabee was not able to win his parties nomination and since that time there has been nary a voice from those remaining in the race about the importance of music and the arts for our children. Without the help of our government and our school systems, it becomes more important than ever that parents do what is necessary to see that their children receive proper music education.

The Academy of Music Performance can help fill the void. It is a private lesson studio and school of music specializing in the Violin and Viola. Current and former students learning how to play violin in the academy range in age from the very young to college age and above.

You can check out a sample lesson by visiting their website, or review the AMP DVD lesson catalog, read about their five step plan, and watch performance videos of current and previous students.

As Thomas Jefferson explained, we must endeavor to maintain peace, but when the government no longer represents the people, sometimes the people must resort to violins.


Politicians: They Know, The Just Don't Care

Friend #1: "How can Democrat politicians NOT know that deep-water oil exploration is the right thing to do. It will take the speculators out of the market resulting in an immediate 25% drop in gas prices, and the money will be going to American companies to reinvest in American jobs and in new energy technologies, AND the money won't be going to some Middle East country where it can be used to support terrorism. How can Democrat politicians NOT know this?"

Me: "They know, they just don't care."

Friend #2: "How can all of these people NOT know that Barack Obama is an empty suit. He has no experience and surrounds himself with terrorists, racists, and crooks. He hasn't a clue when it comes to policy; he was for unconditional talks with dictators and tyrants before he was against it, he was for public funding for elections before he was against it, he was for his pastor before he was against him, he was for all kinds of things before he was against them. He is as much a waffler as John Kerry. How can Obama supporters NOT know this?"

Me: "They know, they just don't care."

I have never been able to understand the way some people can ignore what they know to be true, simply because it doesn't match up with what they want to be true. And, it is not limited to the realm of politics either. Consider this example taken from the book Casanova Was A Book Lover;

The Beardstown Ladies, celebrated for their putatively brilliant investment club, sold eight hundred thousand copies of their first book, success that led to other books. Nothing much changed when a mean-spirited little whippersnapper in Chicago reported that their investments really weren't that good and neither was their math. The little old ladies had not known the right way to calculate annualized returns; the proper calculations showed their returns fell far below the market annual averages. They were sorry. "We're saddened by the people who judged us guilty and suggested we were in it for the money," said Betty Sinnock, the lady who can't add. "I feel like [the reporter] really didn't related what the Beardstown Ladies were all about." Accepting the apology, the public keep buying the books, in which the publisher didn't work too hard at inserting corrections slips. Sinnock remained on the individual investors committee to the New York Stock Exchanges. The reporter attended a speech for which Sinnock received a standing ovation. "The got away with it, and more power to them," of of the members of the audience told him. "Look at how many books they've sold."


In other words, for this member of the audience the popularity of the Beardstown Ladies excused the lack of substance. Sounds familiar doesn't it.


Generation Y Faces Economic Reality?

I am not sure what generation we are on according to the alphablet categorization system. We had Generation X, then Generation Y. Are we still there or are we already up to Generation Z? After that, what? Obviously, we will need a new and improved 'age labeling system'.

Anyway, I was thinking about this group of young people the other day when I was watching an Obama rally. This group of Generation Y was so enthusiastic as Obama laid out his economic plan (vague and sketchy though it was). I found myself wondering how many of these kids are actually paying their own bills yet. Do they still have Mom & Dad's credit card in their wallet?

For many that are just striking out on their own, the issue of credit can be a bit tricky. How do you establish a good credit card rating? A great resource to check out is creditcardsclub.com. You can find all sorts of information about various credit card offers - which gives you the lowest fixed and variable APR, which will help you earn airline reward points and even gasoline credit points. Also helpful is info on no annual fee cards, balance transfer cards, business credit cards, and cards that help you earn cash back. Also, be sure to look into cards geared toward college students.

There are also financial articles that offer tips on saving money with a credit card, how to handle billing errors, repairing bad credit, improving your credit rating, and much more.

So if you are of that Y Generation, don't find yourself like the guy I know who took out a girl on a first date and got his credit card declined. Without another credit card and not enough cash to cover dinner, the girl had to use her own credit card to pay for dinner. Kind of makes you cringe, doesn't it? The girl continued to date him but a lot of females would not have been that accommodating.

So who is paying for all the electronic gadgets that Generation Y is so fond of? Is the newest ipod or iphone going on Dad's credit card or their own?


The Politics Of Black Gold, Texas Tea...Part Two

As far as election issues are concerned, health care is on the back burner as is education. Environmental concerns are diminishing. Even the war in Iraq, as important as it is, will not be the number one issue for many voters. So what is the compelling problem that will have voters practically knocking each other over in their mad rush to the polls?

The high price of fuel! While there are tens of thousands of family members with loved ones in Iraq and even more suffering in both body and pocketbook due to our broken health care system, millions of people drive in this country and are feeling the direct effect of soaring prices every day. It is now viewed as more than a temporary inconvenience, but rather a devastating blow to their monthly budget. Many ordinary commuters are finding their monthly gas bills are running in excess of $500.00, more than many spend on their car payment.

If either Barack Obama or John McCain will speak intelligently to this problem, display that he grasps not only the cause but offers a sound solution that makes sense to the American people...that candidate will win in a landslide.

Political analyst and husband/wife team Dick Morris & Eileen McGann have written an excellent article on this subject. Below is an excerpt:

Democrats call for windfall profits taxes. Bad idea. How can you get oil companies to explore and drill if you tax away their profits? Republicans focus on a gas tax “holiday,” an 18-cent palliative to gas prices that now top $4.50.

Fadel Gheit, managing director of oil and gas research for Oppenheimer and Co., and Jim Norman, author of the book The Oil Card, coming out next month, say that speculation is responsible for a huge part of the run-up in prices.


The growing demand for oil by India and China and the instability of oil supplies certainly account for much of the increase. But the recent spike, they say, is equally due to the weakness of the dollar and massive speculation.


They argue that oil prices are, indeed, determined by supply and demand — not only the supply and demand for oil, but also the supply and demand for oil futures. (Oil futures are a commitment to buy 1,000 barrels of oil at a certain date at a certain price.)


Formerly, most of the investments in oil futures came from energy companies. The federal Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) sharply limited investments by those outside the business, to prevent precisely the kind of speculation now gripping the market.


But when the stock market slowed down in 2000–2002, outside investors decided to speculate in oil futures.


The new players were institutional investors like corporate and government pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, university endowments and other investors, guided by brokerage firms like Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs.


To avoid the CFTC caps, these investors moved their operations to London, setting up the International Commodities Exchange. Now they can buy all the oil futures they want.


Michael W. Masters, of Masters Capital Management, told Congress that the volume of investment in commodities futures soared from $13 billion at the end of 2003 to $260 billion by March of 2008.


After a while, the CFTC rescinded its limits on how much speculators could buy as long as they went through special “swap” desks at the major brokerage houses. You can buy oil futures for only 5 percent down on margin, a bargain considering the 50 percent margin requirement for stock market equity investments. Because the margin requirement on oil futures rises as the due date approaches, few investors actually end up buying the oil; they just roll over their investments.


So the willingness of sellers to unload their oil futures, and of buyers to acquire them, sets up its own market of supply and demand that has more to do with determining the actual price of oil than even the global demand and supply for the product itself.


***

As Morris/McGann advise, McCain had better explain the cause of this problem to voters because their ears are definitely perked. He needs to articulate what he would do as President to get a handle on what is turning into a full-blown crisis. Washington is apparently deadlocked. When the Senate recently tried to force CFTC regulation of all commodities speculators, the bill was killed by Republicans because it was loaded down with a windfall profits tax.

America needs leadership on this issue. Voters might not be able to afford to drive to the polls but they will walk or bicycle if necessary to vote for the candidate willing to provide it.


Presidential Election From 30,000 Feet

They were ridiculed as hypocrites; seven men and a woman campaigning to become the Democrat nominee in the 2008 presidential election. Each was attempting to out "green" the others to win over the voters. Yet, each had flown to the South Carolina debate in a separate private jet. It didn't look good.

I have been critical, okay, very critical, of these folk, but I'm going to have to defend them on this one. Maybe they could have done some jetpooling, but anyone who has spent much time in business knows that it is frequently more economical and a wiser use of resources to charter a flight than it is to fly commercial.

Time is valuable and privacy essential in both business and politics. When on a tight schedule and on urgent business you simply cannot take the risk of flight delays. And, if you are bringing along equipment it can end up costing much more than money, much more than imaginable, if you end up in Dallas but your equipment ends up in Seattle. Outsiders looking on may not understand, they may even call you a hypocrite as in the scenario above, but there are times when the only intelligent thing to do is to go with a business jet charter.

Wing Aviation Charter Services is Houston's premier luxury aircraft charter resource for business and personal travel. And, there are good reasons for the outstanding reputation they have earned. They provide charter service 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and have the capabilities to handle all aspects of your travel experience. When you lease one of the executive air charter aircraft from Wing Aviation Charter Services you can be assured that you will receive confidential, safe, and luxurious service. They offer attention to detail and commitment to excellence that is unprecedented for airplane charter services.

Wing Charter offers access to thousands of airports worldwide, so be sure to check them out.


How many kilowatts does one man need?


Al Gore uses more electricity in a single month than my family does in 18 months. And, we have four (soon to be five) little munchkins running in-and-out leaving doors open and burning every light in the house.

Al Gore flies around in private jets using more fuel in a few hours than I will use in my Toyota in a few years.

Yet, he is the Global-Warming Guru?

I don't get it.

Check out this recent report from the Tennessee Center For Policy Research:


NASHVILLE - In the year since Al Gore took steps to make his home more energy-efficient, the former Vice President’s home energy use surged more than 10%, according to the Tennessee Center for Policy Research.

“A man’s commitment to his beliefs is best measured by what he does behind the closed doors of his own home,” said Drew Johnson, President of the Tennessee Center for Policy Research. “Al Gore is a hypocrite and a fraud when it comes to his commitment to the environment, judging by his home energy consumption.”

In the past year, Gore’s home burned through 213,210 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity, enough to power 232 average American households for a month.

In February 2007, An Inconvenient Truth, a film based on a climate change speech developed by Gore, won an Academy Award for best documentary feature. The next day, the Tennessee Center for Policy Research uncovered that Gore’s Nashville home guzzled 20 times more electricity than the average American household.

After the Tennessee Center for Policy Research exposed Gore’s massive home energy use, the former Vice President scurried to make his home more energy-efficient. Despite adding solar panels, installing a geothermal system, replacing existing light bulbs with more efficient models, and overhauling the home’s windows and ductwork, Gore now consumes more electricity than before the “green” overhaul.

Since taking steps to make his home more environmentally-friendly last June, Gore devours an average of 17,768 kWh per month –1,638 kWh more energy per month than before the renovations – at a cost of $16,533. By comparison, the average American household consumes 11,040 kWh in an entire year, according to the Energy Information Administration.

In the wake of becoming the most well-known global warming alarmist, Gore won an Oscar, a Grammy and the Nobel Peace Prize. In addition, Gore saw his personal wealth increase by an estimated $100 million thanks largely to speaking fees and investments related to global warming hysteria.

“Actions speak louder than words, and Gore’s actions prove that he views climate change not as a serious problem, but as a money-making opportunity,” Johnson said. “Gore is exploiting the public’s concern about the environment to line his pockets and enhance his profile.”

The Tennessee Center for Policy Research, a Nashville-based free market think tank and watchdog organization, obtained information about Gore’s home energy use through a public records request to the Nashville Electric Service.


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RELATED

Politics - Select Quotes

God Amazes Me

Al Gore Campaigns For John McCain

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For Further Reading


Book Cover Book Cover Book Cover


Democratization of Political Blogging

A few decades ago it was possible for a few elite persons to control what information was made available to the public about political candidates. That is not true any more. There has been a democratization of political and public policy information like no one could have foreseen. I am talking about political blogging. Bloggers have "found their voice" and people are listening. Some bloggers have as large, or larger, an audience that does the mass media. And the influence of political bloggers is great enough that the various political parties are now extending full media credentials to bloggers.

Many of you who read Politics & Christianity do a great job of sharing your thoughts in the comment threads here. I encourage you to extend the influence of your "commentary" by beginning your own Blog. There are a variety of blogging platforms that are cheap and easy to learn. One such provider is Thoughts.com. At Thoughts.com you can create a free blog or personal online journal where you can upload photos, videos, and podcasts, or chat in the community forums and bookmark the latest news. Thoughts.com allows you to decide for each blog post if you want it to be public, private, or only viewable by your friends and family. And, there is unlimited free bandwidth for those of you with lots and lots of ideas to share.

If you start your own blog, or already have one, drop me a note so I can check it out.


Michael Williams At The Republican Party of Texas Convention

Nearly 12,000 delegates and alternates gathered last week for the Republican Party of Texas Convention. It seems that the liberal left, the mass media, and radio talk shows have managed to focus attention on a few of the not so pretty items of interest (eg. John McCain's no-show, some stupid buttons sold by a fringe group, a questionable video introduction, etc.). However, there were plenty of newsworthy and noteworthy events and speeches.

One of the most talked about speeches was delivered by Chairman Michael Williams of the Texas Railroad Commission. He was interrupted by applause more than 30 times during the course of the speech. I have embedded the video of the speech below, along with a transcript. I encourage you to check it out.




CHAIRMAN MICHAEL WILLIAMS
2008 REPUBLICAN PARTY OF TEXAS STATE CONVENTION
JUNE 12, 2008 – HOUSTON, TEXAS

I am honored to share a stage this week with Chairman Benkiser, Vice Chairman Armstrong and my 28 colleagues who hold statewide office, all of whom are proud Republicans.

And I am especially honored to be in the midst of the many thousands of you who launched a Republican revolution in Texas… the greatest grassroots organization in the 50 states… the delegates and alternates of the Republican Convention of Texas.

You are the heart and soul of our party…a people who have never stopped believing in
conservative ideas, and who have never stopped living up to conservative ideals.

Eight years ago you saw fit to elect a bald-headed guy who wears bow ties and cowboy boots to the Texas Railroad Commission. Two years later you did it a second time. And I thank you.

If you did not support me in those previous races, that’s okay. You will have another chance in November.

With the price of crude oil above $130 a barrel, and the price of gasoline nearing $4 a gallon, we need leadership that stands up for the economic interests of American families by demanding greater exploration of America’s energy sources.

I have fought for energy exploration, the development of clean energy technologies, common sense water protection and pipeline safety measures and self-imposed spending caps at the Railroad Commission.

I have advocated for fiscal conservatism even when it cost me money… such as when I turned down a pay raise from the Texas Legislature, not once, but twice.

And if you re-elect me Railroad Commissioner in 2008, I will be that voice from middle America that Washington doesn’t want to hear… the one arguing with every fiber in his being that the “cap and trade” carbon tax is nothing more than a cap and spend redistribution scheme, the likes of which we haven’t seen since the creation of the modern welfare state.

I know the liberals think Americans are finally coming their way… that suddenly working families are for higher taxes and bigger government. But the election of a Democrat Congress is not an endorsement of Democrat ideas. The fact is Democrats campaign as conservatives so they can govern as liberals. The problem is Republicans started doing the same thing, so the people chose the real thing.

But the American people still believe in limited government, lower taxes and less regulation.

And if our party returns to its Reagan roots, our majority will one day return to Washington as well.

Like many of you, I cut my teeth in the Reagan Revolution. I later served in the first Bush Administration. And for 30 years I have been friends with a man from Midland I am proud to call my president… George W. Bush.

As we choose a new president, I am keenly aware of the historic nature of this campaign.

As an African-American from the South, I am proud of the fact that someone who looks like me will be a major party presidential nominee for the first time in our nation’s history.

What Senator Obama has done is extraordinary. His nomination speaks well, not only of his own personal political skills, but of the America that exists today.

But Americans will not fall for identity politics over good ideas or slogans in the absence of substance or for promises and platitudes that are the wrong policy prescriptions.

Change is just a slogan when the ideas are the Democrat leftovers of the last 50 years. When it is the same menu as McGovern, Carter and Mondale: higher taxes, bigger government and a steady diet of class warfare and expanded welfare.

We must remember what their message of hope and change is all about: their hope is in
government, and the change they seek is in your pocket.

My fellow Republicans, we are the party of change. We are the ones that brought reform to government, reducing regulation and lowering taxes. We brought down the Soviet wall. We are the ones that believe public education should be about the children and not the union leaders.

Our faith resides in the power of the individual and not an all-pervasive federal government.

And we believe in the simple but profound idea that human life is sacred, beginning with the unborn.

Our message of hope is not dependent on bureaucracy but entrepreneurship. We do not settle for the proposition that a healthy environment has to come at the expense of a healthy economy.

Our hope resides in unleashing the entrepreneurial spirit to address both challenges.
We believe in tying incentives, not penalties, to fuel efficiency. We want to create an economic climate conducive to the further development of the electric, natural gas or plug-in hybrid market and the first 100 mile-per-gallon cars.

We want to send our kids off in low emission natural gas or propane school buses. Not only will our kids breathe easier, but so will taxpayers who pay the fuel bills.
We want to challenge innovators and entrepreneurs who develop new clean coal technology.

Our answer isn’t to say “no to coal” with no alternative. It is to say how can we make the burning of coal cleaner, so we have a more diverse and affordable mix of energy and a cleaner environment?

America is the Saudi Arabia of coal. Texas has a 200-year supply. Let’s not start with the proposition of “why we can’t,” but “how we can.”

My friends, our message of hope and change built a political majority because it reflects the common sense of Middle America.

If you ever doubt whether we have won the debate of ideas, consider the fact that conservatives still call themselves conservatives and liberals call themselves progressives.

It is far easier to rebuild the brand of a party than revive a disproved philosophy.
But to win this election cycle, we need to get our swagger back. We need to start acting with the confidence of a party that reflects the prevailing sentiment. And step one is to stop licking our wounds and start telling it like it is.

The Democrat policy on Iraq is to withdraw regardless of the consequences. Whether you supported the war in Iraq or not, the next president will not decide the past but the future. We cannot base our policy in the Middle East on appeasing the political left. It must be about serving the American interest.

I am so thankful Senator McCain knows that Democrat policies have empowered oil barons in the Middle East. He knows that an unconditional withdrawal will only shift the balance of power further toward the extremists. He is committed to defeating the jihadists who did not wait for the American invasion of Iraq to begin before killing innocent Americans on American soil.

The energy challenge we face today is a direct result of the refusal of Democrats to consider new energy exploration. Democrat policies stand in the way of developing needed refinery capacity.

Democrat policies have left Texans vulnerable to the rising price of natural gas. Democrat policies have stuck us with soaring electric rates. And it was the Democrat Leader in the Texas House who killed a ten percent rate reduction for millions of Texas consumers last year.

Liberals have hijacked environmentalism and given us extremism. They say “no” to nuclear development, “no” to cleaner coal plants, and “no” to wind energy when it encroaches on their East Coast beach properties.

They have fought energy exploration from the coast of Florida to the outer reaches of Alaska.

Then they turn around and blame American energy companies for the high price of energy when their extremism and obstructionism makes us more dependent on foreign oil every day.

What’s wrong with this picture?

The French are harnessing nuclear power. The Chinese and Castro are producing natural gas 50 miles from our borders. And the Democrats just say no. They are reaching back into history for Jimmy Carter’s failed windfall profits tax. The same tax that drove down American oil production. Never mind that today Americans spend $600 billion a year for imported oil.

If Saudi sheikhs are driving a new Rolls Royce, it was Democrat policies that gave them the extra riyals.

Now, the Democrats want to place a $3 trillion tax on carbon output to combat global warming.

Regardless of where you come down on the science of climate change, putting an extra $3 trillion in the hands of Washington politicians is a truly miserable proposition. Those that produce the most carbon will purchase allowances. The money generated from such a scheme will then allow Senator Boxer and her colleagues to dole out favors to all their friends.

And what will be the benefit for the single mom trying to make ends meet? The office worker trying to put his kids through college? The farmer betting on the next crop? The young couple in south Dallas, east Austin, the Valley or third ward here in Houston?

It will be even higher prices for electricity, gasoline at the pump and food at the grocery store.

That single mom with two kids… that office worker with a college loan to go with the home loan… that farmer paying higher fertilizer and diesel costs … those inner city residents making their first house payments won’t breathe easier under cap and spend either.

China and India will continue to increase their carbon output, negating any environmental benefits whatsoever. So this carbon tax will hurt Texans’ jobs, raise the cost of goods, thin our wallets and do little to reduce greenhouse gases.

My friends, this is the fundamental difference about how we address great challenges:
we want to insure economic growth and create incentives for entrepreneurial solutions; they want to punish job creators through new taxes and a massive redistribution scheme.

When it comes to energy and the economy, we ought to focus on producing more, reliable energy sources here in America. Developing alternative energy for transportation and electricity, the new technology to make traditional sources cleaner and killing the Democrats’ cap and trade redistribution scheme.

And then we ought to do everything in our power to attract more American students to the fields of math, science, engineering and technology.

Both my parents earned college degrees in math. My dad was a high school math teacher and a coach. My wife Donna is a mechanical engineer. I understand the value of innovation and technology to the future of this country, which is why this summer I am co-sponsoring a camp called “Williams Innovators” to inspire students between the sixth and 12th grades to pursue proficiency in the fields of math, science, engineering and technology.

We must end the mass exportation of the talent we educate by filling American classrooms with more American students ready to take advantage of the opportunities of the 21st Century.

My friends, this is an historic time. We cannot win this election focused on internal struggles.

We cannot protect jobs and working families if we are relegated to the sidelines of public discourse. We cannot build and sustain a culture that nurtures life from the comfort of our living rooms. Now is not the time to sow the seeds of indifference. We must remember why we joined this fight to begin with… why we entered the arena.

Imagine with me the America that can be if we don’t lose hope, don’t lose our sense of idealism.

Imagine an America where freedom and responsibility go hand-in-hand. Imagine an America where opportunity is available to all and the hope of all. Imagine an America where we exercise proper dominion over God’s creation while ushering in a wave of new prosperity.

Imagine an America where schools compete for our kids instead of taking them for granted.

Imagine an America where the values of Middle America are not looked down upon by the left, but embraced by all because they are right. Imagine communities free of drugs… neighborhoods free of crime… families free of violence.

We can only achieve what we first imagine. We can only realize that which we are willing to do.

I know no election more significant than the next one. My dad is in the Texas Football Coaches Hall of Honor. He says the first rule of winning is to show up.

Will you roll up your sleeves with me, and answer the whistle? Will you join me on the game field? Will you fight for a brighter future for all Americans?

I ask for your help… I ask for your prayers… and I ask for your vote.

May the peace of the Lord be with you. May God bless you and may God bless Texas.

Let’s get to work!


design by Dwayne Hunter
design by Dwayne Hunter