Showing posts with label #springbreak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #springbreak. Show all posts

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Today's Toys Child's Play or Something Else?

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about modern toys. This follows this post about job hunting. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.


“Yank out alien organs dripping in glowing alien blood.” This cheery invitation greets children 7 and under from the box of a toy called Dissect-an-Alien. It's part of the popular Mad Scientist line of playthings made by one of the nation's largest toy manufacturers.

Toys aren't what they used to be

Have you noticed what kinds of toys your children have been playing with lately? How are some of the new types of games and toys affecting them?
Toy manufacturing and marketing has boomed into a multibillion-dollar business. Toy makers not only follow the trends; they start them. Electronics and vivid graphics have added a new dimension to our children's toys.
But, with all that is available, are our children better off?

Benefits of playtime

When most of us reminisce about our childhood, we cannot help but think about our play with siblings, friends, pets and toys. I smile when I think about hiking to a waterfall in the woods with my dog or playing catch with my brother. On wintry Sunday afternoons, I remember playing chess for hours with my father.
Whether we had many toys or only a few, we all remember our favorite teddy bears, dolls, model cars or construction sets. Through toys children experiment, explore, express and discover themselves. They give their toys life, character, abilities and talents. With their imagination they project themselves into their play. Through make-believe they build a bridge with adulthood and look forward to growing up.
Play is important for a child's development. It is one way children learn about the world around them. How they relate to and play with toys helps them learn skills such as dexterity and hand-eye coordination.
Playing with other children helps a child with social development. He (or she) learns how to get along with, tolerate and share with other kids. By interacting with others, children learn how to solve problems.

Survival of the funnest

The first toys could well have been natural objects such as sticks, fir cones, seed pods, bones and smooth, round stones. Since then, dolls, balls, spinning tops and pull toys have become the basic playthings of many cultures.
When visiting a toy store in Russia, I was fascinated to see how universally boys and girls are attracted to animal shapes, puppets, dolls, and miniature cars, trucks and tractors.
At ancient burial sites, animal figures have been found that appear to have been made for no purpose other than to play with. For example, Persian wheeled pull or push toys carved from white limestone into the shapes of animals date from the 12th century B.C. Clues to the nature of many old toys have been found on ancient vases and reliefs, which often picture hobbyhorses, carts, hoops, balls, tops and musical instruments.
Toys were almost completely handcrafted until late in the 18th century, after which mass-produced objects for children to play with began to appear for the first time.
The last decade saw some entirely new species of toys. The computer-game craze reflects advances in science and technology. Yet, although the complexity of toys is on the increase, the longevity of games and toys is decreasing with the constantly changing popularity of styles and heroes.
Although exceptional toys exist that bring out the best in our children, there are an increasing number that represent alarming trends that we as parents need to be beware of. Many toys do not help a child develop imagination, or they develop an entirely wrong kind of creativity.

Violence, the occult, repulsion

Toy makers have found models such as GI Joe (a perennial best-seller) or Rambo-or characters from the current space, war and adventure movies-to be hot-selling items. Toy firearms that discharge lasers and fake bullets sell exceptionally well.
Toys that are disturbing to many parents, like The Blaster, casually offer a child a way to blow up the world. With push buttons and a handgrip with vast firepower, this toy is advertised to help its operator relieve tension: “Leave in your wake a flood of totally imaginary destruction and feel good about yourself once again.” The Blaster simulates machine-gun fire, laser beams and nuclear explosions.
Is this a good way to release tension? What are the lessons a child learns from this kind of toy? Are we doing anything other than teaching barbarism with toys like this?
The impact of playing with war toys increases inappropriate behavior such as hitting, kicking, hair-pulling and teasing. War toys can desensitize children toward violence, produce exaggerated fear of others and increase angry and violent behavior. Children may become more hyperactive, fight and quarrel more, and generally demonstrate more belligerence when they play with miniature weapons of destruction.

Sending a deadly message

By buying children war toys, the message parents send them is that it is appropriate to fight and solve problems violently. If we give impressionable children toys that imply that war or hostility is acceptable, then we send them the message that it is all right to act out feelings using weapons.
On the other hand, the prophet Isaiah speaks about a time during which man will no longer learn war and violence. In those days, erstwhile combatants “shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore” (Isaiah 2:4).
The huge increase in the popularity of electronic games assaults our children with violence. The National Coalition on Television Violence studied 95 Nintendo video games and found that 83 percent feature violent themes, with 58 percent spotlighting war games. The study discovered that children ages 8 through 10 are 80 percent more likely to fight among themselves after playing with interactive laser weapons.
In addition, video games can produce stress, are inherently frustrating and promote obsessive, even addictive, behavior. They also tend to isolate children from other people. Children scream at a video game because it won't do what they want it to. They may throw down the controls in rage or yell at people who come near them and break their concentration. If playmates are involved, they may yell at each other or end up fighting because of the game.
A mother commented that the family's video-game unit turned her two children, ages 10 and 8, into “animals.” She said her 10-year-old “can't stop playing once he starts.” The 8-year-old becomes frustrated, hostile, angry and violent when he plays. The two fight and argue with their friends over Nintendo.

Toying with the occult

Along with violent toys, children and adolescents experiment with the occult-and plenty of toys and games based on the supernatural are available. I strolled down the aisle of the largest toy chain store near my home. Piled high in one section were Ouija boards and other games that encourage dabbling in the occult.
One particularly hideous game is Nightmare on Elm Street: The Freddie Game, based on a movie about a man who murders teenagers. In this nightmare of a toy, Freddie is depicted wearing a glove equipped with razor-sharp blades for slashing his victims.
Do we really want our children to amuse themselves with such a “game”? What could possibly be redeeming about it? Such games only encourage children to come close to the mysterious world of fear, ugliness and death.
Another toy, Boglins, encourages children to identify with lovable but ugly little creatures that come alive in their hands. Still another, the Brain Blaster, has a head that falls apart, with brain matter falling out in chunks. Drool is a hand puppet that lives up to its name. Airsickness depicts an airline passenger strapped into a seat with a look of nauseated anticipation on his face.
Other toys in the Mad Scientist series include one called Monster Lab, which invites children to “make disgusting, gross monsters . . . then sizzle the flesh off their bones.” On the box, a group of young boys is depicted dipping a creature in a frothing vat of make-believe acid.
Then there is the Glowing Glop kit, with advertising that advises youngsters to “squeeze 'em! Alien blood oozes from their eyes.” The popularity of such dreadful toys has prompted a popular brand of candy that looks like spiders and rats, which children are encouraged to devour.
Some adults are rightly concerned with trends toward repulsiveness in lines of toys such as Garbage Pail Kids, because the ugliness desensitizes children to the point that they are no longer offended by violence, sadism and the grotesque.
In the context of children, Jesus Christ warned those who would take advantage of the impressionable and defenseless: “But whoever causes one of these little ones who believe in Me to sin, it would be better for him if a millstone were hung around his neck, and he were drowned in the depth of the sea” (Matthew 18:6).

You buy the toys

The president of Child World, which owns Children's Palace, the second-largest toy-store chain in the United States, stated that playthings featuring the grotesque “are selling quite well. They seem to be part of what we see as a larger trend aimed at little boys for gross kinds of stuff.”
The Toy Manufacturers Association sees no harm in such toys. “When it comes to grossness, we firmly believe that the decision to buy the toys should be made by the parents.”
Even though it comes from a perspective I strongly disagree with, that's good advice, parents. The TMA couldn't have said it any better. The decision to purchase such toys is up to you. As parents, we should closely monitor and evaluate the kinds of toys our children play with. We should make it clear to our offspring that we, as adults, will help choose their toys.
How is it that children are so knowledgeable about and lust for certain kinds of consumer goods? It is no coincidence that children's television programming is often little more than one long advertisement for toys. Your children are a lucrative market, to say the least.
In one year the average 4- to 8-year-old will see 1,000 or more 30-second and 180 or so 30-minute cartoon commercials selling war toys—the equivalent of 18 days of classroom instruction in exciting, stimulating pro-war entertainment. Advertising like this is effective; war-toy sales increased 700 percent in five years from 1982 to 1987.
Don't let yourself feel guilty if you don't get your children the particular toys they want. Don't allow children to go crazy for every toy with a certain make-believe character's picture on it. Monitor what your children watch, and take control of the toy purchases in your family. Your children should not be preyed upon by toy manufacturers competing for your money with bizarre and grotesque products.

What's good

In the midst of commercialism and chaos, you can make many sensible choices if first you consider the impact of a toy before you buy it.
Toys need not be expensive. For example, a device as simple as a yo-yo will teach a child a memorable lesson about objects in motion he will recall in high school and college when he studies physics.
Question the value of any toy your child asks for. How will he (or she) benefit from a particular toy? Will his imagination be directed toward wholesomeness? What will she learn? Will it help her solve problems? Will it help him use his mind?
Will the toy help him interact with others? Will it help her refine her skills or explore and discover things about herself and the world around her? There are many creative, peaceful toys that will stretch your child's imagination while giving hours of fun.
Classic construction sets such as those made by Tinker Toys, Lego, Lincoln Logs and Erector are excellent choices. They help a child imagine a structure, then build it. A simple microscope-or chemistry or electronic kit-with which you can guide a child in learning about the physical creation is also a good choice.
When shopping for toys, you may find it best to avoid the products of high-visibility companies that promote toys that go well with heavily sugared cereals and Saturday-morning television. You can do a lot better by going to the toy department of a science museum or out-of-the-way shops near college campuses.
Hobby stores are a good source for toys. In them you will find products that force parents to spend time with their children as together they learn how they work.

Keep it simple

The toy industry has made many of their wares too complicated. Simplicity should top the list of things to look for in a toy. Something as basic and durable as a ball could be a child's first toy. Skills learned from throwing, catching and bouncing a ball endure for a lifetime.
Often the simplest toys last while the complicated ones drop dead when their batteries run down. Keeping toys supplied with alkaline sources of power can get expensive.
When planning a purchase, consider how an item could be used by the whole family to help bring parents and children together to play and talk. One problem with many electronic games is that children retire to their own little world and tune out everything and everyone around them.
Parents are often irritated and repulsed by a game's sounds, or they may not have the faintest idea how to play it. If children spend too much time playing with electronic games, they tend to get bored easily and aren't interested in developing relationships with others.
Sports toys are wholesome. Many parlor games promote discussion. Pictionary, for example, teaches children to follow rules, take turns, learn new words and communicate with symbols.

The play's the thing

Children want to play. Toys are perfect for play. In our busy world, we often abdicate our responsibilities as parents by using toys as a crutch to entertain our children while we do something else. Children respond favorably to parents and friends who interact with and pay attention to them. Playtimes can be fun and educational and can nurture familial ties.
Make your precious children's early years an experience they will treasure. In the world of the future, there will be the right kind of play with the right kind of toys, for “the streets of the city shall be full of boys and girls playing in its streets” (Zechariah 8:5). GN

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Friday, March 4, 2016

Spring Break Sex vs. Divine Light

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about teens, college students, and spring break. This follows this post about some of the problems of Detroit. This follows this post about the Pope and immigration. For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.


In analyzing these questions, Time magazine writer Belinda Luscombe cites a litany of imprudent behavior by famous young ladies.
Girls behaving badly
Examples include recently published photos of a semi-clothed Miley Cyrus and the unwed pregnancies of Jamie Lynn Spears and Bristol Palin. Plus there are the “Gloucester Seventeen,” a group of high school girls in Massachusetts who agreed among themselves to get pregnant together.
Adding to real-life cases, the author cites fictitious young female personalities who behave just as badly—and often more explicitly. Characters from the television shows 90210 , Gossip Girl and The O.C. top the list, plus MTV hits like My Super Sweet 16 and Spring Break . Juno may be the most visible in a list of films that negatively influence teen girls.
There's not enough room in this commentary to fully address the ways in which this particular Time magazine article fails to properly handle the subject—but there is room to make two very important points.
Boy accountability
First, remember that Jamie Lynn Spears and Bristol Palin did not get pregnant by themselves, nor did the Gloucester Seventeen. Boys must be held accountable for immoral behavior just the same as girls.
Young men need to understand their proper role with young women—to respect their character and protect their purity. If a teenage guy wants to become a real man, he would never make sexual advances toward a girl or accept any advances that she might make toward him. Real men understand the value of saving themselves and their girlfriends for the incredible blessings of marriage.
Underestimating the media
Second, the Time writer fails to grasp the true danger of sexual content in modern media. She states that the link between how teen sexuality is portrayed in the media and the behavior of teen girls is “more complicated than Tracey see, Tracy do” (“The Truth About Teen Girls,” Sept. 22, 2008). That's a word play on “monkey see, monkey do” to describe how some imitate the actions of others without thinking.
While not every teen exposed to sexual content in news or entertainment apes the behavior he or she sees, that's no cause for the cold comfort implied by Ms. Luscombe. The problem with sexually suggestive or explicit material is that it fills the mind with images and sound bites that are incredibly difficult to un-see and un-hear.
Bright thinking vs. wrong sex
Jesus Christ said, “The lamp of the body is the eye. Therefore, when your eye is good, your whole body also is full of light. But when your eye is bad, your body also is full of darkness. Therefore take heed that the light which is in you is not darkness” (Luke 11:34-35).
Of greater concern than “Tracey see, Tracey do ” is the certainty that when Tracey sees, Tracey thinks . When you think about wrong behavior, you suffer a portion of the damaging consequences even if your thoughts never lead to actions. If wrong thoughts do lead to wrong actions, the damage suffered greatly increases.
Asking whether teen girls are becoming sexually active too early in life is the wrong question. Any young person, male or female, who engages in sexual activity before marriage is doing so too early!
The real question for a vertically thinking young person is, “What should I be thinking and how should I be acting so that I can save sex for my marriage?” Successfully answer this question and you'll never regret it! VT

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Friday, March 13, 2015

March LIBERAL Madness Begins!

A timely post about from www.yaf.org about March Madness. This follows this post about the age of Obama.
You can follow me here.

March LIBERAL Madness Begins!

 
  Posted by Cheri Cerame


Your club can dedicate a week towards the end of March to highlight the most outrageous statements made by liberal leaders. The Left never hesitates to remind the public when a conservative misspeaks. Yet, many outlandish remarks made by prominent liberals go unnoticed by the general public and the media.
You can use a bracket system similar to the NCAA Basketball Tournament to highlight 16 of the most radical liberals and their extreme statements. This activity will encourage participation from other students and, if marketed correctly, build anticipation about whom your student body picked as the "maddest" liberal in the country.
Young America’s Foundation has already compiled a list of sixteen liberal leaders and their top "moment of madness." But feel free to use your own!
Begin by reserving a table in the student union or another high traffic area on campus for the entire week. Announce your plans to the local and campus press and advertise that students can come by your location to begin voting.
Gore MLM MIchelle Obama MLMStreisand MLM
Create your bracket system on a dry erase board, chalk board, or poster board that can be displayed by your table. On each bracket, include the name and the picture of each leftist. Consider purchasing Velcro strips that can be attached to each name to allow you to move the name to the next series of brackets.
To assist with voting, make fliers or leaflets available which provide the "moment of madness" for each liberal. Keep a rolling tally on your display of the votes each liberal receives.
Create specific and well-publicized times when students may choose their favorites. We recommend that selection occur on consecutive days beginning on Monday with the top 16 and ending with the final two on Thursday. Each day, announce the winners from the previous round before proceeding with the next round of voting.
If marketed properly, anticipation should build among students as to which prominent leftist wins for the number one slot.

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Spanish and More

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/ about Spring Break. This follows this post about the Madrid bombings anniversary.For a free magazine subscription or to get the books recommended for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632.
I am leaving TWITTER SOON. Please continue to follow me here.


Spanish and More




I thought I knew exactly what I was doing, but my trip to Spain yielded some unexpected results.

It was my junior year at Baylor University, and I thought I had my college career comfortably under control. I had completed most of my requirements with the exception of one Spanish class. Three years had elapsed since I had read, studied or spoken Spanish; and with this small fact I knew that I was going to struggle.
It was tougher than I thought. After one week, I was hopelessly behind and dropped the class. Considering my alternatives, I had the brilliant idea that studying abroad in Madrid would be the perfect way to learn the language and fulfill my college requirement. Little did I know that I was about to learn more than just Spanish.
With my suitcase in one hand and a metro map in the other, I began to roll my belongings through the streets of Madrid. After 12 hours of travel, having flown from Dallas, Texas, I was more than ready for a shower and settling into my new apartment.
As I walked up Calle Manuel and found the apartment that would be my new home, I was greeted by an older woman with dark eyes. Her name was Carmen, and being a native Spaniard she greeted me with a double kiss and rapidly asked questions in Spanish. At that moment I began to think back to my Spanish classes in high school, wishing I had paid more attention! Not knowing much English, she welcomed me in with hand gestures and pointed down a long hallway to where I would be staying for the semester.
This seemed less frightening when I saw that my three other roommates were American students who had the same stunned and overwhelmed look on their faces. We talked about our flights, our expectations and our initial impressions of Spain. We shared the reasons we decided to study abroad for a semester, and they were shocked to find that I was not majoring in the language. To be completely and humbly honest, I did not hold a candle to these girls who seemed to be comfortable holding a conversation in Spanish. My first challenge soon arrived.

Calamari for dinner

Our first night, Carmen made us fried calamari (squid), and in my fractured Spanish, I politely explained that I could not eat the meal she'd prepared. Then, with Spanish-English dictionary in hand, I made a list of the other meats that I couldn't eat. What a way to make a first impression—rejecting her first meal! I was sure Carmen must have thought I was rude, and she soon learned that I was different in more respects than just my diet.
Every Friday night Carmen noticed how I never went out partying with my other roommates. She also inquired about the "movies" I watched on Saturdays. They were not the typical forms of entertainment the other students watched!
I explained that my church had sermons online that I could watch or listen to regardless of my location or country. Spain, a country rich in religious history and predominately Catholic, did not have many who shared in my beliefs. It was difficult to keep the Sabbath alone, and I knew that this feeling of loneliness would grow with time. I had never considered how much my church was actually a family. Being away from my family brought on a feeling of homesickness.

Road trip!

It was finally time for spring break, and although many of my school friends had planned trips outside Spain, I wanted to stay and fully experience the culture. For centuries, this area has been famous for richly unique qualities of food, dancing and landscape.
A year before, I had traveled through Europe and started a friendship with Claire and Jako Kasper, a couple who attend the United Church of God in Germany. After I told them that I was moving to Spain, we quickly planned a road trip together through the Iberian Peninsula (on which Spain and Portugal are located).
It had been months since I had spent time with other young adults who shared my beliefs, so I was really looking forward to our time together. The first weekend of our camping/road trip excursion, we had a nice Friday night meal, shared in deep conversation and enjoyed listening to a sermon from a small MP3 player on the Sabbath.
I had started to forget the importance of being with people who believe, think and feel the same way I do. They invited me to spend the Passover and week-long Feast of Unleavened Bread with them in Germany, and I knew that it would be an amazing opportunity to enjoy time with fellow Church members.
So the spring festival period came, and I remember stepping off the high-speed German train with a hiking backpack, wondering how long it had been since I had sung hymns. Now was my opportunity to wear Sabbath clothes, sing hymns with fellow believers, give an offering and not worry about explaining my beliefs to people in Spanish! Claire and Jako greeted me with hugs and chocolate. We rode to the Passover service together, and when we arrived at the building I was overwhelmed with an unusual feeling.
In scanning the room it seemed that people were from rather diverse cultural backgrounds. Everything was different, including the personalities, senses of humor and, of course, languages. Yet as I sat there listening to the Passover service in German, something occurred to me. Even with these differences, we were all there that night for the same reason. Each of us had been called into this belief, and we were partaking of the Passover as a unified body.

More than Spanish

This is when it dawned on me that I was learning more than Spanish. I had moved to Europe to master a language and to take part in a different culture. However, while in Europe I learned that the important thing was not whether we spoke the same language or had the same opinions about the things of this world, but that we were all fluent in understanding God's truth and purpose for our lives.
In observing the Passover together, we shared the same solemn, repentant and humbled mind-set. I saw that God has the ability to call anyone, no matter where a person lives or how he or she was raised. And He has called a very diverse group of people. In fact, it is through our diversities that we can see the importance of His plan. If we were all alike, how would we be able to challenge one another and grow?
In the week that followed, I was delighted to spend time with a smorgasbord of people with similar beliefs. The evening after Passover, the group of us keeping the Night to Be Much Observed (which begins the Feast of Unleavened Bread), consisted of people from Holland, Belgium, New Zealand and England, and yours truly from Texas. As we sat around the table discussing how we keep the Sabbath and handle day-to-day Christian living, I also considered the fact that many European Church members are used to living in an environment where they can rarely spend time with other believers.
(Those unfamiliar with observing the weekly Sabbath, the annual Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread may wish to request our free booklets Sunset to Sunset: God's Sabbath Rest and God's Holy Day Plan: The Promise of Hope for All Mankind .)
God's people in parts of Europe are so spread out, and yet they have not given in to the ways of the world. They have continued to stand firm and practice their beliefs, even if they are alone in their country. Here I had been, practically spoiled in attending with a few hundred Church members each weekend in Texas. It took my own lonely solitude in Spain to realize the importance of staying committed to what I believe, no matter how alone I might feel.
This lesson was a surprise. I had put such an emphasis on learning a human language that I had temporarily overlooked the more powerful lesson of God—that He is calling people from all backgrounds. I went to Spain to learn Spanish. I came home with a deeper appreciation of the fact that He is calling people of all nations to His way of life. VT
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Friday, March 14, 2014

Is Elizabeth Munoz a Serial Killer? Hispanic El Paso Woman Allegedly Murdered Her Second Boyfriend in Six Years; Why was She Free?


A timely post about from http://nicholasstixuncensored.blogspot.com about a crime in the border town of El Paso, something to think about during Spring Break. This follows this post about holding IRS chief Lois Lerner in Contempt of Congress.  In the meantime, you can get more involved if you like here and read an interesting book HERE.
You can follow me at blogspot here and at twitter here https://twitter.com/brianleesblog. Please consider following both in case one goes down!

Is Elizabeth Munoz a Serial Killer? Hispanic El Paso Woman Allegedly Murdered Her Second Boyfriend in Six Years; Why was She Free?


El Paso Police Department mug shot of an Elizabeth Muñoz, who was arrested on October 17, 2012, for DWI


By Nicholas Stix

I thank the Texas reader who sent me this article, remarking,
“A 33-year-old woman convicted of fatally stabbing her common-law husband seven years ago was arrested Sunday night for allegedly stabbing to death her boyfriend during the weekend at a Lower Valley public housing complex.”

All the dirt poor border Mexicans live in "public" housing.

Guess who pays for this "public" housing?

Affirmative action I: Senorita Munoz is either here illegally—the El Paso Times wouldn’t mention her citizenship status—or she benefited from a previous amnesty. Everyone with a Spanish name in border town El Paso who isn’t some kind of grandee is either illegal or an amnesty beneficiary.

Affirmative action II: When Munoz murdered her boyfriend, Francisco Arceo, 24, she was charged and convicted only of aggravated assault, instead of murder, and did minimal jail time.

Affirmative action III: She was jailed under a measly $250,000 bond for her second alleged murder.


El Paso woman suspected of killing boyfriend with tattoo instrument
Court records show she was convicted of killing common-law husband in 2007
By Daniel Borunda / El Paso Times
Posted: 3/04/2014 12:13:28 A.M. MST
El Paso Times

A 33-year-old woman convicted of fatally stabbing her common-law husband seven years ago was arrested Sunday night for allegedly stabbing to death her boyfriend during the weekend at a Lower Valley public housing complex.

El Paso police detectives arrested Elizabeth Muñoz on suspicion of murder in connection with the fatal stabbing of Raul Robles, 31, on Saturday at the Alvarez apartments, 8247 N. Loop, officials said. Court documents stated that Muñoz allegedly killed Robles by stabbing him in the neck with a tattoo instrument.

About 3:30 p.m. Saturday, police responding to a fight call found Robles bleeding from the neck and laying on the ground behind an apartment, according to a complaint affidavit filed by a detective. Robles, who lived in Chaparral, was taken to Del Sol Medical Center where he died of his wounds.

The complaint affidavit stated that witnesses had seen Robles and Muñoz, who was described as his girlfriend, having an argument and fighting before the stabbing. A witness saw three men assault Robles.

"However, once the victim (Robles) was on the ground and unconscious, the defendant (Muñoz) approached the victim and began to stab the victim numerous times with an unknown object," the affidavit stated. "Another witness observed the defendant standing over the victim as he laid on the ground bleeding."

The affidavit stated that Muñoz allegedly admitted to detectives that she stabbed Robles twice on the neck with a tattoo instrument that he owned. The document does not say what the pair were arguing about.

Muñoz, of the 200 block of North Davis Drive, was jailed under a $250,000 bond. [A convicted killer accused of her second murder, and only $250,000? The part-black Oregon guy accused of molesting boys was jailed on $1.7 million bond.] A police spokesman said Muñoz [sic] photo was not released because the investigation continues into what is El Paso's second homicide of the year.

It is not the first time that Muñoz, who is listed on jail records as being 5 feet, 1 inch tall and 136 pounds, is accused of killing a man.

In September 2007, Muñoz used a knife to fatally stab her common-law husband, Francisco Arceo, 24, during a fight at their home on Clark Street in Central El Paso, according to court records.

El Paso Times archives report Muñoz was initially arrested on a murder charge in Arceo's death. A grand jury indicted her on a charge of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.

[But that’s ridiculous. Ag assault is for an extremely violent attack, usually with a weapon, which the victim survives. Let me guess: The grand jury was packed with sympathetic Mexicans. Although, when it comes down to it, white women are also pretty much useless as jurors.]

The case was prosecuted by the El Paso County Attorney's Office because of a possible conflict of interest because the District Attorney's Office had prosecuted a case were [sic] Muñoz was allegedly a victim of domestic violence.

In December 2008, Muñoz pleaded guilty to aggravated assault with deadly weapon and was sentenced by Judge Patrick Garcia to five years in state prison.

[Of which she served how much time? Maybe two years?]

Daniel Borunda may be reached at 915-546-6102.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Spring Break! The Best Week of Your Life?

An interesting article from http://www.ucg.org/  about Spring Break warnings. This follows this post about the dangers of same sex marriages. For a free magazine subscription or to get the book shown for free click HERE! or call 1-888-886- 8632. You can follow me at blogspot here and at twitter here https://twitter.com/brianleesblog. Please consider following both in case one goes down!




Spring Break! The Best Week of Your Life?

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three girls walking in sunshine
Source: sxc.hu/goodmorph
Spring Break is all too well known as the monumental rite of passage for college students and young adults all over the world. Every year multiple tens of thousands of young adults travel to top tropical destinations where they experience the wildest parties, the most beautiful beaches, and the most outrageous resorts!
Cancun, Acapulco, Panama City Beach, Puerto Vallarta, Daytona, South Padre Island, and Myrtle Beach are just a partial list of the “hotspots.” Many tour providers offer huge discounts with complete packages offering the Ultimate Spring Break Experience. They advertise boldly “You can’t miss this opportunity of a lifetime!”
Really?
Others will say, “Ah yes, Spring Break!” The time to kick back, relax, and not think about school and studying. Days filled with sleeping in, watching TV, wearing comfy clothes that just might have been slept in, and showering only when necessary. Weekdays filled with playing electronic games, shopping, movie nights, and maybe even sleepovers. Time to take a vacation with or without family, or just with friends, as you travel the open road together.
For many during Spring Break, it’s about eating whatever they want, waking up whenever they want, and doing whatever they want because they’re on vacation. Living the Spring Break dream. And no one judges them for it!
Again, really?
In Ecclesiastes:11:9 (KJV) God reminds us, “Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth, and walk in the ways of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes: but know thou, that for all these things God will bring thee into judgment.”
It’s good to rest and take a break! Relaxation helps us build up our energies for the things we face in life, to learn more about this, please read “Relax - Guilt Free! ” I am a huge fan of vacations, breaks, days off, and anything that gives me a chance to decompress, rest, recharge my bio batteries, and gives me a break from this hectic world.
But here is something we don’t want to forget while we’re on Spring Break. Or a vacation from work, or anytime, for that matter.
Do you stop spending time with God just because you are on vacation?
During this time God can be pushed aside, because, um, well, He probably would not want to be at most of the locations involved with Spring Break activities. Maybe you seem to have so many things to accomplish during your vacation that you are just too busy to stay connected with him.
When you’re on Spring Break or any vacation time, remember it is not a vacation from your relationship with God, too. Vacations are great. Spring Break is fine, provided you remember and live the core values God believes and shares with you. Getting some much needed rest is icing on the cake! But remember: don’t take a break from God!
Continue to read the Bible. Continue to talk with God throughout the day in prayer. Continue to go to church services if you are reasonably near a congregation. I would even dare to say… don’t sleep in every day. Wake up at a normal hour and rather than getting ready for classes, or work, grab a cup of coffee and your Bible, and spend time with God.
This week, enjoy your Spring Break or your vacation time. Just remember that it isn’t a break from God, too. He still loves us and wants to hear from us. He still wants us to live His way of life, and question the societal norms advocated in much of the typical Spring Break activities. Many of those He simply would not want us involved in at all.
And yes, He still wants to be a part of our lives… even while we’re on vacation! Enjoy!