Showing posts with label prayer breakfast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prayer breakfast. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Jindal: “The Medieval Christian threat is under control, Mr. President”

A very interesting post from www.jihadwatch.org about a response to the U.S. president's prayer breakfast remarks. This follows this post about a Jordanian pilot burned to death by ISIS. This follows this article about American energy independence and preventing money from going to hostile countries. For more, you can read two very interesting books HERE.
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Jindal: “The Medieval Christian threat is under control, Mr. President”

bobby-jindalJindal has an important point. Even if Obama is correct (he isn’t) that the Crusades were some equivalent of the depredations of the Islamic State today, this does not excuse him or his Administration from their responsibility to face the current threat honestly and deal with it realistically. 900-year-old Christian atrocities, real and imagined, do not excuse his refusal to recognize the reality of the jihad threat.
“Jindal Mocks Obama on Crusades: We’ve Got ‘Medieval Christian Threat’ Under Control,” by Josh Feldman, Mediaite, February 6, 2015 (thanks to Anne Crockett):
President Obama yesterday obliquely addressed the controversy over his administration not referring to terrorist groups like ISIS as being “radical Muslims.” The president said that plenty of horrible things have been done in the name of Christianity, like the Inquisition and the Crusades.
Obama’s gotten some mockery from the right for referencing events from hundreds of years ago, and today Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal joined the fray. In a statement today, he says the president really isn’t addressing the pressing issue of terrorism and instead giving people a history lesson.
And then came the mocking:
“We will be happy to keep an eye out for runaway Christians, but it would be nice if he would face the reality of the situation today. The Medieval Christian threat is under control Mr. President. Please deal with the Radical Islamic threat today.”
White House deputy press secretary Eric Schultz said today Obama was talking about being “honest with ourselves” when we fall short of our values.

Monday, February 9, 2015

Editorial: U.S. attacked by its own President and the Pope!

Editorial


This week both Barack Obama and Pope Francis attacked American Christianity for very similar reasons.


The Presidents's attack here.


The Pope's attack here.





Pope Francis, Immigration, and CHRONICLES Magazine

An interesting article from www.vdare.com about the Pope's meddling in U.S. laws. (Ask him about the immigration policy of the Vatican?) This follows this post about Seven Democratic Senators who have stated they oppose Executive Amnesty before. This follows this post on HOW amnesty is funded in ways other than the DHS. Remember, “Amnesty” means ANY non-enforcement of existing immigration laws! This follows this comment and this post about how to Report Illegal Immigrants! Also, you can read two very interesting books HERE.
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Memo From Middle America | Pope Francis, Immigration, and CHRONICLES Magazine

thepopethreatenstocrosstheborder
What is the Catholic position on immigration? To judge from the Main Stream Media headlines, the Church demands Open Borders and mass immigration. Indeed, in what would be a cheap and hypocritical stunt, the first Latin American pontiff, Pope Francis, expressed a desire to cross the U.S.-Mexican border.
Speaking to reporters on an airplane, Pope Francis said that “To enter the United States from the border with Mexico would be a beautiful gesture of brotherhood and support for immigrants.”
Pope Francis: Crossing Into U.S. From Mexico Would Be A ‘Beautiful Gesture’, By Roque Planas, Huffington Post, January 20, 2015
Of course, such a symbolic crossing would be in a spot carefully selected for maximum publicity, probably with pre-selected illegal aliens as extras in the papal spectacle. It would be a media circus planned to make the U.S. look oppressive and the Pope to look noble.
A more “beautiful gesture” and an authentic display of courage would be for the Pope to go to the Middle East and speak out for persecuted Catholics. But that would not get the kind of worshipful media coverage that His Holiness seems to want. After all, grandstanding on behalf of illegal aliens is now par for the course for many Catholics.
Thus, the real question is whether we can count on the Papacy and the Church to defend Christendom or Western Civilization. Even evangelicals like me recognize the importance of the Church as an institution and to the identity of the West.
A recent issue of Chronicles magazine deals with the issue of immigration largely from a Catholic perspective. It offers some hope that Catholics can be true to their Faith and also to their country.
inspectionJohn Zmirak contributes Church, Immigration, and Nation, which features an interesting photo from Ellis Island of immigrants being checked by health officials. Even during the Great Wave of European immigration, there were not Open Borders, leftist mythology to the contrary.
Zmirak writes that the individual is part of larger groupings, with the Church in the spiritual realm and the human race and the nation-state in the earthly realm:
All human beings have the same incalculable dignity, value, and fundamental rights; they are not identical or interchangeable. Differences of culture, habit, values, and history are precisely what make the existence of so many nations around the world a delight and a blessing. They also make a nation’s decisions on which newcomers to admit, from which societies and in what numbers, grave and consequential.
Zmirak’s statement about “the existence of so many nations” being a “delight and a blessing” is reminiscent of Solzhenitsyn’s observation that “nations are the wealth of mankind.”
Chronicles Editor Thomas Fleming’s Aliens and Strangers spends a great deal of time discussing the record of Pope Francis. However, he shows that the Catholic Catechism, though somewhat ambiguous, does not mandate Open Borders.
Fleming notes this doesn’t prevent Catholic clergy, from cardinals to priests, from banging the drums for Open Borders. And it results in a curious phenomenon found among both religious and secular globalists:
Tenderhearted humanitarians often seem to find it easier to sympathize with criminals and illegal immigrants than with ordinary hardworking people who wish to hang on to the fruits of their labor, their homes, and the cultural and moral principles that have made it possible for them to rear their children in comparative comfort.
Dr. Fleming is right. We see the same thing in the Republican Party: the GOP elite looks down upon its Middle American base. Unfortunately, as Dr. Fleming reminds us, the modern state (by which we mean the modern First World Western state) will not defend itself.
Aaron Wolfe provides a Protestant perspective in the issue. In an article entitled Tongues of Fire: America’s Phony Religion of Immigration, Wolfe cuts to the essence of the debate that is so often obscured. Wolfe observes that the Church is not the state and that their roles are not the same:
In other words, the United States is not a church. Governments exist to protect their citizens, and a just government should act justly…Governments do not exist to peddle a false religion to the world, to invite the drowning onto the ark, to blend all languages into one. This is not a question of compassion, but of function. A government cannot show compassion by refusing to govern. It certainly cannot do so by harming its own citizens.
This is a critical point. When the Pope and the Catholic hierarchy slam Americans who want to control the border, Americans must respond that virtue does not consist in abandoning responsibility for those an institution is supposed to protect. The same applies when the advocates of Open Borders are “evangelicals” subsidized by George Soros.
If you listen to Open Borders Christians of any denomination, you might get the impression that it’s only on American soil that people can be helped. Ironically, those who equate the United States with the Kingdom of God actually make it harder for both church and state to perform their proper functions. For example, listening to the religious Open Borders fanatics, you’d think there were no governments or churches already existing in Latin America that might be able to provide for their own poor people.
As Wolfe writes:
We used to have a religion in this country, more or less, but from before the beginning, false notions of America-as-God’s-Kingdom led to political subterfuge. Today, the two denominations, Democratic and Republican, battle not over theology but for members. They already agree on the central dogma that government exists to serve them and not to protect the people. But they are Elmer Gantrys and not prophets, and we must not to be taken in by their New Thought evangelism… A first step might be to remember that we are a “we,” and that borders are not evil. Even Heaven has them.
From one Protestant to another: Amen, Aaron.
Now if we could only get Pope Francis to understand that.
American citizen Allan Wall (email him) moved back to the U.S.A. in 2008 after many years residing in Mexico. Allan`s wife is Mexican, and their two sons are bilingual. In 2005, Allan served a tour of duty in Iraq with the Texas Army National Guard. His VDARE.COM articles are archived here; his Mexidata.info articles are archived here ; his News With Views columns are archived here; and his website is here.

Friday, February 6, 2015

Honor Ronald Reagan's Birthday

A timely post about from http://www.yaf.org about Ronald Reagan's birthday. This follows this post about DeflateGate.
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Honor Ronald Reagan's Birthday

Posted by Cheri Cerame

In honor of President Reagan's birthday today, we ask our Twitter and Facebook fans to tell your friends why YOU miss President Reagan.
 
Tweet This Starburst
For example: 
 
1. Unlike Obama, Reagan never apologized for America's greatness. @yaf #RRBDay
 
2. Unlike Obama, Reagan cut tax rates. @yaf #RRBDay
 
3. Unlike Obama, Reagan believed government was not the solution to the problem. Government was the problem. @yaf #RRBDay
 
4. Unlike Obama, Reagan never genuflected to foreign leaders. @yaf #RRBDay
 
5. Unlike Obama, the income growth of the Reagan years boosted the fortunes of Americans at all income levels. @yaf #RRBday