R.I.P. Charles “Chuck” Colson

Charles Colson ~ 1931-2012
Well done thou good and faithful servant!

 
Charles “Chuck” Colson, who had been hospitalized since suffering a brain hemorrhage on March 30th, died yesterday afternoon at the age of 80. Infamous for his role in the Watergate scandal, Colson turned to God in 1974 and shortly after his conversion founded Prison Fellowship; to seek the transformation of prisoners and their reconciliation to God, family, and community through the power and truth of Jesus Christ.
 
At the time he fell ill, Colson was speaking at the Wilberforce Weekend Conference hosted by the Chuck Colson Center for Christian Worldview in northern Virginia. Here are some excerpts from that speech:

“Elections can’t solve the problem we’ve got,” Colson said. “The problem we’ve got is that our culture has been decaying from inside for 30 or 40 years. And politics is nothing but an expression of culture. …
 
“So it comes right back to us,” he continued. “Look in the mirror, that’s where the problem is. If we can, through the church, renew the church to really bring a healthy cultural influence, then there’s some hope we can be changed. … This is a moment when the time is right for a movement of God’s people under the power of the Holy Spirit to begin to impact the culture we live in. Desperately needed.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~

…We propose an invitation to the wedding feast, to come to a better way of living. A better way of life. It’s the great proposal.”

 
Thank-you God for Chuck Colson, welcome him home to Your eternal wedding feast.
 

“Be thou faithful until death, and I will give you the crown of life.” ~ Rev.2:10 ~

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Related:
Fallen from Pride… Landing in Grace
God’s Man ~ Obituary by Emily Belz @ World Magazine
Charles Colson found freedom in prison ~ Michael Gerson @ the Washington Post
 

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Saturday Shorts – 4-21-12

Random links of interest, concern or curiosity from the past week or so, that deserve at least a SHORT mention:

 
Recognition finally for a warrior priest’s heroics ~ Inspiring story of a true hero, US Army chaplain Father Emil Kapaun, who died in a Korean POW camp.
 
America: Will we be inspired by Sparta or Calvary? ~ Excellent summary of what ails the country these days. Is the U.S. becoming a “termite colony?”

“Man is powerless to resist evil if he does not recognize it as such, and deceives himself when he becomes indifferent to evil; his whole personality immediately begins to dissolve, for the power of conscience is inseparably bound up with the denunciation of evil.” ~ Archbishop Fulton Sheen ~

 
Police-state fears grow in Delaware – and elsewhere. ~ Appears to be a national effort underway to dismantle the authority of local sheriffs; effectively making law enforcement less and less accountable to the public.
 

Bank of America to gun company: “Find another bank” ~

What you are going to tell me is that because we are in the firearms manufacturing business you no longer what my business.’”
 
Fox’s (BOA Sr.V.P.) reply, according to McMillan? “That is correct.”

Sounds like Bank of America customers need to find another – less partisan – bank! One with a little more respect for the 2nd Amendment. At least the McMillan group of companies may have the last laugh: It is considering no longer accepting Bank of America credit cards for purchases.

 
‘Dogs Against Obama’ Site Launched After Revelation That Obama…Ate Dogs ~ The hottest topic on Facebook, Twitter and the blogosphere this week inspired Dogs Against Obama. “If I had a dog it would look like the dog Obama ate.”

 

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Obama’s Policies – “Deadly Dangerous”

Robin Leach, familiar voice of “Lifestyles of the Rich & Famous,” has joined the chorus of Brits like Daniel Hannan (who spoke repeatedly about the perils of national healthcare) trying to warn Americans about the destructive nature of socialism. He talked with Neil Cavuto on Fox News earlier this week [MRC video via RealClearPolitics]:
 

(If) you remove the monetary supply from the economy and turn it over to politicians and the government to administer, you know that everywhere you turn… government wastes money…
 
Government cannot run anything efficiently. Government breeds corruption and laziness because it is a “we do not care” philosophy. It is rich people and it is private enterprise and it’s small business owners who go out there and bust their humps to make progress in whatever line of work they are doing. It is in our human nature.

 
America would be wise to heed the advice of men like Leach and Hannan… before November at the latest. Having seen the “ugly and evil” results of socialism in the UK they’re speaking from firsthand experience.
“Leveling the playing field” doesn’t work; it’s never worked.
 

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The “Shot Heard Round the World”


Concord Hymm
 
By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled,
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world.
 
The foe long since in silence slept;
Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
And Time the ruined bridge has swept
Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.
 
On this green bank, by this soft stream,
We set to-day a votive stone;
That memory may their deed redeem,
When, like our sires, our sons are gone.
 
Spirit, that made those heroes dare
To die, and leave their children free,
Bid Time and Nature gently spare
The shaft we raise to them and thee.
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “Concord Hymm” was written for a ceremony in 1837 to mark the completion of the Concord Monument, which honored the resistance of American Minutemen to British forces on April 19, 1775.

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Related:
The Battles of Lexington & Concord ~ Interesting history of the events that began the American Revolution.
 

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Cosmic Rays & Clouds – the Climate Connection

What?! Climate change actually has natural causes? Paging Al Gore…
 

 
The Cloud Mystery is a documentary from Danish scientist Henrik Svensmark. You can watch the whole 52 minute film (in 6 parts) HERE.
 

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Happy Tax Freedom Day!

Coincidentally Tax Freedom Day 2012 arrives on the very same day our taxes are due this year. Whoope-dee-do! And of course it comes four days later than last year thanks to higher federal income and corporate tax collections.
 
The actual date for Tax Freedom Day is determined by calculating how long, on average, we have to work each year to pay our fair share of combined federal, state and local taxes:

When the nation has finally earned enough to pay all the taxes that will be due for that year, Tax Freedom Day has arrived. This year, Americans will pay $2.62 trillion in federal taxes and $1.42 trillion in state-local taxes, for a total tax bill of 29.2 percent.

 
Put another way, as Heritage Foundation explains, for the first 111 days of the year, everything you earned went straight to Uncle Sam.
And if the feds raised taxes enough to close our massive budget deficit we’d have to work until May 14th (Deficit-inclusion Tax Freedom Day).
 
Even more depressing, if we go back 112 years to 1900, Tax Freedom Day was January 22nd! At that time, Americans were only forced to pay today about 6% of their income to the government, today it’s almost 30%. But of course that was before Woodrow Wilson and his Progressives took over and started redistributing the wealth.
 
And we aint’ seen nuthin yet. Barring any intervention by Congress, when “Taxmageddon” arrives next year we can all expect an average tax increase of $3,800. As Heritage’s Curtis Dubay explains:

If Congress fails to act, workers won’t have to wait very long to feel the effects. Every payday, they would see a jump in their payroll tax as it takes a bigger bite out of every paycheck. And that only reflects one of the direct hits they’ll face. They’ll feel the pain of other tax hikes they won’t pay directly, like the health care surtax on investment income and salaries over $250,000 — which begins in 2013 along with five other Obamacare tax hikes — because these hikes will slow job creation by taking away resources from businesses, investors, and entrepreneurs.

 

It won’t just be the “evil rich” taking the hit either; 70 percent of Taxmageddon’s impact will fall directly on low-income and middle-income families, leaving them with $346 billion less to spend.
 
I guess maybe we should be celebrating April 17th, 2012. Next year it may just be a nostalgic memory.
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Related:
Tax Burden on American Households ~ Heritage’s “Chart of the Week”
 

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Founding Wisdom [Flouted by the Foolish]

“A nation of well informed men who have been taught to know and prize the rights which God has given them cannot be enslaved. It is in the region of ignorance that tyranny begins.”
 
Benjamin Franklin
 

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Feds appear hellbent on killing “the Town Too Tough To Die”


 
In the wake of the Monument Fire last summer, the town of Tombstone, Arizona has been facing a critical water shortage. But impervious to appeals, the U.S. Forest Service in their relentless drive to restrict access to public lands, seems determined to let the town die of thirst. As the Goldwater Institute reports:

Between May and July 2011, the Monument Fire engulfed a large part of the eastern portion of the Huachuca Mountains. Record-breaking monsoon rains followed. With no vegetation to absorb the runoff, huge mudslides forced boulders to tumble down the mountain sides, crushing Tombstone’s mountain spring waterlines, destroying reservoirs and shutting off Tombstone’s main source of water. In some areas, Tombstone’s pipeline is under 12 feet of mud, rocks and other debris; while in other places, it is hanging in mid-air due to the ground being washed out from under it.

 
The town of Tombstone has held the rights to this water for 130 years. But the Feds’ central planners are not allowing access – that had been granted in the past – to the trucks and tractors necessary for repairs to the city-owned property, because it’s inside a federal land preserve;

…federal bureaucrats are refusing to allow Tombstone to unearth its springs and restore its waterlines unless they jump through a lengthy permitting process that will require the city to use horses and hand tools to remove boulders the size of Volkswagens.

 
World Net Daily published an update on the dire situation a couple days ago: Can’t a man get a drink in this town? They note that Governor Jan Brewer has already declared a state of emergency for Tombstone, gathering together “all police powers of the state,” to address Tombstone’s need.

Nick Dranias, head of the Joseph and Dorothy Donnelly Moller Center for Constitutional Government at the Goldwater Institute, said the issue is far larger than just a dispute over whether trucks and tractors can be used to repair city-owned property inside a federal land preserve…
…He said there is evidence that the Forest Service under Barack Obama’s leadership is adopting a comprehensive plan “to clear federal lands of any private or non-federal uses.”

 
Last Friday the Institute filed a motion for a preliminary injunction that would allow town officials to go into the Huachuca Mountains to make the necessary repairs on the collection system.
 
Let’s hope Tombstone, whose motto is “the town too tough to die” wins this “shoot-out” with the U.S. Forest Service and Barack’s brigade of bullies.
 
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Related:
Doc Hastings (R-WA), chairman of the House Committee on Natural Resources is helping fight back against unwarranted federal restrictions on public land use. Check out his site for the latest news and updates.
 

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Saturday Shorts (Sunday version) – 4-14-12

Random links of interest, concern or curiosity from the past week or so, that deserve at least a SHORT mention:

 
Rasmussen Reports: 77% Believe Jesus Rose From the Dead ~ Oddly enough most of us don’t live as if that were the case. If we did we could transform American society.
 
President Obama’s $1 Million Parties In Detroit ~ The daughter of Little Caesars’ Pizza founders Mike and Marian Ilitch is throwing a campaign fundraiser for Obama on April 18th. For the mere price of $40,000 you too can attend a cocktail reception, dinner and get your picture taken with the “One.” Whoa – sign me up!
Apparently Denise Ilitch is suffering from SRD (severe reality disconnect). First, after decades of Democratic rule, Detroit has been on the verge of bankruptcy for years precisely because of Dem’s leftist policies. Second, the Ilitch’s never could have built their pizza empire with Obama’s anti-entrepreneurial policies in place. And lastly, although I give the Ilitch family credit for helping keep Detroit afloat, a fundraiser for the city itself would be a whole lot more constructive than helping to re-elect “El Destructo.”
 
The end of women: The subversive legacy of the sexual revolution ~ The fallout from our decades’ old “sex without consequences” culture: “It has made nonsense of the body and made men and women strangers to themselves.”
 
Hostile Workplace ~ Well, well, well. Speaking of the “War on Women,” which side is the Obama administration on?
 
Is Profiling Racist, or Does Not Profiling Make You Ignorant? ~ “Every American who can think, profiles.” In the wake of the Martin-Zimmerman tragedy, why is the Left trying to outlaw a basic human instinct?
 

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Japan: Sadness… and Salvation

Aokigahara, a forest located at the base of Mount Fuji is considered the most haunted place in all of Japan. That may very well be the case. Because it also has the dubious distinction of being the world’s second most “popular” destination (after the Golden Gate Bridge) for suicide. From CNN World:

Aokigahara Forest is known for two things in Japan: breathtaking views of Mount Fuji and suicides. Also called the “Sea of Trees,” this destination for the desperate is a place where the suicidal disappear, often never to be found in the dense forest.

 
An April 9th article in the UK Mail Online features a sad story and short documentary about Aokigahara, the suicides, and a guy named Azusa Hayano, who has studied and tended to the forest for more than 30 years.

Though Mr Hayano is unable to give any definitive answer as to why so many kill themselves at Aokigahara, he has gained great insight into the behaviour of those desperate enough to venture in with no intention of coming back.
 
In this haunting documentary he tells the film-makers how clues left among the trees can indicate what went through a person’s mind in the moments before they took their own life – or, as is sometimes the case, had a change of heart and chose to live.
 
His interest in death and despair may seem to stem from morbid fascination, but as the film rolls on it becomes clear that this softly-spoken, pensive man acts out of a desire to understand and prevent these tragedies.

 
Hayano speculates that those who come to the forest to end their lives have become emotionally isolated by the increasingly impersonal and lonely way of life that emerged with the internet; “Now we can live our lives being online all day. However, the truth of the matter is we still need to see each other’s faces, read their expressions, hear their voices so we can fully understand their emotions – to coexist.”

There’s certainly is a lot of truth in that. Texting, social media and even cell phone connections are no substitute for face-to-face communication. Modern society leaves too many of us feeling alone and hopeless. But I also think that with the Japanese specifically, this contemporary despair may be due to the residual effects of an empty worldview. They have nothing beyond this earthly existence to hope for.
 
Although today fewer that 20% of Japan’s people claim any personal religion, the country’s philosophical roots are in Buddhism. It’s a belief system that recognizes evil and suffering in the world and rightly sees the cause as humans’ inability to suppress their craving and desires. But Buddhism, like most Eastern religions offers no solutions to the human dilemma other than one’s own willpower.
 
And that’s the problem. As L.T. Jeyachandran points out, writing in Beyond Opinion: Living the Faith We Defend; “we as humans know what is right but repeatedly find ourselves in the unenviable position of not being able to do what we know is right.”
 
Eventually that realization, conscious or not, creates a sense of hopelessness and despair. And because we can’t save ourselves from our own destructive yearnings (or “be good for goodness’ sake” as the atheists like to suggest) – we need a Savior.
 
Jeyachandran continues;

Salvation is procured by Christ only because humans are incapable of saving themselves. This comes through clearly in the Christian message. The Buddhist view that one can get rid of craving by one’s own effort is doomed to failure on account of the reality of human frailty…
 
…The strongest argument against the attraction of Eastern religions lies not merely in an individual pursuit of Christian holiness but rather in the practice of a visible and demonstrable Christian community.

 
Like, for example, this – from Samaritan’s Purse:
 

After the tsunami and earthquake in 2011, a new wave of God is moving across
Japan as Christians from all over the world help the people of the Tohoku region…

 

 
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if this “wave of God” washed through the Sea of Trees?
 

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There are signs posted at various places throughout the Aokigahara forest with messages hoping to dissuade the despondent:
 

“Your life is a precious gift from your parents. Please think about your parents, siblings and children. Don’t keep it to yourself. Talk about your troubles.”
 
“Please reconsider what you’re about to do.”
 
“Please consult the police before you go off to die!”
 
What if they included a couple signs with these messages?
 

For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.
~ Luke 19:10 ~
 
Come unto Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and My burden is light.
~ Matthew 11:28-30 ~

 

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No Story: Invalid Color Combination

Don’t hold your breath waiting for the mainstream media and race-baiting pundits to get all worked up over this story:

Phoenix: Claiming self defense, a black man shoots a mentally disabled Hispanic man who was walking his dog. Now, the police are saying more about a shooting at a Taco Bell on April 3, 2012 in which left one man dead.
 
They’re identifying the Hispanic male victim as 29-year-old Daniel Adkins. His family says Adkins is mentally disabled and has a mental capacity of a 12 year old child.

 

 
Wonder whether either the victim or perp look like they could be Obama’s son…?
 

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Centers of Higher Nihilism

If you need further proof that America’s colleges and universities have become bastions of vacuity, check out the latest course offerings at Portland State University; Revolutionary Marxism: Theory and Practice, Art Within Activism and Exploring Buffy the Vampire Slayer 😯 .
 
A story from the Blaze which reports that the Revolutionary Marxism instructors are avowed socialists who list these three goals for their class:
 
1. Students will learn the fundamentals of Marxist theory

2. Students will apply a Marxist analysis to current events

3. Students will apply Marxist theory to local political and community organizing
 

Wonder if Oregonians are aware that their capitalist-generated tax dollars are being used to promote a bankrupt, dehumanizing philosophy bent on the destruction of capitalism?
 
Oddly enough, the syllabus mentions nothing about reviewing the writings of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, or studying the history of Marxism – and the millions of dead bodies left in its wake.
 
But hey, maybe dead people are your thing – or at least the walking dead. In that case you can venture further into the reality-free zone with this course offering at Michigan State University – “Surviving the Coming Zombie Apocalypse — Catastrophes and Human Behavior.”
 
Glenn Stutzky, an MSU social work instructor and creator of the course, says:

Students will learn about the nature, scope and impact of catastrophic events on individuals, families, societies, civilizations and the Earth itself…
…Though the topic is serious and worthy of academic study, the challenges presented in surviving a hypothetical zombie pandemic have real-world applications. After all, zombies make everything more interesting.

 
Yeah. Nothing says to a prospective employer “I’m seriously committed to my career” like having Surviving the Coming Zombie Apocalypse on your transcript.
 
Then again, considering what passes for “higher” education these days, maybe the rest of us need to prepare for zombie hoards of college graduates relentlessly bent on destroying America.
 

 

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