“Honey, I forgot to duck”

Those were President Reagan’s first words to his wife after he was shot by that nutcase  John Hinckley Jr.. It was thirty years ago today. Thank God he survived and lived to serve two full terms. And, please God, we really need someone like him again.

Thirty years ago, Ronald Reagan became the first sitting U.S. President to survive being shot in an assassination attempt. From the dark moments of initial diagnosis through America’s hope for his speedy recovery, Ronald Reagan never lost his deeply held virtues of optimism, courage, and humility.

The attempted assassination was a pivotal moment in President Reagan’s life, and a transformational moment for the world. Ronald Reagan’s courage and determination to reassure the American people despite his pain transformed this horrifying act of violence into an inspirational story.

If I ever get out to Simi Valley, CA, I have to visit the recently renovated Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Library. Nice website.

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Inspiring

McNaughton Fine ArtBeautiful paintings by Jon McNaughton. If you mouse over each picture you can read the artist’s explanation of the various details.


Via Dolorosa is his newest painting – check out the video too. From one of Jon’s Facebook posts: “Truth in Christ, but also what’s right in our country.”

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Our Sunday adventure in Motown

Yesterday we ventured into Detroit to catch a “Les Miserables” matinee at The Fisher Theatre. We enjoyed the show; the city, not so much. Maybe it was the contrast between the nice sunny afternoon and the surrounding scenery, but the city looks more and more like a war zone with each trip we take down the inbound freeway. The grass may be greening, but spring does not appear to be coming to Detroit any time soon.


Last week, various news sources reported on the sharp 25% drop in the city’s population from 2000 to 2010. Only New Orleans recorded a greater reduction, but they had Katrina. Poor Detroit was hit by a progressive-socialist hurricane. According to the census, roughly 20% of the homes still standing are vacant.

From Michigan Capitol Confidential: “In 1950, Detroit was the wealthiest city in America on a per capita income basis. Today, the Census Bureau reports that it is the nation’s 2nd poorest major city, just “edging out” Cleveland.”

Note- this article was from ’09. Detroit may have passed Cleveland up by now.



Back to the adventure…

We had just exited the freeway onto Pallister St., only a couple blocks from the theatre. We were stopped at a traffic light when we suddenly saw a hooded, bandana’d thug brandishing what looked like a 4×4 at a middle-aged well-dressed black man. He chased the man and pinned him against a building, waving the chunk of wood back and forth. What?! For a second we thought they must be making a movie (since Michigan began offering tax breaks to the film industry, Motown’s become a popular site for the post-apocalyptic genre) – but this was the real thing. On a Sunday afternoon. In broad daylight. Welcome to Detroit.
As the light changed, my husband drove through the intersection and then stopped in the middle of the street. Rolling down the window, he yelled out “Hey! Leave him alone!” That was enough to distract the punk. His potential victim shoved him in the chest and backed away. At the same time we noticed another driver had pulled to the curb just past the attacker and was starting to get out of his van.  Suddenly, Mr. Thug’s chances weren’t looking so good anymore and he hightailed it down the street.



Although I’ve always lived in the northern suburbs I’m generally in the city a few times a year, and used to go more frequently for business. But this little episode was definitely a first – and maybe last.

Detroit recently received a “Cities of Service Leadership Grant” and subsequently launched a “Believe in Detroit” campaign “designed to engage all who care about Detroit and to create an army of Believers who will be ambassadors and volunteers.” I wish them well.

Posted in Cultural Erosion | 2 Comments

5 Easy Steps


And you thought he didn’t have a plan. Behold the Obama Doctrine!

By following these five easy and enjoyable steps, Barack Obama has found the roadmap to a Presidency free of Personal risk. The people he governs may face hardship as a result, but honestly, that’s not really his problem.

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When nothing means nothing

A great piece by Daniel Greenfield at Sultan Knish,“The Massacre of Meaning” really gets at the core of what ails our postmodern society.

The way words are used is the way that meaning is created. To massacre meaning, all you need to do is kill the truth.

If the meaning of the words that we use to communicate is continually morphing and changing, to the point where we can no longer agree on what “is” is, communication itself will eventually become impossible. When anything can mean anything, nothing can mean anything.

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Trying to have a rational conversation with a Leftie

“I Don’t Care, Obama Is Awesome”
Posted by Jonah Goldberg at National Review Online (Not sure who actually created it):



“HALIBURTON!”

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The “Birther Thing”

We won't be needing the constitution anymore
All we want is something simple like the TRUTH.

Seriously, can’t we just get a resolution to this? Produce a legitimate birth certificate, as required of all American citizens, on numerous occasions throughout their lifetimes, and this “controversy” just goes away. Seems to me that a president who really wanted what’s best for the country would do just that.

Lawrence Sellin’s post at Canada Free Press satirizes this ridiculous situation nicely: Obama’s eligibility: whistling past the graveyard.

I, for one, welcome the concept of ignoring our nation’s laws, especially those related to the Internal Revenue Service.

Absolutely!

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Who’s in charge of Operation Free Libya?

Is it just me, Alan Caruba, and a few conservatives… or are the inmates running the asylum? Where are the rational, responsible, adult-type people who got us through WWII?

Who’s in charge of Operation Free Libya? No one knows!

If there weren’t actual human beings involved in this fiasco, it would make for a really funny SNL skit – or a Mel Brooks movie. Considering the reality, it’s downright scary.

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“Parity, not Charity”

Here’s a great idea that embodies the old-fashioned American character trait of self-reliance: Timebanks. Rather than ask “What can the government do for me?” these groups are effecting positive change on a local level. Instead of looking for a hand-out, individuals are giving a hand to other individuals -in a mutually beneficial way. It reminds me of that great old pioneer custom of barn raising: I’ll help you build yours – and you help me build mine. And then we’ll all sit down and enjoy a good meal together!

Neighbors helping neighbors – what a concept! Why doesn’t the Community-Organizer-in-Chief help organize communities like this?

I’m glad to see that this trend is catching on in my home state of Michigan. If we could really grow this into a huge national movement, just think how much we could shrink the government.

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Efforts to aid Japan continue

Updated: 8-11-19
Just noticed I never actually referenced the earthquake/tsunami that devastated a big chunk of Japan on March 11, 2011. Here’s a summary: Japan Earthquake & Tsunami of 2011: Facts and Information (9-13-17) ~

The effects of the great earthquake were felt around the world, from Norway’s fjords to Antarctica’s ice sheet. Tsunami debris has continued to wash up on North American beaches years later […]
 
In Japan, residents are still recovering from the disaster. As of February 2017, there were still about 150,000 evacuees who lost their homes; 50,000 of them were still living in temporary housing, Japan’s Reconstruction Agency said […]
 
The number of confirmed deaths is 15,894 as of June 10, 2016, according to the reconstruction agency. More than 2,500 people are still reported missing.
 
More than 120,000 buildings were destroyed, 278,000 were half-destroyed and 726,000 were partially destroyed, the agency said. The direct financial damage from the disaster is estimated to be about $199 billion dollars (about 16.9 trillion yen), according to the Japanese government. The total economic cost could reach up to $235 billion, the World Bank estimated, making it the costliest natural disaster in world history.

 
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AP/Photo by Toshiharu Kato (Japanese Red Cross Society)

The following images are from Samaritan’s Purse:





Donations:

Salvation Army

Mercy Corps

Samaritan’s Purse

American Red Cross

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Past the Point of No Return?

Is America too far gone to recover? Gina Miller thinks so – see her post at ScottFactor.com. I agree.

If you’re paying attention, you can see it in the little things every day. The rudeness, the profanity, the lack of critical thinking skills, the vacant looks in the eyes of most teenagers and the sometimes frightened looks in the eyes of many seniors. Most of us have forgotten the Golden Rule. Others never learned it.

As a nation, we have forfeited the rights endowed us by the Creator. But, as Gina puts it:

Look to the Lord, and keep your hope in Him. As we watch our country fall from within, those of us who know the Lord have a sure hope of a future that is literally out of this world. Don’t lose your hope, your peace, and your joy that only God can give, as you watch the inevitable downfall of our nation and world. He is already there and waiting for us at the end.

“Wait on the Lord;
Be of good courage;
And He shall strengthen your heart;
Wait, I say, in the Lord!”
~ Psalm 27:14 ~

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National debt + individual state debts = You can’t count that high!

The National Debt is already unfathomable. But on top of that, let’s not forget about all the money owed by each of the individual 50 states. Here’s a video from Ben Howe to remind us:

“We must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt.”
–Thomas Jefferson, letter to Samuel Kercheval, 12 July 1816

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