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43 Years Ago Today New Video

I posted a video over something special that happened in my life 43 years ago today. Watch it  - 43 Years Ago Today August 31, 1966- August 31, 2009.

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Celebrity mom Kate Gosselin to sub as a co-host

 
 
ABC is adding Kate Gosselin to the list of guest co-hosts for "The View."
Celebrity mom Gosselin will be subbing for regular "View" co-host Elisabeth Hasselbeck.
( Gosselin has said she is tired of how the media is following her children. If that is the case why is she doing stuff like this. Too bad she didn't try to work on her marriage as hard as she is going on the talk shows. Read the rest of the above story Celebrity mom Kate Gosselin to sub as a co-host on ABC's `The View' in September.)
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Leroy Carhart: Scandalous Behavior Even for an Abortionist

(Below is a post from my friend Denny Hartford which he did on his  Vital Signs Blog  last week.)

 
 
The Omaha World Herald, never a friend to pro-life interests, is nevertheless compelled to cover the allegations by former employees of the late-term abortionist, Leroy Carhart, that the business he runs is not only dangerously unsanitary but conducts illegal medical procedures.

Here's the report.
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Tim McGraw won't put up with abuse at concerts

 Tim McGraw isn't looking for trouble at his concerts, but there are certain things he just won't ignore.

"It's all about enjoying yourself and not messing with other people's fun," the country singer said in a recent interview. "And certainly I don't think you should be abusive to women. I think that's No. 1 right there." (  http://www.idahostatesman.com/apentertainment/story/880403.html)

McGraw, 42, has thrown out disruptive fans from at least two of his concerts in the past year and a half, most recently in July. Video of the incidents taken by fans went viral on the Internet.

At one concert, McGraw stops in the middle of singing "Indian Outlaw," calls for security and pulls a guy on stage by his shirt so that guards can haul him away.

"Look, I'm the one with the microphone, so if there's something that needs to be done, and I'm the one who can see it because of where I'm at, then I'm probably the only person who can ask somebody to do something about it, because other people may not be able to see it, security especially," said McGraw.
(Good for McGraw! We need more people who will take on bad behavior at concerts and in the culture.)
 
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GORE: Country has 'moral duty' to pass health care reform...

Two old friends, fresh from a day of mourning in rainy Boston, came south Saturday night to pledge to a roomful of roaring Tennessee Democrats that Ted Kennedy’s dream indeed will never die.  (  Country has 'moral duty' to pass health care reform...
   )

 

Al Gore and Bill Clinton — ghosts of Democratic victories past who are increasingly showing up to buck up the faithful as President Obama goes through his first real trials in office — were the star guests at the Tennessee Democratic Party’s annual Jackson Day dinner.

 

As you would expect from two very skilled old pros, they were careful to not inject a note of abject partisanship into a day when much of the nation watched the services and burial for the legendary Massachusetts senator, a man Gore called “by far the most effective member of the United States Senate that I ever served with.”
(Here it comes. It is a moral duty to pass government forced health care to honor the late Sen. Kennedy. So those of us who are against what the left is doing are evil. Didn't Kennedy once say those on the right love America as much as those on the left. I guess these Democrats don't want to follow the example of Kennedy.)



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Abortions laws takes effect

(Below is part of a story from yesterday in a Nebraska Newspaper.)
The head of Nebraska Right to Life hopes a new state law will put Nebraska at ground zero in a legal battle over abortion.

The law requires abortion providers to position an ultrasound screen so a woman awaiting an abortion can see the image of her fetus.

The woman can choose whether to view the image.

The law is one of several taking effect today. Among others are laws to expand health coverage for children, increase court costs and require drivers to move over when passing stopped emergency vehicles.

 
Julie Schmit-Albin, executive director of the anti-abortion group, said she’ll be watching to see whether abortion rights supporters go to court in an attempt to block the ultrasound law.

“When the abortion industry challenges our legislation, then we know we’re on the right track,” she said.

Schmit-Albin said Nebraska’s law is stronger than most because it requires the screen to be placed so a woman can see it without having to ask.

(I believe to see abortion on demand  end we not only need a spiritual change in this nation but young women need to see and hear the truth about abortion  and about the baby they are about to have killed. Good for all the states which have passed  ultrasound laws. Read more on this issue Abortions laws takes effect.)
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Lockerbie Lessons True Versus Misplaced Compassion

Should dying prisoners be released early on grounds of compassion? In some cases, absolutely. In the case of the Lockerbie bomber, that is a wholly different matter.

Last week a Scottish judge released Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, the only man ever convicted of the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Because al-Megrahi is dying of cancer, the judge, on grounds of compassion, sent him back to Libya so he could spend the remainder of his life with family.

Naturally, news of al-Megrahi’s release—and his triumphant return to Libya—stunned and angered many here in America and across the world. Kathleen Flynn, whose son was killed in the 1988 bombing, asked, “Did Megrahi, as he planted a bomb on a US airliner, reflect on compassion for the people he was about to blow up? I think not.”
 

But I’m also concerned that this notorious case will make it more difficult for compassionate release to be used in situations which truly merit it.

In 2007, the U.S. Sentencing Commission issued guidelines for compassionate release. Among the “extraordinary and compelling reasons” were if the prisoner were suffering from a terminal illness, if deteriorating health made self-care impossible, or if death of a family member left the defendant’s minor children without care.

Ideally, this kind of compassionate release would involve the input of victims, and would be coupled with the remorse of the offender. The release of the prisoner should also not injure justice or cause a threat to the community


Although I am an advocate of compassionate early release for prisoners under the right conditions, I was horrified at the decision to release the Lockerbie bomber. First, there’s the heinous nature of his crime—and the fact that al-Megrahi served a mere 11 days in prison for each of the 270 people killed. Then there’s his lack of remorse, or even admission of guilt. And finally, there’s the pain that this decision is causing the victims’ families.

This kind of compassionate release is desperately needed in this country, where the population of geriatric prisoners is growing rapidly, and where the costs of caring for aging and terminally ill prisoners are passed on to taxpayers. Sadly, very few federal prisoners are released early—each year only about a dozen of the 200,000 federal prisoners have their sentences commuted for health reasons.

These are prisoners like Michael Paul Mahoney, who in the last stages of terminal lymphoma, lay in prison bedridden and incoherent. He was first convicted in 1980 for selling methamphetamines, and after his release, went clean. He bought a pool hall in Jackson, Tennessee. Every night he would deposit the day’s earnings at a bank, carrying a small gun for protection. But when he reported his gun stolen, he was convicted of being a felon in possession of a firearm and received a mandatory 15 years.

Although his family and the judge who sentenced him petitioned for the dying man’s release, he died in prison—needlessly, and at great public expense.
(The above radio commentary gives us some good  food for thought. There is a place for compassion but that doesn't mean every soul in prison should be freed because some health worker says he or she is ill. Read more...  of the above radio commentary or listen to it  here.
)
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Abortion foes turn on each other over the Operation Rescue name

Years ago, Randall Terry and Troy Newman were brothers in arms in the struggle against legal abortion.

"Troy was my son in the movement," said Terry, 50, a onetime used-car salesman from upstate New York who founded Operation Rescue in 1986. Terry rose to fame leading clinic blockades until lawsuits, jail terms and finally a stunning 1998 legal settlement forced him to abandon his militant tactics, and he faded from the forefront of the struggle.
Newman, meanwhile, was an up-and-coming activist in San Diego and a spokesman for Operation Rescue there. He admired Terry's energy, charisma and rhetoric. "Randall was the first guy to say, 'If abortion is murder, then act like it,' " said Newman, now 43, who became president of Operation Rescue West in 1999. "A lot of us concur that God used him at a certain time for certain projects. For a time."
 

But today, the two abortion foes are locked in an increasingly nasty battle over ownership of the Operation Rescue name, which Newman trademarked in 2006.

Terry has called his former protege a weasel. Newman has branded Terry a charlatan.

Operation Rescue is a name worth fighting for: Whoever controls it benefits from its unquestionable ability to raise money from those who oppose abortion.

"Why does Troy need my name? What does he get from stealing another man's heritage? Money and media," said Terry in a telephone interview from Falls Church, Va. He moved to the Washington suburb from Florida last year in an effort to reestablish himself as a national leader in the antiabortion fight, which has heated up with Democrats in control of the White House and Congress.
"Operation Rescue is largely a blast from the past, and fairly marginalized in the pro-life movement now," said Marvin Olasky, editor of the World, a generally conservative Christian magazine.
"About 20 years ago, the Operation Rescue activities were probably creating more support for abortion overall, and as the pro-life movement recognized that, the emphasis became one of offering compassionate help to women in a crisis," said Olasky. "The group as a whole, and particularly Randy Terry, never made that leap."
 
(It is sad  when two  pro life brothers go to war against one another. I admit I am not a big fan of Mr. Terry or of Operation  Rescue. I believe Mr. Terry and O.R. has done harm to the pro life cause and has even done more damage to the Christian faith. I agree with Mr. Olasky far as OR goes. Read more of this    "behind the scenes" take on  this fight far as  Operation Rescue goes.)
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After Kennedy's Death: Silence from the Pope - and where is Sen. Kennedy Now

There was a poignant footnote to President Obama's historic July 10 meeting with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican. Behind closed doors in the papal library, Obama handed Benedict a letter that Senator Edward Kennedy had asked him to personally deliver to the pontiff. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs later told reporters that nobody - not even the President - knew the contents of the sealed missive. Obama himself asked Benedict to pray for Kennedy, and called the ailing Senator afterward to fill him in on his encounter with the 82-year-old Pope. (  After Kennedy's Death: Silence from the Pope -  )

 

The letter, most likely already re-sealed and tucked away in the Vatican archives, was probably just a dying Catholic's request for a papal blessing. In the eyes of the traditionalist wing of the Church, however, Kennedy should have been asking the Pope for forgiveness. The Vatican's official newspaper L'Osservatore Romano reported Kennedy's death, praising his work on civil rights and fighting poverty, but noted that his record was marred by his stance on abortion. As of yet, unlike some other world leaders, Pope Benedict has not commented or issued an official communique in response to Kennedy's death. One veteran official at the Vatican, of U.S. nationality, expressed the view of many conservatives about the Kennedy clan's rapport with the Catholic Church: "Why would he even write a letter to the Pope? The Kennedys have always been defiantly in opposition to the Roman Catholic magisterium." Magisterium is the formal expression for the authority of Church teaching.
(While I agree with the teaching of the Catholic Church when it comes to the issue of abortion. Being  pro life doesn't make anyone right with God. This is going to shock some of you but I believe there are going to be souls who backed abortion in Heaven even though the Bible teaches they were  wrong on that and  sadly there are going to be pro life souls in Hell. Only God knows where Sen. Kennedy is and it is based  on if he ever came to faith Jesus by the grace of God.)
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Vegas Friends

Here is a video  which I  posted a few days ago  that shows some friends I met on my trip to Las Vegas this Summer.  Please take time to view it vegas Friends .

Tags: new video  
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Cal Thomas Was a Friend Sen. Kennedy

(Cal Thomas did a great radio commentary yesterday on the death of  a friend of his. It is something every person of faith and everyone on the right needs to  read or hear. It was one of  Cal's best  radio spots at least in my humble view. I have posted some of it below.)
SOME PEOPLE MADE CAREERS AND A LOT OF MONEY DENOUNCING TED KENNEDY. THE SENATOR, WHO DIED YESTERDAY OF BRAIN CANCER, NEVER RESPONDED IN KIND. IN THAT, HE WAS MORE CHRISTIAN THAN SOME OF HIS CRITICS.
I HAD THE PRIVILEGE OF KNOWING HIM, PRAYING FOR HIM AND SPEAKING ABOUT JESUS WITH HIM. I WONDER HOW MANY OF HIS CHURCH-GOING, BIBLE BELIEVING CHRISTIAN CRITICS PRAYED FOR HIM? NOT MANY, I’LL BET.
 
IF YOU NEVER PRAYED FOR HIM, PICK ANOTHER LIBERAL AND PRAY FOR HIM (OR HER). SEE WHAT DIFFERENCE IT MAKES …IN YOU.
 
(Amen Cal Thomas. So often we think those who may not agree with us are our enemies. That is done by those on the right and the left. We need to see people like Sen. Kennedy as another human- being who had a true need to know others loved him and that Jesus gave his life for him. Besides Jesus was a friend to sinners and the Bible teaches all of us are sinners. We may not always agree with the politics of others but we need to be willing to have friendships with those we don't always see eye to eye with. Read the whole commentary Cal did  right here  or  listen to the audio
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Dems Pushing for Health Care Reform Say 'Win One for Teddy'

"You've heard of 'win one for the Gipper'? There is going to be an atmosphere of 'win one for Teddy,'" Ralph G. Neas, the CEO of the liberal National Coalition on Health Care, told ABC News.  (  Dems Pushing for Health Care Reform Say 'Win One for Teddy'  )

Democrats are hoping that Kennedy's influence in death may be even stronger than it was when he was alive as they push for President Obama's top domestic priority. Democratic officials hope that invoking Kennedy's passion for the issue will counter slippage in support for heatlh care reform.

"Ted Kennedy's dream of quality health care for all Americans will be made real this year because of his leadership and his inspiration," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a statement.
(I believe it is an outrage to use the death of this man for politics. It is one thing to talk about the things Kennedy did in his life but to try get a bill passed by using the  death of this man is not only wrong  but a dishonor to the name Kennedy.)

 

President Obama's senior advisor remembers the "Lion of the Senate."

"You've heard of 'win one for the Gipper'? There is going to be an atmosphere of 'win one for Teddy,'" Ralph G. Neas, the CEO of the liberal National Coalition on Health Care, told ABC News.

Democrats are hoping that Kennedy's influence in death may be even stronger than it was when he was alive as they push for President Obama's top domestic priority. Democratic officials hope that invoking Kennedy's passion for the issue will counter slippage in support for heatlh care reform.

"Ted Kennedy's dream of quality health care for all Americans will be made real this year because of his leadership and his inspiration," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a statement.

Tags: Politics  
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