It’s not trendy or politically correct to say this, but I am religious, not spiritual. I am a Christian; Jesus Christ is the head of the church, not me, not my inner thoughts, energy source, feelings, body contortions, and no other guru who is a flash in the pan with a webpage. I’ve always been a bit puzzled by those who claim more personal wisdom than a 5th century Pope or a 16th century reformer, or even their own local church government, given how far removed they are from the founders’ work. Even Paul, who wrote most of the New Testament to provide a structure for the church Jesus established 2,000 years ago, didn’t rely on his own personal experience. He had many years of being taught and grounded in the Scriptures of the Jews, and after his experience of meeting the living Christ after his resurrection, he spent a lot of time in training with the disciples who worked with Jesus during his ministry on earth and who already had a “church structure” of meeting together for prayer, sharing bread, evangelizing and service. When the Holy Spirit revealed something to him to pass along, he had some depth and learning to test it. The New Testament is full of lists to define various appointments, gifts, personality characteristics of leaders and roles in the church—Romans 12:-6-8, 1 Corinthians 12:28, Ephesians 4:11, Acts 6, 1 Timothy 5:17, Titus 1:7-9, Acts 20:28, 1 Peter 5:2, 1 Peter 5:1-5, etc. In fact, other than the topic of hell, there are few topics as well covered as how to structure the church, so religion must be important to Jesus.
Friday, August 10, 2012
Thursday, August 09, 2012
How much of this $900,000 for “Improving the Health of People with Disabilities” will get to the people with disabilities?
“The Ohio State University Nisonger Center and Ohio Department of Health were recently awarded a $900,000 grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to promote health, prevent chronic disease, and increase the quality of life among people with disabilities.” These are extremely vague goals; I assume there are specific diseases that disabled people have that are different than the general population (measles, mumps, polio, tetanus, shingles, chicken pox, etc.) and specific quality of life markers in the contract. Essentially, this is a monitoring and surveillance program—i.e., there’s nothing new—no new services, no research, no . . . nothing. The goal of the CDC is to “reduce disparities” and not to help the disabled.*
There are so many fingers in this pie, it is difficult to imagine that anyone except the direct researchers, bean counters, and university and government staff will benefit. First of all, when a federal government grant comes to the university, close to 50-60% is taken off the top to cover university overhead—this is everything from parking lots, utilities. janitors, food service, debt, and social events for deans and faculty. But keep In mind, that the amount started out bigger than $900,000 because each agency whose hands/offices it passed through also took their cut for overhead.
The employees of the following agencies and organizations must be paid before a disabled person receives a dime’s worth of service, and even then it is monitoring services that they already have had from earlier programs. I used to be an employee of Ohio State University and The State of Ohio Department of Aging. It’s a very nice living for many well-educated people.
Federal
National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities
Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
State
Ohio Department of Health Division of Family and Community Health Services
Ohio Emergency Management Agency (EMA)
Ohio Department of Health’s Division of Prevention
Ohio Department of Aging
Ohio Disability and Health Program (ODHP)
Ohio Office of Health Preparedness
State Universities
The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center
Nisonger Center Health Promotion / Healthcare Parity
The Ohio Colleges of Medicine Government Resource Center
University of Cincinnati UCEDD at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center
Associations/non-profits
Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD)
Ohio Association of Community Health Centers
*Through public health efforts, such as surveillance, research, and health promotion, CDC aims to reduce health disparities and the incidence and severity of secondary conditions, including additional physical or mental health conditions that occur as a result of having a primary disabling condition. CDC http://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/disabilityandhealth/pdf/AboutDHProgram508.pdf
Stop his plan before he kills the country
Late Nite Catechism
Last night at the Hoover Auditorium we were treated to a very funny show called, Late Nite Catechism featuring Mary Zentmyer as Sister, a classroom teacher in traditional nun habit, and teaching pre-Vatican II style with old fashion discipline. I thought it was very funny, plus informative, and decided Catholics are a lot funnier than Lutherans or Methodists. Yes, not everything is doctrinally correct, but I think she got the flavor. And I was surprised when about half the audience raised their hands when she asked how many had gone to Catholic School.
Wednesday, August 08, 2012
Romney Hood--how funny is it? Not very.
A new one today was the funding stream for Romney to start Bain Capital. Have the Democrats complained about the bootleg money that built the Kennedy fortunes or the Mafia ties o JFK and RFK? It's Chicago politics, all right.
You can't make these things up!
http://blogs.denverpost.com/thespot/2012/08/06/sandra-fluke-introduce-obama-denver/77882/
The reading list wars
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/19/books/19read.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all
Mr. Obama tends to take a magpie approach to reading — ruminating upon writers’ ideas and picking and choosing those that flesh out his vision of the world or open promising new avenues of inquiry.
His predecessor, George W. Bush, in contrast, tended to race through books in competitions with Karl Rove (who recently boasted that he beat the president by reading 110 books to Mr. Bush’s 95 in 2006), or passionately embrace an author’s thesis as an idée fixe. Mr. Bush and many of his aides favored prescriptive books — Natan Sharansky’s “Case for Democracy,” which pressed the case for promoting democracy around the world, say, or Eliot A. Cohen’s “Supreme Command,” which argued that political strategy should drive military strategy. Mr. Obama, on the other hand, has tended to look to non-ideological histories and philosophical works that address complex problems without any easy solutions, like Reinhold Niebuhr’s writings, which emphasize the ambivalent nature of human beings and the dangers of willful innocence and infallibility.
Tuesday, August 07, 2012
What exactly worked?
Increased deficit?
Loss of religious freedom?
Increased health care costs?
Expanded war zones?
More people on food stamps?
Loss of prestige globally?
More radical Muslim governments in power?
Highest unemployment since WWII?
Businesses sitting on their capital rather than investing it?
And somehow only 10% of the people who supported him in 2008 are defecting?
This needs to be in an Obama/Romney campaign ad, with sad faced, weeping retirees
When the Obama administration was "saving" the auto industry in 2009 the UAW got the spoils and investors and creditors got the shaft. It's no surprise that this trickled down to the auto suppliers as well. Who got shafted there? At Delphi, 20,000 non-union retirees. (Kitchen Cabinet)
Delphi, a General Motors company, is one of the world’s largest automotive parts manufacturers. Twenty thousand of its workers lost nearly their entire pensions when the government bailed out GM. At the same time, Delphi employees who were members of the United Auto Workers union saw their pensions topped off and made whole.
Why lie about taxes? Because class envy works for the President.
I just can't figure out the lies about taxes that the left reports. I've looked at these tables (Brookings) from every angle, and there's just no way but what the top 1% is being unfairly taxed more than any other group. And if you like quintiles (fifths), then the top quintile pays 24.5% and the bottom .8. To the left, that's not fair because after taxes, the rich are still rich, not impoverished, and the poor are still poor even with all those government transfers for food, housing and health. Before the recession that Obama has relentlessly encouraged, the top quintile paid even more, but they've lost a lot of ground.
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/numbers/displayatab.cfm?Docid=3277
Monday, August 06, 2012
What we call “Cafeteria Catholics”
Protestants.
Priests should be free to marry. Women should be able to be priests. Gays should marry in the church. Abortion and contracepting is OK. Nah, I don’t go to Mass every Sunday. Confession? Well, gosh, why not be a Methodist or Presbyterian?
“The Christian who believes he has a right to his private opinion, that he already knows what the Church will only come to grasp later, must ask himself in sober self-criticism before God and his conscience, whether he has the necessary depth and breadth of theological expertise to allow his private theory and practice to depart from the present doctrine of the ecclesiastical authorities. The case is in principle admissible. But conceit and presumption will have to answer for their willfulness before the judgement seat of God.” K. Rahner, “Magesterium” quoted in Francis A. Sullivan, Magisterium, 1983, p. 171.
Random sightings at Lakeside
I saw on Fox News this morning at the coffee shop that the man who killed worshipers at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin was white, a veteran and had tattoos and it has been called domestic terrorism rather than a hate crime. Obviously, the left media will claim a victory—saying it’s the Tea Party’s fault. They never blame testosterone, the mentally ill or the military in these shootings. Or they won’t while Obama is Commander and Chief. Not even the Ft. Hood massacre was called “domestic terrorism” even though the perp was an American (and, shhh, a Muslim).
There are two groups of very handsome, agile teens here this week. The boys appear to be track, the girls, either cheerleaders or drill team. The coaches of course are riding bikes while the kids run.
This is “Peace” week, or “multi-faith” week at Lakeside, so I won’t be going to the programs. The speakers are usually on a journey, seeking, striving, dialoguing, and it is just so boring. There is a walking tour of south Lakeside that looks good.
Sunday, August 05, 2012
This will make it easier
To remember the Great Lakes, think HOMES
Huron
Ontario
Michigan
Erie
Superior
Thanks Gayle! (from my cousin’s weekly newsletter)
Happy Birthday, Mr. President
You are the only president in my memory (the first president I remember was Harry Truman) who worsened race relations, promoted class warfare, supported death to the unborn, and denigrated the spirit and drive that built our great country. May the archives ever reflect your accomplishments so future presidents will learn from your mistakes.
Saturday, August 04, 2012
Christians are disappearing from Islamic countries
We have a President who was raised a Muslim, who converted to Christianity in a church (UCC, Rev. Wright, Chicago) where hatred for whites, Western Civilization and the United States was preached. He says he didn't notice--but maybe he just didn't attend that often. In any case, President Obama says we are not a Christian nation. Being a nation that doesn't demand its citizens attend a Baptist or Presbyterian or Catholic church must be what he means--it's what allows Muslims, Bahai, Jews, and Wiccans to pursue their spiritual needs.
In the past, our Presidents have had a "bully pulpit" for human and religious rights. With his "multicultural" past and his attempts to reduce our own religious freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment, any words of warning to despots and monarchs can be laughed away. "Human rights" and "religious freedom" in Muslim countries are terms defined by Sharia Law, not ours. The July 30 report by Secretary of State Clinton must be viewed with the August 1 HHS Mandate currently being fought by Catholics and many other Christian groups in mind.
We’ve been down this road before—with FDR
Perhaps you believe Rush and Beck are just alarmists about the Muslims in the White House even if maybe backing the Arab Spring wasn’t such a good idea. Ok, so maybe thousands are being slaughtered by the guys BO supported. After all, the progressives (Democrats, Socialists, media) all say there is no problem or we shouldn’t expect their version of democracy to look like ours. But remember, that's what Communist sympathizers in the press and government said about Stalin and the USSR too in the 1930s, when FDR reigned and Ukrainians were dying at 25,000 a day from starvation.
As one of the best known correspondents in the world for one of the best known newspapers in the world, Mr. Duranty's denial that there was a famine was accepted as gospel. Thus Mr. Duranty gulled not only the readers of the New York Times but because of the newspaper's prestige, he influenced the thinking of countless thousands of other readers about the character of Josef Stalin and the Soviet regime. And he certainly influenced the newly-elected President Roosevelt to recognize the Soviet Union.
What is so awful about Duranty is that Times top brass suspected that Duranty was writing Stalinist propaganda, but did nothing. In her exposé "Stalin's Apologist: Walter Duranty, the New York Times's man in Moscow," S.J. Taylor makes it clear that Carr Van Anda, the managing editor, Frederick T. Birchall, an assistant managing editor, and Edwin L. James, the later managing editor, were troubled with Duranty's Moscow reporting but did nothing about it. Birchall recommended that Duranty be replaced but, says Taylor, "the recommendation fell by the wayside."
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/002/791vwuaz.asp
Friday, August 03, 2012
Contraception as a health issue for women
In 1955 the famed sex researcher Alfred Kinsey said, “. . . we have found the highest frequency of induced abortion in the group, which in general, most frequently used contraceptives.” Alan Guttmacher, for whom the research wing of Planned Parenthood of America is named said, “. . . there is no scientific evidence that increased availability of contraceptive services will clearly result in a decreased abortion rate.” Keep in mind, this was before the pill, before legal abortion. And nothing has changed. Statistics kept today at PP show that half of the women using abortion services have been using contraception. And we’re having one million abortions a year, and for blacks it’s over 40% of the pregnancies are ending in abortion. It explains how Planned Parenthood guarantees repeat customers, since even teen girls after their 2nd or 3rd abortion are given contraception after their procedure to destroy the baby.
Citation: Abortion in the United States (New York: Harper and Row, 1958), pp 157, 182.
So by requiring that all employers, including religious institutions that are against both contraception and abortion, provide for contraceptives in their insurance plans in the HHS Mandate of Obamacare, our misguided president is not preventing unwanted pregnancies,but encouraging them, and then calling the result “health services for women.” It’s a 2-fer—hurts women and hurts blacks.
Was he homophobic and hateful in 2008?
In 2008 Barack Obama ran on a “traditional values” and “one man one woman marriage” plank in his leftist platform. For people who didn’t read his books or weren’t stampeding because of his Marxist friends and views, this was a good ploy. But he dropped it last year, and came out. Now, those of us who didn’t flip flop on marriage are being called intolerant by gay activists (Shep Smith on Fox News) and bigots and hateful (have you seen the YouTube of the sweet CFO who harassed a poor clerk at Chick-fil-A when he drove through for free water?). So what happened between 2008 and 2012? Well, Obama’s leftist base was getting cranky and threatening not to support him. So the marriage views, held by reasonable people for thousands of years, had to go.
Political ads--Ohio is a swamp
Friday family photo—exercise class
My husband left his partnership at Feinknopf, Maccioci and Schappa located in downtown Columbus in 1994 and became a sole practitioner with me as his only staff. We borrowed a small computer from a friend for billing and specs, and purchased a copier and fax (still using them), and everything else was in his head and hands. Eventually, as his business grew, he moved it from his art studio off the master bedroom to our family room which had an outside entrance for clients. It was an interesting and exciting time for us. He used to tell people, “The kids left home, Norma got tenure, and the cat died.” So it seemed a safe time to do something he’d always wanted to do—be in charge from the beginning. Even so, it seemed unrealistic to expect we’d ever have the income he had as an owner of a successful, larger firm. Having health coverage on my plan was a huge benefit, of course, and he arranged for a buy out of his stock in the company to run over several years to give us a small cash flow. I worked out a cash only budget and being able to cut our spending (and credit cards) wasn’t hard with just the 2 of us. I simply stopped going to retail stores and reading ads. We already had everything we needed. What he didn’t have was an exercise group which he enjoyed on his lunch hour down town at the YMCA. He was part of the PULSE (forgotten what it stands for) instructors and really enjoyed it. I mentioned to him that there was a morning class at our church, UALC, and he could check into that. A women’s exercise class? Oh horrors. But he did join it, and loved it, and the women loved him. It was a huge group that also had evening classes. Over the years as the organizers and original members went back to work or into retirement homes or moved away, the group dwindled and he gradually took on first substituting for instructors, then becoming one, then managing the group. Today we (I joined a few years ago) are a group of 10-15 if every comes, and sometimes “alumni” show up if they are on holiday, or are between jobs. We currently have three instructors, all from the class, and he subs if one of them goes to India (Rita) or Poland (Christine), or has a busy season at work (Molly). By mid-June we close for the summer, and this year got together at Christine’s home for a brunch and to see photos of her recent trip.
Thursday, August 02, 2012
Marriage--what's your excuse?
These days you have to qualify the word marriage with the word, "traditional," if you mean that relational contract between a couple and the state. And if you own a business, it's not enough that you are a fair and just employer and you hire, train and promote people of all genders, faiths, and ethnicities--you must also contribute money only to those organization that support "non-traditional marriage." Like Chick-fil-a, a restaurant whose product I've never used, but will have to check out.
That said, we conservatives, Christians or otherwise, should be ashamed to target proponents of gay marriage as our marriage problem! We messed that up all by ourselves. Homosexuals didn't send the divorce rate soaring; they didn't invent the trophy wife or annulments; they aren't dropping babies to be raised by the state on welfare and Medicaid; if they are shacking up without our blessings, it's because the state and the church haven't an alternative for them.
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
No Ordinary Time--FDR and Eleanor on the home front
A Cuban freedom lover living in New York
On Facebook there is a page called “Humans of New York” with photos of odd, interesting, and fashionable people. Sometimes there is a brief explanation, sometimes a whole story.
A couple weeks ago, I posted this photo with this caption:
"He barely spoke any English. But I did gather that he'd recently moved from Cuba, and had come to America for "La Libertad."
After seeing the post, the man sought the services of a translator in order to fully express his story. Here is the version that showed up my inbox today:
"This is my story and it’s real. I was born in the humble town of Central Guatemala on the Island of Cuba after Castro's revolutionary triumph. I have been living in exile in the USA for the past 3 years. I come from a very beautiful and united family. I miss and love my family immensely. I never stop thinking about them, not even for an instant. Despite living here in America I still worry about their well-being and day-to-day necessities.
My mother, who is the most precious person in my world, is battling cancer. Not being able to see her face-to-face and tell her how much I love her deeply hurts me. Due to Castro's cruel dictatorship, however, living in America means that my entry into Cuba is not permitted. As such, it’s not possible for me to see my mother, to hug her, and to tell her how much I miss her. I am afraid that I may never see my mother again.
Being a professional sportsman gave me the opportunity to represent Cuba in a workshop in Venezuela named ‘Barrio Adentro Deportivo’, which is one of the methods used by the Cuban regime to portray Castro's dictatorship as benevolent. Many of us are ‘selected’ to go abroad using coercion, deceit and threats. If you refuse to go, the regime degrades your economic and social status. Some Cubans opt to follow this charade and use it as a means to improve their social and financial status. Others, like me, decide to use it as a gateway and potential escape to a better life.
Migrating to a new country has been a very difficult experience, as it has been for many other Cubans who, like me, made the decision to leave Cuba to be embraced by this and other nations. These adopting countries have given many of us their support and solidarity because they are aware of the suffering we have experienced in leaving behind our families, friends, culture and, often, our hearts. Many of us have risked our lives fleeing through the borders of several nations in search of liberty. It is shameful and painful, but nevertheless true, that many Cubans have to face such calamities in order to achieve a right that The Creator has given to all humanity: the right to freedom."
Wow. What a message. I wish our President and Senate would read this! Thank you, young man for reminding us.
The cost of medical care?
How many times have I heard in my adult years that our health care is the most expensive in the world, but with only mediocre results? However, have you ever seen the research? Does that include over the counter? Supplements? Exercise club memberships? Insurance policies that cover tattoo removal? Does that include everyone in the census (people) or citizens? Does it include the profit insurance companies make or the dividends investors (retirees like me) get in their 401-Ks? Pelosi thinks welfare payments and unemployment benefits actually provide a return to the economy. Don’t health care costs?
What is known for sure, is that today the Health and Human Services mandate of Obamacare goes into effect. This we know is a violation of the First Amendment freedom of religion clause. This, if it takes place, will enormously raise your health costs because it will put the Roman Catholic church out of the health care and social services business—or so they (the U.S. Bishops) have promised. Obama thinks the Catholics should be like the Amish, who have religious freedom because they take are only of their own. The Catholic church is the largest provider of social services in the United States. Even Catholics who are poo-pooing this because they use contraceptives and see no big deal, don’t seem to realize that this camel’s nose is way inside the tent, and soon Catholics will be scooping out the dung that will include insurance coverage for abortions, gay couples, and other things coming down the “choice” pike like incest, polygamy and man boy love.
What is also known is that to the three biggest government health systems we have, the VA, Medicare and Medicaid, are riddled with waste, cost overruns and fraud, and there is no reason to think Obamacare will be different. A recent issue of JAMA includes a story about dual billing of VA for Medicare Advantage—to the tune of about $13 billion. Now if the feds can’t track its own veterans which is a much smaller population than the entire country, why do they think they can follow the rest of us. Obama is simply shifting costs to the states, which are mandated to balance their budgets, which he isn’t.
This man is so bad, so evil, and so statist, that our only hope is to vote him out before he completely destroys our country.
John Wesley’s advice for singing our national anthem
Actually, Wesley, one of the most famous hymn writers of all times had never heard the Star Spangled Banner strangled as we’ve heard recently at the Olympics and at various sporting events. . . But, he did give “Directions for Singing” in his 1761 preface to Sacred Melody, and some apply to our difficult national anthem and the screeching and yodeling we sometimes hear as performers attempt to stamp it with their own interpretation. And here are a few tips:
1. Learn these tunes before you learn any other; afterwards learn as many as you please.
2. Sing them exactly as they are printed here, without altering or mending them at all; and if you have learned to sing them otherwise, unlearn it as soon as you can.
3. Join with the congregation
4. Sing lustily and with good courage. Beware of singing as if you were half dead, or half asleep; but lift up your voice wit strength. . .
5. Sing modestly. Do not bawl . . .
6. Sing in time. . . Do not run before nor stay behind it. . .
7. Above all sing spiritually. Have an eye to God in every word you sing. Aim at pleasing him more than yourself, or any other creature. . .
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Closing out the closer with half price goods
TV writers are not so clever about their anti-Christian bias, if you watch a series for any length of time. All the boogey men and rumors and myths are brought out in the story, then the priest, minister, pastor, etc. are absolved in the end, but the seeds of suspicion and hate have been firmly planted. This also happens on Bones and Law and Order. But Muslims--they are not treated this way. They are usually the victims of prejudice in the story line by unnamed bigoted groups. All the Closer team was going along with the theme--a murdered priest had been a child molester, the church was doing a massive cover up--but he was completely innocent and had been killed by someone whose confession he had heard. Closer also has a strong anti-Mexican theme in many stories and with blatant stereotyping, but allow the one Hispanic character (whose Spanish sounds about as good as mine) on the show always has to interpret the church to the rest of the crew.
Monday, July 30, 2012
Monday Memories—wringer washer at our 2nd apartment
Or maybe it was our third apartment. It was on Third Street, in Champaign, Illinois. I think it was called Harvard Apartments. I was living in a rented room at Maude Peter’s home in Urbana so I could do my student teaching at Urbana High School (in Spanish), and Bob was finishing a class in Indianapolis living with the Moir family in the Spring of 1961. We’d been married less than a year and were already “separated” by circumstances. So we probably moved in shortly before I graduated—I have photos taken at the apartment of me in my cap and gown. Anyway, there was a wringer washer in the basement (we lived on the third floor) for the tenants. As I recall, it was 25 cents a load; for that you got wash and wring, and if you were really quick, you could get er done. Fortunately, I’d helped with the wringer washer my mom had before 1953, so I knew how to use one. After our son Stanley was born, it was really important, because trying to boil diapers on the kitchen stove and wring them out, and dry them on a rack, was a lot more work.
Mitt Romney in Jerusalem
"Let me turn from Iran to other nations in the Middle East, where we have seen rising tumult and chaos. To the north, Syria is on the brink of a civil war. The dictator in Damascus, no friend to Israel and no friend to America, slaughters his own people as he desperately clings to power.
... Your other neighbor to the north, Lebanon, is under the growing and dangerous influence of Hezbollah.
After a year of upheaval and unrest, Egypt now has an Islamist President, chosen in a democratic election. Hopefully, this new government understands that one true measure of democracy is how those elected by the majority respect the rights of those in the minority. The international community must use its considerable influence to ensure that the new government honors the peace agreement with Israel that was signed by the government of Anwar Sadat.
As you know only too well, since Hamas took control of the Gaza Strip in 2007, thousands of rockets have rained on Israeli homes and cities. I have walked on the streets of Sderot, and honor the resolve of its people. And now, new attacks have been launched from the Sinai Peninsula.
With Hezbollah rockets aimed at Israel from the north, and Hamas rockets aimed from the south, with much of the Middle East in tumult, and with Iran bent on nuclear arms, America’s vocal and demonstrated commitment to the defense of Israel is even more critical. Whenever the security of Israel is most in doubt, America’s commitment to Israel must be most secure.
When the decision was before him in 1948, President Harry Truman decided without hesitation that the United States would be the first country to recognize the State of Israel. From that moment to this, we have been the most natural of allies, but our alliance runs deeper than the designs of strategy or the weighing of interests.
The story of how America – a nation still so new to the world by the standards of this ancient region – rose up to become the dear friend of the people of Israel is among the finest and most hopeful in our nation’s history.
Different as our paths have been, we see the same qualities in one another. Israel and America are in many respects reflections of one another." - Mitt Romney in Jerusalem
Making the legal seem illegal
I receive a weekly digest from the U.S. Treasury Dept. (although it seems not that often) and today it was about FATCA, Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act --an act passed by the Obama Administration in 2010. A little late for Timmy Geithner, though.
"FATCA was enacted in 2010 by Congress as part of the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act. FATCA requires foreign financial institutions (FFIs) to report to the IRS information about financial accounts held by U.S. taxpayers, or by foreign entities in which U.S. taxpayers hold a substantial ownership interest."
Reading through the complex, obscure language that only bureaucrats can compose, I did determine that it isn't illegal to have foreign investments or work for foreign companies, so why are Obama ads (in Ohio, a swing state) making a big deal about Romney's legal investments regulated by our ever vigilant IRS? Except of course, to make voters think he's doing something illegal.
http://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1653.aspx
Sunday, July 29, 2012
John Tesh opens Week 6 at Lakeside
John Tesh was fabulous last night! One of the best shows ever!! I thought I might have to leave because of the deafening sound level, but after about 3 numbers he began the interaction with the audience and talk part, so that reduced the pain level. The 11 member band was so loud, we couldn't hear Tesh at the piano. In the middle of the show he gave his Christian testimony. Lakeside loved it.
On our way back to the cottage about 10 pm, our 80 something neighbor whizzed by on his bicycle, and said, “That was the best program I’ve heard at Lakeside.”
Tesh was co-host of Entertainment Tonight for 10 years. This was his “big band” sound and a similar show is airing on PBS. He is married to Connie Sellecca (20 years) who he say was the inspiration of his current radio show. The night before Lakeside the band was in Dayton, and one of the trumpet players had appendicitis, so they came to Lakeside with a PhD trumpet player from U of Cincinnati who plays with the symphony there.
Pandering to His Base
He is moving sharply to the left on issue after issue: immigration, religious liberty, welfare, gay marriage, the environment, race, the role of government. Why? It's an election year!
And then there are the expanded wars . . . the crony capitalism . . . the deliberate moves to hurt the economy by denegrating small business . . . what is up with this guy and his supporters?
Pandering to His Baseyear! Have Democrats really gone over the cliff as a party?
Fancy Nancy and the President's trips to Israel
The Kitchen Cabinet says:
"Nancy Pelosi - the gift that just keeps on giving... with Mitt Romney currently visiting Israel, guess she was feeling nervous for Obama when in her interview with Al Hunt she remarked that, he "has been there [Israel] over and over again."
Hmmm, not once as President, and only twice before that while in the Senate, and NEVER as a private citizen.
Pelosi also said that Republican Jews are being "exploited", but did remark, "And they’re smart people." Yeah, smart enough not to vote for Obama this time Nancy... getting anxious yet?"
More here: http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/pelosi-president-obamas-been-israel-over-and-over-again_649078.html and interview transcript here: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-27/pelosi-says-republicans-use-israel-to-distract-transcript-.html
Current fashions
Also, what's up with young (ish) women wearing baggy sweats rolled at the waist with skinny t-shirt tops. Not very flattering. Is that the yoga look?
Ladies: I know they make fun of "mom jeans," but trust me when I say perhaps you should leave that painted on style to your teen daughters.
I must say, though, I do approve of the many pretty dresses available now in the stores. Many lovely floor length, summery, swishy styles. Just a few more sleeves please. This one is from Kohl's, similar to the one I'm wearing to church.
Friday, July 27, 2012
Not so wild about technology
Thursday, July 26, 2012
The Chick-fil-a hypocrisy of Democrats
Interesting that Democrats, the party with a history of organizing and membership in the KKK, serial criminal behavior, treasonous speeches when we're at war, looking the other way when Jews were being slaughtered in Europe, supporting of the return of Jim Crow by disenfranchising legal voters by protecting the illegal and dead ones, and the killing of the pre-born for the last 40 years have a problem with Christians exercising legal rights guaranteed by the Constitution.
Now it’s a failure of connectivity
Computer fixed, can get e-mail, but barely can get blogger and no luck with FaceBook. Somedays I hate technology.
But Mother Nature isn’t being much kinder. Last night two bats got in the house, apparently when we opened the front door around twilight, but we really don’t know since we didn’t discover them until around 11 p.m. We thought there was just one, but the cat found the 2nd one, upside down on the dining room blinds.
There’s supposed to be a big storm this afternoon. After the seriousness of the last two on June 29 and July1 which interrupted services for quite awhile, I bought a new flashlight, bottled water, and cooked this evening’s dinner at noon.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
He didn’t say it, or didn’t mean it, but it doesn’t matter, we know his heart
James Taranto writes: “Still on the defensive over "you didn't build that," President Obama's campaign is out with yet another ad claiming he didn't say that, or at least he didn't mean that. This one features Stephanie Cutter, the deputy campaign manager. . . [we haven’t seen this in Ohio yet].
“If Obama has made any permanent, across-the-board cuts [he claims 18 times] in either individual or corporate tax rates, that's news to us. As far as we know, such tax cuts as have been enacted since 2009 have been temporary and targeted--designed to provide "help" to particular segments of the economy or "stimulus," not to improve the overall business climate.
“Then Obama takes credit for "investing" in (read spending on) "infrastructure"; in Pell Grants, which transfer money from taxpayers, including businessmen, to colleges and universities; and in "expanding broadband access," an area in which the private sector is doing fine.
“Now remember all the governmental goodies Obama credits with building small businesses: roads and bridges, teachers, the Internet. It's all right there on Cutter's list. She's confirming, not refuting, Mitt Romney's account of Obama's collectivist philosophy.”
Restoring Love
Last night we listened to Kalai sing Julia Ward Howe's "Battle Hymn of the Republic" on Glenn Beck's 5 p.m. program. Beautiful, but not like you've ever heard it. Our God is marching on . . . Restoring Love. Glennbeck.com/music.
According to another blog, Revolutionary Artists: "Kalai was born “Kaniela Ka Lei Ali’i ‘O’ Kalani Kala’i” in December, 1979, in Kailua, Hawaii and raised in Alaska. Kalai, despite a permanent injury in his left hand, at the age of 16 learned guitar by watching his father, Danson, a Hawaiian music icon who has performed with Eric Clapton and Van Morrison."
Women for Obama
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
The blame game is killing people
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/young-gay-black-men-at-high-risk-of-hiv/2012/07/23/gJQA445T5W_story.html?wpisrc=nl_headlines
Monday, July 23, 2012
Time for a new computer
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Week 4 at Lakeside, 2012
On Thursday we enjoyed Helen Welch from Cleveland who did music from the Silver Screen. The day time topics were the Great Lakes and Ethics. I did attend two of the Great Lakes lectures--learned about the Salt Mines under Lake Erie. Also attended a 3 day class led by our summer pastor, Irwin Jennings, Making sense of God’s Will. The Kids Sail on Sunday had to be post-poned due to weather, but almost 90 showed up on Thursday for the make-up date, and my husband loved it. He always has interesting stories to tell about what children say--when they aren’t with their parents.
Thursday night our neighbors had a party--Isobel is 95. The electric golf cart was decorated and the neighbors came in for cake and ice cream and a lot of laughter. I think she told me once that her parents brought her to Lakeside when she was 6 months old.
Friday, July 20, 2012
I spoke too soon
Thursday, July 19, 2012
None dare call it treason
John A. Stormer wrote this book in 1964. I picked it up at a sale today--vaguely remembered the title. Here are some of the chapter titles.
- The growth of world Communism
- How has it happened?
- Education
- Subverting our religious heritage
- The press, radio and TV
- The Organized labor movement
- The tax-exempt foundations
- Internationalism
Revising textbooks to eliminate nationalism, taking history out of the early grades, belittling patriotism, and eliminating the Pledge of Allegiance were noted (quotes suggestions from UNESCO).
http://www.scribd.com/doc/52165577/None-Dare-Call-It-Treason-John-Stormer-1964
The topic is Ethics at Lakeside
- Abortion.
- Removing DDT from malaria prone areas killing more Africans than the European slave trade.
- Testing drugs on women in developing countries and claiming the researchers have "informed consent" to exploit their ignorance.
- Crippling families with welfare and making Uncle Sam a no-good, abusive step-daddy-O.
- Destroying the hearing of teen children with rock concerts and ear buds so performers can live in luxury.
- Eminent domain for profit and cronyism and the building trades.
- Non-profits that are hugely profitable by any thinker person's definition of profit.
- College programs and faculty taking tuition from students to study for non-existent jobs.
- Keeping adult children dependent because you need to be needed.
- Not taking care of an animal you've agreed to own.
- Making a living legally from the addictions and pain of others--gambling, alcohol, pornography, etc.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
The anti-life president and stem cell research
"An analysis of scientific funding over several years suggests that morally acceptable types of stem cell research [using adult cells] offer the greatest promise for a wide variety of effective therapies and treatments.Some Americans fret over where Obama was born. I wonder where his heart came from. We may never know the real truth, but his mother was a 17 year old, unmarried American, impregnated by a foreigner. His policies seem to speak out against his own mother who later turned him over to her parents to raise.
Research on adult stem cells does not require the destruction of a human embryo and therefore does not pose the ethical difficulties associated with embryonic stem cell research. In addition, adult stem cell research has already contributed to advancing therapies for various diseases." EWTN News
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
A memo to the president
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM9sbQf9MQ4&feature=share
Seen at the coffee shop in Lakeside
In "Real Simple" I was reading an article on aging and beauty, and of course, the photos were of women 40-something. That's what consumer magazines call "aging." For aging, they should come to Lakeside where 80-somethings are still wearing shorts and riding bikes and sailing. For us, here are my tips, but I think most magazines will tell you the same thing.
- Good nutrition
- Stay out of the sun
- If you must, use baby sun screen
- Drink a lot of water
- Move as much as you can
- Don't smoke
- Avoid alcohol
- Go really light on the make-up because it collects in wrinkles and eyebrow hair, emphasizing them
- If you must wear make-up, get the right color
- Smile
- Take care of your teeth
- If you've been coloring your hair, go lighter--that's how God does it.
Monday, July 16, 2012
Bicycling at Lakeside
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Putting all non-government social service agencies out of business--the HHS Mandate
Friday, July 13, 2012
Friday Family Photo-Old Friends
Week 3 at Lakeside, 2012
The Osmond Brothers, Merrill, Jay and Jimmy, performed Saturday night. Wow. What amazing, accomplished musicians, but then they’ve been performing together over 50 years, having had their 50th anniversary as a family group in 2008. Seven of the nine Osmonds are musicians and/or actors--one brother who used to perform with these three in recent years in Bransom, MO and on tour has had a stroke and another has M.S. Donny and Marie still perform together occasionally. All the Osmonds use their many talents in other areas of show business. They did a lot of interacting with the audience, and one more row and I would have been able to shake Merrill’s hand. The audience at the end (about 2-3 encores) rushed up to take photos, and they obliged. Some performers are very stingy with their time, but not this group. They also called Shirley Starey (who is program director) to the stage because it was her birthday.
The Archives and Heritage Hall has a new director of operations, Gretchen Curtis, who did our educational programming for years. Keith Addy gave some “behind the scenes” stories about the days he was in charge of the Hoover entertainment, 1988-2004. My neighbor provided a few additional ones. He said his wife was the driver from the airport when the Osmonds (5 of them) appeared here in 1985. Also he said when the Lennon sisters appeared here (1960s?), they took a break after about 30 minutes. The audience waited and waited, but they never came back on state. They’d left during intermission!
On Monday and Tuesday Frank Deaner, retired Ohio Newspaper Association, talked about future of newspapers and the sunshine law. He was hopeful about the future of newspapers, although the dailies are down (1902, 2600; 2009, 1392), many people report using a newspaper daily (59%) or on Sunday (53%). News websites get 113 million adult visitors. E-content (tablet, etc.) readers are increasing readership. Many websites are going “hyper-local.” I learned that the Cincinnati Inquirer is getting out of the printing business, and will be printed by the Columbus Dispatch. Also new is a less than 7 day schedule, like publishing 4 days, and the current stories appear only on blogs or the website. Lots of multi-media cross digitization--Scripps Howard now owns Food Network (cable), for instance.
On Wednesday and Thursday Meghan Harper, Assoc. Prof., Kent State talked on the future of libraries. She was very upbeat and positive. Two of my library friends, Andrea and Marian, and I compared notes at the Wednesday picnic. Our view from the trenches was not quite so positive. Of course, none of us were as enamored of technology as Ms. Harper.
A great genealogy workshop this week, 5 days at 3:30, by Derek Davey, who is an instructor in genealogy, and a private, for-hire, genealogist. Many of the points I knew (although I don’t always follow). Met a woman who also has a Church of the Brethren background and I told her about the Brethren genealogy listserv that has been so helpful for me in finding Wengers, Danners, Geigers, and Fetters. Because maiden names were often not included in older records, it is nice to have such a helpful group.
Thursday night was The Glenn Miller Orchestra. Powerful performance. The leader said they tour 48 weeks a year, 4-5 performances a week! This also included a seminar in the afternoon, although I didn’t attend. After all, one has to preserve some nap time!
Friday night Judy Collins is scheduled. She is my age and still does about 100 performances a year. So I guess I can walk 3 blocks to hear her. She is multi-talented, and is also an author.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
It's only the largest tax increase in our history. . .
Imaginative Conservative
Sunday, July 08, 2012
Transfer of health
Saturday, July 07, 2012
Diet and exercise myths and studies
Losing weight is no problem. Maintenance is. Most medical reports only go to 18 months for “success” stories. I lost 20 lbs. In October 2006-March 2007. Travel is broadening, and in 2006 we went to Finland, Russia, California, an architectural tour, and to Michigan. We ate a lot of good food. I gained a few pounds back in Ireland that fall, a few pounds in Italy the next year, and a few in our Holy Land tour in 2009. Since 2010 it’s been a hopeless climb back to my 2006 weight. In fact, I’d be happy to weigh what I did in 2009.
The June 27 issue of JAMA has another comparison of plans, and STEP, or a stepped care weight loss program does better than the standard behavior mod plan. However, “The findings do not answer the question of how to achieve weight loss in a manner that will be appealing enough to the participants in long term sustained weight loss." (p. 2641). Really? Who knew?
Eat less, move more. It always works.
.
Diet and exercise myths and studies
Losing weight is no problem. Maintenance is. Most medical reports only go to 18 months for “success” stories. I lost 20 lbs. In October 2006-March 2007. Travel is broadening, and in 2006 we went to Finland, Russia, California, an architectural tour, and to Michigan. We ate a lot of good food. I gained a few pounds back in Ireland that fall, a few pounds in Italy the next year, and a few in our Holy Land tour in 2009. Since 2010 it’s been a hopeless climb back to my 2006 weight. In fact, I’d be happy to weigh what I did in 2009.
The June 27 issue of JAMA has another comparison of plans, and STEP, or a stepped care weight loss program does better than the standard behavior mod plan. However, “The findings do not answer the question of how to achieve weight loss in a manner that will be appealing enough to the participants in long term sustained weight loss." (p. 2641). Really? Who knew?
Eat less, move more. It always works.
.
Friday, July 06, 2012
Week 2 at Lakeside--hot in so many ways
We left early Sunday morning for Illinois, arriving in time for our family reunion, so I can't speak to the programing on Monday and Tuesday except it was on art and literature. I know on Monday night there was a lovely theater production at the hotel because Bev, who was attending our cat, said it was great. Thursday night's Hoover program was "The Magic of John Denver" performed by Rick Schuler. In the middle, he told us about archealogy digs in Israel he's participated in, and sang the Lord's Prayer in Hebrew.
Tuesday and Friday are farmer's market, so I'd better hurry. Saturday (week 3) is the Osmond Brothers--the real thing.
Update: Friday's program, Rhythmic Circus, a group of tap dancers and ensemble musical group, was outstanding. I've never seen anything like it--although they were here last year (I must have not attended, because you'd remember these folks). My feet, knees and calves were aching in sympathy after the first number, yet they continued until 10:30! Hoover was packed--unusual for a non-name group, so they must have a following. The new "cooling" system, huge ceiling fans, couldn't make a dent in the heat, and at intermission many left to go get ice cream. But, oh my, they were fabulous.
Small business waits . . .and so do we
Meanwhile in Ohio, a swing, critical state, we are inundated with 2 Obama ads; 1) Romney outsourced jobs, 2) Bain Capital (when he was no longer an owner) which created thousands of jobs and businesses (Staples, 92,000 alone) caused a woman to lose her job. How about the government EPA requiring us to buy energy efficient light bulbs made in China. How about those wind towers that dot the Illinois prairies which are made in China? What about Obama off-shoring our oil wells to the waters outside Brazil? These ads are so easy to refute, where are the Romney writers? They are certainly collecting enough money--it's time to call out Obama on his lies.
John Stossel's new book points out he made $11/hr, tax free, begging on the streets, and found 40 jobs in 2 hours in an area where the unemployed, collecting benefits, said there were no jobs.
Driving back to Ohio on July 4 we made record time getting around Chicago--it was a breeze. But. Oh. My. The radio talk shows. Really in the tank for Obama, plus we had to listen to an interview with Elizabeth Warren pleading for money (wampum?). Remember she's the one who has been sliding buy as a Native American, based on a family story that great great great granny or someone was an Indian. Well, who doesn't have that in their family genealogy/tree, especially if you are from an area where Indians were forceably remove. A nice gig, but isn't she smart enough and female enough to make it on some thing else.?
Allen West: "When you go back and you read the documents, the Declaration of Independence, the full declaration, the full Constitution, you’ll understand limited government, you’ll understand fiscal responsibility, you’ll understand individual sovereignty, free markets … strong national defense.
But there are people on the other side, and you can call them whatever you wish, you can call it Communism, Progressivism, Socialism, Marxism, or Statism …They believe in creating and expanding an entitlement or welfare state."
Monday, July 02, 2012
Monday Memories--Very fresh, Blogging from Illinois
The ladies of the class meet this evening and then the class reunion is at the Pines State Park tomorrow evening. However, classmate Phil Egan died Saturday, and the funeral will be tomorrow, so I expect to see some classmates at the services or visitation.
Very hot here. Instead of a cool walk along the lakefront, it was 77 degrees on a country road.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Friday, June 29, 2012
Friday family photo
Thursday, June 28, 2012
The Supreme Court's Decision
I doubt that the USSR could have fallen without Pope John Paul II and his inspiration for the Polish people to fight for their freedom. Looks like the limp, spineless evangelicals need to get behind the Catholics in their battle against the HHS Mandate. It's the only power we've got who can stand up to Big Brother Barack.
"It is amazing that people who think we cannot afford to pay for doctors, hospitals, and medication somehow think that we can afford to pay doctors, hospitals, medication and a government bureaucracy to administer it." --Thomas Sowell
























