Saturday, December 12, 2015
New Christmas CDs
The Pope, the Lutheran and the Eucharist
”I can only respond to your question with a question: what can I do with my husband that the Lord’s Supper might accompany me on my path? It’s a problem that each must answer [for themselves], but a pastor-friend once told me that “We believe that the Lord is present there, he is present” – you believe that the Lord is present. And what's the difference? There are explanations, interpretations, but life is bigger than explanations and interpretations. Always refer back to your baptism – one faith, one baptism, one Lord: this Paul tells us; and then consequences come later.
I would never dare to give permission to do this, because it’s not my own competence. One baptism, one Lord, one faith. Talk to the Lord and then go forward. [Pauses] And I wouldn't dare – I don’t dare say anything more.” http://whispersintheloggia.blogspot.com/2015/11/life-is-bigger-than-explanations-to.html
Friday, December 11, 2015
Former Homeland Security employee told to shut down a surveillance program
Political correctness run amok.
Malik ignored.
"The attack by Farook, the U.S.-born son of Pakistani immigrants, and Malik, a Pakistani native he married in Saudi Arabia last year, has heightened security concerns in the United States and become an issue in the U.S. presidential campaign."
Hope for a terrible disease--Dengue Fever
The Scientist
The fun Christmas party for PDHC
Women in combat
The general consensus is that women in combat weakens the military. There are many, many who call themselves Americans who would like to see this.
Zuckerberg, Facebook, and ISIS
In the past few years, the use of Twitter (as opposed to Facebook), on the other hand, has grown. ISIS supporters embraced the platform in the latter part of the last decade, Stalinsky says, when old-school web forums regulated by moderators remained popular among Al Qaeda members. According to research from the Brookings Institute, ISIS supporters used some 46,000 Twitter accounts between September and December 2014, though not all were active at the same time.
Mark Zuckerberg will offer Muslims peace and safety at Facebook
Facebook is a free service to which we can unsubscribe at any time. I could ignore HuffPo and just post cat photos. But some are made more welcome than others, and some are held to higher PC standards. I know people who have complained to FB about obnoxious, hateful photos and comments, and nothing is done. At other times, really innocuous comments gets someone banned.
Zuckerberg made a huge fortune on a good idea at the right time using the capitalist system, and now he goes all soft and gooey for socialism and a religion whose radical adherents would kill him for no reason other than he is a Jew.
Zuckerberg reassures Muslims
More have slipped into lower income group under Obama
The recession was "over" in June 2009, yet the middle class has lost out and some have slipped downward. Finger wagging (Obama), criticizing the GOP (Hillary) and creating additional expensive government programs (Bernie) won't take the place of sound economic policies.
http://www.census.gov/did/www/saipe/data/highlights/files/2014highlights.pdf
Obama violated federal law with his Bergdahl deal
The report compiled by the GOP majority charges that the administration did so when it bypassed Congress in negotiating the exchange of five Taliban prisoners for U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who was being held in Afghanistan. They suggested that the White House had put politics and expediency ahead of proper procedure in making the deal." (CNN)
https://pjmedia.com/trending/2015/12/10/house-armed-services-committee-obama-violated-federal-law-with-bergdahl-exchange
Ohio pro-abortion legislators want to take away first amendment rights
But in Ohio, based on the crazy guy who attacked people at an abortion clinic in Colorado, 2 female pro-abortion legislators want to further infringe on the rights (speech, religion, assembly) of people peacefully walking near abortion clinics and they want clients, staffers and abortionists of the clinics to be able to sue the demonstrators who are doing nothing wrong using pseudonyms. They essentially are accusing people who have done nothing wrong of plotting murder. Dear was not demonstrating, was part of no pro-life group, and had a history of disturbing behavior with a criminal record, infidelity, multiple marriages, and abuse of women. Apparently, he believed babies were being killed there and said so. For that, these legislators want to take away the rights of Ohioans.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Electroporation
This article in the OSU News is about interesting cell research on cancer cells, but includes some possible good news on Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s.
https://ece.osu.edu/news/2015/12/cell-cell-curing-cancer-nanoscale
The process of cell reprogramming through electroporation is recognized as an important strategy for curing Parkinson and Alzheimer’s diseases, as well as many cancers. Stem cell reprogramming researchers were even awarded the Nobel Prize in 2012.
Electroporation involves delivering probes to individual cell membranes, in order to apply a focused electrical field. This makes the cells permeable enough to place foreign molecules inside, like genes or drug treatments, without damaging the surrounding tissue.
[If my troll who doesn’t like my medical articles or my political articles or my pro-life views takes issue with this, please take it up with either the researcher or the editor of the article. Thanks.]
Wednesday, December 09, 2015
No wonder people are ready for Trump
“A student at an Arizona community college is challenging her school’s so-called “speech zone,” arguing the policy “severely limited” her right to free speech and due process.
Brittany Mirelez, a freshman at Paradise Valley Community College in Maricopa County, Ariz., was kicked out of the designated speech zone in October for failing to obtain permission to use the space.”
Three Word Wednesday—the Obituary
Three Word Wednesday gives writers, poets and those who journal a mid-week jolt of creativity. Each week, three words are selected; you create something with the words. Then come back and post a link to your contribution.
Obituary, a notice of a death
Placid, not easily upset or excited; calm and peaceful, with little movement or activity.
Resonant, deep, clear, and continuing to sound or ring; filled or resounding with (a sound); having the ability to evoke or suggest enduring images, memories, or emotions;
The obituary
by Norma J. Bruce
December 8, 2015
Two days later, he died.
The obituary was clear on the dates.
Death notices are often dry and placid,
It took my breath away as I thought back.
With careful wording and verbs about the destination.
Brief paragraph, not resonant with the muffled sounds of the past
Of young love, quarrels and misunderstandings,
When sixty years ago they had hoped for a future that
Was not to be. Ever. At least on this side.
Farook and Malik
I only had the news on about 2 minutes this morning before I turned to something more spiritual and scriptural, but I did catch more bad news about Farook, the San Bernardino shooter. It could be unsettling for the leftist meme--which continues to be shattered as more investigation is done.
Now, it appears, in addition to the bank account transfer 2 weeks ago, workplace violence can't even be a partial motive, like that quarrel with a Jewish co-worker. Obama and Lynch so desperately wanted that label! They want to blame Islamophobia so the American people can be at fault.
He had planned this 2 years ago, then got spooked. That also means his wife didn't radicalize him (not sure why her radicalizing him was such comfort to some, but it seemed to be—even Donald Trump who is looking for more excuses to get publicity). Now I'm wondering if she was the 15th victim, did she actually have a choice? In those hours after the shooting driving around when the bombs didn't explode, was she pleading with him to give up so they could see their child again? We'll never know.
And I'm still wondering how CAIR knew to call a press conference before the rest of us knew their names. Unless the White House or FBI (which reports to Obama) gave them a heads up.
Tuesday, December 08, 2015
Talat Strokirk, Pakistani-Swede, former Muslim
Of all the segments I’ve watched on Journey Home (EWTN), this is one of the most interesting given the struggles today between Muslims and Christians. Talat Strokirk has lived all over the world, but now lives in Sweden and is married to a Swede. She was born in pre-partition India and her Muslim family became citizens of Pakistan. Although she speaks very lovingly of her devout Muslim parents, they had a number of serious breaks in their relationship—when she became baptized, and when she decided to marry a foreigner.
But it also shows the importance of Christian missionary schools, as she was educated in several countries by Catholic nuns, although with no pressure to participate in Christian activities or worship. She said her Muslim father approved of the Catholic schools because, “the nuns dressed modestly and followed a good moral code.” She also said that leaving home (around 1960) to take refuge in a convent (after her baptism) was unusual in that day, but today would be almost impossible. Her parents were embarrassed in their community by a Christian daughter, and her mother said she would have preferred she had come home with a child (from England where she had studied) rather than as a baptized Christian.
Monday, December 07, 2015
Walnuts—food of the week
“Most U.S. adults have yet to discover the benefits of walnuts. A recent study has determined that only 5.5% of all adults (ages 19-50) consume tree nuts of any kind! This small percentage of people actually do a pretty good job of integrating tree nuts (including walnuts) into their diet, and average about 1.25 ounces of tree nuts per day. But the other 94.5% of us report no consumption of tree nuts whatsoever. In a recent look at the nutritional differences between tree nut eaters and non-eaters, researchers have reported some pretty notable findings: on a daily average, tree nut eaters take in 5 grams more fiber, 260 milligrams more potassium, 73 more milligrams of calcium, 95 more milligrams of magnesium, 3.7 milligrams more vitamin E, and 157 milligrams less sodium! “


