I was pretty sure I’d found this in Luther’s writings and then designed the bookmark, but couldn’t figure out which, so I googled, “if you were able and did not” and sure enough found it was LW 51,9. It was on a page for sex and gender diversity at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Inbreeding among Muslims for 1400 years?
I am not at all familiar with Pickerington Post blog. So I haven’t confirmed this “research.”
Massive inbreeding among Muslims has been going on since their prophet allowed first-cousin marriages more than 50 generations (1,400 years) ago. For many Muslims, therefore, intermarriage is regarded as being part of their religion. . .
The BBC’s research also discovered that while British Pakistanis accounted for just 3.4% of all births in Britain, they accounted for 30% of all British children with recessive disorders and a higher rate of infant mortality.
It is estimated that one third of all handicapped people in Copenhagen have a foreign background and 64% of school children in Denmark with Arabic parents are illiterate after 10 years in the Danish school system.
The research appears to be only at right wing website and all cite the same Danish psychologist, Nicholai Sennels .
http://pjmedia.com/blog/the-problem-of-inbreeding-in-islam/
The dissenters: http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/robert-spencer
Dear Mr. Reno, editor of First Things
I don't know about the progressive because I'm a conservative, former liberal, humanist and Democrat. But I do know how disappointed I was in the December issue, "Crisis of our Time." If I could have found your e-mail, I would have said,
"What are you thinking? Capitalism is more dangerous than powers of government and you're leaning to Francis' view?"
Really? Name any global capitalist cabal that has murdered 100 million of its customers as the USSR and China did in the 20th century! What about the kings, monarchs, tsars, caliphates, Imans, and tribal leaders of past eras? Who do you think was at the foundation of 18th c slavery if not the petty tribal and Islamic leaders of that era who sold souls to slavers? Do you think capitalists have killed more of their citizens than they did? Only mosquitoes have killed more people than governments. /And statist governments are the worst.
Indirectly I suppose you could say the abortion industry is capitalism, but in the United States it is the plank of the Democrat Party, and it has destroyed millions of lives and caused American families to decay at the roots.
I've eagerly read your columns with each issue; now I could cry. I'm a Lutheran so technically have no skin in your game, but I do know the Roman Catholic church is the greatest defender of social and political rights in the world, the only entity strong enough to stand up to powerful government interests, especially Marxists. Once you weaken that with this drivel that Francis is promoting, the 40,000 Protestant groups and denominations might as well fold their tents and let the culture die.
Wednesday, November 11, 2015
Coloring books for adults
Have you seen those coloring books for adults at the book stores? Yesterday I bought some colored pencils and I picked up two Sunday school children's bulletins with b & w drawings at church. It's all good.
Jesus probably didn't wear purple on earth--too expensive, but he is King of King and Lord of Lords, so I took some artistic license for heaven.
http://time.com/4106154/crayola-coloring-book-adults-color-escapes/
http://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/why-adults-are-buying-coloring-books-for-themselves
There’s a gremlin in your diet plan
Ghrelin, a hunger inducing hormone, sounds like the word “gremlin,” at least to me. After weight loss, regardless of the diet employed, there are changes in circulating hormones involved in the regulation of body weight. Ghrelin levels tend to increase so that makes you more hungry and levels of the nine appetite-suppressing hormones decrease, so they aren‘t doing their job. The word gremlin became popularized in the early 20th century, originally used as a creature that sabotaged aircraft, but the word works for diets, too. Even after 3 years, your body still responds to diets this way.
Report insults and slights to Police—it’s not illegal, but do it anyway
"While cases of hateful and hurtful speech are not crimes, if the individual(s) identified are students, MU’s Office of Student Conduct can take disciplinary action.” Police at University of Missouri ask students to report speech to the police that hurts their feelings. Would that be "fatty fatty two by four," or "you're ugly, bitch," or "you're a retard," or "You've got man boobs," or "No, I won't buy you a beer, chink" or accusing a male of "white privilege" when he's 1/16th native American and on campus as a minority scholarship despite blonde hair and blue eyes? Is it OK for a gay guy to use a homosexual insult? Can a black guy use the N-word? How far will police take this? Really, this hate speech stuff is out of control. Shame, shame on all academe. It's much worse than the "in loco parentis" of the 40s and 50s.
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
A lesson in good manners
I thought I was done with this, but in case you’ve forgotten how to be polite and cheerful, here it is.
Ben Carson asks for money because media are unfair. Well, duh!
"The media have paid far more attention to Ben Carson's speculation about what the Pyramids were built for, thousands of years ago, than to outright lies that Hillary Clinton told about tragic American deaths in Benghazi, within days after she knew the truth, as her own e-mails now reveal." Thomas Sowell.
That said, if Dr. Carson doesn't stop using the stupidity of the media as a reason to support his campaign, I won't send him any money. GW Bush ignored the terrible way they treated him. Looks darn good in retrospect.
Monday, November 09, 2015
Sunday, November 08, 2015
History of money
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6NRC9aofKU
Lecture series at Hillsdale College.
“Money has been used as a medium of exchange since ancient times. It affects not only economics, but also history, politics, and culture. This second CCA of the 2015-2016 academic year, co-sponsored by the Ludwig von Mises Lecture Series, will examine the history of money, as well as money-related controversies.”
Sunday, November 8:
4:00 p.m. EST
“The History of Money: An Overview”
Kenneth R. Calvert
Headmaster, Hillsdale Academy
Associate Professor of History, Hillsdale College
8:00 p.m. EST
“How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy”
Steve Forbes
Chairman, Forbes Media
Author, Money: How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy
Monday, November 9:
4:00 p.m. EST
“Milton Friedman and Monetarism”
Robert Barro
Harvard University
8:00 p.m. EST
“Money in American History”
John Steele Gordon
Author, Empire of Wealth: The Epic History of American Economic Power
Tuesday, November 10:
4:00 p.m. EST
“How to Think About the Federal Reserve”
Peter Schiff
President and CEO, Euro Pacific Capital
Author, The Real Crash
8:00 p.m. EST
“The Problem of Crony Capitalism Today”
William Walton
Founder, Rappahannock Ventures
Dreams, visions and prophecies

Great sermon today by Gemechis Buba, Mission Director of the North American Lutheran Church, at Mill Run, UALC on dreams, visions and prophecies. He reminded us that the culture is pushing the church to the fringes and we need to regain our vision. He reflected that the great churches of Sweden, Norway, Germany, England and Holland sent missionaries to Africa, but neglected their own countries and their children and grandchildren lost the faith established centuries ago. Pastor Buba, who was raised in Ethiopia, noted that a German missionary had baptized him. Now Africa is sending missionaries to Europe to fill their empty pulpits. I crossed the river to hear him and my husband came over after ushering at our Lytham campus. He has a powerful message; will probably be at ualc.org sermon site by Tuesday.
If we solved poverty, too many people would be out of work
It's not easy being poor, and especially homeless. You have to support so many good middle class jobs. I was looking through the 2014-15 annual report of the Ohio Housing Trust Fund yesterday. It began as a group of concerned citizens in 1990 cobbling together resources to help the homeless and now has a budget of about $60 million. It doles out grants to various non-profits who assist with low income housing and programs for the homeless. I looked at one of the larger grants, Integrated Services of Appalachian Ohio (that's the geographic area that Obama promised to destroy in 2008--coal country). This ISAO has a budget of about $7 million. CEO makes $134,522 (2013), and about 60% of that $7 million goes to salaries. Poverty is big business.
http://collectingmythoughts.blogspot.com/2008/11/affordable-housing-in-ohio-and-your.html
http://collectingmythoughts.blogspot.com/2009/02/what-is-ocdca-not-obsessive-compulsive.html
Saturday, November 07, 2015
Testimony on climate change
Dr. Don Easterbrook, geologist, Professor Emeritus of Geology at Western Washington University. Easterbrook was educated at the University of Washington, where he received the BSc in 1958, the MSc in 1959, and the PhD (Geology) in 1962.
Republicans could elect another Clinton
For those of you who think the Fox Channel is spawn of the devil because it isn't a mouth piece of the Democrat Party, you're missing a great analysis of the new book by the former President George H.W. Bush. I do wonder why it was released during Jeb's campaign--the left will snip and slice and pull out juicy parts to hurt Jeb and destroy George W. But for Republicans who will see it, it's a good reminder that YOU elected Bill Clinton by chasing after Perot. I didn't, because I was a Democrat then and of course voted for Clinton--never thought anything through in those days except do what the party says. Let's not make the same mistake and elect Hillary by pouting that our candidate didn't make the cut in a field that's the best in our history as a country.
Friday, November 06, 2015
Episode 3: Hormones and Hunger
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yo3TRbkIrow
Why it isn’t just eat less move more.
“Metabolic endocrinology appears to be only slightly more complicated than a nuclear reactor and brain surgery combined. No single hormone controls body composition, appetite, and hunger — and your individual hormonal profile may be relatively unique.
What’s also notable is that dieters who lost more weight on the diet had more significant changes in their appetite. They were probably hungrier while losing that weight.”
http://www.precisionnutrition.com/leptin-ghrelin-weight-loss
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOCPyheVesM Robert Lustig on sugar at Google
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmC4Rm5cpOI Robert Lustig at Ted Talk on sugar
Jenean Hampton, Tea Party Republican
Republicans also made history in another way. Bevin’s lieutenant governor running-mate, Jenean Hampton, is now the first African American elected to statewide office ever in the state’s history.
Born in Detroit, the 57-year-old Hampton and her three sisters were raised by a single mom who lacked a high school education and couldn’t afford a television or a car. But Hampton was determined to better herself. She graduated with a degree in industrial engineering and worked for five years in the automobile industry to pay off her college loans. She then joined the Air Force, retiring as a Captain. She earned an MBA from the University of Rochester, moved to Kentucky and became a plant manager in a corrugated packaging plant. Then she lost her job in 2012. She used her free time to start a career in politics and becoming active in the Tea Party.
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/426555/kentuckys-new-gop-lt-gov-black-tea-party-activist-john-fund
Too much sex at OSU
The Women's Place (Ohio State University) produces a comprehensive report on the status of women at Ohio State. The purpose of the report is to synthesize and disseminate comparative data to evaluate progress towards increasing diversity and promoting equality for women at Ohio State. In doing so the report identifies successful areas and areas where more work is needed."
I read it; mostly about implicit bias and why there aren't more women in top positions. So I wrote them: "I've read the 2015 report. I think I see the problem. Your organization focuses too much on sex (babies, assault, relationships) and not enough on skills, leadership, intelligence and accomplishments."
http://womensplace.osu.edu/assets/files/Status_Report_2014-15.pdf

Thomas Sowell on slavery
Why is there such a euro-centric view of slavery? Why more concern for slaves long dead than those living today? Because there are ideological gains to be had.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ao7FKReHYKY
http://townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/2015/07/07/a-legacy-of-cliches-n2021930/page/full
Big Oops
As part of Clinton’s criminal justice reforms, she supports “banning the box,” meaning the box former criminals have to check on a job application acknowledging they committed a misdemeanor or felony. But as she was articulating that stance to her audience [Charleston NAACP] Friday, she made a verbal slip-up.
“Earlier today, I announced that as president, I will take steps to ban the box, so former presidents won’t have to declare their criminal history at the very start of the hiring process,” she said. “That way, they’ll have a chance to be seen as more than just someone who’s done time.”
She's now a much bigger criminal than any president, she just isn't a former president.
Pumpkin Pie Cupcakes With Cream Cheese Whipped Cream
Cupcakes
- 15 oz can pumpkin puree
- ¾ cup sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- ¾ cup Half and half (Or you can try evaporated milk0I used half/half)
- ⅔ cup flour
- ½ teaspoon or 1 teaspoon cinnamon (depending on your preference-can also add 2 tsp pumpkin pie spice but we do not like that)
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon baking powder
- ¼ teaspoon baking soda
- whipped cream
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Grease 12 cup muffin tin.
- Mix the pumpkin and sugar in mixer with whisk.
- Add eggs, vanilla and half & half.
- Add all dry ingredients.
- Fill each muffin cup with ⅓ cup of the mixture.
- Bake for twenty minutes.
- Cool 20 mins then pop in fridge until cold.
- Remove and top with whipped cream
Cream Cheese Whipped Cream
Ingredients
- 8 ounces cream cheese, softened
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla
- 1½ cups heavy cream
Instructions
- In a bowl whip the cream until stiff peaks form.
- In another bowl, beat together the cream cheese with sugar and vanilla until smooth.
- Fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese mixture.
http://hugsandcookiesxoxo.com/2015/08/pumpkin-pie-cupcakes-with-cream-cheese-whipped-cream.html
The homeless woman—Three Word Wednesday
This week (no. 452) the words are:
Ragged, adjective: (of cloth or clothes) old and torn,
Threatening, adjective: having a hostile or deliberately frightening quality or manner,
Unsightly, adjective; unpleasant to look at; ugly.
The homeless woman in July
She’s not threatening
as she daily rides her bike
through the neighborhood
of suburban McMansions.
Dressed in heavy pilled sweaters ,
a ragged hand knit hat blue
from the church missionary barrel,
and unsightly galoshes with treads.
Perhaps she knows that
Cold winds will blow soon.
Thursday, November 05, 2015
Build a better salad
“Want to maximize the health benefits of your salads? Start with romaine lettuce for a salad guaranteed to be packed with nutrients. The vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients and fiber found in romaine lettuce are especially good for the prevention or alleviation of many common health complaints. . . an excellent source of vitamin A, vitamin K, folate, and molybdenum. Romaine lettuce also is . . . a very good source of dietary fiber, four minerals (manganese, potassium, copper, and iron), and three vitamins (biotin, vitamin B1, and vitamin C). “
http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=61
http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=nutrientprofile&dbid=42
Ben Carson has no political experience
“You are absolutely right — I have no political experience. The current Members of Congress have a combined 8,700 years of political experience. Are we sure political experience is what we need. Every signer of the Declaration of Independence had no elected office experience. What they had was a deep belief that freedom is a gift from God. They had a determination to rise up against a tyrannical King. They were willing to risk all they had, even their lives, to be free. Today we find ourselves with an entire class of politicians. No one in Philadelphia, during that summer our nation was born, dreamed that service was a career with a pension. America was the land of the Citizen Statesmen. They were merchants, lawyers, farmers — and yes, even doctors. They were willing to stand for freedom. . .
“My experience is very different than what we have come to expect. I grew up poor. I know what it is like to be homeless and hungry. I know the pain of poverty. I also know that education and a mother’s love can be the path out of dire poverty. I know what it is like to see water fountains you are not allowed to drink out of because of your skin color. I also know that once you peel back the skin, the brain is the same no matter what your skin color or continent you live on. I know that victimhood is a trap. I know that it is our Christian responsibility to offer those less fortunate a hand up. I know my faith is strong and my ego is small. . .
”I didn’t go to embassy cocktail parties or beg lobbyists for money. I spent night after night in a quiet, sterile room trying to save the life of a small child. That was my life’s service. This is my life’s experience. What I have is a lifetime of caring, integrity and honesty. I have experienced the American Dream. No where in the world, other than America, could a man whose ancestors were slaves, rise to become a leading brain surgeon and one day seek the Office of President.” Ben Carson Facebook page, Nov. 5, 2015
Data mining our medical records
There wasn't a shred of research or evidence that electronic medical records included in the Obamacare pre-package would improve health or reduce costs, but the benefits to IT companies and researchers had them salivating. I just noticed this on a recent story. Did we give anyone the right to use your records for research? Probably signed away our rights to privacy without reading the small print.
"Researchers from Houston Methodist and Stanford University used computer algorithms to scour some 16 million records from nearly 3 million patients to find which of them had taken medications for gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, and how many of them had heart attacks."
South Side Roots Café and Market, Columbus, Ohio
Is your lunch bunch looking for a terrific place to meet? Try the South Side Roots Cafe & Market on Reeb, south of Parsons in Columbus, in an old restored elementary school. It's intended for low income who have limited resources, they pay what they can, and get delicious, chef inspired meals. It is part of the Mid-Ohio Food Bank and has a grocery store with locally grown foods. Eat well, do good.
From Columbus Business First, "The cafe will operate on a pay-what-you-can model serving lunch Monday through Friday, and brunch on Saturday. Customers with the resources can pay-it-foward and donate meals to a hungry neighbor. Additionally, the cafe will host a free community meal every Tuesday evening and provide snacks to Reeb’s on-site child-care center and the Boys & Girls Club." Hours are M-F 11-3, and Saturday brunch 9-2.
https://www.facebook.com/#!/South-Side-Roots-Cafe-Market-108575456144715/?pnref=story
Lie upon lie—Obamacare
If you know any Obama supporters who don't yet see the intention was not better or cheaper or more fair health insurance, but single payer so the government could control our lives, smack them. There might still be a brain cell or two working you could activate. http://townhall.com/columnists/halscherz/2015/11/04/the-human-toll-of-the-bureaucratic-state-in-healthcare-n2075710
One of the untold stories regarding the negative effects of Obamacare on our healthcare system, is the irreparable harm being done to our rural healthcare network. iVantage Health Analytics reported that since 2010, there have been 56 rural hospitals that have closed their doors- the latest, Mercy Hospital in Independence, Kansas. There are an additional 283 rural hospitals across America on the brink of closure. 35% of rural hospitals are operating at a financial loss, but this was not always the case. Obamacare is a big part of the problem.
The plan is that it will get so bad and so expensive, the voters will beg for single payer. Marx was definitely wrong. You don’t need impoverished workers to revolt; only dumb, non-thinking well-off voters.
Wednesday, November 04, 2015
Obama is turning the country into Republicans
With the election of Matt Bevin in Kentucky, 64% of governors are now Republican and Kentucky has its first female, Black statewide official, a Tea Party Republican. This will be Obama's legacy--he has lost the Democrat party hundreds of state legislatures, plus many seats in the house and senate of the U.S. Congress. He has overseen the slowest economic recovery in our history by trying to micromanage it from Washington. He has let Russia and Iran lead him by the nose. Democrat candidates’ issues are sex, drugs and guns. Republicans agenda items are jobs, security, borders, Obamacare, debt/deficit, and military. Democrats are running an elderly socialist and a woman who should be in jail. Republicans are offering an amazingly diverse group, including two Hispanics, a black, a woman, a few governors and no socialists.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/us/republican-wins-governors-race-in-kentucky.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/04/us/republican-wins-governors-race-in-kentucky.html
A little child will lead them
Occasionally I read something very profound on FaceBook--and the one posting doesn't even realize it. An atheist FB "friend" (we've never met) was born and raised in the former USSR, and is now an American author and professor. He was walking his dog when he encountered a small child, about 5, sweet and innocent, who asked about the dog, and then about God. "Does God ever get sick?" he asked the professor. A very wise and gentle man was he, and could honestly say, "No," reasoning that if God doesn't exist (he said to himself to justify his answer) he couldn't get sick. I read that exchange and thought to myself that here was a 5 year old who had never seen an ultrasound of a baby, or the aurora borealis, or a fossil, or a spider's delicate web, or the billions of galaxies, and yet he knew more about God and cared for his well-being in his child-like way than my friend, the all wise and jaded professor did. Yes, it was an inspiring post.
Being with the dying
There was a catch in her voice. “Do you know any Scripture I could read to the dying, you know, for comfort?” I told her I would check with the pastor, and get back to her, although I knew I could Google it. Google tells all. All except how to sit by the side of your dying daughter and think about life without her. All except how to live one’s few remaining years without her who used to be your future, the one who would have told sweet stories at your funeral, settled your estate and gone to the cemetery to leave flowers.
http://www.holyredeemerhealth.com/hospice-support/being-with-the-dying/
The Youth vote has much better choices with the Republican slate this coming year, but . . .
It is said that liberals become conservatives as they age (has something to do with raising a family and paying debts), but there's pretty good research to show that how you vote when you start is how you'll end up. In 2008, the youth vote went for Obama. They were sucker punched in my opinion, but with the help of older Christians who sat out 2012, they also reelected him. Now those 18-25 year olds will be 26-33 when Hillary asks for their obedience, and they won't even give it a thought and will pull the lever/press the screen for the big D. They've finished college (although not their government induced debt), married or living with, might even have a child or two. Their happy clappy rock star religion is probably boring now and not much has replaced it. They are probably too busy to look around and think or notice how things have changed since Obama gave them hope and Kool-aid.
Millennials, born between 1981 and 1999, consist of 80 million Americans who are the largest generation in 100 years. Accounting for roughly one-fourth of the total voters today—a larger voting block than seniors citizens—they are predicted to make up as much as 40 percent of the electorate by 2020. Most are too young to remember 9/11, and the recession was just a hiccup because they could move back home with mom and dad. and still pay for their car and i-phone and pot. Many really do want someone to take care of them, and even though the gov't takes from their own wallet and future, they'd rather believe the lies than do the tough stuff of analysis and thinking. Marx was really wrong--he thought you'd need a revolt of the workers when all that was necessary was materialistic college grads.
According to Pew Research, young voters continue to identify with the Democrat Party at relatively high levels and express significantly more liberal attitudes on a range of issues, from gay marriage, abortion, the environment, and the role of the federal government. The kids who were left at day care to be raised by others, are perfectly comfortable with having the federal government take over their decisions and life’s direction.
http://www.conservativebookclub.com/10576/featured-article/can-conservatives-win-back-the-youth-vote
Tuesday, November 03, 2015
October was Respect Life Month
At least for Catholics. We didn’t hear that at our Lutheran church.
Jesus said, “I came that they might have life and have it more abundantly.” (John 10:10) Today there are Christians who don’t see that statement of Jesus extended to the unborn.
- Defenders of life are vilified in our culture; we’re troublemakers who don’t want the best for women (even though over half of the aborted are female).
- Defenders of life are called anti-science for not wanting embryos used in medical labs, or body parts of fetuses sold for medical research.
- Defenders of life are called haters and homophobes for defending marriage.
- Defenders of life are out of step with the culture because casual fluid relationships are not acceptable to us.
- Defenders of life are hassled by the pro-euthanasia crowd because assisting the sick and dying is just too hard for people.
- Defenders of life are called stingy if we don’t want our tax dollars supporting Planned Parenthood’s slaughter houses.
- Defenders of life are told, even by our President, that “black lives matter,” but not that “all lives matter,” even the weakest who cannot speak for themselves.
Defenders of life are called by Christ to be the counter-culture.
(HT David Garick, editor, Catholic Times, Diocese of Columbus)
“Our worth is based not on our skills or levels of productivity. Rather, we discover our worth when we discover our true identity found in the unchangeable, permanent fact that we are created in God’s image and likeness and called to an eternal destiny with him.” http://catholicherald.com/
Sugary Fatty Foods
are as addictive as heroin and cocaine. Leptin. Ghrelin. Whole bunch of things controlling your appetite.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z_M6N2YvhK8
Or was it exposure to DDT? Obesogens?
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/44278/title/Obesogens/
“The biological basis of obesity is further highlighted by the vigorous defense of weight following weight loss. There are at least 10 circulating hormones that modulate hunger. Of these, only one has been confirmed as a hunger-inducing hormone (ghrelin), and it is made and released by the stomach. In contrast, nine hormones suppress hunger, including CCK, PYY, GLP-1, oxyntomodulin, and uroguanylin from the small bowel; leptin from fat cells; and insulin, amylin, and pancreatic polypeptide from the pancreas.
After weight loss, regardless of the diet employed, there are changes in circulating hormones involved in the regulation of body weight. Ghrelin levels tend to increase and levels of multiple appetite-suppressing hormones decrease. There is also a subjective increase in appetite. Researchers have shown that even after three years, these hormonal changes persist (NEJM, 365:1597-604, 2011; Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology, 2:954-62, 2014). This explains why there is a high rate of weight regain after diet-induced weight loss.
Given that the physiological responses to weight loss predispose people to regain that weight, obesity must be considered a chronic disease. Data show that those who successfully maintain their weight after weight loss do so by remaining vigilant and constantly applying techniques to oppose weight regain. These techniques may involve strict diet and exercise practices and/or pharmacotherapy.”
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/44288/title/The-Changing-Face-of-Obesity/
Monday, November 02, 2015
Sunday, November 01, 2015
Fallen Angel with Gary Sinise
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vdo0lrn3tJ0
I watched this today. Lots of twists and turns, but very good.
Summary:
Produced by Hallmark and broadcast on Nov. 23, 2003, FALLEN ANGEL is a wonderful production about a man and a woman who try to put the pieces of their lives back together after a Christmas family tragedy years earlier. FALLEN ANGEL deals with overcoming pain and suffering, learning forgiveness, and seeing prayers answered in unexpected ways.
Obama’s legacy
“To the many gullible souls out there who truly think that Barack Obama is "legacy building" in his all-out assault on America, I implore you to bow out of the conversation because you are not seeing clearly.
The term legacy carries positive connotations of something bequeath that is to the receiver's benefit. Everything that Barack Obama does is calculated to destroy America, which he despises. This man no more cares about legacy than he fears being properly prosecuted by the white political leaders whose responsibility it is to remove him from office.” Read what this conservative black woman has to say.
- Nuclear Iran
- Weakening the military
- Relations with Cuba
- Open borders and amnesty
All Saints Sunday, November 1, 2015
Narthex window, Church on Lytham
Today we Christians celebrate and remember all the Saints who have gone before us. In our church members submit names on cards to be read during the service they attend. We'll be serving communion during that time, so it is always wonderful to hear the names of my parents and sister while I'm offering the body of Christ to fellow believers.
Pastor Brody preached an unusual sermon. He went over the funeral service as printed in the Lutheran Book of Worship (Augsburg, 1978), “Burial of the Dead” pp. 206-214. It was very moving.
"Most Lutheran churches use the first Sunday in November to remember all the saints in the Church of Christ Jesus, especially those members and friends of the local congregation who have been called to Heaven in the previous year.
The custom of commemorating all the martyrs of the Church on a single day goes back at least to the third century. All Saints' Day celebrates not only the martyrs and saints, but all the people of God, living and dead, who together form the mystical body of Christ.
In Europe, All Saints' Day is also called All Hallow's Day ('hallowed' means 'sanctified' or 'holy'). October 31st, the evening before All Saint's Day is named All Hallow's Eve, which was contracted to Halloween." (Emmanuel Lutheran Church, Ypsilanti, MI)
Sanctuary window, Church at Mill Run
Why do Democrats talk about the gap instead of life style?
Facebook sent me a memo about what I wrote on November 1, 2014.
"This is why the Democrats have to talk about a gap rather than quality of life and consumption.
The typical poor household, AS DEFINED BY THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, has ...
- a car and air conditioning, two color televisions, cable or satellite TV, a DVD player, and a VCR.
- If there are children, especially boys, the family has a game system, such as an Xbox or PlayStation.
- In the kitchen, the household has a refrigerator, an oven and stove, and a microwave.
- Other household conveniences include a clothes washer, clothes dryer, ceiling fans, a cordless phone, and a coffee maker.
- The home of the typical poor family is in good repair and is not overcrowded.
- The typical average poor American has more living space in his home than the average (non-poor) European has.
- By its own report, the typical poor family was not hungry, was able to obtain medical care when needed, and had sufficient funds during the past year to meet all essential needs."
The immigrants who come here probably know this; the media and politicians don't seem to.

Notice what is soaring? College tuition and fees, not health care. Government is heavily involved in college loans.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
C.A.T.C.H. Court and Judge Paul M. Herbert

October 31 I attended a presentation at UALC Mill Run campus on the C.A.T.C.H court of Franklin County, Ohio, which is a diversion program offering women victimized by human trafficking the chance to leave lives of trauma, homelessness, substance abuse and incarceration. It was started in 2009 by Judge Paul M. Herbert, a Christian, who had a personal experience with a woman in his court room that was like that of the disgraced woman in Luke’s account of the woman who bathed Jesus’ feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. He told us the most important word in the Bible is “SEE.”
He told us that prostitution isn’t the glamorous, self selected life of “Pretty woman” the Julia Roberts film where women are exchanging sex for money. He showed footage of severe physical abuse. We heard about branding with tattoos, pimps being “married” to all his girls, new identities, traumatic brain injuries, broken bones and rape. That’s NOT sex for hire. . . it’s slavery. One third of the prostitutes were in the field before age 15, and now average age is 12-13; 62% are before their 18th birthday. Ohio passed a Statute of Human Trafficking, June, 27, 2012—every human trafficking victim is also a prostitute—victim and criminal. 92% of those arrested for prostitution also fit the definition of human trafficking.
The C.A.T.C.H. program graduates have a very high rate of success. We also heard from a graduate of the program, Vanessa Perkins who today is employed by the very court system that previously tried and convicted her and has completed 5 years of sobriety with no new offenses. She serves on the Board of Freedom a la Cart. Story here.
This video is very similar to the presentation I heard this morning.
Thank you Suzanne Tyack who brought this program to UALC.Justice Scalia and Justice Kennedy on the Constitution and our rights—polar opposites
If there was one phrase Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia could eliminate from our vocabulary, it would be "living constitution." "God, I hate that phrase," Scalia said. "I prefer 'enduring Constitution.' " (speaking at Santa Clara University this past week)
Our founders set up 3 branches of government with checks and balances and specific duties, the strongest and most powerful, given the most responsibilities was the House of Representatives because it was "power to the people," something they didn't have in Europe. Now a group of unelected judges, 5 of them liberals, have absconded with our rights, and defiled the constitution.
A nod to the Nazis comes from Justice Kennedy. Obey the law or else, even though I made it up.
Responding to a question about marriage and abortion:
The justice responded by pointing out that only three judges resigned during Germany’s Third Reich — the government of Adolf Hitler — and said, “Great respect, it seems to me, has to be given to people who resign rather than do something they view as morally wrong, in order to make a point. However, the rule of law is that, as a public official, in performing your legal duties, you are bound to enforce the law.” “This requires considerable introspection,” he continued, “and it’s a fair question that officials can and should ask themselves. But certainly, in an offhand comment, it would be difficult for me to say that people are free to ignore a decision by the Supreme Court.”
Reviewing Doubting Thomas

Doubting Thomas? The religious life and legacy of Thomas Jefferson, Mark A. Beliles , Jerry Newcombe, Morgan James Publishing, Release date: Oct 31, 2015, ISBN 978-1-68045-150-7, $29.99.
I’ve been getting really selective about accepting books for review—it’s like getting your name on a list of donors and hearing from groups you knew nothing about.
But, if you’re an American history buff, or you’ve been wondering about all the leftist and progressive propaganda about our founders’ faith, then you’ll like this book. Every page has something I could quote, with good citations. (Bibliography has hundreds of sources.) For instance:
One time, John Adams was ruminating on the overall thrust of American independence. Here’s what he wrote to Jefferson in 1813 (p. 195):
“The general Principles, on which the Fathers Achieved Independence, were the only Principles in which that beautiful Assembly of young Gentlemen would Unite, and these Principles only could be intended by them in their Address, or by me in my Answer. And what were these general Principles? I answer, the general Principles of Christianity, in which all those Sects were united: And the general Principles of English and American Liberty, in which all those young Men United, and which had United all Parties in America, in Majorities sufficient to assert and maintain her Independence.”
From the download page: “While Jefferson may seem to be the Patron Saint of the ACLU, his words and actions showed that he would totally disagree with the idea of driving God out of the public square. Doubting Thomas documents that. . .
* Jefferson said that our rights come from God. God-given rights are non-negotiables.
* At the time that he wrote the Declaration of Independence and the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom---major contributions to human and religious rights―Jefferson served diligently as a vestryman (like an elder and a deacon rolled into one) for the Episcopal Church.
* In 1777, he wrote up the charter for the Calvinistical Reformed Church in his town with an evangelical preacher, the Rev. Charles Clay--with whom he had a lifelong friendship. Jefferson was the biggest single contributor to this fledgling congregation.
* Jefferson had nothing but the highest praise for Jesus’ teaching, which he studied religiously (even in the original Greek), in order to pattern his life after that which he called “the most sublime and benevolent code of morals which has ever been offered to man.”
* As president, he attended church on a regular basis at the US Capitol building, even sometimes recommending preachers to fill that pulpit.
* He had many positive relationships with orthodox clergymen and active lay Christians.
* He actively supported Christian causes, financially, in ways that would put the average Christian to shame.
* He set out to create a non-denominational college that accommodated Christian groups of different stripes.
Historical revisionism has distorted the religious views of Thomas Jefferson, making him far more skeptical than he was. But there is no doubt that by the end of his life, he seemed to privately embrace Unitarian views of the Christian faith, while outwardly supporting and attending his local Trinitarian church.
Academicians tend to quote each other in their peer review journals. Time to take a fresh look, and get off the anti-America train.
The Kennedys didn’t get rich and powerful by playing fair!
Joseph P. Kennedy III is the 22nd wealthiest member of Congress ($18.6 million). His wife Lauren Anne Birchfield also has some college debt. Her student loans remain (she’s in the hole some $50,000 to the federal government, Harvard and a Des Moines-based educational outfit). Really? I have nothing against the rich dynasty Massachusetts Democrats continue to send to Congress, but with all those trust funds, couldn't they pay us back for college? Roll Call. http://media.cq.com/50Richest/#
The main source of the Kennedy family wealth was amassed by his namesake in banking, real estate, liquor, films and Wall Street holdings. In 1998, the Kennedy family sold Chicago’s Merchandise Mart for $625 million, which the family patriarch had purchased in 1945 for $12.6 million. The deal allowed Kennedy heirs to receive a stake in one of the nation’s largest real estate investment trusts, according to the Associated Press.
Kennedy, who represents the 4th Congressional district, reported most of his assets are held in family trusts. The 2014 range - $18.7 million to $64.5 million – is higher than the $15.6 million to $55.8 million range he reported as a candidate in 2012. His latest report also includes mortgage debt of between $750,000 and $1.5 million on homes in Brookline and Washington, D.C., and student loans – owed by his wife Lauren Birchfield – of between $40,000 and $115,000.
http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/article/20150616/NEWS/150617085
Ben Carson, Seventh Day Adventist

I think it was Donald Trump, in attack mode, who first brought up the religion of Dr. Carson, Seventh Day Adventism. All I knew about this group was they worshiped on Saturday, didn’t drink alcohol or eat meat, had a female founder, and were known for their good works and social action—i.e., they are living out Matthew 25.
“Carson, the only African-Amercian presidential candidate for 2016, said two stories inspired him in his life: Up from Slavery, an autobiography of Booker T. Washington, and the account of Joseph's life in the Old Testament in the Bible.
"That really spoke volumes to my heart. Where you end up has a lot to do with the attitude you adopt in your life," he told the congregation” http://www.christianpost.com/news/ben-carson-shares-with-iowa-church-how-he-became-christian-142552/#eVSeF3vf2jhgBMHk.99
Today I came across Teresa Beem who grew up in the faith and wrote a book about why she left. Then later she became a Catholic and in 2008 was interviewed on Marcus Grodi’s Coming Home Network. I also found a letter to the Adventist church written by her and her husband in 2001 on the scriptural reasons they left their church.
I’m accustomed to squabbles among denominations. There are approximately 30-40,000 Protestant groups, all claiming Biblical authority, but in fact, the final authority rests with the believer, not the Bible, a tradition or a leader from the past. They see the Pope everyday in the mirror, combing their hair or putting on make-up. Add to that all the Gen-X and Millennials who claim the faith of “None” meaning they are “spiritual” but not “religious” and they have a veneer of Christianity. But I’m sure if Carson grows in popularity, the media will begin to make an issue of his faith—particularly what it teaches about Roman Catholicism.
Beem says her earliest memories of the faith are fear of Catholics—that they would come to kill anyone who didn’t worship on Sunday. And even today (she said in 2008 on the Journey Home) Adventism is growing particularly in South America among nominal Catholics, because it isn’t just evangelization, but fear that Catholics will rise up and kill them. Wow. I didn’t know that. Growing up Protestant (Church of the Brethren) I heard all the whisper myths, like Catholics worship Mary and statues and can sin without worry because they can go to confession. Yes, I was told this by my little friends when I was about 9 or 10. Beem also says Adventists are conspiracy theorists and believe and teach the government will take away their religious rights based on the teachings of their founder Ellen White, using todays headlines to confirm many of her prophecies.
I believe Barack Obama was elected to a second term because millions of Christians (evangelicals and fundamentalists) stayed home and didn’t want to elect a Mormon, so they got a socialist who is giving away the store. Fear of Mormonism worked beneath the surface to elect Obama, so I hope we don’t get the fear mongers in the media (who mostly support Hillary) to attack Carson.
Beem on EWTN Journey Home (2008)
Friday, October 30, 2015
Islam: What the West Needs Know.
Documentary film
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bY4p39jeAVI
Peaceful, moderate Muslims are not following the tenets of Islam. Even violent Muslims think they are peaceful—Islam is dedicated to establishing the faith in the world, and is therefore peaceful, even if people have to be killed. The “verse of the sword” makes all other verses null and void. Kill them when you see them, wherever you find them (Christians and Jews).
Abrogation in the Koran means later verses counseling Holy War, such the Sword Verse abrogate earlier verses counseling tolerance and peace . When Westerners quote the peaceful verses, they ignore that they have been replaced.
There is no assurance of heaven, unless one dies as a martyr during jihad. Islam does not forbid suicide—and they don’t see it that way since the intention is to kill others.
Jihad means struggle. There are 164 verses in the Koran and many in the Hadith on jihad
They know how to use our rights with full knowledge they will try to destroy those rights.
Beautiful sacred music
To find inspiration for my morning bike (stationary) ride, I type in to Google, Choral sacred YouTube, so this morning I found
AGNUS DEI - Sacred Choral Music - The Choir of New College, Oxford. (recorded 1996) Album
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRwhkBAeheM
Likewise, about 3.5 million others have also been listening to it.
I wonder where the performers are now, 2 decades later?
College of New College web page and schedule of performances
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Paul Ryan our new Speaker of the House
I listened to Paul Ryan's speech today. It was nice to be reminded by him how important the House is to the people. We tend to forget this, but the founders made the House the most important of the branches in Section 2 of Article 1, by listing it first. It has the power of the purse, the power to make law, the power to impeach, override vetoes, vote on members of Supreme Court and impeach them. Then the Senate, section 3, which originally were not elected but appointed by the states. Then comes the executive branch, in Article 2, section 1 where the President's duty is explained as Commander in Chief of the military who can make treaties with the advice and consent of the Senate and gives occasional speeches to Congress. Then coming in 3rd in power is Article 3, the judicial power, with no mention that they should make law or invent rights as they did in Obergefell decision. The founders did not want the government to control the churches, as it does now, when it tells churches they can’t offer the Gospel if they have food pantries receiving government food, nor did they want the courts to have the power they had in Europe. Instead it was to be power for the people, the House of Representatives.
It was a revolutionary idea in the 18th century—and maybe still is since we haven't been able to hang on to it.
Do good by doing well
I received a notice today that my investment advisor had purchased 10,000 bond shares in a company I'd never heard of so I researched it. (Another purchase notice was stock in Ford, but that company I understand.) Even after reading what it does (semiconductor equipment and yield management system) I didn't understand. What I did understand is that one of the founders (Tencor) was a Czech immigrant who left a Communist country and became successful in the United States. After poking around the internet I found a physics post doctoral fellowship named for him (died in the 90s), employees volunteering at Habitat for Humanity, grant for superior papers by young STEM students, and a foundation to support the children of his employees in college. The company KLA-Tencor is involved in a number of “good works.” Doing good while doing well. It’s the capitalist way.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XCLf7ylBQr4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5cHeZN_t7I
