Things Heard: e106v1

Good morning.

  1. Now that’s a snowblower.
  2. Bailout and expectations.
  3. The fall of Rome … took not 4 centuries but 14, btw.
  4. Another cap/trade proposal.
  5. Some dance.
  6. The Metropolitan Ware talks in VA.
  7. Health insurance and mortality and a follow-up.
  8. Demographics and Lent in Russia.
  9. Uh, I disagree. If Russia and US borders were 100 miles apart … we’d be trading partners and our economies would be so intermingled and intertwined that nuclear exchange would be unthinkable.
  10. I don’t think I could disagree more.
  11. Interesting … except that there is almost zero chance that much homework is getting done.
  12. For Valentines day … the actual St. Valentine. A geek lover note.
  13. More left leaning lies and distortions regarding Ms Palin.
  14. The President has an official “twitterer?

Speech 101

Why is the Left getting so worked up about Sarah Palin jotting down reminder notes on the palm of her hand, for her speeches? Maybe she should simply read her speeches, word for word via a teleprompter, like the President does.

Confusion in the 21st century

The Winter Olympics have barely gotten underway and I’ve already been asked, by my children, why some guy kinda looks like a girl and some girl kinda looks like a guy

Best Cauldron Lighting Ever

The mechanical feats that have occurred at Olympic opening ceremonies keep getting more elaborate.  Last night’s lighting of the cauldron in Vancouver would’ve been spectacular if not for the problem with one of the pylons that was to emerge from the floor.  What a bummer.  Nice idea, though.

But the best cauldron lighting ever, in my mind, depended not on mechanics but solely on athleticism.  A million variables meant this could have gone anywhere from slightly to horribly wrong, but Paralympic archer Antonio Rebollo nailed an amazing shot to light the torch in Barcelona in the summer of 1992.

Truly impressive.

I Blame Global Warming

Today there was snow on the ground in 49 states

Things Heard: e105v5

  1. The economics of snow removal
  2. The Empress Theodora … or more properly St. Theodora the Empress.
  3. The personal and political … and for which the left wants more and more of it seems, e.g., healthcare and government.
  4. Iran and conflict.
  5. State taxes and movement.
  6. The threats of which our administration was mindful.
  7. Mr Chavez.
  8. A problem suggested with populism … that it cannot lead to limited government.
  9. Academic linkage as racism.
  10. Pay scales and government.
  11. Disencentivising incentives.
  12. To think he was in the running.
  13. CO2 and climate … and one of the problems with the AGW proponents who will say “weather isn’t climate” when they don’t say it.
  14. Yet another progressive unhappy with the President.

Things Heard: e105v4

Good morning. Well, it didn’t snow last night. 😀

  1. Looking at the Iliad.
  2. Grumbling about Avatar and its message.
  3. Afghanistan.
  4. Small town and the city.
  5. New wars … well I think I’m not reading (any!?) Balkan blogs, perhaps that’s something that needs correction.
  6. Men in black.
  7. Zoooom.
  8. Dating … a scene upon which my young daughters will soon enter.
  9. A tax plan.
  10. Why Greek monetary problems are a problem outside of Greece
  11. Thinking ahead.
  12. Secession.
  13. A new CBS program and Mr Hayek.
  14. A word from the desert on fasting.

On Manliness

Today in a BSA related discussion the following statement was made,

…and that’s without even getting into the dubious idea of “manliness” — the idea that there is one right way to be a man.

and to this I have to agree with the BSA. There is in fact only one right way to “be a man”, this is not a multiple choice exam. Examine for a moment, the BSA Scout Law:

Scout Law

A Scout is trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly,
courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty,
brave, clean, and reverent.

which pretty much nails it. One has expressed manliness by (a) being a man and (b) living those 12 virtues.

There is no “alternate” or “other” way to be a man.

More Guns, Less Crime

Just after Barack Obama won the presidency, gun sales rose dramatically, in the fear that he’d be going out rounding up firearms.  Well, that round-up didn’t happen, but something else didn’t happen either; a rise in crime.

After all, it has been an article of faith among gun-control advocates that guns cause crime. That catechism was repeated relentlessly after the 2008 Heller ruling, in which the Supreme Court struck down the District of Columbia’s ban on gun ownership: "Introducing more handguns into the District will mean more handgun violence," D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty lamented.

Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin agreed: "There is no question that this decision from the Supreme Court makes it harder for all mayors to keep their city safe," she told NPR. Chicago Mayor Richard Daley called the ruling "very frightening." The New York Times fumed the court had "all but ensured that even more Americans will die senselessly." The Chicago Tribune issued an equally nuanced and measured response: "Repeal the Second Amendment," it begged.

Yet despite a remarkable uptick in gun sales, during the first six months of 2009 violent crime fell 4.4 percent, property crime fell 6.6 percent, homicides fell 10 percent, and car thefts fell 19 percent.

As Heather Mac Donald of the Manhattan Institute recently pointed out, the falling crime rate was particularly precipitous in big cities such as Los Angeles, where homicides fell 17 percent in 2009, and New York, where they fell 19 percent.

If guns caused crime, then we should have expected precisely the opposite to happen — particularly given the related liberal belief, which Mac Donald dissects, that hard economic times drive people to desperate acts. Among others, she quotes a New York Times editorial in late 2008 fretting that "the economic crisis has clearly created the conditions for more crime and more gangs among hopeless, jobless young men in the inner cities." If liberal orthodoxy held true, then the combination of hard times and more guns should have made the past year a record-setting period for bloodshed. It didn’t.

And yet this perfect storm of circumstances, long held by liberals as a reason for crime, not only didn’t happen, but things went precisely in the opposite direction.  I’ve been noting this for over seven years now.

Things Heard: e105v3

Well, I had more than a little difficulty getting my machine to boot last night. While embarrassingly enough I figured it out quickly this morning … the dual-boot Windows (7)/Ubuntu experiment on my laptop is a little rocky right now. Anyhow, enough about my excuses … links?

  1. Comparing Democrat and Republican.
  2. Toyota’s recall and state response … linked to GM ownership. A real journalist could likely do some digging there …
  3. It’s interesting when democrats accuse the GOP of hypocrisy.
  4. Those protective labor laws.
  5. Wordplay and the sheatfish. Yikes.
  6. IPCC problems.
  7. Lessons for Iran?
  8. Guppies in the wild.
  9. An interesting reflection on economics.
  10. The binding power of hatred.

Front Porch: A threshold of community and ministry

I have a back deck, and if you live in the suburbs, you probably do too. I wish I had a front porch. Kendra Juskus, in a terrific post at Flourish, explains why a front page is an important tool of community and of ministry.

She writes:

The porch is a physical space that is both personal to its owner and hospitable to guests and strangers. It is a threshold of community: neither a place of anonymity, nor of complete intimacy. It is a place where new connections are wrought and old connections are strengthened. One can be invited onto a front porch even as a passerby; it provides opportunities for welcoming the stranger.

Contrast the front porch with the back deck, an architectural feature that arose in American neighborhoods in the 1970s. The back deck is purely private, a sanctuary into which only the friends and relatives of the deck owner are admitted.

Tebow Ad Alarms, Surprises, and Triumphs

I really like what Focus on the Family pulled off with the Tebow ad on television’s biggest stage. It wasn’t what I expected, but after reflecting on the strategy, it was a great “head fake” that produced unbelievable interest and then really offended no one, showed a sense of humor, and drove people to the Website for deeper messages on life and family (and the full Tebow story).

Focus’s site got 500,000 hits and 50,000 unique visitors in the hour the ad aired.

But the impact kept growing:

Focus spokesman Gary Schneeberger said:

“For Sunday and Monday only, we had 1.16 million unique visitors, which is eighteen times our normal traffic,” he says. “And we had 8.6 million terabytes streamed. I don’t know what that means [a terabyte is 1,000 gigabytes], but that’s apparently 267 times more than we normally have. The full interview with the Tebows that’s mentioned at the end of the ad had been watched a total of 762,897 times as of yesterday, and the ad on our website had been watched 305,000 times — and that’s not counting the number of views on other websites. I just saw a link on Yahoo!, which had posted the ad, and it had been viewed on their website over 1.1 million times.”

Leaders of the evangelical generation: Stan Mooneyham, humanitarian

[I am working on a project that may become a book on the most influential evangelicals leaders of our generation, since 1976, and the impact they’ve had on the church and their times. I will introduce them briefly on this blog from time to time.  Who do you think should be on a list of leading evangelicals?].

#8 W. Stanley Mooneyham: Humanitarian. 1926-1991

With today’s ubiquitous calls for Christians to respond to human needs around the world, it is difficult to remember the days when evangelicals didn’t see the connection between physical and spiritual needs in a holistic outreach. W. Stanley Mooneyham was a giant in moving the church to “come walk the world” and respond to the great needs of body and soul.

Mooneyham was a passionate maverick who, as the second president of World Vision International after its founder Bob Pierce, became an advocate for international aid and the first real star of television fundraising for the hungry and suffering children and families of the world. During his tenure, Mooneyham took the organization from an annual budget of $7 million in 1969 to $158 million with a worldwide staff of 11,000 when he left.

He really gave his life serving the poor. The ravages of the diseases he encountered in constants trips to the cesspools of the most impoverished areas of the world led to the failure of his kidneys in 1991, when he died at 65. The trauma and lure of almost constant international travel, as well as the emotional roller coaster of a life spent immersed in Southern California hedonism and Third World squalor, took a toll on not only his health but also his family. His marriage ended about the same time his days with World Vision did.

During Mooneyham’s tenure as president, he directed the relocation efforts that helped Vietnamese boat people. It was an involvement typical of his time at World Vision. He was advised not to pursue the venture, which he called Operation Seasweep, and there was no place to take the boat people rescued on the high seas. But Stan threw caution to the wind, bought a World War II landing craft, outfitted it, and sent it to the South China Sea.

That’s when I met Mooneyham. In 1978 I was beginning my first job, as a writer for World Vision, and in after just seven months on the job I was sent to Asia to document the maiden voyage of Operation Seasweep. I hadn’t met Mooneyham during my early months at WV, but he wasn’t about to have me writing about the mission without a good talking-to.

When I arrived in Singapore, I was summoned to Stan’s hotel, where he lectured me on treating the poor and suffering with respect. And he didn’t want my copy filled with wonder at how “different” these people were.

That year, we rescued 228 Vietnamese boat people from the Thai pirates and the deathly surges of the high seas. Within two years, the world was shamed by the boldness of World Vision’s leader and the U.S. Navy was picking up these refugees.
Mooneyham was a special assistant to Billy Graham before joining World Vision. He was one of the first practitioner of telethons and direct-mail campaigns to raise funds and was not afraid to use emotional appeals. Responding to criticism of his methods in 1978, Mooneyham said: “We are accused of emotionalism, but hunger is emotional, death is emotional and poverty is emotional. Those who wish to make it all seem neat, clinical and bureaucratic are the ones falsifying the picture, not us.”

Mooneyham was the seventh child of a cotton sharecropper in Mississippi. He joined the Navy and served in the South Pacific during World War II. He told The Times in a 1981 interview that he became a Christian because of the war. He graduated from Oklahoma Baptist University on the GI Bill. Mooneyham joined the Graham evangelical crusades as a media liaison worker in 1964 and became advance planner for Graham evangelism congresses around the world. It was in some of those foreign lands that he saw what he described as “the awesome human needs” and joined World Vision.

Abortion Tradeoffs

Hey, what’s a few more cases of breast cancer when something so important as the "right" to an abortion is on the line?  For some, that’s just a necessary tradeoff.

A women’s group is asking Congress and the Obama administration to investigate the expose’ showing how a top National Cancer Institute researcher recently admitted that abortion causes a 40% breast cancer increase risk but organizing a meeting to get the NCI to deny it.

As LifeNews.com reported earlier this month [January], the main NCI activist who got the agency to deny the abortion-breast cancer link has co-authored a study admitting the abortion-breast cancer link is true, calling it a "known risk factor."

The study, conducted by Jessica Dolle and NCI official Louise Brinton, appears in the April 2009 issue of the prestigious cancer epidemiology journal Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers and Prevention.

The Dolle study, conducted with Janet Daling of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, cited as accurate Daling’s studies from 1994 and 1996 that showed between a 20 and 50 percent increased breast cancer risk for women having abortions compare to those who carried their pregnancies to term.

Now, the Coalition on Abortion/Breast Cancer informed LifeNews.com today it is sending a letter, signed by doctors and pro-life organizations to President Obama and the leaders of Congress calling for an investigation of the U.S. National Cancer Institute.

Karen Malec, the head of the group, told LifeNews.com the letter "puts political leaders on notice of a discrepancy between what the National Cancer Institute says about the breast cancer risks of abortion … and what Louise Brinton, the NCI’s Chief of the Hormonal and Reproductive Epidemiology Branch, has reported in her research."

"The letter asks Congress to investigate the NCI’s failure to issue timely warnings about breast cancer risks and asks political leaders to remove public funding for abortion from all legislation being considered by this Congress," she said.

The truth doesn’t matter to these people.  What’s more important is the freedom to kill their inconvenient children.  Are those the kind of politics your vote supports?

Things Heard: e105v2

Good morning.

  1. A Lenten blog fer da younger set (HT: ByzTex)
  2. Faith as hermeneutic.
  3. Roman and Orthodox on Original sin compared.
  4. 7 deadly sins … and a book. And the count was 8! Hmmph.
  5. This and that recession … a graph.
  6. State and size of same.
  7. On inerrancy.
  8. Love and fear.
  9. Failure to govern … and why.
  10. An important conservative book noted.
  11. Reading On Being Human.
  12. Some thoughts on the Super Bowl. My view of the Super Bowl is still partially transfixed with the vision of the scrum after the on-side kick. That many guys who are that strong all fighting that hard for one ball. It’s hard to imagine what that was like I think.
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