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Personal Update – December 2011

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IN THE NEWS

Jobless Rate in 'Eurozone' Highest In 10 Years →

September 01, 2009

Unemployment levels across the 16 countries that use the euro hit a 10-year high in July, as the impact of the recession continued to be felt. The number of people unemployed across the eurozone region totalled 15.1 million people in July, a seasonally-adjusted rate of 9.5 percent.
-

Homeschoolers Rank Higher On ACT →

September 01, 2009

Compared with other students, homeschoolers scored higher than the national average on this year's ACT, a national standardized test used to gauge educational development and college readiness. The national average for 2009 graduating high schoolers reported by ACT (American College Testing) officials is 21.1 on a scale from 1 to 36. Homeschoolers scored a national average of 22.5.
- CNSNews

Abbas and Netanyahu To Meet in September →

August 31, 2009

President Obama is expected to moderate a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in late September, a discussion that could lead to the resumption of peace negotiations, Israeli President Shimon Peres told FOX News.
- Fox News

No War In Darfur Says UNAMID Commander →

August 27, 2009

There is no more war in Darfur, according to the outgoing military commander of the joint UN-African Union (UNAMID) peacekeeping force in the western Sudan region. "As of today, I would not say there is a war going on in Darfur," Martin Luther Agwai told correspondents. "If war is a conflict whereby today you attack and then go back home and stay until three, four, five months and come back... If that is a definition of war then there is a war in Darfur. But if that is not the definition then there is no war as of now in Darfur," said Agwai.
- AFP

Swedish Article Accuses Israelis of Smuggling Body Parts →

August 27, 2009

Sweden's fervent defense of free speech has sparked a diplomatic storm with Israel over the government's refusal to condemn an article accusing Israeli soldiers of smuggling dead Palestinians' organs. Israel has urged the Swedish government to condemn the "anti-Semitic" article, which claimed that Israeli soldiers snatched Palestinian youths to steal their organs and returned their dismembered bodies days later.
- AFP

Evil Conservatives And Wrong Liberals →

August 25, 2009

Marcia Segelstein writes about the tendency of liberals to promote tolerance for everybody except conservatives. "I have long thought that one of the striking differences between liberals and conservatives is this: liberals believe conservatives are evil, while conservatives believe liberals are wrong...It's important to keep in mind that the label 'conservative' (or Republican) brands us, in the minds of many liberals, as just plain bad people."
- OneNewsNow

Lofgren Aknowledges that Obamacare Will Fund Abortions →

August 13, 2009

The New York Times and FactCheck.org both claim that Obamacare will not allow taxpayer funding of abortion. According to a townhall video, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) disagrees.
- The Heritage Foundation

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ARTICLES AND COMMENTARY

A TALE OF TWO REPORTS: IRAN AND THE BOMB - (Print)

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) released a report last week saying that Iran's nuclear program expansion has slowed since May. The report also states that the IAEA has no concrete evidence that Iran is trying to build a nuclear bomb. However, the IAEA has withheld another document – one summarizing Iran's nuclear efforts – and Israel wants the IAEA to stop protecting Iran and release this additional document.

Iran has consistently said that its nuclear program is for peaceful energy purposes, in order to free up more oil for exports. Plenty of people have been skeptical of that claim, of course. For one, Iran's leaders have a serious antagonism toward Israel and regularly fund terrorist groups and countries that want to destroy the little Jewish state stuck in the middle of a vast Middle East Islamic empire. For another, Iran's government is run by strict Muslims who believe Islam will eventually take over the world. Top that off with the fact that Iran has no nuclear power plants to use all that stockpiled uranium, and it's easy to doubt Iran's peaceful agenda.

The IAEA report released on Friday does have some positive things to say. For instance, for three years Iran continually increased the number of centrifuges enriching uranium at its underground Natanz plant. But, since May no new centrifuges have been added. Iran's foreign ministry spokesman said last week that Iran would remain under IAEA monitoring, and the IAEA also noted that it had no definite evidence that Iran has nuclear bomb aspirations.

Yet. Iran has 5000 centrifuges busily refining uranium like normal, and there are 2000 more that could be up and running within weeks after doing routing tests. There is so much uranium enrichment going on that inspectors aren't able to keep up on it sufficiently to ensure none is siphoned off for "military purposes." Analysts believe Iran has enough low-enriched uranium to convert into the highly-enriched uranium necessary for a nuclear bomb. That doesn't mean Iran is ready to produce an actual bomb, but it could conceivably have the technology by 2013.

The IAEA has another document that it has not released, one that summarizes all the information it has gathered on Iran's nuclear program to date. According to the AP, the summary includes information on Iran's alleged weapons experiments, including research into developing nuclear warheads. The current head of the IAEA, Mohammed ElBaradei, has been unwilling to release the summary, fearing that doing so would decrease Iran's cooperation with the IAEA and could encourage the US and Israel to take military action against Iran.  The IAEA will release a final report on Iran in a couple of weeks and will announce whether it will release the full summary.  If ElBaradei does not release the summary, Japan's Yukiya Amano might do so after taking charge of the IAEA on December 1.

The world wants to know what exactly Iran is up to. After months of stonewalling the IAEA on the full extent of its nuclear program, Iran announced on Tuesday that it was ready to discuss its nuclear plan with world powers. The United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China are all meeting in Germany this week to discuss the Iran issue.  The latest international proposal is that Iran stop with its uranium enrichment or else face a fourth round of sanctions. Some analysts believe Iran is behaving moderately well because it wants to keep Russia on its side in resisting calls for sanctions. While Iran has been cooperating somewhat with the IAEA, it has not offered the full transparency that would really calm hearts.  And if Iran refuses to cooperate with the UN Security Council and Germany, history has shown Israel quite willing to take out its enemies' nuclear facilities before they can be used for either good or evil.

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RELIGION IS JUST A PATSY - (Print)

Religion is often blamed for the miseries of the world.  An "Imagine No Religion" billboard has just gone up in St. Louis, and most people get the point even if they disagree with it.  If it were not for religion, after all, there would have been no Spanish Inquisition, no Taliban, no World Trade Center bombing, no human sacrifices to various and sundry gods. Religious wars would be conspicuously absent from world history and nobody would follow cult leaders in sipping down toxic Kool-Aid.  Richard Dawkins' book The God Delusion spends the first page of the Preface going through the evils that have been done in the name of religion. Yet, while atheists love to blame  zealous believers for the world’s sufferings, they have missed the true problem. Yes, much earthly evil has been done in the name of one deity or another, but religion isn’t the real problem. The real problem is …. human nature.

Religion is a convenient scapegoat for the atheist, who wants to justify himself in a world of believers. The atheist has a serious problem in blaming the evils of the world on religion, though. For every complaint against religious people, there are plenty of complaints to be made against the faithless.

Have people been slaughtered in the name of religion? Certainly. Yet, the Crusades are a drop in the bucket compared to the massive death toll caused by atheistic regimes. The leaders of the French Revolution shoved God out of their social justice crusade, and the result was a blood bath. Stalin is responsible for the deaths of at least 20 million of his own people, and Mao Zedong's death toll runs upwards of 40-70 million. From Pol Pot in Cambodia to the Kims in North Korea, governments freed of "religion" – those utopias of atheistic communism - have murdered millions upon millions of people. People of various religions continue to fight all around the world, but, anti-God governments streamline human death. Any time people get starry-eyed about imagining "no religion too" they need a little history lesson.

The problem isn’t religion or even lack thereof. The problem is humanity. Human beings have this propensity for violence and greed, for self aggrandizement and selfish laziness. We struggle – and sometimes succeed - to overcome these things, but they are there inside us. As Paul writes in Romans 7:21-24:

"I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man: But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"

We all have that destructive sin nature inside us by birth. It’s there, and we spend our lives fighting it. If we were naturally good, it would be easy to be good and kind, generous and patient. If we were naturally good, it would be a heavy effort to be rotten. But, we find that we are just the opposite, always struggling to do what is right and constantly falling into that corruption that most people want so desperately to avoid.

Even the atheist wants to avoid the corruption, as far as his own conscience dictates. Atheists have consciences too, after all. Paul writes:

"For when the Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves: Which shew the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another;" -Rom 2:14-15

Atheists and humanists are quite capable of morality and moral decision making. Yet, in rejecting the True God, atheists and humanists make themselves their own gods, and because they have no greater yardstick to measure by, it often happens that they reject one evil only to turn around and embrace something far worse.  The poor in France had good reason for anger against the spoiled aristocracy and opulent church in the late 18th century. But, having only man’s reasoning to depend on, and hearts full of vengeance, thousands of innocent people were murdered. The atheist has nobody but himself and the local legal system to help him do the good he wants to do, and that can lead easily into gross error.  Humankind has excellent thinking ability, but we can easily use that brainpower to justify doing the evil we want to do rather than the good we should. 

Yet, the atheist is not too far off when he looks at the religions of the world and feels massively unimpressed. Religion is not the salvation of the world. Religion can be useful in that it provides a framework in which to live, and gives people rules of right and wrong outside themselves. Yet, religion itself cannot change the human heart or free humans of their natural destructive tendencies. In fact, some religious sects actually promote violence and destruction.

Paul didn’t find the answer to his dilemma in religion. He found the answer in the person of Jesus Christ. He found his answer in the Spirit of God, working in human lives to cleanse and free and make new.  And the Spirit of God is real, and He is powerful, and He continues to change millions of lives today.  If more atheists were truly aware of the reality of God's Spirit to heal and to transform, Richard Dawkins would sell fewer books.

"This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh. But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance: against such there is no law. And they that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts. If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit."  - Gal 5:16,22-25

Life on this planet is hard, and Jesus never promised us anything different. He said we would have many troubles in this world, but he also said he had overcome the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. If we are filled with the Spirit, walking hand-in-hand with our King and Savior, His light is going to shine out of us to the lost and the dying. And if, in the midst of our own struggles and suffering, the reality of Christ is alive and well in us, anybody who is watching will see the difference between the truth and the false religions that have caused so much grief through the years.  If people can see Christ in us, they won't want to imagine a world without him. 

"For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us. We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; Persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed; Always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body." - 2Cr 4:6-10

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AN ARCHEOLOGY UPDATE - (Print)

While they do not often carry whips or get chased by massive boulders, archeologists still get to dig in dusty parts of the earth and uncover little bits of history. To some a summer home, or a piece of a woman's cosmetic palette from 3000 BC might seem petty, but to others, they can open up a whole slough of information about ancient times.

Emperor Titus Vespasian made ripples again recently when a summer villa believed to be his was discovered in the mountains northeast of Rome. Archeologist Filippo Coarelli of the University of Perugia led the digs which uncovered the huge marble villa with its baths and beautiful mosaic floors. There is nothing specific about the building to designate its owner, but it was constructed just outside the town of Falacrinae, Vespasian's birth place.

Most people remember Vespasian as the emperor who built the Colosseum in Rome and who cleaned up the empire after Nero died. Jews remember Vespasian for another reason; the Temple no longer stands in Jerusalem because in AD 70, Roman legions led by Vespasian's son Titus set the Temple on fire (against orders) and tore it apart stone by stone in order to get at the gold that had melted into the cracks. King David is remembered for killing Goliath, Noah is remembered for building the ark, and Vespasian built the Colosseum using gold from the Jewish Temple.

In the meanwhile, a shard of an ancient plaque bearing Egyptian signs was discovered at a dig in the Jordan valley where the Jordan River leaves the Sea of Galilee. The piece bears an arm with a hand holding a scepter and an early form of the ankh and dates back 5000 years to Egypt's First Dynasty, some 900 years before Abraham. The signs on it are of a royal quality, and nothing like it has been found outside of Egypt. It was known that there had been comings and goings between the Egyptian royal court and that part of the Jordan Valley, but the piece indicates that the interaction was even more significant than previously thought.

A little farther north, clear up in Cambridge, archeologists are working quickly to uncover the remnants of second-century wealthy Roman farms. They don't have a lot of time, the plot of land where they are digging is getting prepared for an expansion of Cambridge University. The team has found a variety of Roman remnants, including tiles from hypocaust heating systems and pieces of some very upscale ancient dishes at the site, and they expect to find many more items before their time is up.

"What's interesting about Cambridge is that with these tracts of land bequeathed to the university, you have a lot of preserved green space coming in close to the city centre," says Chris Evans, head of the Cambridge unit. "It hasn't been developed in the intervening centuries. There are iron-age and Roman farmsteads literally every 200-300 meters." Evans suggests there may be 10,000-15,000 artifacts in all.

The Roman Empire did not stop at Jerusalem or Spain, but stretched clear up into the British Isles and down into Africa. A "revived Roman Empire" would take up all of Europe and a significant part of the near Middle East.  Which...is also partially thanks to Titus Vespasian, who did a lot to expand the Roman Empire into England. 

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