30 December 2006

SADDAM DEAD


Good Riddance.

Predictably, the left-wingnuts are finding a way to turn this into a slam on President Bush. Hugh Hewitt has some great coverage of the response by the left.

And the editors of National Review Online have a great take on the execution of the Butcher of Baghdad. An excerpt...


The collapse of his dictatorship has created a social and political void, and a variety of hit men, as usual, are trying to make careers out of it. The only way to prevent their doing so is to introduce the rule of law and impose enough security that it has a chance to take. Saddam’s trial, for all its flaws, was an exercise in the rule of law. Justice is never perfect, especially when carrying an element of retribution. Much more important, though, this case is exemplary. Saddam’s trial and execution could yet be the building block of a future with hope in it for an Iraqi society and state at last free from his tyranny.

27 December 2006

Morale of soldiers in Middle East high

Michael Yon has an excellent post on how the American perception of how the world views us is much different than the reality. And how the morale of soldiers over there is high--much higher than the MSM would have us believe. Yon's just arrived back in Kuwait, so I'm expecting some more great reporting on the war--NOT a bunch of drivel from mainstream journalists who rely on stringers to bring them their news. Here's an excerpt from his post:
This war is strange. I never hear soldiers worried about their own morale sagging. Contrary, the war-fighters here are more concerned to bolster the morale of the people at home. Here in Kuwait, where the dining facilities are bedecked in Christmas decorations, soldiers stream in from Iraq on convoys and stream back north along those bomb-laden roads. The service members here are not all rear-echelon people who never see fighting or blood. Yet their overall morale obviously is high. Few of them know I am a writer, and so they speak freely at the tables around me. In Qatar, from which I’d just departed, I spoke with troops taking 4-day R&R passes, some having just returned from the most dangerous parts of Iraq, and others heading straight back and their overall morale was also very high. The morale at war is higher than I have ever seen it at home; makes me wonder what they know that most Americans seem to be missing.

25 December 2006

Air Force--A top 25 force in basketball


Irv Moss from the Denver Post has a great article on Air Force basketball.
...there's nothing prankish about this Air Force team. It already has victories of 69-68 over Long Beach State, 79-45 over Stanford, 84-46 over Colorado, 67-53 over Texas Tech and 94-58 over Wake Forest. The only loss was a 71-56 setback to Duke on Nov. 20.
Bzdelik has let his coaching and his players do the talking. His record in a season and a half is 36-8, including a school-record 24 wins last season.
While statistics explain why the Falcons are winning, Bzdelik has a more important reason to explain how they win. He quickly learned what his players' everyday life is like at Air Force, and he used it as an advantage on the basketball floor. His Falcons play as a team.
"Unselfishness is a way of life for them," Bzdelik said. "They have a serve-before-self attitude. They learn to sacrifice for a greater cause. That's a huge asset for a coach in a team sport. If you lined up our basketball team one-on-one with most of our opponents and played a one- on-one game, our record would be 1-11. Five guys working together pack a pretty powerful punch."

Read the entire article...

UPDATE: 22:07 PST Mark Kiszla from the Denver Post has his own article here.

Spiritual revolution in Middle East

Just ran across Joel C. Rosenberg's blog. In case you haven't heard of him, he has written some great novels, the first of which was "The Last Jihad". I guess that since I've only just finished reading this first one, I can't actually say the rest are great, but he did win "Best Novel of 2006" by the ECPA for "The Ezekiel Option". He's got a great post about how Christianity is spreading throughout the Middle East, even in those countries which are run by fundamentalist Islamic regimes.
Iraq: more than 5,000 new Muslim converts to Christianity have been identified since the end of major combat operations, with 14 new churches opened in Baghdad, and dozens of new churches opened in Kurdistan, some of which have 500 to 800 members. Also, more than 1 million Bibles shipped into the country since 2003, and pastors report Iraqis are snatching them up so fast they constantly need more Bibles.

Egypt: some reports say 1 million Egyptians have trusted Christ over the past decade or so. The Egyptian Bible Society told me they used to sell about 3,000 copies of the JESUS film a year in the early 1990s. But last year they sold 600,000 copies, plus 750,000 copies of the Bible on tape (in Arabic) and about a half million copies of the Arabic New Testament. "Egyptians are increasingly hungry for God's Word," an Egyptian Christian leader told me. Last Christmas, I had the privilege of visiting the largest Christian congregation in the Middle East, which meets in an enormous cave on the outskirts of Cairo. Some 10,000 believers worship there every weekend. A prayer conference the church held in May 2005 drew some 20,000 believers.

Afghanistan: only 17 Muslim converts to Christianity before 9/11/01, but now more than 10,000. Dozens of baptisms every week.

Kazakstan: only 3 known Christians in 1990, but now more than 15,000.

Uzbekistan: no known Christians in 1990, but now more than 30,000.

Sudan: more than 1 million Sudanese have converted to Christianity just since 2000, and some 5 million have become Christians since the early 1990s, despite a radical Islamic regime and an on-going genocide that has killed more than 200,000. Seminaries are being held in caves to train pastors to shepherd the huge numbers of people coming to Christ. Why such a dramatic spiritual awakening? "People have seen real Islam, and they want Jesus instead," one Sudanese evangelical leader told me.

Iran: in 1979, there were only 500 known Muslim converts to Christianity, but today Iranian pastors and evangelical leaders tell me there are more than 1 million Iranian believers in Jesus Christ, most of whom meet in underground house churches.


He's got some more great stories in the rest of the post.

23 December 2006

Terrorists are targeting Channel tunnel


The Observer is reporting that the CIA has informed the French that the threat of a terrorist attack on the Channel tunnel is "sky high".
According to the French sources, the plan was put together in Pakistan and is being directed from there. The plotters are believed to be Western Europeans, possibly Britons of Pakistani descent. The DGSE say that levels of 'chatter', the constant communication that takes place between militants, has not been so high since 2001. Last week Sir Ian Blair, the head of the Metropolitan Police, described 'the threat of another terrorist attempt' as 'ever present' adding that 'Christmas is a period when that might happen'.
'It is a far graver threat in terms of civilians than either the Cold War or the Second World War,' he said. 'It's a much graver threat than that posed by Irish Republican terrorism.'

American security sources told The Observer that the threat was 'sky high'.

The news of the threat to the Channel Tunnel comes as Eurostar trains transport record numbers of passengers heading home for Christmas and as fog continues to affect flights to and from the continent.

More than 8 million passengers travelled on Eurostar trains last year. Staff on the line went on strike earlier this year in protest at what they said were lax security arrangements.

'A successful attack on such an installation would be almost as spectacular as September 11', said one terrorist expert. 'Al-Qaeda and those they inspire are trying everything from low-level strikes to major attacks on critical infrastructure.'


Unfortunately, while counterterrorist agencies will hopefully foil any attacks against the tunnel and other transportation hubs and arteries in Europe, this report will most likely cause many travelers to choose a different means of travel or cancel travel entirely during the Christmas holiday. This means that the terrorists have already succeeded to a limited extent by causing us to change the way we behave. Hopefully, the majority of travelers will flip the terrorists a collective middle finger by continuing to use the tunnel.

22 December 2006

More violence against house churches in China


More attacks against Christians in China. This time in Beijing, the site of the upcoming 2008 Summer Olympics. Wonder how much of this type of violence will be seen (and allowed to be reported) during the summer games. Here's the story.

A group of policemen and unidentified persons broke into the home of Xiu Ruibin, a house church missionary in Beijing, beat people in the house and destroyed the furniture. Before the attack two other church leaders were put under house arrest in Xiaoshan on the eve of the court trial of 8 Christian leaders “guilty” of having protested against the destruction of their church, this according to the China Aid Association (CAA), a US-based NGO fighting for religious freedom in China.
The CAA reports that a few days before the attack, some of Xiu’s former colleagues in Heilongjiang Province, who came to Beijing to complain to the central government about illegal actions of their local government, were physically attacked by unknown assailants.
Ms Xiu took them into her own home for their safety and to preach the gospel to them.

19 December 2006

Damon & DeNiro speak on the military

Again, we have a liberal TV talk show host (Chris Matthews) interviewing a couple of liberal guys who make millions to pretend to be something they're not (Robert DeNiro and Matt Damon), asking them questions which they are wholly incapable of answering knowledgably.

Monday, the aforementioned actors were on Hardball to promote their new movie about the CIA, "The Good Shepherd". Here's a bit of the transcript, beginning with a question from someone in the audience...

QUESTION: Hi, my name is Meghan Wright, I‘m from Richmond, Virginia and I was just—this question is both for Mr. DeNiro and Mr. Damon. I was just wondering, would either of you go to war right now? Not right now, I guess, but—would you go to war if you were asked?

DENIRO: Well that‘s such a complex question.

(LAUGHTER)

DENIRO: I ...

MATTHEWS: If you were drafted?

DENIRO: Well, I don‘t know, that‘s another thing about the draft and so on, if it ever would come up again. I mean, I was for going to Iraq originally and then I saw, I realized that when you—we went in and we didn‘t know how to like deal with it once we were there.

We just thought they‘d all cheer us and we‘d be out and then they‘d want democracy. We‘re dealing with—we were just talking about before—the thousands of years old cultures that have all their in-fighting, whatever. I mean, we can‘t come in unless we have a real plan or strategy and I never thought that.

DAMON: There is this great book that just came out about that called “Imperial Life in the Emerald City.” That‘s definitely a book worth reading, just about that.

We kind of blundered in there with the best intentions, but nevertheless without a plan. So, but in terms of your question, I agree with Bob that it‘s a complex question. It would depend on certain situations. I mean, I don‘t think that it‘s fair, as I said before that it seems that we have a fighting class in our country that‘s comprised of people who have to go for either financial reasons or you know, I don‘t think that that is fair. And if you‘re going to send people to war, if we all get together and decide we need to go to war, then that needs to be shared by everybody, you know. And if the president has daughters who are of age, then maybe they should go to.

(APPLAUSE)


It was nice how DeNiro sidestepped the question about the draft. She asked if he'd go to fight if asked to by his country, and he couldn't answer it! No, instead he goes into whether we should have gone into Iraq. And I'm not sure what in the world Matt Damon is talking about. A "fighting class"??? Tell me, Matt, exactly how do you define the fighting class? If you refer to those Americans who have set aside any ambition to make millions of dollars for the sake of serving their nation, willingly going to foreign lands and risking limb and life, then I would have to agree with your definition.

Something tells me, though, that he has a much different idea in mind. "...people who have to go for either financial reasons or..." Huh? So we in the military are so poor before joining that we join to raise our level of living? Ha! If this is what he thinks, Mr. Damon has no clue. While he made millions pretending to be a soldier in "Saving Private Ryan", real soldiers who face real bullets make less in a year than he makes in a month. Has he not heard the stories of the Reservists who are serving on active duty who have taken huge cuts in pay while being absent from their non-military jobs?

Mr. Damon, the members of the military have joined voluntarily. We come from all backgrounds, all levels of society, all ethnicities. Please know that we are not forced to serve. Contrary to popular opinion in today's society, fame and fortune are not the only things in life that matter.

Nominees for picture of the year



The U.S. is in the middle of a 6-nation summit in South Korea to discuss the way ahead for dealing with North Korea. These photos were taken by the AP of South Koreans protesting the regime of Kim Jong Il. Now if only that sentiment will carry on into the North...

17 December 2006

Cuban pastor cleared of all charges

Stacy Harp reported Friday on Persecution Blog that all charges of trafficking in illegal immigrants have been dropped against an evangelical pastor in Cuba.
On Tuesday, December 13, a Cuban court absolved Rev. Carlos Lamelas of all charges of trafficking in illegal immigrants.

In a statement Lamelas expressed concern that the Cuban government would look for a way to punish him. His lawyer told him that he might be required to pay a fine for the “falsification of documents”.

Lamelas was arrested in a police raid at his home on February 20. The evangelical pastor was in jail for more than four months, before being unexpectedly released from the Villa Marita Detention Center on June 26.

Thank you to all who prayed for and wrote to Pastor Lamelas.

House church attacked in China


Lest anyone think that China has softened in its stance against Christianity, the Christian Newswire is reporting that police in Shanghai attacked a house church less than 2 weeks ago.
China Aid Association was just informed that December 9th, 2006 a house church in Changqiao, Shanghai was attacked by the local police. A brother named Wang Mingwei was taken to the police station, along with some church belongings. CAA is investigating the event and trying to acquire more details.

Photo: Brother Wang Weiliang


In the same article, on a different incident:
CAA learned that the Xiaosha intermediate People's 10th Court, Hangzhou City has scheduled a trial for the famous Xiaoshan case at 8am, December 22, 2006, more than 4 months after the Dangshan church was demolished by the local government. Eight Christians: Shen Chengyi, Shen Zhuke (female), Wang Weiliang, Feng Guangliang, Ni Weimin, Guo Lijun, Shen Jianjian, Luo Bingliang, will stand trial on charges of inciting a crowd to resist law enforcement. Six of the eight Christians are currently detained in the detention center. Shen Jianjian and Luo Baoliang are out on bail pending trial.

December 8, 2006, family members of the eight Christians received indictments from the Xiaoshan Prosecutor, Hangzhou City.

CAA also learned that Brother Zan Aizong, the ex-chief of the Hangzhou reporter station of Chinese Ocean Newspaper, who was fired because he criticized the Xiaoshan event, has brought a lawsuit against the Internet Supervising Division of the Hangzhou PSB, which placed him in custody for 7 days on the charge of disturbing the public order by spreading rumors on the Internet. The Shangcheng District People's Court has accepted his lawsuit and will try it December 19, 2006. Brother Zan Aizong had just returned to Hangzhou following a short visit to US.


Remember to keep these brothers and sisters in Christ in your prayers. For more info on the persecuted church, visit Persecution Blog.

16 December 2006

Democrats praying?

The recent brain surgery on Democratic Senator Tim Johnson from South Dakota has made me think that the Democrats have prayed more in this past week than in the last 10 years. If, God forbid, Senator Johnson didn't make it through the procedure or recovery, the Democrats would lose a seat in the Senate after the Republican South Dakota governor filled it with a Republican. This would result in a 50-50 split. The cynical side of me thinks they prayed more for the Senate seat than for Senator Johnson...

Looks like he's probably going to be alright.

11 December 2006

Iranian Students Speak Out

Some Iranian university students disrupted a speech being given by the country's dictator, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. A report by the "semi-official" Fars news agency stated that
"Some students chanted radical slogans and inflamed the atmosphere of the meeting"

Nice bias, there, in favor of the dictator. Breitbart.com has the story...
Iranian students have disrupted a speech by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at a prestigious Tehran university, setting fire to his picture and heckling him.

"Some students chanted radical slogans and inflamed the atmosphere of the meeting" at the Amir Kabir University, said the semi-official Fars news agency on Monday, which is close to Ahmadinejad.

"A small number of students shouted 'death to the dictator' and smashed cameras of state television but they were confronted by a bigger group of students in the hall chanting: 'We support Ahmadinejad'," it said.

It was the latest in a series of student demonstrations in recent days, the first time in least two years that such protests have taken place on this scale at Iranian universities.

Ahmadinejad responded by describing those students chanting the slogans as an "oppressive" minority.

"A small number of people who claim there is oppression are creating oppression and do not let the majority hear (my) words," he said.


I have a bad feeling about what's in store for those students. Something tells me they're going to pay dearly for these expressions of free speech.

09 December 2006

Christians attacked for not "reconverting" to Hinduism

Le Journal Chretien tells of how two men in the Madhya Pradesh state in India, who converted to Christianity four years ago, were attacked for not turning back to Hinduism.
Ostracized by their village for the past year, two converts of a church in Madhya Pradesh state’s Shahdol district have been beaten for their refusal to return to the Hindu fold.
Santu Prasad Barmaia and Kunjan Prasad Barmaia, both farmers and members of a Gospel for Asia church in Paralia village, were attacked by a group of 12 villagers on October 19.

The attack took place in the morning, when the two were on their way to their fields, a local Christian requesting anonymity told Compass. Both men suffered internal injuries.

Police have not arrested the culprits, the source said, in spite of the fact that the victims named them in a complaint filed at the Amarkantak police station.

Police officials could not be reached for comment.

The source explained that villagers were angry with the Christians for declining to participate in Hindu rituals since receiving Christ four years ago. “The villagers had been persistently putting pressure on them to ‘reconvert’ to Hinduism,” he said.

He added that in the past year villagers have refused to allow the two men, the only Christians in the village, to take water from the hamlet’s common well to pressure them to return to Hinduism. In spite of their limited resources, the Christians dug their own well.

“Earlier, some miscreants vandalized a Hindu temple in the village and the blame fell on the Christians,” the source said. “Later, however, police investigation revealed that they had not done it. Yet the villagers continued to treat them with contempt.”

Please remember these two brothers in your prayers.

08 December 2006

Air Force's Historic Season


Finally, national sports writers are starting to notice Air Force basketball. 9-1, Air Force has beaten two Big 12 teams, a Pac-10 team, and an ACC team. ESPN.com's Andy Glockner has a great article about the secret behind Air Force's success (hint--it has something to do with teamwork--gasp!) and the history that Air Force is creating with it's great start. Not just in its 9-1 record, but in how it has won those games.
According to stats guru Ken Pomeroy, since the 1999-2000 season, there is only one other team from outside the "Big Six" conferences with at least two wins by that margin over Big Six schools. New Mexico also beat Colorado this season, by 41, and thrashed Mississippi last season by 53, but both of those wins were home games in the Lobos' intimidating Pit. Overall, there have been only two seasons since 1999-2000 (before this current one) in which there were at least three total wins of that margin involving a non-major school over a Big Six team.

Furthermore, if you look across all teams – Big Six or not – in that same time frame, there have been only 15 cases of a team having at least three wins by 30 points or more over BCS-league competition in one season. All 15 teams were at least at-large worthy and 13 of those teams got a top-four seed in that season's NCAA Tournament. Nine of them were No. 1 seeds. Only one of the 15 (Kansas last season) didn't win at least one NCAA Tournament game.


This year's non-conference schedule and results should silence the critics who complained last March when Air Force made the NCAA tournament despite a weak non-conference schedule.

06 December 2006

Assyrian Christians in Iraq--no voice, no protection


Michelle Vu reports in The Christian Post on a protest held Monday outside the White House by Christians trying to bring attention to the plight of Assyrian Christians in Iraq. Although most religious and ethnic groups are suffering in Iraq, Vu reports that this tiny segment of the Iraqi population is especially vulnerable.
“This should be a priority because Assyrian Christians are the indigenous people of Iraq and many people don’t know that,” explained Paul Isaac, one of the rally’s organizers. “Because of their small population, weak status, and lack of regional support they have no one to protect them from all the violence.”

Isaac pointed to the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) report statistic that although Assyrians comprise only five percent of Iraq’s population, they make up nearly 40 percent of the refugees fleeing Iraq. He said that although all the ethnic and religious groups are suffering in Iraq, “it is clear that the Assyrian Christians are suffering by far the most…and they really have no one to protect them…”

In addition to the troubling Assyrian refugee statistic, there has been a rise in reports of persecution of Assyrian Christians in Iraq. Recently, in October, a 14-year-old boy near Mosul died by a crucifixion-murder. In the same month, Father Paulis Iskander was beheaded in Mosul.


For more information on the Christians of Iraq, visit ChristiansofIraq.com. For much more information on the persecution of Christians around the world, visit The Voice of the Martyrs. And as always, remember our fellow brothers and sisters in Christ in your prayers.

03 December 2006

Illegal aliens arrested while working in secure area of airport

LaShawn Barber has a great post about a company, TC Drywall, that had been hired to hang drywall in a secure area of Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. How do we know about this? 6 workers from TC Drywall were arrested. All are illegals from Mexico. My favorite passage from LaShawn:
What’s especially irritating to me is having to go through mind-numbingly inane security lines with Transportation “Safety” Administration employees (whose methods of screening are inconsistent across different airports) where I have to take off my shoes, sweater or jacket, and submit myself to random searches and pack “liquids” in containers no larger than three ounces in quart-sized plastic bags, knowing illegal aliens — people who pose the real security risk, for crying out loud! — are working in areas I’d be arrested for venturing into accidentally…it’s madness!


TC Drywall's website is currently down for "technical reasons".

Another interesting tidbit from LaShawn's post is at the top, about a landscaping company in Boston which hires illegal aliens. Oh, and, as the Boston Globe reports, this company has done work for Mitt Romney for the past 10 years. It appears that he never inquired of the company's owner as to the legal status of the workers. Could become an issue which causes Romney to back out of his run for the Presidency. We'll see. Hopefully, this story becomes huge so that it finally shows the politicians that we are serious about cracking down on illegal immigration and the employers who hire illegal aliens.

01 December 2006

The Nativity Story--"The dumbest movie I've ever seen"

We decided to take the family to the local theater to see "The Nativity Story". I'd heard some good things about it, and I wasn't disappointed. The script pretty much stuck to the work on which it was based, the Bible. Since the Gospel accounts of the Christmas story don't include everything that happened, we have to guess at some of the things that were said and done. One especially moving moment was when Joseph and Mary were talking to each other about their fears during their travel to Bethlehem. After Mary wonders when they will first be able to tell that Jesus is God, Joseph admits being apprehensive, saying, "I'm afraid that I won't have anything to teach him." Another touching scene is when Mary bathes Joseph's feet as he sleeps by the river after many days of traveling to Bethlehem.

There were several times during the movie when I was moved to tears. So it was with surprise when I stood up to leave at the end that I heard a lady (in her 60's) a few rows back say to her friends in a not-so-soft voice, "That was the dumbest movie I've ever seen!" I couldn't believe my ears. My first reaction was irritation. But that soon turned to feeling sorry for her. I'm not sure what she had been expecting since the title of the movie is pretty clear about what the movie is all about. Then I felt good, because the story of Christ's birth is really meant for people exactly like her. She couldn't have been in a better place for that 1 hour and 41 minutes. A seed was planted in her heart. Someday I hope that seed is watered and begins to grow.

UPDATE: Here's an interview with Catherine Hardwicke on the making of The Nativity Story. Turns out that Keisha Castle-Hughes, the 16-year-old actress who plays Mary, is pregnant by her 19-year-old boyfriend. Not exactly a perfect parallel to Mary, but at least she has chosen to have the baby.

Hmmm...what's wrong with this picture?


Alright, here's another entry for the PC Idiocy files. According to Tom Breen, an AP writer, in the Chicago Tribune, it appears that the community's "holiday display" in St. Alban's, West Virginia, is missing a few main characters. In a scene which has a manger, shepherds, a guiding star, camels, and a palm tree, the town has left out Mary, Joseph, and oh, yeah, the baby Jesus.
The parks superintendent said Jesus was left out because of concerns about the separation of church and state. But Mayor Dick Callaway said it was done for purely technical reasons: "It's not easy to put a light-up representation of a baby in a small manger scene, you know."

Huh? Sounds like a cop-out to me. And the mayor's answer doesn't explain why Mary and Joseph didn't make it into the scene. I tend to believe the parks superintendent's answer. Why even put up the display if you're not going to have Mary, Joseph, and Jesus?

According to an article in The Charleston Daily Mail, the park superintendent stated:
"You could call it a manger," he said. "We call it a place for the animals. It looks like two things coming up on the sides with a roof-like structure. What it looks like depends on your imagination. We have never had a baby Jesus or a Mary, a Joseph or wise men."

Visiting the display, Melinda Ashby got it right.
Ashby, 35, called the scene one of the dumbest she's ever seen in her life.

"I asked ‘where is the baby Jesus?' I was told that it is a desert scene and to use my imagination," she said. "I would be less offended if the manger scene had not been there at all. Jesus is the reason for the season."


Well said.

Oh, and to give credit where credit is due, the photo was taken by Craig Cunningham.

30 November 2006

More on College of William & Mary

Retired Air Force Brigadier General George Forschler has written a letter to the editor of the Alexandria Gazette in response to the president of the College of William and Mary ordering a cross removed from the campus chapel in an effort to promote diversity. I posted on this a few days ago. A few lines from his letter:
William & Mary, one of America’s oldest universities, [now a public university] was founded as a school of divinity in 1693. That Christian tradition lives today, and any student or parent sending a student to the college is undoubtedly aware of that. Freedom of association is one of this Nation’s founding principles. If students enter or avoid William & Mary due to its Christian roots, that is their choice.
The only religion being persecuted by Nichol’s decision is Christianity itself. A Muslim or Jewish school would not remove holy symbols from a mosque or synagogue to make room for other faiths, nor should they be expected to.

Hopefully, those in Virginia with a little common sense will join General Forschler and help president Nichol see the light.

29 November 2006

Air Force Flies By Wake Forest


Air Force is out to prove that it belongs with the big boys of basketball. After taking a lot of heat for making the NCAA tournament last year after playing a fairly weak non-conference schedule, it seems that Air Force has a chip on its shoulder. So far this year, Air Force (7-1) has whooped up on some teams from the major conferences, like Stanford, Colorado, Texas Tech, and now Wake Forest (their only loss was to Duke). Wake Forest came into Colorado Springs with a 5-0 record, although none of the teams they'd faced to this point was close to Air Force in talent. Notice I said Colorado Springs instead of Air Force's Clune Arena. This game was played in the "neutral" World Arena. Air Force has only played two home games so far, because no one wants to play them at Clune Arena, where they have won 41 out the last 42 games. Bob Stephens from the Winston-Salem Journal has more on Wednesday night's 94-58 trouncing. Brian Gomez from the Colorado Springs Gazette offers his account of the game.

27 November 2006

Good news for couch potatoes

Finally, vindication for all you slouchers out there. Turns out that slouching is better for your back than sitting up straight. I could have told them that for a lot less than what they paid for this study...from the The London Times.
...Now research suggests that we would be far better off slouching and slumping. Today’s advice is to let go and recline. Using a new form of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a team of radiologists have found that sitting up straight puts unneccesary strain on the spine and could cause chronic back pain because of trapped nerves or slipped discs...

So slouch proudly, you slumping slouchers!

Spy Games

Michael Ledeen has a very interesting article on National Review Online, an "interview" with the ghost of James Angelton, a former CIA officer who specialized in the Soviet Union. He discusses with Angleton the very suspicious death of Alexander Litvinenko, a KGB spy who defected and became a critic of the Kremlin. Among some enlightening conversation in the article:
ML: Okay, you say that to me. But how would you prepare an analysis for President Bush? After all, he’s invested a lot in a personal relationship with Putin, as Blair has, and as Secretary Rice has. If the Kremlin is back in the business of silencing critics just because of what they say and write, it will be hard for that relationship to continue. So you’d better be convincing.

JJA: There are patterns, very convincing patterns. And then there’s the widely ignored fact that, just last summer, Putin changed Russian law so that this sort of thing is actually legal.

ML: What? I haven’t seen that in print anywhere.

JJA: Have a look at the letters column in the London Times on the 11th of July, just as the G8 Summit was getting ready to start in Russia. Vladimir Bukovsky and Oleg Gordievsky wrote a letter, and you’d better pay attention when those guys talk.


Read the entire article to see why we shouldn't be so quick to dismiss the threat that Vladimir Putin has become to freedom--and not just the freedom of Russians.

Senator Durbin on Ambassador Bolton

I recently sent my Senator, Richard Durbin (D-IL), a letter urging him to do what he could to ensure that John Bolton is confirmed. I know, it was a long shot, but, as his constituent, I felt it was my duty to inform him of my views. Here is his reply, received today:
Dear Major Reed: Thank you for letting me know of your support for the nomination of John Bolton to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. As you may know, in August 2005 President Bush used his constitutional authority to bypass the Senate confirmation process while the Senate was in recess, appointing Mr. Bolton to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations through the end of 2006. President Bush has resubmitted Mr. Bolton's nomination for confirmation by the full Senate in the hope of extending his term beyond 2006.

At a time when we should be strengthening our ties with our allies and the broader international community, I do not believe that John Bolton is the right person to serve in this important position. He has strongly disparaged efforts to pursue international cooperation on important global issues through the United Nations; he has brow-beaten intelligence analysts who refused to alter their findings to suit his political views; and he has belittled the value of peacekeepers in solving civil conflicts. More broadly, and most importantly, Mr. Bolton has been dismissive of the basic notion that it is frequently in our national interest to work with other nations in addressing issues of international concern. In his time as temporary ambassador to the U.N., Mr. Bolton's abrasive style has served to alienate even close U.S. allies. During his tenure, he has made little progress in forging greater international cooperation on pressing global issues such as the genocide in Darfur or Iran's nuclear program.


The United Nations is in need of reform, and the United States should be a positive influence in reshaping the U.N. for the 21st Century. Based on his public record, however, John Bolton is not the person to lead this effort as our representative to the U.N. Thank you again for taking the time to contact me, and please feel free to stay in touch.



Sincerely,
Richard J. Durbin
United States Senator


Hopefully, in the very near future, I'll be able to go through the text of his letter and examine all of his claims. Like I said, I knew it was a long shot to expect him to support Bolton's confirmation, but I had to try. I also sent a letter to Senator Obama. Haven't received a reply yet.

25 November 2006

Dartmouth AD apologizes for inviting Fighting Sioux


In today's PC Idiocy file, we've got a letter to the editor of The Dartmouth, the student-run newspaper, from Dartmouth College's athletic director, Josie Harper. Seems that, two years ago, the school invited the University of North Dakota to participate in a hockey tournament this December. Ms. Harper apologizes for that "mistake" in her letter:

To the Editor:

I am writing to strongly denounce the historical and recent affronts to the Native American community at Dartmouth and to offer the support of the athletics department in playing a leading role to combat racial, ethnic and sexist ignorance and intolerance on our campus.

At the same time, I must offer a sincere apology to the Native American community, and the Dartmouth community as a whole, for an event that will understandably offend and hurt people within our community. In late December, we will host a men's ice hockey tournament that includes the University of North Dakota Fighting Sioux. UND is one of 14 colleges or universities that continue to maintain a Native American name and image to represent their athletic teams. [see logo, top right]

Let me state clearly that UND's position is offensive and wrong. When we scheduled UND nearly two years ago to participate in our tournament, we did so without considering their team's nickname and symbol. Perhaps we should have, but I deeply regret that we didn't.

On Friday, as I was traveling on College business, a member of my staff met with the Native American Council to discuss our hockey tournament and to offer our apology for the pain that it will cause. In the days and weeks ahead, I will develop a specific and continuing plan to address issues of respect and tolerance within the athletic department as well as considering a policy for scheduling athletic contests against institutions that support offensive nicknames and symbols.



Ms. Harper's letter contains all the usual Political Correctness buzzwords. As background, UND is currently involved in a court case with the NCAA, which has stated that UND cannot have its logo or mascot present at any post-season tournaments. UND has an injunction which allows it to use its logo and mascot until a higher court can rule on the case.

My question for Ms. Harper is this: if she truly regrets inviting UND, why doesn't she dis-invite them? The most likely answer is that they have a contract with UND. But why doesn't the AD put her money where her mouth is and risk getting sued by UND for breach of contract, if it is really against her principles to have the Fighting Sioux participate? Why? Because not having one of the premier hockey programs at this tournament would mean lost revenue in ticket and concession sales.

If you read subsequent letters to The Dartmouth, you'll find outraged reactions from Alumni--but they're outraged at her, not at UND. Maybe if the Athletic Director would worry more about the school's athletics, Dartmouth's football team would have a better record than 2-8 this season.

24 November 2006

Indian converts forced out of homes

Compass Direct News tells of nine families that were attacked and forced from their homes in the northeast region of India because they had converted to Christianity.

Their ordeal began when Christians attended a Pentecostal meeting held in Haldibari village last Monday (November 13).

“This meeting infuriated the Bodo tribals, who organized their own religious gathering the next day,” a source told Compass.

At 8 a.m. on Tuesday morning (November 14), the tribal people of Haldibari gathered for their own meeting at the village council hall, said the Rev. Madhu Chandra, Delhi regional secretary of the All India Christian Council.

“Some of them were sympathizers of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh [RSS, a Hindu extremist group],” Rev. Chandra said. “Under their influence, the group resolved to evacuate Christian families from the village.”

At around 2:30 p.m. that day, 25 Bodo villagers went to the homes of three Christian families in Haldibari and attacked their houses. The violence soon spread to the neighboring villages of Moflabari, Jamduguri and Basdari.



Sadly, on 16 May, Compass reported that the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom failed to include India on it's recommended list of Countries of Particular Concern (CPC) for 2006. Contact the Commission here to urge them to include India in its list for recommended CPCs for 2007.

Prayers regarding the persecuted church

Glenn Penner has an excellent post at The Persecuted Church. He asks how we react when we hear stories of Christians being persecuted in other countries. Do we simply say, "Thank God we don't have to live like that"?

Let me state it plainly. If your first and primary response to the Persecuted Church is to feel grateful for the freedoms we enjoy in this country then, like me, you have probably missed the whole point of what God wants to say to you through the testimony of His Suffering Church. Simply put, the Persecuted Church does not exist so that we can feel grateful, and they deserve to be more than a prayer item or sermon illustration designed primarily to elicit thanksgiving.


I have to admit that my first reaction is to be thankful for being able to live in the U.S. But when I hear specific stories of brothers and sisters in Christ suffering for Him, I do try to lift them up with my prayers, asking Him to give them strength and courage during their trials.

May I continue to have more of the mind of Christ...

Muslims monopolize "multifaith" room at Ryerson U.

Little Green Footballs has this story about Ryerson University in Toronto. Apparently, the Muslim Students' Association (MSA) has become the largest student group on campus. Well, now they've totally booked the "multifaith" room on campus so that no other student groups can ever book time in it. According to the article in The Eye Opener , an independent Ryerson newspaper,
Eric Da Silva, president of the Catholic Student Association, says the group looked into using the room for mass but was told by RSU front desk staff that the room was “permanently booked” by Muslim students.

“No one is trying to take away the space from the Muslims, we just don’t want to be stepping on their toes,” says Da Silva. He stresses that the group found another space to hold mass and the conflict was quickly resolved. Da Silva acknowledges that Muslims have a stricter prayer schedule than Catholics, but he challenges whether the room should be called a multifaith one. The space, which is divided to separate males from females, has rows taped on the floor for prayer and Islamic decorations adorning the walls, is only accommodating to Muslims.



Why are they afraid to press the issue? It sounds like the non-Muslims are walking on eggshells, afraid that if they upset the Muslims, their campus will be visited by suicide bombers. It's not a surprising reaction, really. When all that you hear in the news are stories of radical Muslims practicing their religion, blowing up all non-believers. If it was the other way around, with Christians not allowing Muslims to have any time in the multifaith room, I think the university administration would waste no time in forcing equal opportunity. Any bets on whether Ryerson will do anything about this situation?

20 November 2006

Air Force gives Duke a run for their money

Okay, I've gotta give some press to my alma mater, the U.S. Air Force Academy. Their men's basketball team was 4-0 going into the semi-final round of the College Basketball Experience tournament. They'd already won those 4 games by an average of 27 points against teams like Stanford, Long Beach State, and Colorado. But tonight they had to face Duke. Bottom line: Duke was hitting everything; Air Force couldn't hit anything. If the Zoomies could have hit some of their early 3-pointers, I think that Duke would have lost a lot of their confidence and the game would have ended a lot differently than the 15 points Duke won by. With the seasoned veterans they have, I think Air Force is going to have a great season. For more about the game, read this article in the Mercury News.

19 November 2006

College removes cross from chapel in "spirit of diversity"

And from today's Political Correctness Run Amok files, WTKR, a TV station in Virginia, is reporting that the President of the College of William and Mary has ordered a cross removed from an altar in the Sir Christopher Wren Chapel "in the spirit of diversity and to make the chapel 'more welcoming to all' ".

The cross had been a part of the chapel for the past 60 years. The president stated that "If you're not a Protestant Christian and you go into that room and see the symbol that's there, to some, it's a message that, yes, this is a beautiful space, but it really isn't mine."

I'm sorry, but isn't a Christian chapel supposed to be about Christ? The cross is the symbol of Christ's death for us and our sins. The very idea that we are sinners in need of a savior is offensive to many. If you want to remove a symbol that helps make a building a chapel, why even call it a chapel? Do they have to remove all the Bibles when it is used for a secular purpose?

The student senate introduced a bill to reverse the decision, but it was rejected. A student group is still trying to get the cross restored. See their website: www.SavetheWrenCross.org.

Christians plea for help in India

In an article posted today on Spero News, Christians in Southern India are pleading with authorities to protect them and their churches in the wake of a rash of incidents that have occurred over the last several days. In one incident, the police were present, but did nothing. The article doesn't say exactly what group(s) the militants are with.

13 October 2006

In the beginning...

Well, this is it. My first baby-step into the world of blogging. I plan on giving my opinion (as small and seemingly unimportant as it may seem) on whatever comes to mind. Boy, I hope things come to mind. My entries will, above all, hopefully represent a Christian worldview. And it won't take long for you to figure out that I'm a part of the vast right-wing conspiracy. There will be rantings on terrorism, the Persecuted Church, fantasy football, politics, Hollyweird, liberals, music, running, kids, food, and a whole bunch of other topics. I welcome any feedback on my posts, but if you're just being an idiot, you will get no press on my blog. You have the right to free speech, but not the right to be heard.

That's all.